Examples of Tilaks or sect-marks worn on the forehead.
Brāhman worshipping his household gods.
Pronunciation
a,
has the sound ofu
in but or murmur.ā
has the sound ofa
in bath or tar.e
has the sound ofé
in écarté or ai in maid.i
has the sound ofi
in bit, or (as a final letter) of y in sulky.ī
has the sound ofee
in beet.o
has the sound ofo
in bore or bowl.u
has the sound ofu
in put or bull.ū
has the sound ofoo
in poor or bootThe
plural of caste names and a few common Hindustāni words is formed by
adding s in the English manner according to ordinary usage, though
this is not, of course, the Hindustāni plural.Note.—The
rupee contains 16 annas, and an anna is of the same value as a penny.
A pice is a quarter of an anna, or a farthing. Rs. 1–8 signifies
one rupee and eight annas. A lakh is a hundred thousand, and a krore
ten million.
Part II Articles on Castes and Tribes Agaria—Fakīr
Agaria1.
Origin and subdivisions.Agaria.1—A
small Dravidian caste, who are an offshoot of the Gond tribe. The
Agarias have adopted the profession of iron-smelting and form a
separate caste. They numbered 9500 persons in 1911 and live on the
Maikal range in the Mandla, Raipur and Bilāspur Districts.The
name probably signifies a worker with āg or fire. An Agaria subcaste
of Lohārs also exists, many of whom are quite probably Gonds, but
they are not included in the regular caste. Similar Dravidian castes
of Agarias are to be found in Mīrzāpur and Bengal. The Agarias are
quite distinct from the Agharia cultivating caste of the Uriya
country. The Raipur Agarias still intermarry with the Rāwanbansi
Gonds of the District. The Agarias think that their caste has existed
from the beginning of the world, and that the first Agaria made the
ploughshare with which the first bullocks furrowed the primeval soil.
The caste has two endogamous divisions, the Patharia and the Khuntia
Agarias. The Patharias place a stone on the mouth of the bellows to
fix them in the ground for smelting, while the Khuntias use a peg.
The two subcastes do not even take water from one another.Their
exogamous sections have generally the same names as those of the
Gonds, as Sonwāni, Dhurua, Tekām, Markām, Uika, Purtai, Marai, and
others. A few names of Hindi origin are also found, as Ahindwār,
Ranchirai and Rāthoria, which show that some Hindus have probably
been amalgamated with the caste. Ahindwār or Aindwār and Ranchirai
mean a fish and a bird respectively in Hindi, while Rāthoria is a
gotra both of Rājpūts and Telis. The Gond names are probably also
those of animals, plants or other objects, but their meaning has now
generally been forgotten. Tekām or teka is a teak tree. Sonwāni is
a sept found among several of the Dravidian tribes, and the lower
Hindu castes. A person of the Sonwāni sept is always chosen to
perform the ceremony of purification and readmission into caste of
persons temporarily excommunicated. His duty often consists in
pouring on such a person a little water in which gold has been placed
to make it holy, and hence the name is considered to mean Sonāpāni
or gold-water. The Agarias do not know the meanings of their section
names and therefore have no totemistic observances. But they consider
that all persons belonging to one gotra are descended from a common
ancestor, and marriage within the gotra is therefore prohibited. As
among the Gonds, first cousins are allowed to marry.2.
Marriage.Marriage
is usually adult. When the father of a boy wishes to arrange a
marriage he sends emissaries to the father of the girl. They open the
proceedings by saying, ‘So-and-so has come to partake of your stale
food.’2
If the father of the girl approves he gives his consent by saying,
‘He has come on foot, I receive him on my head.’ The boy’s
father then repairs to the girl’s house, where he is respectfully
received and his feet are washed. He is then asked to take a drink of
plain water, which is a humble method of offering him a meal. After
this, presents for the girl are sent by a party accompanied by tomtom
players, and a date is fixed for the marriage, which, contrary to the
usual Hindu rule, may take place in the rains. The reason is perhaps
because iron-smelting is not carried on during the rains and the
Agarias therefore have no work to do. A few days before the wedding
the bride-price is paid, which consists of 5 seers each of urad and
til and a sum of Rs. 4 to Rs. 12. The marriage is held on any Monday,
Tuesday or Friday, no further trouble being taken to select an
auspicious day. In order that they may not forget the date fixed, the
fathers of the parties each take a piece of thread in which they tie
a knot for every day intervening between the date when the marriage
day is settled and the day itself, and they then untie one knot for
every day. Previous to the marriage all the village gods are
propitiated by being anointed with oil by the Baiga or village
priest. The first clod of earth for the ovens is also dug by the
Baiga, and received in her cloth by the bride’s mother as a mark of
respect. The usual procedure is adopted in the marriage. After the
bridegroom’s arrival his teeth are cleaned with tooth-sticks, and
the bride’s sister tries to push sāj leaves into his mouth, a
proceeding which he prevents by holding his fan in front of his face.
For doing this the girl is given a small present. A paili3
measure of rice is filled alternately by the bride and bridegroom
twelve times, the other upsetting it each time after it is filled. At
the marriage feast, in addition to rice and pulse, mutton curry and
cakes of urad pulse fried in oil are provided. Urad is held in great
respect, and is always given as a food at ceremonial feasts and to
honoured guests. The greater part of the marriage ceremony is
performed a second time at the bridegroom’s house. Finally, the
decorations of the marriage-shed and the palm-leaf crowns of the
bride and bridegroom are thrown into a tank. The bride and bridegroom
go into the water, and each in turn hides a jar under water, which
the other must find. They then bathe, change their clothes, and go
back to the bridegroom’s house, the bride carrying the jar filled
with water on her head. The boy is furnished with a bow and arrows
and has to shoot at a stuffed deer over the girl’s shoulder. After
each shot she gives him a little sugar, and if he does not hit the
deer in three shots he must pay 4 annas to the sawāsa or page. After
the marriage the bridegroom does not visit his wife for a month in
order to ascertain whether she is already pregnant. They then live
together. The marriage expenses usually amount to Rs. 15 for the
bridegroom’s father and Rs. 40 for the bride’s father. Sometimes
the bridegroom serves his father-in-law for his wife, and he is then
not required to pay anything for the marriage, the period of service
being three years. If the couple anticipate the ceremony, however,
they must leave the house, and then are recalled by the bride’s
parents, and readmitted into caste on giving a feast, which is in
lieu of the marriage ceremony. If they do not comply with the first
summons of the parents, the latter finally sever connection with
them. Widow marriage is freely permitted, and the widow is expected
to marry her late husband’s younger brother, especially if he is a
bachelor. If she marries another man with his consent, the new
husband gives him a turban and shoulder-cloth. The children by the
first husband are made over to his relatives if there are any.
Divorce is permitted for adultery or extravagance or ill-treatment by
either party. A divorced wife can marry again, but if she absconds
with another man without being divorced the latter has to pay Rs. 12
to the husband.3.
Birth and death ceremonies.When
a woman becomes pregnant for the first time, her mother goes to her
taking a new cloth and cakes and a preparation of milk, which is
looked on as a luxurious food, and which, it is supposed, will
strengthen the child in the womb. After birth the mother is impure
for five days. The dead are usually burnt, but children under six
whose ears have not been pierced, and persons dying a violent death
or from cholera or smallpox are buried. When the principal man of the
family dies, the caste-fellows at the mourning feast tie a cloth
round the head of his successor to show that they acknowledge his new
position. They offer water to the dead in the month of Kunwār
(September-October).
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