The Tribes and Castes of the Central Provinces of India - novelonlinefull.com
You’re read light novel The Tribes and Castes of the Central Provinces of India Volume II Part 50 online at NovelOnlineFull.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit NovelOnlineFull.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
[164] Bhattacharya, _Hindu Castes and Sects_, p. 207.
[165] This article is based on papers by Mr. Pancham Lal, Naib-Tahsildar Sihora, and Munshi Kanhya Lal, of the Gazetteer office.
[166] See also notice of Benaikias in article on Vidur.
[167] _Bombay Gazetteer_, vol. xvii. p. 81.
[168] _Bombay Gazetteer_, _Hindus of Gujarat_, p. 99.
[169] _Ibidem._
[170] _Ibidem._ p. 98.
[171] _Merinda citrifolia_, see art. Alia.
[172] See article.
[173] This article is based princ.i.p.ally on a _Monograph on the Banjara Clan_, by Mr. N. F. c.u.mberlege of the Berar Police, believed to have been first written in 1869 and reprinted in 1882; notes on the Banjaras written by Colonel Mackenzie and printed in the _Berar Census Report_ (1881) and the _Pioneer_ newspaper (communicated by Mrs. Horsburgh); Major Gunthorpe's _Criminal Tribes_; papers by Mr. M. E. Khare, Extra-a.s.sistant Commissioner, Chanda; Mr. Narayan Rao, Tahr., Betul; Mr. Mukund Rao, Manager, Pachmarhi Estate; and information on the caste collected in Yeotmal and Nimar.
[174] Mr. Crooke's _Tribes and Castes_, art. Banjara, para. 1.
[175] _Berar Census Report_ (1881), p. 150.
[176] _Ibidem_, para. 2, quoting Dowson's Elliot, v. 100.
[177] Khan Bahadur Fazalullah Lutfullah Faridi in the _Bombay Gazetteer_ (_Muhammadans of Gujarat_, p. 86) quoting from General Briggs (_Transactions Bombay Literary Society_, vol. i. 183) says that "as carriers of grain for Muhammadan armies the Banjaras have figured in history from the days of Muhammad Tughlak (A.D. 1340) to those of Aurangzeb."
[178] Sir H. M. Elliot's _Supplemental Glossary_.
[179] _Monograph on the Banjara Clan_, p. 8.
[180] _Hindus of Gujarat_, p. 214 _et seq._
[181] _Rajasthan_, i. 602.
[182] _Ibidem_, ii. 570, 573.
[183] This custom does not necessarily indicate a special connection between the Banjaras and Charans, as it is common to several castes in Rajputana; but it indicates that the Banjaras came from Rajputana. Banjara men also frequently wear the hair long, down to the neck, which is another custom of Rajputana.
[184] _Jungle Life in India_, p. 517.
[185] _Berar Census Report_ (1881), p. 152.
[186] _Bombay Gazetteer, Hindus of Gujarat._
[187] _Letter on the Marathas_ (1798), p. 67, _India Office Tracts._
[188] _Army of the Indian Mughals_, p. 192.
[189] _Monograph_, p. 14, and _Berar Census Report_ (1881) (Kitts), p. 151.
[190] These are held to have been descendants of the Bhika Rathor referred to by Colonel Mackenzie above.
[191] See note 3, p. 168.
[192] General Briggs quoted by Mr. Faridi in _Bombay Gazetteer, Muhammadans of Gujarat_, p. 86.
[193] A. Wellesley (1800), quoted in Mr. Crooke's edition of _Hobson-Jobson_, art. Brinjarry.
[194] c.u.mberlege, _loc. cit._
[195] c.u.mberlege, pp. 28, 29.
[196] Elliot's _Races_, quoted by Mr. Crooke, _ibidem._
[197] c.u.mberlege, pp. 4, 5.
[198] c.u.mberlege, _l.c._
[199] This custom is noticed in the article on Khairwar.
[200] c.u.mberlege, p. 18.
[201] Mr. Hira Lal suggests that this custom may have something to do with the phrase _Athara jat ke gayi_, or 'She has gone to the eighteen castes,' used of a woman who has been turned out of the community. This phrase seems, however, to be a euphemism, eighteen castes being a term of indefinite mult.i.tude for any or no caste. The number eighteen may be selected from the same unknown a.s.sociation which causes the goat to be cut into eighteen pieces.
[202] _Ethnographic Notes in Southern India_, p. 344, quoting from Moor's _Narrative of Little's Detachment_.
[203] c.u.mberlege, p. 35.
[204] _Berar Census Report_, 1881.
[205] c.u.mberlege, p. 21.
[206] The following instance is taken from Mr. Balfour's article, 'Migratory Tribes of Central India,' in _J. A. S. B._, new series, vol. xiii., quoted in Mr. Crooke's _Tribes and Castes_.
[207] From the Sanskrit Hatya-adhya, meaning 'That which it is most sinful to slay' (Balfour).
[208] _Monograph_, p. 12.
[209] _Asiatic Studies_, i. p. 118 (ed. 1899).
[210] c.u.mberlege, p. 23 _et seq._ The description of witchcraft is wholly reproduced from his _Monograph_.
[211] His motive being the fine inflicted on the witch's family.
[212] The fruit of _Buchanania latifolia_.
[213] _Ethnographic Notes in Southern India_, p. 507, quoting from the Rev. J. Cain, _Ind. Ant._ viii. (1879).