R. V. Russell
The Tribes and Castes of the Central Provinces of India, Book I
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Table of contents
Preface
Part I. Introductory Essay on Caste
Part I Glossary of Minor Castes and Other Articles, Synonyms, Subcastes, Titles and Names of Exogamous Septs or Clans Note.
Political
Divisions of the Indian EmpireScale
= 1 : 17,500,000Central
Provinces and BerarScale
= 1 : 4,000,000 or 63.1 Miles to an InchMain
Linguistic or Ethnical Divisions of the Central Provinces with the
Sambalpur District and Certain States now in Bihar and OrissaScale
= 1 : 4,000,000 or 63.1 Miles to an InchHINDI-speaking
Districts.—The western tract includes the Saugor, Damoh,
Jubbulpore, Narsinghpur, Hoshangabad, Nimar and Betul Districts which
lie principally in the Nerbudda Valley or on the Vindhyan Hills
north-west of the Valley. In most of this area the language is the
Bundeli dialect of Western Hindi, and in Nimar and Betul a form of
the Rajputana dialects. The eastern tract includes the Raipur,
Bilaspur and Drug Districts and adjacent Feudatory States. This
country is known as Chhattisgarh, and the language is the
Chhattisgarhi dialect of Eastern Hindi.MARATHI.—Amraoti,
Akola, Buldana and Yeotmal Districts of Berar, and Nagpur, Bhandara,
Wardha and Chanda Districts of the Nagpur Plain.TELUGU.—Sironcha
tahsil of Chanda District. Telugu is also spoken to some extent in
the adjacent tracts of Chanda and Bastar States.TRIBAL
or Non-Aryan dialects.—Mandla, Seoni, Chhindwara, and part of
Balaghat Districts on the Satpura Range in the centre. Sarguja,
Jashpur, Udaipur, Korea, and Chang Bhakar States on the Chota Nagpur
plateau to the north-east. Bastar and Kanker States and parts of
Chanda and Drug Districts on the hill-ranges south of the Mahanadi
Valley to the south-east. In these areas the non-Aryan or Kolarian
and Dravidian tribes form the strongest element in the population but
many of them have abandoned their own languages and speak Aryan
vernaculars.URIYA.—Sambalpur
District and Sarangarh, Bamra, Rairakhol, Sonpur, Patna and Kalahandi
Feudatory States. This area, with the exception of Sarangarh, no
longer forms part of the Central Provinces, having been transferred
to Bengal in 1905, and subsequently to the new Province of Bihar and
Orissa. It was, however, included in the ethnographic survey for some
years, and is often referred to in the text.
Preface
This
book is the result of the arrangement made by the Government of
India, on the suggestion of the late Sir Herbert Risley, for the
preparation of an ethnological account dealing with the inhabitants
of each of the principal Provinces of India. The work for the Central
Provinces was entrusted to the author, and its preparation,
undertaken in addition to ordinary official duties, has been spread
over a number of years. The prescribed plan was that a separate
account should be written of each of the principal tribes and castes,
according to the method adopted in Sir Herbert Risley’s Tribes and
Castes of Bengal. This was considered to be desirable as the book is
intended primarily as a work of reference for the officers of
Government, who may desire to know something of the customs of the
people among whom their work lies. It has the disadvantage of
involving a large amount of repetition of the same or very similar
statements about different castes, and the result is likely therefore
to be somewhat distasteful to the ordinary reader. On the other hand,
there is no doubt that this method of treatment, if conscientiously
followed out, will produce more exhaustive results than a general
account. Similar works for some other Provinces have already
appeared, as Mr. W. Crooke’s Castes and Tribes of the North-Western
Provinces and Oudh, Mr. Edgar Thurston’s Castes and Tribes of
Southern India, and Mr. Ananta Krishna Iyer’s volumes on Cochin,
while a Glossary for the Punjab by Mr. H.A. Rose has been partly
published. The articles on Religions and Sects were not in the
original scheme of the work, but have been subsequently added as
being necessary to render it a complete ethnological account of the
population. In several instances the adherents of the religion or
sect are found only in very small numbers in the Province, and the
articles have been compiled from standard works.In
the preparation of the book much use has necessarily been made of the
standard ethnological accounts of other parts of India, especially
Colonel Tod’s Annals and Antiquities of Rājasthān, Mr. J.D.
Forbes’ Rasmāla or Annals of Gujarāt, Colonel Dalton’s
Ethnology of Bengal, Dr. Buchanan’s Eastern India, Sir Denzil
Ibbetson’s Punjab Census Report for 1881, Sir John Malcolm’s
Memoir of Central India, Sir Edward Gait’s Bengal and India Census
Reports and article on Caste in Dr. Hastings’ Encyclopaedia of
Religion and Ethics, Colonel (Sir William) Sleeman’s Report on the
Badhaks and Rāmāseeāna or Vocabulary of the Thugs, Mr. Kennedy’s
Criminal Classes of the Bombay Presidency, Major Gunthorpe’s
Criminal Tribes of Bombay, Berār and the Central Provinces, the
books of Mr. Crooke and Sir H. Risley already mentioned, and the mass
of valuable ethnological material contained in the Bombay Gazetteer
(Sir J. Campbell), especially the admirable volumes on Hindus of
Gujarāt by Mr. Bhimbhai Kirpārām, and Pārsis and Muhammadans of
Gujarāt by Khān Bahādur Fazlullah Lutfullah Faridi, and Mr.
Kharsedji Nasarvānji Seervai, J.P., and Khān Bahādur Bāmanji
Behrāmji Patel. Other Indian ethnological works from which I have
made quotations are Dr. Wilson’s Indian Caste (Times Press and
Messrs. Blackwood). Bishop Westcott’s Kabīr and the Kabīrpanth
(Baptist Mission Press, Cawnpore), Mr. Rajendra Lāl Mitra’s
Indo-Aryans (Newman & Co., Calcutta), The Jainas by Dr. J.G.
Bühler and Mr. J. Burgess, Dr. J.N. Bhattachārya’s Hindu Castes
and Sects (Thacker, Spink & Co., Calcutta), Professor Oman’s
Mystics, Ascetics and Saints of India, Cults, Customs and
Superstitions of India, and Brāhmans, Theists and Muslims of India
(T. Fisher Unwin), Mr. V.A. Smith’s Early History of India
(Clarendon Press), the Rev. T.P. Hughes’ Dictionary of Islām (W.H.
Allen & Co., and Heffer & Sons, Cambridge), Mr. L.D.
Barnett’s Antiquities of India, M. André Chevrillon’s Romantic
India, Mr. V. Ball’s Jungle Life in India, Mr. W. Crooke’s
Popular Religion and Folklore of Northern India, and Things Indian,
Captain Forsyth’s Highlands of Central India (Messrs. Chapman &
Hall), Messrs. Yule and Burnell’s Hobson-Jobson (Mr. Crooke’s
edition), Professor Hopkins’ Religions of India, the Rev. E.M.
Gordon’s Indian Folk-Tales (Elliot & Stock), Messrs. Sewell and
Dikshit’s Indian Calendar, Mr. Brennand’s Hindu Astronomy, and
the late Rev. Father P. Dehon’s monograph on the Oraons in the
Memoirs of the Asiatic Society of Bengal.Ethnological
works on the people of the Central Provinces are not numerous; among
those from which assistance has been obtained are Sir C. Grant’s
Central Provinces Gazetteer of 1871, Rev. Stephen Hislop’s Notes on
the Aboriginal Tribes of the Central Provinces, Colonel Bloomfield’s
Notes on the Baigas, Sir Charles Elliott’s Hoshangābād Settlement
Report, Sir Reginald Craddock’s Nāgpur Settlement Report, Colonel
Ward’s Mandla Settlement Report, Colonel Lucie Smith’s Chānda
Settlement Report, Mr. G.W. Gayer’s Lectures on Criminal Tribes,
Mr. C.W. Montgomerie’s Chhindwāra Settlement Report, Mr. C.E.
Low’s Bālāghāt District Gazetteer, Mr. E.J. Kitts’ Berār
Census Report of 1881, and the Central Provinces Census Reports of
Mr. T. Drysdale, Sir Benjamin Robertson and Mr. J.T. Marten.The
author is indebted to Sir J.G. Frazer for his kind permission to make
quotations from The Golden Bough and Totemism and Exogamy
(Macmillan), in which the best examples of almost all branches of
primitive custom are to be found; to Dr. Edward Westermarck for
similar permission in respect of The History of Human Marriage, and
The Origin and Development of the Moral Ideas (Macmillan); to Messrs.
A. & C. Black in respect of the late Professor Robertson Smith’s
Religion of the Semites; to Messrs. Heinemann for those from M.
Salomon Reinach’s Orpheus; and to Messrs. Hachette et Cie and
Messrs. Parker of Oxford for those from La Cité Antique of M. Fustel
de Coulanges. Much assistance has also been obtained from Sir E. B.
Tylor’s Early History of Mankind and Primitive Culture, Lord
Avebury’s The Origin of Civilisation, Mr. E. Sidney Hartland’s
Primitive Paternity, and M. Salomon Reinach’s Cultes, Mythes et
Religions. The labours of these eminent authors have made it possible
for the student to obtain a practical knowledge of the ethnology of
the world by the perusal of a small number of books; and if any of
the ideas put forward in these volumes should ultimately be so
fortunate as to obtain acceptance, it is to the above books that I am
principally indebted for having been able to formulate them. Other
works from which help has been obtained are M. Emile Senart’s Les
Castes dans I’Inde, Professor W. E. Hearn’s The Aryan Household,
and Dr. A.H. Keane’s The World’s Peoples. Sir George Grierson’s
great work, The Linguistic Survey of India, has now given an accurate
classification of the non-Aryan tribes according to their languages
and has further thrown a considerable degree of light on the vexed
question of their origin. I have received from Mr. W. Crooke of the
Indian Civil Service (retired) much kind help and advice during the
final stages of the preparation of this work. As will be seen from
the articles, resort has constantly been made to his Tribes and
Castes for filling up gaps in the local information.Rai
Bahādur Hīra Lāl was my assistant for several years in the taking
of the census of 1901 and the preparation of the Central Provinces
District Gazetteers; he has always given the most loyal and unselfish
aid, has personally collected a large part of the original
information contained in the book, and spent much time in collating
the results. The association of his name in the authorship is no more
than his due, though except where this has been specifically
mentioned, he is not responsible for the theories and deductions from
the facts obtained. Mr. Pyāre Lāl Misra, barrister, Chhindwāra,
was my ethnographic clerk for some years, and he and Munshi Kanhya
Lāl, late of the Educational Department, and Mr. Adurām Chandhri,
Tahsīldār, gave much assistance in the inquiries on different
castes. Among others who have helped in the work, Rai Bahādur Panda
Baijnāth, Diwān of the Patna and Bastar States, should be mentioned
first, and Bābu Kali Prasanna Mukerji, pleader, Saugor, Mr. Gopāl
Datta Joshi, District Judge, Saugor, Mr. Jeorākhan Lāl,
Deputy-Inspector of Schools, and Mr. Gokul Prasād, Tahsīldār, may
be selected from the large number whose names are given in the
footnotes to the articles. Among European officers whose assistance
should be acknowledged are Messrs. C.E. Low, C.W. Montgomerie, A.B.
Napier, A.E. Nelson, A.K. Smith, R.H. Crosthwaite and H.F. Hallifax,
of the Civil Service; Lt.-Col. W.D. Sutherland, I.M.S., Surgeon-Major
Mitchell of Bastar, and Mr. D. Chisholm.Some
photographs have been kindly contributed by Mrs. Ashbrooke Crump,
Mrs. Mangabai Kelkar, Mr. G.L. Corbett, C.S., Mr. R.L. Johnston,
A.D.S.P., Mr. J.H. Searle, C.S., Mr. Strachey, Mr. H.E. Bartlett,
Professor L. Scherman of Munich, and the Diwān of Raigarh State.
Bishop Westcott kindly gave the photograph of Kabīr, which appears
in his own book.Finally
I have to express my gratitude to the Chief Commissioner, Sir
Benjamin Robertson, for the liberal allotment made by the
Administration for the publication of the work; and to the
publishers, Messrs. Macmillan & Co., and the printers, Messrs. R.
& R. Clark, for their courtesy and assistance during its progress
through the press.
Part I. Introductory Essay on Caste
1.
The Central Provinces.The
territory controlled by the Chief Commissioner of the Central
Provinces and Berār has an area of 131,000 square miles and a
population of 16,000,000 persons. Situated in the centre of the
Indian Peninsula, between latitudes 17°47′ and 24°27′ north,
and longitudes 76° and 84° east, it occupies about 7.3 per cent of
the total area of British India. It adjoins the Central India States
and the United Provinces to the north, Bombay to the west, Hyderābād
State and the Madras Presidency to the south, and the Province of
Bihār and Orissa to the east. The Province was constituted as a
separate administrative unit in 1861 from territories taken from the
Peshwa in 1818 and the Marātha State of Nāgpur, which had lapsed
from failure of heirs in 1853. Berār, which for a considerable
previous period had been held on a lease or assignment from the Nizām
of Hyderābād, was incorporated for administrative purposes with the
Central Provinces in 1903. In 1905 the bulk of the District of
Sambalpur, with five Feudatory States inhabited by an Uriya-speaking
population, were transferred to Bengal and afterwards to the new
Province of Bihār and Orissa, while five Feudatory States of Chota
Nāgpur were received from Bengal. The former territory had been for
some years included in the scope of the Ethnographic Survey, and is
shown coloured in the annexed map of linguistic and racial divisions.The
main portion of the Province may be divided, from north-west to
south-east, into three tracts of upland, alternating with two of
plain country. In the north-west the Districts of Sangor and Damoh
lie on the Vindhyan or Mālwa plateau, the southern face of which
rises almost sheer from the valley of the Nerbudda. The general
elevation of this plateau varies from 1500 to 2000 feet. The highest
part is that immediately overhanging the Nerbudda, and the general
slope is to the north, the rivers of this area being tributaries of
the Jumna and Ganges. The surface of the country is undulating and
broken by frequent low hills covered with a growth of poor and
stunted forest. The second division consists of the long and narrow
valley of the Nerbudda, walled in by the Vindhyan and Satpūra hills
to the north and south, and extending for a length of about 200 miles
from Jubbulpore to Handia, with an average width of twenty miles. The
valley is situated to the south of the river, and is formed of deep
alluvial deposits of extreme richness, excellently suited to the
growth of wheat. South of the valley the Satpūra range or third
division stretches across the Province, from Amarkantak in the east
(the sacred source of the Nerbudda) to Asīrgarh in the Nimār
District in the west, where its two parallel ridges bound the narrow
valley of the Tapti river. The greater part consists of an elevated
plateau, in some parts merely a rugged mass of hills hurled together
by volcanic action, in others a succession of bare stony ridges and
narrow fertile valleys, in which the soil has been deposited by
drainage. The general elevation of the plateau is 2000 feet, but
several of the peaks rise to 3500, and a few to more than 4000 feet.
The Satpūras form the most important watershed of the Province, and
in addition to the Nerbudda and Tapti, the Wardha and Wainganga
rivers rise in these hills. To the east a belt of hill country
continues from the Satpūras to the wild and rugged highlands of the
Chota Nāgpur plateau, on which are situated the five States recently
annexed to the Province. Extending along the southern and eastern
faces of the Satpūra range lies the fourth geographical division, to
the west the plain of Berār and Nāgpur, watered by the Purna,
Wardha and Wainganga rivers, and further east the Chhattīsgarh
plain, which forms the upper basin of the Mahānadi. The Berār and
Nāgpur plain contains towards the west the shallow black soil in
which autumn crops, like cotton and the large millet juāri, which do
not require excessive moisture, can be successfully cultivated. This
area is the great cotton-growing tract of the Province, and at
present the most wealthy. The valleys of the Wainganga and Mahānadi
further east receive a heavier rainfall and are mainly cropped with
rice. Many small irrigation tanks for rice have been built by the
people themselves, and large tank and canal works are now being
undertaken by Government to protect the tract from the uncertainty of
the rainfall. South of the plain lies another expanse of hill and
plateau comprised in the zarmīndāri estates of Chānda and the
Chhattīsgarh Division and the Bastar and Kanker Feudatory States.
This vast area, covering about 24,000 square miles, the greater part
of which consists of dense forests traversed by precipitous mountains
and ravines, which formerly rendered it impervious to Hindu invasion
or immigration, producing only on isolated stretches of culturable
land the poorer raincrops, and sparsely peopled by primitive Gonds
and other forest tribes, was probably, until a comparatively short
time ago, the wildest and least-known part of the whole Indian
peninsula. It is now being rapidly opened up by railways and good
roads.2.
Constitution of the population.Up
to a few centuries ago the Central Provinces remained outside the
sphere of Hindu and Muhammadan conquest. To the people of northern
India it was known as Gondwāna, an unexplored country of
inaccessible mountains and impenetrable forests, inhabited by the
savage tribes of Gonds from whom it took its name. Hindu kingdoms
were, it is true, established over a large part of its territory in
the first centuries of our era, but these were not accompanied by the
settlement and opening out of the country, and were subsequently
subverted by the Dravidian Gonds, who perhaps invaded the country in
large numbers from the south between the ninth and twelfth centuries.
Hindu immigration and colonisation from the surrounding provinces
occurred at a later period, largely under the encouragement and
auspices of Gond kings. The consequence is that the existing
population is very diverse, and is made up of elements belonging to
many parts of India. The people of the northern Districts came from
Bundelkhand and the Gangetic plain, and here are found the principal
castes of the United Provinces and the Punjab. The western end of the
Nerbudda valley and Betūl were colonised from Mālwa and Central
India. Berār and the Nāgpur plain fell to the Marāthas, and one of
the most important Marātha States, the Bhonsla kingdom, had its
capital at Nāgpur. Cultivators from western India came and settled
on the land, and the existing population are of the same castes as
the Marātha country or Bombay. But prior to the Marātha conquest
Berār and the Nimar District of the Central Provinces had been
included in the Mughal empire, and traces of Mughal rule remain in a
substantial Muhammadan element in the population. To the south the
Chānda District runs down to the Godāvari river, and the southern
tracts of Chānda and Bastar State are largely occupied by Telugu
immigrants from Madras. To the east of the Nāgpur plain the large
landlocked area of Chhattīsgarh in the upper basin of the Mahānadi
was colonised at an early period by Hindus from the east of the
United Provinces and Oudh, probably coming through Jubbulpore. A
dynasty of the Haihaivansi Rājpūt clan established itself at
Ratanpur, and owing to the inaccessible nature of the country,
protected as it is on all sides by a natural rampart of hill and
forest, was able to pursue a tranquil existence untroubled by the
wars and political vicissitudes of northern India. The population of
Chhattīsgarh thus constitutes to some extent a distinct social
organism, which retained until quite recently many remnants of
primitive custom. The middle basin of the Mahānadi to the east of
Chhattīsgarh, comprising the Sambalpur District and adjoining
States, was peopled by Uriyas from Orissa, and though this area has
now been restored to its parent province, notices of its principal
castes have been included in these volumes. Finally, the population
contains a large element of the primitive or non-Aryan tribes, rich
in variety, who have retired before the pressure of Hindu cultivators
to its extensive hills and forests. The people of the Central
Provinces may therefore not unjustly be considered as a microcosm of
a great part of India, and conclusions drawn from a consideration of
their caste rules and status may claim with considerable probability
of success to be applicable to those of the Hindus generally. For the
same reason the standard ethnological works of other Provinces
necessarily rank as the best authorities on the castes of the Central
Provinces, and this fact may explain and excuse the copious resort
which has been made to them in these volumes.
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