The kingdom of Congo, upon the southern coast of Africa, is divided into many large districts or provinces, the inhabitants of which appear to have made some progress in agriculture.Each of these districts comprehends a multitude of small lordships, which are said to have been formerly independent, but which are now united together, and reduced under a single chief or governor, who exercises absolute authority over them.The great lords, or governors of provinces, are in like manner dependent upon the king, and owe him the payment of certain annual duties.
This monarch is understood to have an unlimited power over the goods of all his subjects; he is the proprietor of all the lands in the kingdom, which return to the crown upon the death of the possessors; and, according to the arbitrary will of the prince, are either continued in the same, or bestowed upon a different family.All the inhabitants are bound to appear in the field whenever they are required by the sovereign who is able in a short time to raise a prodigious army upon any sudden emergency.
Every governor has a judicial power in his own district, and from his sentences there lies an appeal to the king, who is the supreme judge of the nation.Similar accounts are given of the constitution in the neighbouring kingdoms of Angola, Loango, and Benin.
The same form of government may be discovered in several parts of the East Indies, where many great lords, who have acquired extensive dominions, are often reduced into a sort of feudal dependence upon a single person.
Among the natives of Indostan, there are a great number of families who have been immemorially trained up to arms, and who enjoy a superior rank to most of the other inhabitants.They form a militia capable of enduring much hardship, and wanting nothing to make good soldiers but order and discipline.These hereditary warriors are subject to the authority of chiefs, or Rajahs, from whom they receive lands, upon condition of their performing military service.It would seem that those different families were originally independent of each other.By degrees however many of the poorer sort have become subordinate to their opulent neighbours, and are obliged to serve them in war in order to obtain a livelihood.In like manner the leaders of more wealthy families have been gradually subdued by a certain Rajah, who mounted the throne, and whose influence became more and more extensive.This in all probability gave rise to the political constitution at present established in that country.The Rajahs, or nobility, are now for the most part retained by the Great Mogul in a situation resembling that of the crown vassals in Europe.At the same time there are some of those chiefs who still maintain an independency even in the heart of the empire.In the reign of Aureng-zebe, there were about an hundred, dispersed over the whole country, several of whom were capable of bringing into the field 25,000 horse, better troops than those of the monarch.
In the kingdom of Pegu, which was formerly an independent monarchy, the king is said to have been the sole heir of all the landed estates of his subjects.The nobility or chiefs had lands and towns assigned them, which they held of the crown, upon condition of their maintaining a certain number of troops in time of peace, and bringing them into the field in case of a war.
Besides these military services, they were also bound to the performance of several kinds of work, which the sovereign rigorously exacted from them, in token of their subjection.This country is now annexed to the kingdom of Ava, in which, as well as in that of Laos and of Siam, the same regulations appear to be established.
Travellers who make observations on the Malais [says the judicious M.Le Poivre] are astonished to find, in the centre of Asia, under the scorching climate of the line, the laws, the manners, the customs, and the prejudices of the ancient inhabitants of the north of Europe.The Malais are governed by feudal laws, that capricious system, conceived for the defence of the liberty of a few against the tyranny of one, while the multitude is subjected to slavery and oppression.
A chief, who has the title of king, or sultan, issues his commands to his great vassals, who obey when they think proper.
These have inferiour vassals, who often act in the same manner with regard to them.A small part of the nation live independent, under the title of Oram鏰y, or noble, and sell their services to those who pay them best; while the body of the nation is composed of slaves, and lives in perpetual servitude.