The Marāthā clan system (also referred to as Shahaannav / 96 Kuli Marathas or 96K) refers to the network of families and surnames within the Maratha culture of India. The Marathas primarily reside in the Indian states of Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat, Karnataka, Goa and Tamilnadu.[1] Various lists have been compiled, purporting to list the 96 clans, but these lists are often at great variance with each other.[2]
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The list of ninety-six clans is divided into five ranked tiers, the highest of which contains the five primary Marathan clans.[3]
The issue is clouded by the fact that members of the Kunbi cultivator class living in Maharashtra also adopted some of the Maratha names, whether to indicate allegiance to a Maratha chief of that name, or as an attempt at upward mobility. As an example of the latter, researcher Rosalind O'Hanlon quoted the Marathi proverb: Kunbi majhala Maratha jhala ("When a kunbi prospers he becomes a Maratha").[2]
One of the clans, the Bhonsle, launched the Maratha Empire which covered a large part of India in the 17th and 18th centuries.[4]