Punjab and Zamindar Bank
Full Form of PBZ
What is PBZ?
The Punjab and Zamindar Bank (PBZ) was a regional commercial bank that operated primarily in the Punjab region of British India during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. It catered to the financial needs of zamindars (landowners) and the agrarian economy, offering loans for land improvement, seed procurement, and revenue payments. The bank played a significant role in facilitating credit flow to rural areas before the establishment of larger institutional lenders. With the partition of India in 1947, the bank’s operations were disrupted, and it eventually merged with other entities or ceased to exist. Though no longer active, PBZ is remembered as part of India’s early banking heritage, especially in discussions about pre-Independence financial systems and the evolution of rural credit. In modern Indian history examinations, PBZ appears as an example of region-specific banks that supported the zamindari system. Its legacy is often cited to illustrate how banking practices adapted to local land tenure structures before nationalisation and the rise of cooperative banks.
PBZ का फुल फॉर्म
पंजाब और ज़मींदार बैंक
Example
The Punjab and Zamindar Bank (PBZ) provided crucial credit to farmers in pre-partition Lahore district.