2015.262278.Caste-In India J H Hutton - Text
2015.262278.Caste-In India J H Hutton - Text
2015.262278.Caste-In India J H Hutton - Text
FOURTH EDITION
BOMBAY
OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
DELHI CALCUTTA MADRAS
Oxford University Press
OXFORD LONDON GLASGOW
NEW YORK TORONTO MELBOURNE WELLINGTON
NAIROBI DAR ES SALAAM CAPE TOWN
KUALA LUMPUR SINGAPORE HONG KONG TOKYO
DELHI BOMBAY CALCUTTA MADRAS KARACHI
y
I"
*
^khiktkuS'^
Part V
Bibliography
263
Glossary
276
Index
299
Maps folded at end
A. Areas referred to in the text
B. Places and Physical Features referred to in the text
j
PREFACE
In this edition of Caste inIndia little new matter will be found.
One or two minor mistakes have been corrected, an omission or
two rectified. A few slight alterations have been made in order
to conform to some of the internal changes of administrative
boundaries in India, e.g. of the partition of Bombay into Gujarat
and Maharashtra; but N.E.F.A. and Nagaland will be found
alluded to as if they were still part of Assam. They never had
very much in common
with the Assam Valley proper, but the
same applies to other hill tribes like the Khasi and the
Lushei who are still included administratively in the state
of Assam. Otherwise there has been no change. That is not
intended to imply that the caste system itself has suffered no
change, but it is likely that such change as has taken place since
the third, or perhaps even since the first edition was published,
is hardly yet perceptible in day-to-day social life, at any rate in
Institute vol. Ixxxv, pp. 101-10, was overlooked, and there have
1 Caste in Modern India and Other Essays, pp 5 sqq. and Essay I passim.
viii PREFACE
appeared since Aspects of Caste in South India, Ceylon
and
North-West Pakistan, edited by Dr E. R. Leach, Dr McKim
Marriotts Caste Ranking and Community Structure
in Five
Regions of India and Pakistan, Professor Irawati Karv^s
Changing India: Aspects of Caste Society, her Hindu Society:
an
Interpretation (see Man, 1962, 254), and Mrs Taya Zinkins Caste
Today. The two last items taken together will give an admirable
idea of the practical working of caste, in the past
and in the
j^esent, to anyone unfamiliar with it at first hand;
they make
an excellent supplement to Professor Srinivas account of the
current political aspects of caste. All trf these are of
course more
up-to-date than I can be. and Professors Karve
and Srinivas at
any rate have the advantage of seeing thie caste system from
inside. ,
MEW MmoR H. H.
J.
luly xs63
uv uT
published. The 7 of*ndia
aijiyal
since Caste in India was first
independence and a purely Indian
^eminent has i^ble legislation which wo^ild live been
imptt^per ewn a i e^
possible to an alien administratitm,
and the leaders of thou^t and policy in India seem
generally
to hare o the decuion that the caste system must
go. If
that be indeed the caM it 1$ perhaps
jMotly on the ground that
die caste syrtem is a hindrance to industrial
development and
eccHUwic advance, but more particularly under the urge
of an
altruistic and humanitarian desire for
an improvement in the
condition of the depressed classes, and a feeling that the
caste
system is bound up with the untouchability of the exterior
castes and is discreditable therefore to a
modern society. Legis-
lation then has been undertaken in an attempt to deal with this
situation.
In 1931 it^ was redtoned that the exterior castes numbered
over fifty million; in 1951 nearly fifty-two million 'untouch-
ables were counted; in i960 the scheduled castes are spoken
ofi as nuinbering fifty-five million. The Indian Constitution
makes special provision for the scheduled castes, and in 1955 the
Indian parliament enacted the Untouchability (Offences) Act,
which laid down severe penalties for anyone acting on ancient
custom to prohibit to excluded castes the use of temples, wells,
schools, shops, eating-houses, or theatres, or to treat them as in
any way separate or inferior. In the agencies of central and of
state governments one post in eight of those filled by compe-
titive examination is reserved for them, and standards and age
limits are adjust^ to their poorer education; government
schedarships are likewise reserved for students from their com-
munities. Caste^ Hindus are encouraged by the offer of free
board and lodgii^f to enter hostels intended to accommodate
exterior castes, ^d
aU hostels accepting government aid are
^
Midsummer, 1^0
PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION
In this second edition of Caste in India the author has to
acknowledge with thanks his indebtedness to the many kind
reviewers of the first edition for improvements in this one. He
has done his best to take advantage of all criticisms except one
or two which he found it impossible to accept, and one which
required something beyond his powers: having no Sanskrit he
was compelled to continue to rely on translations of the vedas
and puranas instead of consulting the original texts. He has
moreover made little attempt to recast his material in the terms
of India and Pakistan as they appear after their achievement of
independent status, but has thought it wiser to retain the termi-
nology of the India with which he was personally familiar. In
the few passages cont2dning words, references, or quotations from
Greek literatmre Roman script has been substituted for the Greek
lettering used in the original edition. Otherwise he has added
a little, he has altered a litde, and he has to thank Mr Martin
Rowlands of the School of Geography in Cambridge for two
admirable maps, one showing areas, the other places and geo-
graphical features. The general aim in these maps has been to
insert all places mentioned in the text, and, with the object
of keeping the maps as dear as possible in a small space, such
places only.
It should perhaps be added that it was largely the appreciative
reception of the first edition by Indians that encouraged the
author to publish a second, and to get it done in India itself,
a country to which his lasting gratitude is due. And in this
connexion the author has to acknowledge n<^ only the generosity
of the Cambri<%e University Press in allowing him to transfer the
work to another press when the first edition was sold out, but
also the courtesy and the efficiency of the printers and puHisbers
in3ombay.
J. H. H.
NEW EADNOn
November
FOREWORD TO THE FIRST EDITION
It isprobable that some sort of an apology is needed from
anyone who is bold enough to add to the great mass of literature
As however
caste *
is a collective noun I hold that I am
entitled to use either number in the verb that follows, and I have
deliberately declined to be unnecessarily (as it seems to me) con-
sistent in this matter. If thereader is offended thereby, I offer
him my apologies forma.
I have to acknowledge the kindness of the Government of
India in giving me leave to reproduce as appendices to this
volume an appendix (ii) from my report on
and a chapter (xi)
CAMBRIDGE
p October
CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTORY
The subcontinent of India has been likened to a deep net into
which various races and peoples of Asia have drifted and been
caught. It is of course divided from the rest of Asia by the high
barrier of the Himalayas and from the other parts of the outside
world by sea. This isolation has not prevented numbers of races
from migrating into India, but it has led to the development of
society on peculiar lines of its Together with Pakistan
India ^ contains nearly a fifth of the world's population, some 530
millions of people, and being a natural geographical unit there
is inevitably much
that this great population has in common.
At the same time it is composed of all sorts of different elements
of great diversity, of different creeds, different customs, and even
different colours. All these varied peoples have been enabled
to live together, in conditions of comparative stability and
forming what may be described as a. multiple society, by the
caste system, which must probably be regarded as having deve-
loped as a sort of organic response to the requirements of the
particular case. Geographical circumstances have imposed a
certain unity on the inhabitants of the peninsula, whereas the
diverse origins of the people have dictated variety. The view
put forward in this volume is that it is caste which has made
it possible %r both requirements to be satisfied within a single
values to refer to the whole peninsula in which India in its more recent
sense and Pakistan are included.
1
3 THE BACKGROUND
they are regarded as outside the ordinary pale of society and
suffer disabilities accordingly,
but that is perhaps an incidental
rather than an essential feature of the caste system.
Each The customs by which it
caste is a social unit in itself.
lives are generally different in
some respects from those of other
castes, and are sometimes in marked contrast to those of
any
other caste at all. Persons of one caste do not marry those of
another. The extent to which persons of one caste will eat or
drink with those of another is strictly limited by unwritten laws
and everybody knows who is affected by them. Even a change
of religion does not destroy the caste system, for Muslims,
who
do not recognize it as valid, are often found to observe it in
practice,and there are many Muslim castes as well as Hindu;
and when some reforming body breaks away from Hinduism
and repudiates caste, it becomes something very like a
new caste
of its own.
Jews and Christians also in India often form castes
or bodies analogous to castes.
There are thought to be some 3,000 castes in India,
and it
would need an encyclopaedia to deal with them all.
Some are
derived from tribal or racial elements, some are
occupational,
being of the nature originally perhaps of guilds
of artificers or
craftsmen, some are territorial, some religious, and so fortl^.
The
original bond which united the members of a caste ^as
often
been different in different cases, but it is
suggested that the
society of the country as a whole has
been buiU up by the inte-
grauon of these different units into an orgafiic
community, and
one into which a new unit is fitted without
difficulty, while any
^oup that breaks ^way from other upTts can as easily
form itself
into a new cell within the structure,
and will indeed find it
almost impossible to do anything else.
To get some idea of the vaii-ious peoples which
have contri-
buted to this society one must
consider what is known of
^pauons into India. To judge by other areas of
south-east
Asia It seems likely that the
earliest human inhabitants of the
Indian peninsula of which any trace
survives were Negritos--
vtxy dark pygmies with peppercorn
hair, marked steatopygia,
and generally between 4 and 5 feet high.
There are several sLh
tribes still surviving in Malaya
and the Philippine Islands, and
there are somewhat kindred tribes in
New Guinea. They have
survived in an almost unmixed form in
the Andaman Islands in
INTRODUCTORT 3
the Bay of Bengal, though in rapidly dwindling numbers, and
traces of their blood are possibly to be seen in some of the
forest tribes of southern India, like the Kadars of the Cochin
forests, in occasional individuals in remote and hiUy areas such
were a racial one; it is only used here for want of a better term, and
because it is familiar.
6 THE BACKGROUND
language, and it is not unlikely that they had, at any rate to
some extent, fair hair and blue eyes. Their religion was a form
of nature worship, expressed in the hymns to their nature deities
which we know as the Rigveda. These people occupied and
settled in the Punjab in the north-west of India, later sending
colonies farther east and filtering through central India into the
south. Over the whole of northern India Aryan languages have
generally superseded all others, and though they have never
succeeded in doing this in southern India, they have naturally
succeeded in modifying some of the languages of that part of the
peninsula.
These Indo-Europeans were followed in subsequent centuries
by many invasions on a smaller scale. Between 600 b.c. and the
beginning of the Christian era northern India was invaded by
Persians and Greeks, and after them by the Sakas or Scythians
and by the Kushans, who were a nomad tribe from Central Asia.
Again in the fifth century a.d. another horde of nomads from
central Asia, the Huns, invaded northern India. In the eighth
century the Muslim invasions began with an Arab invasion of
Sind, and Muslim invasions of one sort or another continued'
until the establishment of the Mughal Empire in the sixteenth
century, by which time the Portuguese had already founded
their settlement at Goa. From the other direction the
Mongoloid Shans had invaded Assam, and Mongolians no
doubt already occupied the higher mountains all along the
northern fringe of India.
It is from such diverse elements that the peoples of India are
derived, ahd although the development of the caste system and
its stabilization have crystallized the peoples of India into a
large number of fairly 'watertight* communities, the barriers
between them were less rigid while the system was in its early
development than they are now, and even now they are not
all immutable. Consequently the differences between caste and
caste, in so far as they are racial, are rather differences of degree
of mixture than absolute differences of race and type. In some
cases it is easier to differentiate between Indian racial types
hy
area than by caste,^ and of course it is possible that in the course
of time different geographical environments may have played some
part in establishing physical differences between the inhabitants
^ Vide Guba, op. cit., particularly with reference to his map on p. lag.
INTRODUCTORY 7
for, while the climate has favoured the growth of heavy forest
most in the south, the shape of India has tended to drive early
inhabitants southwards under pressure, no doubt, of migrations
and invasions from the north. In this introductory glance at
the background of caste, then, it will be convenient to start with
the south of India, and the most primitive of the people to be
found there, working northwards and then across India from
west to east, and thence north-westwards again into the Hima-
layas which form the northern boundary of the Indian penin-
sula, It will be understood that in a survey so restricted of an
area so vast and a population so varied it is only possible to
generalize on broad lines.
SOUTHERN INDIA
Perhaps the most primitive of the south Indian forest tribes is
that of the Kadar of Cochin State, a tribe in which the proto-
Australoid element is definitely predominant. For an un-
questionable Negrito we have to go outside the mainland of
India to the Andaman Islands. The Eadar have only
got some suggestions of similar physical characteristics, but,
like the Andamanese, they live by hunting and the collection
of forest produce. They bury their dead, observe no period
of taboo after a death has occurred in the family, and erect no
memorial. They file or chip the incisor teeth to a point. Like
the Andamanese the Eadar are very rapidly dying out, largely,
apparently, as the result of their having taken to opium and
distilled liquor, which has been given them by alien contractors
employing their services.^
Another tribe of southern India living in an extremely primi-
tive way by hunting and digging for roots is the Mala-Pantaram
tribe of Travancore. Their principal or only weapon and
implement is with the point hardened in the fire, and
a stick
they have no domestic animal except the dog. Being entirely
dependent on hunting and food collecting they need about two
square miles of forest per head to support themselves. Their
form of burial is very simple; the dead are just buried where
they die and the group leaves the place and moves elsewhere.
They arq nomads within a limited area, and their dwellings
either rock shelters or flimsy huts of leaves. Unlike most of
their neighbours they are not matrilineal, but reckon descent
through the father. A very similar tribe is that of the Paliyan
of Madura district. They, too, do not cultivate, and live
entirely by collecting forest produce and snaring and trapping
wild animals and birds; they own no personal property except
the clothes they wear, a few of the simplest utensils, a digging
stick like that of the Pantaram, and a bill-hook. They depend
largely on wild honey and on the sale of the wax from its
combs. To get the honey a man is commonly let down over
^ Report on the Census of Indta^ 1951, vol. 1 (India), pt. iii-B, pp. aij sqq.
SOUTHERN INDIA %
2 Ibid.,
pp. 195 sq.
3 L. A. K. Iyer, Travancore Tribes, i, p. 159, and illustrations at pp. 145,
149 -
10 THE BACKGROUND
The peoples of southern India, other than the primitive jungle
tribes of pre-Dravidian race, are roughly divisible into four
groupsthose of Telingana or the Andhra country, of the
Tamilnad, of the Carnatia and of Kerala. The first of these
corresponds roughly with the distribution of the Telugu lan-
guage, which is spoken along the east coast of India from the
Pulicat lake, a little north of Madras itself, in the south to
Kalingapatam at the mouth of the Vamsadhara and the Orissa
boundary in the north. Inland it stretches back into
Hyderabad (formerly the Nizam's Dominions), to Sandur
and to the eastern districts of Mysore south of that. The
second occupies the whole of the eastern side of India
south of Pulicat lake, from the Coromandel coast, that is, to
the Western Ghats from Cape Comorin to the Nilgiri Hills.
This is the home of the Tamil language. The term Carnatic *
are noted for the outbreaks of rioting between the castes of the
Right Hand and of the Left, two ancient factions in which the
low castes of Mala and Madiga are respectively prominent as
protagonists. The Chindu dance performed by Madigas with
bells on their legs at marriages, and festivals generally, has had
to be prohibited in several districts on account of its infuriating
effect on the Malas, and of the resulting riots. The Tamil
seems generally to be of a harder-headed, more practical turn
of mind than the Telugu, similar musical gifts being combined
with a peculiar aptitude for mathematics and physics. The
Tamil community Brahmans in particular have produced
^ Vide Thurston, Castes and Tribes^ v, pp.
75 sqq. The same practice
used to be followed by the Okkaliga of Mysore and Kanara. Vide Iyer and
Nanjundayya, The Mysore Tribes and Castes, rv, pp, sts^ sqq.
Vide infra, p, 70.
U THE BACKGROUND
whose names are well known in Europe. Among the
physicists
lower Tamilnad are the criminal tribes known as
classes of the
Kallar and Maravar, more or less professional cattle thieves
who have a notable bull cult very suggestive of the Mediterra-
nean, whether of ancient Mycenae or of modern Portugal.
Bulls with sharpened horns are driven to fury, and the young
man who wishes to distinguish himself and prove himself a
desirable match for the lady of his choice must jump on the
bulFs back and recover a doth from its horns.^ Another caste
of the Tamil country with rather unusual customs is that of the
who live in a walled fort of some 20 acres extent,
Kottai Vellala
insidewhich no male of any other caste is allowed to enter
and outside which no woman of the Kottai Vellala caste is
allowed to go. The family dwelling-house passes to the
youngest daughter, and u daughter who marries continues to
live in it until her younger sister marries. The caste is a very
small one, a contrast in this respect to the Kallar. Tamils of
the poorer classes have emigrated in large numbers as labourers
to Ceylon and also to Malaya and elsewhere.
The caste known as Kammalan or Panchala should be men-
tioned, as it consists of the artisans of five occupational sections--
goldsmiths, braziers, carpenters, stonemasons, and blacksmiths.
They daim descent from Viswakarma, the architect of the
gods, and equality with Brahmans. They intermarry (though
the goldsmiths will not intermarry with the blacksmiths) and
have most elaborate guild organizations. When, as they some-
times do, they bury their dead instead of cremating them, they
use a stone-lined grave, in which apparently they place the
deceased in a sitting position, in contradistinction to the culti-
who do not line the grave with stone and generally
vating castes
bury the body extended. The Chetti, a caste of bankers,
brokers, shopkeepers, moneylenders and traders, have a large
number and of much
of subdivisions; being in general wealthy
businessacumen their social importance is greater than mere
numbers would warrant. One other Tamil caste must be
mentioned here and that is the more humble one of the Kuruba,
whose traditional occupation is the keeping of sheep and the
weaving of woollen doth and blankets. They seem strictly to
divided into the White Jews of pure Hebraic descent and the
Black Jews who .nclude local converts and persons of mixed
descent. Linschoten remarks that the White Jews speak good
Spanish and says that they came direct from Palestine, and
Crooke classifies them with Spanish Jews as Sephardim.^ The
Moplahs (Mappila) of Malabar are generally regarded as partly
of Arab extraction, much reinforced by local converts. The
more southerly have the reputation of being exceptionally
fanatical Muslims, and in frequent rebellions have earned a
reputation for complete disregard of personal safety in their
which has also shown itself in attempts at whole-
religious zeal,
sale conversion ofHindus to Islam by force.
Among the non-Nayar Hindu castes of Malabar mention must
be made of the Tiyar, a caste corresponding to the Shanan of
the Tamil country, whose traditional occupation is the extrac-
tion of toddy from palm trees, and the Iruvan, who seem to
have reached Malabar by sea from the Indian archipelago by
way of Ceylon; the Panan caste also is of interest for its
picturesque practice of the curing of sickness by dancing in the
guise of demons about the body of the sick, a practice used also
by the Malayar, as well as by the Parava caste.
The landward isolation of the Malabar coast from the rest
of the Indian peninsula has led to the survival there of ancient
forms of society. It has also led to the survival of ancient
physical types, for the immigration of broad-headed elements,
probably coming down the west coast of India from the Iranian
plateau somewhere about the third millennium b.c., has hardly
penetrated this area at and the Nambudri Brahmans from
all,
Things Indian,
i6 THE BACKGROUND
bow and arrow put into his hands as a symbol, and athletic
arc
contests of one kind or another form a
common feature of
ceremonial or festive gatherings/^ The uniform brachycephaly
of these mountaineers, in marked contrast to the dolichocephdy
of most of Madras, indicates Coorg as the southern extremity
2
CHAPTER III
^ aofphysical
lity
type the are more
Parsis
Indians of Bombay than another
from the genera-
distinct
community of foreign
WESTERN, CENTRAL, AND EASTERN INDIA 19
From a tribe the Koli has become a Hindu caste, but retains in
his appearance the physique of the earlier inhabitants of India.
Above him in the social scale is the widespread cultivating caste
of the west coast, the Kunbi, the typical peasant of western India
who probably contributed largely to the rank and file of that
fighting race the Marathas. The heard of in
Marathas, first
doubtful in the case of some of the jungle tribes that still survive
in small numbers in the west of India, tribes such as the Chodhra
or the Katkari, who up a meagre and nomadic living by
pick
down as labourers
collecting forest produce, or sometimes settle
on the land of their employers. One famous tribe of western
India, however, is still numerous and vigorous, and that is the
Bhn tribe, an important section of which is to be found in the
former Bombay province, though it extends widely into Rajputa-
na to the north and into central India eastwards. Bhili, the tribal
language, is an Indo-Aryan tongue, but it probably replaces an
older Dravidian tongue, and perhaps a Kolarian language before
that. The tribesmen, partially Hinduized now in most districts,
but in some professing a rather unorthodox form of Muslim
and tribal conscious-
faith, still retain their tribal organization
ness. Most them are now peaceful cultivators, but in the
of
past they have been renowned for brigandage and lawlessness.
They are a smallish, swarthy race, very expert in the use of the
bow. There are a number of different sections of the Bhil tribe
each divided into many exogamous and totemistic dans. They
have been said to venerate the horse above other animals, but
theiir chief festivals are those in honour of the dead. They are
inveterate believers in witchcraft, and their women, who have
much freedom and influence, used in former times to accompany
their menfolk into battle, using slings with great effect.
do, using their oxen as pack animals for transporting grain and
living in temporary camps. They used to do not a little business
in the disposal of loot and in the purchase and sale of children.
Their women are noted for good looks, domestic freedom, and
a remarkable headdress in which a shawl is- raised above the
head by a wooden horn resting on the back hair.
pp.
to' vn'^w ^' r
fIndus of an Indian
and the West (el OMalley).
WESTERN, CENTRAL, AND EASTERN INDIA 25
ently some of the ancient Irish, of displaying their affection
for their deceased relatives by eating their bodies in piety.
If the Birhors ever did have this custom, they have abandoned
itfor at least a couple of generations, but similar
customs are
not unknown in other parts of the world, and there
is nothing
inherently improbable in the tradition of its
having existed
among the Birhors.
12 Eiithoven, Tribes and Castes, ra, pp. 138 sqq.; Thurston, Castes and
Tribes, v, p. 424. ^
WESTERI^ , CENTRAL, AND EASTERN INDIA
can eat together and no one be defiled. Sir William Hunter,
indeed, recorded that he had seen a Brahman priest accept
this food from the hand of a Christian. Pilgrimage to Jagan-
nath secures all sorts of earthly blessings and gives liberation
from sin. Indeed, on the entry of the pilgrims by the Lion
Gate of Puri a man of the scavenger caste used to strike them
with his broom to sweep away all sin and compelled them to
promise not to disclose the secrets of the shrine.^*
M ./
3* THE BACKGROUND
converted to Islam, but the aristocracy indudes a number ojE an-
cient families of Arabic or Mughal lineage. It is the Bengali
Muslim of eastern Bengal and of Sylhet who supplies a very high
proportion of the Indian seamen and lascars serving in British
merchantmen. In the extreme east of Bengal the Chittagong
Hill Tracts contain more or less Mongolian
tribes, some of
them Buddhists like the Maghs and Mru, others like
>
the
Chakma more or less Hinduized, but all really having more
in common with the lull tribes to their north
in Assam than
with the inhabitants of the plains of Bengal. In the
Himalayan
and sub-Himalayan areas again many Mongoloid tribes,
like
the Lapcha, are found, and in the delta areas of
eastern Bengjal
a number of Feringhees, now mostly cultivators,
who
Hair^i
descent from the Portuguese pirates who once
occupied Chitta-
gong and thence in the seventeenth century raided
Bengal as
far west as Dacca and Calcutta.
CHAPTER IV
NORTHERN INDIA
Proceeding up the Ganges one passes from Bengal into Bihar,
and thence into- the province of Awadh (Oudh). These areas
form a meeting place of the outer and inner bands of Indo-
Aryan languages and are likewise, at any rate in the case of
Bihar, the area of change from the broad-headed Bengali type
to the long-headed type characteristic of Upper India. Here-
abouts was the stronghold of Buddhism before it was overthrown
and extinguished by the Brahmanistic reaction, while farther to
the west, between the Ganges and the Jumna, was the centre
of Hinduism par excellence, the sacred land from which
Brahmans were distributed to many other parts of the peninsula.
There are of course many castes and classes of Brahmans, and
they are not all so intellectual and refined as the high-class
pandits of Benares. Moreover, it is only a minority of the
Brahman castes which exercises priestly functions. Brahmans
practise in all the learned professions as lawyers, land agents,
clerks, etc., and act not infrequently as cooks, since most Hindus
will eat food cooked by a Brahman of good standing. It is
probable that more than one racial element has gone into the
composition of most Brahman castes, and perhaps they represent
the priesthoods of what were once different, even antagonistic,
religions, but there is no gainsaying the fact that the Brahmans
of Upper India in general have preserved their purity of blood
and their intellectual ascendancy for a very long period.
Brahmans like the Gayawals of Gaya, who maintain themselves
in idleness on the offerings of pilgrims to their holy city, or the
Chaubes of Mathura, who are more celebrated for their skill in
wresding than in learning, are generally held in comparative
disrepute;^ Apart jErom Rajputs, the castes which probably
stand next to Brahmans in social position and are in some ways
allied to them are the Babhan, and the Bhat. The Babhan
are land-holders particularly associated with Bihar and daim
to be Brahmans who have given up the priesdy function for a
life of agriculture. Their social divisions, however, suggest
aflBinities with Rajputs rather than Brahmans. The Taga caste
1 Crooke, Northern India, pp. 99 sq.
3
34 THE BA CKGROU ND
of the Upper Ganges valley and the neighbourhood of Agra
have similar traditions and a similar status. The Bhats, who
daim a Brahman extraction, as the similar caste of Charan does
a Rajput one, are hereditary genealogists and heralds who used
in particular to act as escorts to protect persons and property
passing through areas of freebooters in northern India where
brigandage was almost a profession. The Bhat secured a safe
passage for his convoy by committing suicide if it were plun-
dered, when the firm belief that the plunderers would be for
ever haunted by his outraged ghost was enough to deter -them
from becoming the cause of his death.
The ^eat cultivating caste of Bihar and Awadh is that of the
Kuirmi, a caste equivalent in status to the Kunbi of the Maratha
country; while the Ahirs, graziers, occupy much the same sort
of position. Very numerous also in
this part of India, though
absent elsewhere, the caste or tribe known as Bhar who have
is
N ORTHERN INDIA $5
in the Report on the Censm of India, 1931, vol, i, pt, iii a, pp. 17 sqq.;
Crooke, and Castes, ii, s.v. Bom.
5
Ehrenfels, Mother-tight in India, pp. 1:58 sq.
Crooke, Tod's Annals and Antiquities
of Rajasthan, pp. xxxi sqq.;
Baines, Ethnography, p. 31.
36 THE BACKGROUND
descendants of the Sun, of the Moon, and of Fire, reflects such
a threefold origin and that, while the descendants of the Sun
and of the Moon go back to the Rigvedic age and earlier, the
Fire-descended Rajputs were of later origin and became Rajputs
in virtue of a ritual of purification by and rebirth from fire
after the Hindu reaction against Buddhism had devastated its
Rajput supporters. There are generally said to be thirty-six
royal clans of Rajputs, but the lists vary and some include the
Huns, and also the Jats, which latter are more often regarded
as a lower caste and who are perhaps derived from
comparatively
late immigrants. Indeed, the distinction between the Rajput
and the Jat is in some degree more social than racial, and the
same applies again to the distinction lower down the scale
between the Jat and the Gujar. The principal clans of the
Solar line are those of Sesodiya, Kachwaha and
Rathor; of the
Lunar line those of Yadava and Tonwar; and of the Fire-
descended lines those of Ponwar, Chauhan, Parihar and
Solanki.
Some inscriptions record the marriage of Rajput princes, among
the Sesodiya, for instance, with Hun wives. Many of the
dynasties ruling in Rajputana states in 1946 can be
still
shown to
have been established between the seventh and eleventh
centuries
A.D. The earliest Sesodiya inscription in Rajputana is dated
A.D. 646, when that dan migrated eastwards from Gujarat to rule
in Udaipur. The Bhatti, a sept of the
Yadava or Jadu dan,
came in the eighth century to Jaisalmer and still
rules there,
and about the same time the Chauhan settled in
Sambhar, but
later migrated southwards to Sirohi,
Bundi and Kotah states.
The Kachwaha came from Gwalior to Jaipur early in the
twdfth century, and the Rathor settled in
Jodhpur in the
thirteenth. The Princes of Bikaner and of Kishengarh also
belonged to this illustrious dan. It has
been said of this clan,
which IS freer than most from taboos
on food and
tonk, that they are soldiers first and
Hindus after that.
The Rajputs, with their quasi-feudal tribal system, their
romantic character and chivalrous valour,
and their punctilious
regard for personal honour, have
been well described by Tod
in his Annals and Antiqvities
of Rajasthan, which, although his
speculations as to origins and affinities
are out of date has
rightly been described as the
most comprehensive monograph
ever compiled by a British officer describing one of the leading
NORTHERN INDIA 37
The population
of the Punjab the land of Five Rivers ^which
has often proved the best of all recruiting grounds for the Indian
army, falls generally into three groups Hindu, Sikh and
Muslimbut the differences between them are rather religious
than racial, at any rate if the Pathans and Baluchis of the
western Punjab be excluded. For the Punjabi Muhammadan
who provided such an important element in the Indian army is
commonly of Rajput extraction, as are many of the Sikh rulers,
while the Jats who form perhaps the most important element
in the population of the Punjab may be either Hindu or Sikh
or Muslim, though the last are in the minority, and the typical
Punjab Jat is probably a Sikh. The Jat is a typical yeoman,
devoted to agriculture* and not particularly concerned in satisfy-
ing the requirements of orthodoxy, at any rate as a Hindu, so
that he takes a lower social level than the Rajput. His industry
is unceasing and every member of his family shares the work
in the fields.His reputation for stolidity and reticence has
caused him to be described as having grown grave and impassive
*
Cole, Rajputam Classes, ch. iv ; Rmsell, Tribes and Castes, jv, pp.
414 sqq.; Enthoven, Tribes and Castes, ni, pp. i?9q sqq.; Rose, Tribes and
Castes, III, p. 300 ; Ibbetson, Panjab Custes, pt. iii Crooke, Tribes and
;
Arabs from the west. There are, however, clear traces of the
Sakas and Huns in Sind, and the clan known as MahSr probably
preserves the name of the Epthalite Mihirs. The Rajputs of
the tenth century succeeded in expelling the Arabs, but were
converted to Islam by the later Muslim invaders from the north.
The Rajput title Jam is still used by Muslim descendants of
the old Rajput houses. Of the non-Muslim castes the Bhatias
and Lohanas are among the most important. They are very
similar in custom, both are trading castes, and the Bhatias at
any rate probably of Rajput extraction. The Bhatia are mostly
Hindu, but the Lohanas arc many of them Sikhs.
Of the Muslims of Sind, many are of Baloch origin, parti-
cularly in the west, and they are often organized as the followers
NORTHERN INDIA 41
darker, and among the Kanets of the Kulu valley, and the
Garhwalis, who again form an important element in the Indian
army, a shorter dark long-headed type is found akin to that of
the Indian plains. In Ladakh and in Lahaul and Spiti the
inhabitants become definitely more Mongoloid, and this latter
type predominates among the Gurkhas of the independent state
of Nepal as it does likewise in Sikkim and Bhutan to the east
CHAPTER V
ITS STRUCTURE
Let be understood at the outset that it is not intended to give
it
caste. But highly complex as it is, caste could only arise within a
limited area in which all the elements contributing to it were
associated over a long period of time. It is virtually incon-
ceivable that the association of circumstances necessary to pro-
duce so complex an institution as caste is in India could ever
be found in more than one area of the earth*s surface; and it is
probably significant that the geographical limits within which
the institution is manifest are such as have offered in the past
very considerable obstacles to perennial communications or easy
contacts of any kind.
The word caste comes from the Portuguese word casta,
* *
very far from being the same thing as a caste, the Hindi word
for which' is jati or jat. The relationship between varna and
jat is dealt with later on.
KetKar defines caste as a social group having two characteris-
under a common name, while these large groups are but sub-
divisions of groups still larger which have independent names.
Thus we see that there are several stages of groups and that
the word caste is applied to groups at any stage. The words
caste and subcaste are not absolute but comparative in
signification. The larger group will be called a caste while the
smaller group will be called a subcaste. A group is a caste or a
subcaste in comparison with smaller or larger. When we talk of
a Maratha Brahmin and Konkan Brahmin, the first one would
be called a caste while the latter would be called a subcaste;
but in a general way both of them might be called castes. . . .
4
50 CASTE
fenni, et, en thferie du moins^, rigoureusement h6r<5ditaire,
People of India, p. :*7o. And see Wise, Notes on the Races, Castes
and Trades of Eastern Bengal, pp. 194 sq.
Primitive Exogamy and the Caste System*, Proc. A,S.B., viii, no. 3,
iguj. *Vide infra, pp. us sq.
58 CASTE
of fishermen and Haliya (or Chasi) Kaibarttas who lived by
agriculture. But as the latter is a respectably regarded mode
of life while fishing is a despised calling, in the course of time
the practice arose on the part of the Haliya Kaibarttas of exact-
ing high prices for their daughters when married by Jaliya
Kaibarttas while themselves refusing to marry Jaliya women.^
Eventually the Haliya Kaibarttas broke away entirely, banning
all intermarriage with the Jaliya Kaibarttas, and succeeded in
-i
58 CASTM
castes only at the initiation ceremony {up&n&y&nS) at which the
sacred thread is assumed. In the case of an adopted son whose
gotra is not that of his adopting father he will be regarded as
belonging to two gotras for marriagfe purposes, unless, that is,
he is adopted in infancy before he has undergone the upanayana
ceremony. In the latter case his gotra should be that of his
adoptive parent.^
The gdtra then, though normally the exogamous group within
the endogamous caste or subcaste, is very far from being a stable
institution of consistent pattern, even among Brahman castes
themselves, and the only safe generalization that can be made is
of course, that castes which have only one gotra depend, though
castes with multiple gotra observe them no less. The most fami-
liar of these rules is the one known as that of sapindH.^^ Under
the sapinda rule, which is generally observed in castes of good
status, marriage is prohibited between any two persons who
possess a common ancestor within a certain number of degrees
on the fathers side and a smaller number of degrees on the
mothers. The actualnumber of prohibited degrees varies
in different castes
and in different parts of India seven degrees
on the. fathers side or five on the mothers is sometimes given
as the rule; six on the fathers side and four on the mothers
is a frequent standard, but the degrees on the mothers side
Brough (op. cit.) says that to bar marriage a majority of rishi names
must be identical, but it is possible that he is thinking in terms of pravara
containing the names of three rishts only.
39 The original meaning of s&pindd seems to be one who is under an
obligation, shared with the person using the term, to perform funeral cere-
monies for a father, grandfather, great-grandfather, and their wives, in
common. The term is derived from the Sanskrit word pinda, meaning the
cake of food offered to the departed at the funeral ceremonies.
tTS STRUCTURE 6i
riage with all patrilineal kindred and with the kindred of the
mother's brother, though permitting marriage with cousins
derived from a fathers or mothers sister, while others again
allow marriage with all but patrilinear cousins, i.e. have no
real sapinda rule at all. Some castes forbid a daughters being
married into her mothers family, a rule which Blunt explains
on the ground of h^jpergamy, but which may be a survival of
a matrilineal tradition.^ The generally accepted simple, rule
is that no marriage shall take place between a person and a
I
(5*) Mother*sfathersfather=Mothersathersmother(4)
Here ego may not marry into any of the he be lines (1) (7) if
a Satmulia, nor any descendant of he be a (8) or (9) either if
(dudh lautdna), the idea being that the taking of a woman from
her family is repaid by returning another in the next genera-
tion, which may imply a quasi-economic origin for the custom
its economic advantages in the way of keeping property in the
family are obvious or possibly the results of contact between
patrilocal tribes who wished to remove their wives from .matri-
local families, who insisted on a return in kind to the matrilocal
fold. However this may be, this very un-Brahmanical custom
is followed in many respectable castes of southern India; Iyer
remarks that the practice is creeping in to some sections of
*
'
ITS STRUCTURE 65
the Vedas while the Brahman was the utterer of prayer and
conductor of ceremonial, but apparently had no privilege on
that account and attained his greatest dignity as the purohita or
family priest of kings and princes, of the Rajanya that is, who
were the holders of the raj or government and possessors of
kshatra, authority. The highest religious authorities seem to
have been the sages or rishis, the poetical authors of the vedic
hymns, and these rishis came from any varna and belonged in
some cases to indigenous families; both Rajanya and Vaishya
52 Wilson, Indian Caste, i, p. 454.
5^ Ibid., p. 307.
^
I,
55 Vide Gait, Report on the Census of Bengal, 1901, pp. 379 and 381, and
cf. Colebrooke,
Enumeration of Indian Classes in Asiatic k Researches
*
66 CASTE
had the privilege of conducting certain sacrifices at any rate as
well as Brahmans, whose predominance does not appear until
the later or derivative vedas. Certain colours are associated
with the four varna ^white with the Brahman, red with the
Kshatriya, yellow with the Vaishya and black with the Sudra;
varna, as has been stated,means colour. It is possible that this
colour distinction some way associated with race, as one is
is in
reminded of the ancient Egyptian convention which showed
Egyptians red, Asiatics yellow. Northerners white and negroes
black; Hocart has strenuously attacked this hypothesis and
maintains that the traditional association of the colours of the
four varna with points of the compass ^white with the north,
red with the east, yellow with the south and black with the
west ^has a ritual, not a racial significance, and refers to the
four quarters of an enclosed town allotted respectively as dwell-
ing places to the different varna, outcastes having to live, as
they Still do, outside the village fence.
However that may varna are often claimed not only
be, the
to be of the nature of castes but up to a point to be castes
Brahman and Kshatriya at any rate are terms which seem at
first sight to be still in use as labels associated with particular
castes, while the term Vaishya has come back into use of recent
caste system as they knew it. At any rate the varna of the
present day is not a though it may be regarded as a group
caste,
of castes, and there a tendency among social reformers to
is
are Kanarese, do not always tally with the Tamil, and are in
some cases apparently purely occupational. A list is given by
Aiyangar,^ but that of the castes of the Right Hand is clearly
incomplete. Oppert gives a list which shows at least fifty-eight
castes of the Right and at least five of the Left, but it is dfficult
to identify all the castes in his lists, which contain other obscur-
ities also. The principal castes of the Left Hand are the fol-
lowing: Beri Chetti, Vaniyan (who yoke two bullocks to their
oil-press), Devanga (weavers), Golla (cowherds), Panchala (five
pp. 51 sqq*
Other references to this division into Right and Left will be found in
Thurston, Castes and Tribes, e.g. i, p. 35 ; ii, pp. 4, 11, ii ; m, pp. 40, 117
sq.; IV, pp. 295, 330, 335} ; v, pp, 474 sq.; vi, pp. 15, 91 ; in Sonnerat,
Voyages aux Indes, i, pp. 54 sqq.; in Hayavadana Rao, Indian Caste System,
pp. 73 sqq.; and in Love, Vestiges of Old Madras, i, pp. 118 sqq,
67 Op. cit., p. 65 n. 68 Castes and Tribes, vi, p. 15.
6 Loc. cit. 70 See Oppert, op. cit., p. 6s, n.
59.
ITS STRUCTURE 69
CHAPTER VI
ITS STRICTURES
The marital restrictions of caste have already been treated, as
they are vitally involved in the relationship of a caste to society
as a whole, bnt they are very far from being the only restrictions
which isolate or, rather, insulate one caste from another.
Indeed, seems possible that caste endogamy is more or less inci-
it
though he may be, and often is, on the ground that he has eaten
food cooked or served by her or taken water from her hands.^
This suggests that the taboo on marriage is the necessary and
inevitable outcome of the taboo on food and drink, rather than
the cause of it. Roscoe, indeed, has pointed out the efiEect of
food taboos in preventing intermarriage between pastoral and
agricultural peoples in central Africa.^
Now the taboo on food and water as between caste and caste
is subject to many gradations and variations It is often stated
water from the hands of any woman who had no tattoo spot, though this
taboo was breaking down in 1883. Vide Wise,<op. cit., p. 1*3.
7
CASTE
Ganges water, however, can be taken apparently even from
untouchables, on account of its sacred character which is beyond
pollution. There is a saying also that water is purified by air,
alluding to the common practice of pouring out water from
one main vessel into the drinking vessel of another. No one in
practice drinks out of a vessel belonging to another caste, though
theoretically a man
can drink from one that has been used only
by a higher than his own. This would, of course, make it
caste
useless to the higher caste owner. In northern India a Brahman
will take water poured into his lota (drinking vessel) by men of
several Sudra castes regarded as clean, e.g. Barhai (a carpenter
caste, claiming an origin from the god Viswakarman, the Archi-
tect of the Universe), Nai (the barber caste, the services of which
are important in much Hindu ritual), Bharbunja (grain-
parchers), Halwai (confectioners), Kahar (fishermen, well-sinkers,
and growers of water-nuts). The southern Brahman is more
particular, and in any case the water distributors at railway
stations are always Brahmans, so that anyone can accept water
poured out by them. As an instance of the variation shown
from place to place the Goala (cowherd) caste will serve. In
Bihar Brahmans can take water from them, but not in Bengal,
or at any rate in parts of Bengal. In the case of castes lower
than Brahman the restrictions on taking water may be somewhat
less rigid, at any rate in northern and north-eastern India, but
are approximately the same, a caste recognized as dean by
Brahmans being similarly recognized as such by other castes.
Restrictions in regard to eating are generally speaking more
severe than those which govern drinking, but do not depend, as
in that case, on who supplies the food but rather on who cooks
it. The cooking is very important, and a strangers shadow, or
even the glance of a man of low caste, ^ falling on the cooking pot
may necessitate throwing away the contents. Members of the
same exogamous unit can, of course, share each others food.
So, too, as a rule can members of different exogamous groups
who can intermarry, for a man must be able to eat food cooked
by his own household. Blunt maintains that this commensality
is a result of intermarriage, and that until such intermarriage
had taken place the two groups could not eat each others food.
^Thurston, Omens and Superstitions, p. 109.
0 Caste System, p. 89.
ITS STRICTURES 75
The Other way round, however, is perhaps the more likely, if one
comes before the other at all, and intermarriage takes place
because there is no taboo on interdining, A Kahar employed by
a superior casteBrahman, Rajput, Kayastha, etc. ^may eat
their leavings so long as he himself is r')t married; after
marriage he may not do so. Some castes v;ill not take food from
their own daughters once these daughters are married, even to
men own caste. ^ The ordinary cooked meal has to be
of their
prepared with much ceremony and care, rice boiled in water, or
chSpatij that is, bannocks, cakes of unleavened flour or meal
mixed with water and baked upon a griddle, form the staple
food of most castes, and these must be cooked, as Blunt says,
'
with the precautions of a magic ceremony. If away from the
regular household cooking-place, each man marks off his own
cooking-place, makes his own mud oven and cooks apart from
his fellows. He may cook for others of his own caste or subcaste
also,but so particular are most castes that a number of sarcastic
proverbs attach to their scruples Thirteen Rajputs, thirteen
cooking places Three Tirhut Brahmans and thirteen cooking
'
md Castes, 1, 56.
Molony, A Book of South India (i96), p. 109.
ITS STRICTURES 11
that it cannot be made really dean as well as on the use of
certain animals for food. The only castes that will eat beef
are untouchables like the Chamar (leather-worker) or some of
the scavenging castes like the Dom. The Dom is reputed to
eat tiger's flesh, while the monkey is probably eaten only by
primitive tribes, most of whom would taboo tiger flesh. Some
castes are at any rate in theory purely vegetarian, but this seems
to depend largely upon sect, Vaishnavas being vegetarians,
whereas Shaivas and Saktas eat meat. Even where meat is eaten,
most respectable castes eschew the domestic fowl and even more
the domestic pig. Mutton, goat and game, whether ground or
winged, is generally eaten freely, the superior Rajput eating
the wild pig as many other castes do. As regards fish, custom
varies greatly, more perhaps by locality than by social position.
Thus most respectable castes eat fish in Bengal, whereas in the
dry and sandy deserts of Raj pu tana the idea of eating fish causes
disgust, and traders coming from there to live in Assam refuse
to allow their lorries carrying goods to transport the disgusting
creatures. A
Marwari baniya (trader) has been heard to remark
that to carry fish for food was as bad as carrying snakes. Some
castes distinguish between fish with scales and those without,
and some, the Kewat, for instance, who will not eat fowl or pork,
will eat crocodile and tortoise. Certain vegetables are also
tabooed in some cases: Agarwalas will not eat turnips or
carrots; they and some others bar the onion, and according to
Blunt some subcastes bar turmeric and are called Haldiya
The pipe * is often just a coconut water-containex having an earthen-
*
ware tobacco bowl, connected with it by a vertical bamboo tube, and a hole
in the side of the upper part through which the smoke is inhaled.
Caste System, p. 96.
78 CASTE
(= Turmeric ones) accordingly, a fact which is rather suggestive
of totemism.
Since pollution may be incurred by contact through food or
drink it is not surprising that it should be carried by mere bodily
contact. Thus contact with a woman during her monthly
period, a woman within the tabooed period after childbirth, a
man who had lit a funeral pyre and is therefore tainted by death-
pollution till purified, or persons in a similar state of ceremonial
impurity or taboo, cause pollution and make it incumbent on
a Hindu of caste to bathe and wash his clothes before eating or
before undertaking any act requiring ceremonial purity. Similar
purification is strictly speaking necessary as a result of contact
with certain low castes whose traditional occupation, whether
actually followed or not, or whose mode of life places them
outside the pale of Hindu society. Such castes are those com-
monly spoken of as outcastes or untouchables. Thus Chamars
(they work in cowhide). Dhobis (they wash dirty, particularly
menstruously defiled, clothes), Dorns (they remove corpses),
sweeper castes, and many others who are impure because they
eat beef or the flesh of the domestic pig, all pollute a Brahman
by contact. Castes lower than a Brahman are generally speaking
less easily defiled, but the principle is the same, and contact with
castes or outcastes of this category used to entail early steps to
remove the pollution. Thus if a Cheruman, or Pulayan, be
touched by a Paraiyan, he is defiled and must wash his head
*
from the Nayar and the Cheruman 32 ft. from the Iravan. The
Nayadi when travelling has to avoid not only people of other
castes, but dwellings, tanks, temples, and even certain streams
when people are bathing in them. If a Nayadi touches the
water in which men of higher castes are bathing, the water loses
its purificatory qualities so long as the Nayadi is in contact with
it within the sight of the bathers. At Vilayur there is a tintal
para or pollution rock, which marks the limit within which
Nayadis may not approach the village. It is three furlongs from
there to the nearest Hindu house. An Ernadan must not come
within 400 yards of a village or 100 yards of a man of high
caste.-"^ If a man is polluted by a Nayadi, he must bathe in
23 Land of the Permauls, pp. 322, 323.
C/iarity, pp. s, 46. 25 Op. cit., 11,
::
2 p. 74,
Anthropology of the Nayadis, pp. i8 sqq.
27
The Emadan are a small jungle tribe of Malabar which is reported t6
have a r^arfable custom by which a man marries his
eldest daughter as
his second wife (Thurstop, Castes and Tribes, n, p. giy)
ITS STRICTURES 8i
seven streams and seven tanks and let blood from his little finger.
Ulladans and Paraiyans are mutually polluted by each other's
approach. Innes^ records that Nayadis had to avoid walking
over the long bridge over the Ponnani river and go miles round,
because if they walked over it they would pollute it, or any at
least who might make contact with their footprints, while the
Ande Koragas of Mangalore District had to carry round their
necks a small spittoon since they must not expectorate on the
public road for fear of polluting a passer-by who might all
unknowing tread where they had spat. Mateer quotes a say-
ing that a Vedan pollutes the road while he is upon it, but a
Pulayan pollutes the road by which he has gone. Indeed, in
some cases, as already indicated, mere sight might be enough to
cause pollution, for apart from the case he mentions of bathers,
Aiyappan says: 'Some believe that low caste people should
not be seen by them on days when they have to be specially
pure.* A correspondent of The Hindu reported (24 December
1932) that in the district of Tinnevelly there were a class of
unseeables a caste of washermen known as Purada Vannan,
who washed the clothes of untouchable castes and were therefore
doubly polluting. They had to work between midnight and
daybreak and were not allowed to come out during the daytime
because the very sight of them was polluting.^ ^ Such distance
pollution *
as that described is still observed in ritual situations,
though no longer enforced in ordinary day-to-day secular life.
Since indirect contact and even sight can be polluting, it is
clear that the use of the same wells by caste and outcaste would
give rise to trouble, though A. K. Forbes mentions wells from
which outcastes drew water on one side, and Brahmans 'when
they are gone from the other. A well defiled by the corpse
*
. .death has been received but some other castes, e.g. Prabhu
.
Innes, op. cit., p. 170 ; Thurston, Castes and Tribes, vn, p. 518.
For a detailed account vide Dubois, op. cit., pt. n, ch. i and Crooke,
Things Indian, s.v. Thread, sacred. ^^Matecr, Land of Charity, p. 45.
S6 CASTE
Rajputs or for wearing gold ornaments in a similar way.*^ This
on the use of ornaments seems to be of very ancient
restriction
and widespread observance, non-Hindu
as certain clans in the
Ao Naga country in Assam, for instance, are not allowed to wear
the heavy ivory armlets in use there on both arms, and similar
restrictions are in force in the Islamized Laccadive Islands on
the extreme opposite fringe of the Indian area.^ In both
cases again failure to observe the prohibition has frequently
resulted in violence. Similar prohibitions are found against
the use by low castes of horses as mounts
bridegrooms in for
marriage processions, a common cause of violence or boycott, or
of palanquins, the use of which at marriages has often led to
disturbances in Madras when used by low castes there and has
had the same result in Bengal when used by Namasudras
(Chandals). The right to use ornaments, etc., of certain kinds
may vary not only as between caste and caste, but also as be-
tween castes of the Right Hand and castes of the Left, and
Dubois mentions great commotion caused at a festival by a
v"^hakkiliyan*s wearing red flowers in his pagri which the
Paraiyans denied his right to wear.
In keeping with these restrictions as to dress and ornament are
the restrictions of language still perhaps obtaining on the Mala-
bar coast, and at one time probably a good deal more widely
observed, which compelled members of what may be conveniently
called the
exterior *
castes, asbeing outside the pale of respect-
able Hindu society, to use special language when referring to
themselves or their possessions; "when speaking of their bodily
members, such as an eye, or an ear, to a superior, they (as must
also the Chogans [=:Tiyan, Izhavan or Iluvan], and
those in-
ferior to them) prefix it by the epithet old, such as ""
old eye ,
old ear They are obliged to call their children ""
calves ,
their silver "copper, and their paddy chaff. They com-
mence speaking by saying, ""your slave has received permission
to observe . Nairs they must call Kings , and Brahmans
they
must not approach etc.^ The Pulayan *
dare not say ""
I ,
but your slave ; he dare not call his rice ""c/zorw
but karikadi dirty gruel. He asks leave not to take food,
Hutton, Census of India,
pp. 485, 486.
and R. H. Ellis, loc. cit.
"S,
Day, Lana of the Permauls, p,
ITS STRICTURES 87
but '*
His house is called madam
to drink water a hut,
and he speaks of as monkeys , or calves
his children and
when speaking he must place the hand over the mouth, lest the
breath should go forth and pollute the person whom he is
addressing/ Conversely, a Brahman may use different expres-
sions when returning the greetings of persons of different varna.
Mateer says that if a Pulayan tried to build himself a superior
type of house, infuriated Sudras' would soon pull it down.
From Day we learn that the higher castes also are not without
restrictions, obviously as a result of the possibility of breach of
taboo, in the matter of building materials: In building for
those of the higher castes, great care is necessary, as a piece of
wood, clothing or drapery will convey pollution, from the lower
to the higher castes: as will also coir matting should it contain
even one thread of cotton upon it although it is of itself un-
pollutable, a piece of new doth may be thrown to a high caste
person, who can look at it and toss it back without having been
defiled, but should it be old it causes pollution. Floors must
be made of chunam [lime plaster], stone, or earth, which are
non-conductors, and not of planks: and for the same reason
no carpets or mats can be spread. The chequered black and
white chunam floors, are therefore usually seen, in the houses
of the higher castes,^
It is hardly necessary to labour the differences between caste
and caste in matters of custom.Specific taboos are assodated
with particular occupations, like the taboo on the pan culti-
vations of the Barui (;^5n-growing) caste, which the owner may
not enter without bathing and purification and which the
Brahman may not set foot in at all; or like the impurity which
attaches to the potters oven: or the taboo which the Let sub-
caste of Bagdi place on bamboo fishtraps, which they will not
use although they fish with nets; or the Sarak caste place on
the use of the word meaning to cut .^ Such differences extend
to every kind of ceremonial activity, and many instances have
already been given of the sort of variation found. To say
52 Or, according to Logsm, Malabar, i, p. 85, ' dung heaps
53 Mateer, Land of Charity, p. 45. 5 ^ Day, op. cit.,
p. 405 (sic).
Kisley, Tribes and Castes, !, pp. 72, 73.
56 Gait, Report on the Census
of Bengal, etc., p. 421.
57 Ibid.,
pp. 428, 430. The Saraks of Orissa are Buddhist, and those of
Bengal still extremely sensitive about the taking of animal life, whence,
no doubt, the taboo on a word assodated with slaughtering.
88 CASTE
nothing more of difiEerences in etiquette and ritual, customs such
as those of inheritance, for instance, vary very greatly by caste.
In Malabar, at any rate, the matrilineal system of inheritance
still survives, according to which a mans property is inherited
by and there are traces of it elsewhere in
his sisters children,
India. Among
pinely patrilineal castes observing primogeniture
the rules of precedence between brothers vary. Some castes
hold the senior son to be the first son of the first wife married;
others the first son bom, irrespective of the wife; others again
regard as senior the son first seen by his father. Similarly in
the case of twins, while some castes count the elder of the two
to be the one first seen by his father, many more count the first
to be born the elder son, but many more still, apparently, count
the later bom to be the elder son.
One restriction on Hindus in general may perhaps be men-
tioned here, as it applies, or used to apply, with much greater
force to higher than to lower castes, and that is the
prohibition
against going overseas. The causes of the prohibition
can only
be guessed at, but it has possibly arisen from the feeling that
the act of aossing the sea and living in a strange land makes the
observance of caste rules so difSicult that they are certain to be
broken and therefore the mere act of such travel has itself
become
taboo. However that may be, it entails among strict
Hindus
the purification ceremony which involves drinking the
panchgavya\h3.t is, the five products of the cowmilk, clari-
fied butter, curds, urine, and dung all mixed together, than
which no remedy is more efficacious for purifying
the body from
defilement. Cows urine is likewise a potent
cleanser of external
defilement, and Dubois * noted having
seen it used for that
pujTJOse. Nowadays, of course, it is common enough for
many
strict Hindus to ctoss the sea,
and it is probable that the punch-
pvya is reduced to a purely
ceremonial minimum for those who
have to cTOsume it on return to India.
Restrictions on occupations have
already been mentioned in
connexion with taboo infections, and
are to be generally asso-
PP/ 37*
ciated rather with the Hindu creed in general than with the
caste system specifically. Since certain occupations are unclean,
e.g. scavenging or flaying cattle, the persons following these
occupations become untouchable, and anyone adopting them,
unless in company with his caste, must neceR^arily be ou toasted
to preserve the whole caste from pollution. Often there is a
distinction between the occupation of different subcastes of the
same caste. Thus there are two divisions of the Teli caste in
Bengal sometimes distinguished as Tili and Teli one of which
only deals in oil while the other presses it. There seems to be
no doubt that both spring from an original caste which pressed
oil seeds (til) and sold the oil. The pressing of oil seeds, how-
ever, is stigmatized as a degrading occupation in the Code of
Manu because it destroys life by crushing the seed.
This seems
to have 3 'd to the division of the caste into two, one of which
is treated as untouchable, the other not, and the Telis who
only sell oil will outcaste a member who should venture to press
it. Similarly, those Rajputs of the Kangra valley who refrain
from ploughing hold themselves distinct and superior to those
who plough,*^ while Blunt records that the bad reputation
for chicanery acquired by the patwaris (keepers of village land-
revenue records and maps) nearly led to the formation of a
separate and inferior subcaste of Kayastha by the refusal of
Kayasthas in general to have connubial and commensal relations
with patwari families of that caste. Clearly, therefore, caste may
lay occupational restrictions on its members, although mere
occupation other than that traditionally associated with caste
will not of itself be an offence. The traditional occupation of
Brahmans is the teaching and interpretation of the scriptures,
but very many Brahmans are employed as cooks, since anyone
can take food from them, but they are not therefore put out
of caste.
Sometimes occupational restrictionsimposed by caste may have
a purely economic purpose: O'Malley mentions a case of the
Kasera (brass-founder) caste expelling a man who tried to steal
a march on his fellow-castemen by working on a day which the
caste had decided to keep as a holiday; the Sonars (goldsmiths)
of a district in the Central Provinces have a feast at which the
castemen take oath that they will not reveal the amount of alloy
ITS SANCTIONS
A CASTE has been described as a social unit, and it is in accord-
ance with its character as such that it is, generally speaking, the
guardian of its own rules, that it disciplines its members, expels
A
Brahman, be he ignorant or learned, is a great divinity.*
(xix, 7-8): Let the King, paying attention to all the laws of
countries, castes and families, make the four varna fulfil their
particular duties. Let him punish those who stray.* Manu
prescribes the action of a conquering prince in regard to a
conquered realm as follows When he has gained the victory
:
let him duly worship the gods, and honour righteous Brahmanas,
let him grant exemptions, and let him cause promises of safety
dirt, their hair hung in long strands and was filthy in the extreme,
elected, and the same applies to the members, who may also
include vice-chairmen and executive officers who may likewise
be hereditary or elected. Election may be for life or for each
meeting. Often two systems are combined, the headman being
hereditary and the members elected or vice versa. In the case
of the Lal-Begis, a scavenger caste in Benares, the organization
ismodelled on that of a military cantonment. The diversity of
constitution prevailing may be illustrated by the variations with-
in a single caste. Thus in the Khatik caste in Aligarh there
is an hereditary headman called chaudhuri with five punches
chosen for the occasion, though there is a tendency to choose
them on hereditary lines, and the Sonkhar subcaste in Gorakhpur
has aheadman and six or seven punches who are all hereditary.
The Poldar subcaste has a headman {chaudhuri) and a vice-
president (padhan) who are both hereditary, but the Saqba sub-
caste has a headman only who is elected for a single year at the
Dasehra festival. In Bulandshahr every village has an officer
known as muqaddam, who disposes of minor cases, and an
hereditary chaudhuri with two vice-presidents (diwan) to every
hundred or so villages.^ A
similar diversity holds good gene-
rally as between different and is common between different
castes,
subcastes of a single caste. Among the Koltas of Orissa, where
the headman is hereditary, women have been known to succeed
to the office.^ This is, of course, most unusual, but the Tawaif
of the United Provinces, who are dancing girls, have a head-
^3
Caste System, pp. 107 sqq, 34 Blunt, Caste System, pp. 109 sq.
OMalley, Caste Customs, p. 41.
102 CASTE
woman (chaudhuram) elected for life, and a panchayat of women
elected for the occasion. The chaudhurdin must have been born
within the jurisdiction of the panchayat. The headman of a
caste council often has privileges or insignia which possibly sug-
gest that the position is derived in some cases from that of the
chief of a tribe. In one section of the Vellalans of Tinnevelly
he has a seat on a dais, while everyone else stands, a.nd is
addressed by the title Irunkol meaning Please sit down
In
other castes the headman may on horseback, use an
ride
umbrella, wear a gold ring, etc., and the Bhoksa of the United
Provinces address the president of their council as takht,
* *
throne while badshah, * king and mehtar,
are prince
among the appellations used by other castes for their headmen.'
In some castes in south India *
the headman is like a chief with
practically absolute power', according to O'Malley, and he
mentions the Maravan caste as an instance.
The jurisdiction of caste panchayats is conceived as extending
to any matter in which the men of the caste consider that the
interests or reputation of the caste require action to be taken
against a member of the caste. Clearly there is vast room here
for the diversity of practice which has been seen to be charac-
teristic of the caste system as a whole. Here again, too, it is
obvious that the castes which have a permanent and continuous
system of controlling bodies are likely to exercise a much more
rigid control than those which have not, and control will
be
least among the higher and generally speaking better educated
classeswhose distribution is wide, who are less tied to a parti-
cular locality by individual family ties, and who
have learned
to appreciate the liberty which they enjoy by not
being in
tutelage to any particular caste authority. In fact a proposal
to revive caste panchayats for the socially
advanced Prabhus in
Bombay met with a critical opposition, which declared the caste
panchayats to be the greatest of all evils as being opposed
to '
these two heads, and the nature and extent of such offences will
vary greatly with caste, and locality, and the conditions of life
in general. Some castes, for instance, forbid the remarriage of
any widow, while others allow remarriage of widows to widowers
only, and others again observe no restrictions. Often a subcaste
which wishes to raise itself in social status will place a ban on
the remarriage of widows, while other subcastes of the same caste
continue to allow it. Grave offences against widely accepted
precepts of Hinduism, such as insulting a Brahman or killing a
cow (i.e., generally, causing its death by neglect or ill-treatment),
of which the courts established under British rule will take no
cognizance^ or treat only as minor offences, are likewise subject
to caste discipline, though the nature of the reason is not always
easy to determine, as besides the feeling of injury to the repu-
tation of the caste the feeling of collective responsibility and
the contagious nature of taboo may also come into play. This
seems almost certainly the case where the caste panchayat takes
action, as it does in some castes, on account of the killing of a
dog or cat or ass. The same doubt attaches to the sins of being
But since the achievement of independence the government of what
were the Central Provinces has made the killing of a cow a cognizable
offence.
104 CASTE
deservedly or undeservedly beaten with a shoe or put in gaol/^
it is possible in their case that it is rather the fear of pollution
for
through contact with cowhide or through eating with someone
who has been the guest of the Inspector-General of Prisons that
is operative, than any sense of disrepute attaching to the stigma
of chastisement or of conviction in a criminal court. It may be
likewise such a fear of pollution by contagion that causes a man
to be put out of caste, as by the Sansiya, a criminal caste or tribe
of Rajputana, for happening to be touched by the petticoat of
his mother-in-law or daughter-in-law, or for being struck by
his wife's petticoat '
in the course of connubial strife Some-
thing of the same doubt attaches to offences against etiquette
or against caste custom in the, matter of feasts and entertain-
ments, while in the latter case again there may be an overlap
with offences against the economic interests of the caste such as
might be involved in a breach of caste trading conventions,
or customs respecting handicrafts exercised, or the collection of
wild produce. Where the caste panchayat takes the liberty of
retrying cases among its members already disposed by the
of
courts, no doubt it is regarded as in the interests of the caste
as a whole that a decision which it finds unsatisfactory
should
be modified in its effects by the action of the caste, even though
the actual decision of the courts of law must be endured.
Blunt
suggests that such retrials among criminal castes may
be con-
cerned really with the clumsiness which has led to the
offender's
detection.^* Caste panchayats will generally be very much more
likely to know the true facts of offences their castemen have
committed than the ordinary law courts are, and they un-
doubtedly resent matters closely touching their community being
taken to the wdinary courts, and when the
interests of a fellow-
casteman are in question the caste may combine to stifle evidence
which might lead to a conviction in a court of
law. O'Malley
ITS SAJsfCTIOUS
gives two instances of evidence of murder being suppressed in
this way.Such instances could probably be multiplied indefi-
nitely by diving into the records of police stations throughout
India.
The procedure observed in cases tried by caste panchayats is
Ibid., p. 114.
Norman Loftus Bor cC the Indian Forest Service in an article on
'
The Baflas and their Oaths Caste Customs, p. 46.
S'*
Mills, The do Nagas, pp. 195 sqq. Vide supra, pp. 74 sqq.
ITS SANCTIONS 107
ban his corpse must lack the funeral rites which alone ensure
a continued existence after death and subsequent reincarnation.
An excommunication of this sort may be a temporary penalty
for a stated period, for an indefinite time subject to the perfor-
mance of some required expiation for the fault punished, or
for life, in which case the culprit is virtually compelled to seek
acceptance in some other caste or to remain in communion
with other unfortunates in the same plight as his own. Other
forms of punishment made use of are the exaction of fines or
feasts to the caste or to Brahmans. The fines may be utilized
to buy sweetmeats for the assembled castemen or for putting
mto the fund which many castes maintain for communal
purposes. Other penalties inflicted may be corporal punishment,
or the performance of a pilgrimage, or the collection of a fine
by begging. Many penalties imposed are intended to humiliate
the culprit excessively
and often to fit tile crime as far as possible
somewhat in the manner advocated by the English philosopher
Jeremy Bentham at the end of the eighteenth century. Thus
corporal punishment may be given with a shoe, for the sake
of
humiliating the offender. The person responsible for the death
of a cow often has to make a pilgrimage with a
cows tail tied
to his staff or to beg for his living for a period in the same
manner, or accompanied by a cow the tail of which he holds;
or he may have to low like an ox at the same time or even
to
wear the dead animals hide, horns and hoofs, or have a rope
round his neck and straw in his mouth. Shaving the culprit
oil one side of his head and face and
leaving the other adorned
with hair is another method of humiliating, or the
victim is
paraded on a donkey with one side of his face blacked
and
the other whitened; or he may be compelled to
wear a string of
old shoes round his neck, while an unchaste woman
may have
to wdk round the village with a basket of
mud on her head
or with a grindstone hung round her neck. OMalley' men-
tions as a punishment making a man stand on one leg in the
sun with a pitcher of water balanced on his head;
also a
punishment used by the Nats of Bihar of making the culprit
sit in cold water for as long even as
twenty-four hours. This
penalty suggests an element of purification, though
the same
can hardly be said of one mentioned by Blunt,' who
speaks of
Caste Customs, r Caste System,
pp. 8o, 8i. p. 1*3,
io8 CASTE
a Thathera (brazier) of Azamgarh who was immersed for three
days up to the neck in a cesspit before going on a pilgrimage
to Puri and Benares and feasting the biradari. But bathing in
the Ganges or even swallowing some of its sand (or mud) very
often forms part of a penalty imposed, as does drinking water
into which a Brahman has dipped his toe. The element of
purification is clearly present, and
another punishment
in
described by OMaJley^ the proceedings probably involve a
more elaborate symbolism than mere washing, for a Ravulo
husband, who has ill-treated his wife, has to enter a fish-trap
shaped like a hencoop and his wife sits on it; both parties then
MM. fcmd to
ITS SANCTIONS 109
has seduced a girl o the caste they have to be married, and they
and by bathing in 108 different pools of
their relatives purified
water, by walking over the buried head of a sheep with the
blood of which they are smeared, by further bathing, by the
drinking of cow's urine, by bathing again, and finally by feast-
ing the panchayat^^ The sheep here is possibly associated with
the scapegoat idea, which, like the idea of sin-eating, appears in
some caste ceremonials for purification. Among the Uppiliyans
of Trichinopoly a man called
the man
two lights has to of '
eat a meal in the polluted house with his hands tied behind his
back, and in the Central Provinces several castes pay an agua
one who goes ahead to eat the first mouthful at a penitential
feast, by doing which he takes on the sins of others.^
ITS FUNCTIONS
The previous three chapters have been concerned with the
manner in which caste operates, and the functions of caste in
regard both to the individual casteman and to the caste as a
whole will already be evident from what has been said. It will
therefore be necessary here to do litde more than recapitulate
and generalize on certain aspects of the foregoing. Something
more is perhaps necessary when it comes to considering the
society as a whole, and it will be convenient to treat of the
functions which the institution of caste performs first, very
briefly,from the individuals point of view, then from that of
the caste as a body, and finally, at somewhat greater length,
from the point of view of society and the State.
From the point of view of the individual member of a caste
the system provides him from birth with a fixed social milieu
from which neither wealth nor poverty, success nor disaster can
remove him, unless of course he so violate the standards of
behaviour laid down by his caste that it spews him forth
temporarily or permanently. He is provided in this way with
a permanent body of associations which controls almost all his
behaviour and contacts. His caste canalizes his choice in
marriage, acts as his trade union, his friendly or benefit sciciety,
his slate club and his orphanage; it takes the place for him of
health insurance, and if need be provides for his funeral. It
frequendy determines his occupation, often positively, for in
many castes the occupational tradition is very strong indeed,
commonly negatively, since there are many any rate
pursuits, at
in the case of all but the lowest castes, which he cannot follow,
or can follow only at the cost of excommunication from the
society to which he belongs. It must often happen that member-
ship of a caste will take the place of attachment to a political
party, since in such cases as disputes between castes of the Right
Hand and of the Left his views on the merits of a dispute and
the side he is to support are predetermined for him by his caste
membership.
Thus the practice of his caste dictates to each member customs
to be observed in the matter of diet, the observance of ceremonial
lU CASTE
uncleanness, and whether he may, or may not, marry or remarry
a widow. It prescribes to some extent (or at least limits his
choice of) ritual to be observed at birth, initiation, marriage
and death. It may state, for instance, whether or not his ears
shall be bored, and if so in how many places. With reprd to
the individual the function of caste is to predetermine his
pattern of behaviour in this world to a very considerable degree
of nicety, leaving much less to individual choice than is usual
in a casteless society.
8
114 CASTE
in Assam can, in fact, be generally measured by the number of
persons belonging to that community who are in Government
service/ Caste then may in some cases serve communities (but
never individuals) as a ladder for rising in the social scale.
Itno doubt one of the functions of a social system to hand
is
name, they seem to have been absorbed into Hindu society under
5 Information given personally by Dr Verrier Elwin.
^ Netherlands India, p, 464.
^ Hindu Tribes and Castes, in, p. 574.
116 CASTE
the guise of Rajput clans, but the Gujar caste has retained its
ancient tribal name, and that is the rule rather than the
exception. Many are the tribes who have now become castes.
*
Modern India, having created a caste of chauffeurs from the
menials who tend motor-cars, is almost ripe for a Rolls Royce
caste rejecting food or marriage with the Fords. He should
rather have called it a Rolls-Royce subcaste, for at least it would
start in that way and, if true to pattern, reject first the giving
of daughters to Fords while not hesitating to take wives from
among them, secondly, the eating of food with them, and finally,
allconnexion of any kind, discovering a long-forgotten descent,
not shared by Fords, from some Brahman or Kshatriya ancestor
who drove the fiery chariot of Surya in the misty dawn of
mythology. Whether Enthoven be right or not in stating that
a caste of chauffeurs actually exists, he is most certainly right
in emphasizing ' the quite disproportionate importance attached
in India to trifling differences arising from one reason or
another in the conduct of small groups of individuals Work- *
just as they are stated (to be). Jackson goes on to point out
that a large proportion of subcastes bear geographical names,
and while some take a name from the kingdom others, parti-
cularly the trading and artisan castes, take it from the capital
city, and that many traces are to be found of sets of subcastes
P* 1"** .
^^opie of India, pt. i, ch. ii.
System in India
Oct x, xii, xiii, xiv (LA., March-
ITS FUNCTIONS isi
seeks a refuge with Brahmanas, attains (in his next life) a hi her
g
caste. No doctrine is more likely to conduce to contentment
in this life. The ties of caste , writes Sherring,
are stronger
than those of religion. A man may
be a bad Hindu so far as
the practice of his religious duties goes; but caste rules must
be minutely observed, or he will have to reap the consequences
of neglect. With many Hindus the highest form of religious
observance is the complete fulfilment of the of caste;
and most of them conceive of sin as a breach of caste discipline
rather than of moral law.
The doctrine of karma must clearly help to palliate the appa-
rent inequity of the caste system, but it seems likely that it has
been grafted on to it in the course of its development, and is
not inherent in its origins. In any case it is quite dear that
the caste system has been effectively utilized by the Brahman
priesthood to maintain the existing form of Hindu society with
the Brahmans as a privileged class, and that caste has been taken
advantage of generally by the higher castes to keep the inferior
and exterior castes in their respective stations, if not to reduce
them to the lowest status possible. It is true that theoretically
greater responsibilities rest on the higher castes, but the Brahman
reception or rejection of water or food is the measure of the
status of any given caste in a given place. And in point of
fact a tribe which does not recognize Brahmans or Hinduism
at all generally in a better position socially with regard to
is
surprising then that there were castes which had to carry warning
bells like a medieval leper, and that they were treated as one
might expect when they were completely without power them-
selves and inspired nothing but disgust in persons of higher caste,
a disgust so great that contact with them by sight or by the
passage of a breath of air necessitated ceremonial purification.
The theory that greater responsibilities and obligations rest on
the higher castes is no doubt put into practice in the form of
Op. dt., p. 36 (pt. I, ch. vi); and see Wilson, Indian Caste, i, pp. 390,
411, 426; Ketkar, History of Caste, pp. 138 sqq.; Dutt, op. dt., pp. 148
sqq., etc.
Dr J. Gonda, in a review of the first edition of this book in Erasmus,
refers to a text of Kautilya (Arthasastra, ch. xix) according to which kings
should receive intelligence, etc. before the daily bath and breakfast.
ITS FUNCTIONS igy
God, with them as his agents, their appointed job being to kill
travellers
to (juote the words of a Thug, just as a tiger feeds
upon deer . The caste had a life of at least more than five
hundred years, as the earliest historical mention of Thuggee
isin Zia-ud-Din Barnis history of Firoz Shah, written in 1356,
and refers to the capture, and release, of a thousand Thugs at
Delhi about a.d. 1290.^ Other criminal castes, like Korava,
regard their criminal practices as justified by if not enjoined on
them by their membership of the caste to which they belong
and by their common share in its ancestors and traditions.
Again, Dubois says of the Kalian caste that they exercise their
profession of robber,
without disguise, as their birthright . . .
outside the terms of union, each living its own life. But it
differs', he says, from a confederation
in that the constituent
thought that the caste system had the common bond of religion
as well as of law,but we have already seen that the first
injunction of religionis to obey caste rules, which suggests that
Ibid., p. 466.
ITS FUNCTIONS 129
xhis taboo is, of course, world-wide. There can be little doubt but
the reason why the adjectives bloody * and * bleeding are, or till recently
*
^3 Anthropology in Reconstruction, p. 5 .
ITS FUNCTIONS 13,
There is yet another function which the caste system probably
performs, and that is a genetic one. India
is a country in which
the male sex generally outnumbers the female. The ratio in
1931 was 1,000 males to 941 females, or, if Hindus alone be
considered, to 953, and this inequality is likely to be felt most
acutely among Hindus on account of their ban against the
remarriage of widows. Now a good deal of fairly recent work
on sex ratios has pointed to the conclusion that an excess of
males is indicative of a declining population, but this is certainly
not the case in India. It is possible that the caste system itself
contributes to the preponderance of masculinity. Westermarck **
takes the view that a mixture of race leads to an increase
in the ratio of females to males. He cites a number of observa-
tions from various parts of the world to support this view:
he quotes Dr Nagels experiments in the self-fertilization of
plants, as producing an excess of male flowers, and several cases
of inbreeding herds of cattle in which bull calves greatly exceed
two independent experiments in horse-breeding
heifers, as well as
indicating that predominate among foals in proportion
fillies
if once a caste,
whether as the, result ot
least be conceded that the
different factor, have acquired
inbreeding or of some quite condmon
of ha^ng an excess of
m^es, this
ntmal condition
maintained.
long as inbreeding is
is likely to be
perpetuated as
Caste, Lrefore' would
appear to be of definite ce ^o
There
for male offspring.
Hindu in his superlative anxiety
man.
is no heaven for the sonless
PART THREE
ORIGINS
CHAPTER IX
ANALOGOUS INSTITUTIONS
ELSEWHERE
It has already been said that caste is an exclusively Indian
phenomenon, but there are in various parts of the world ana-
logous institutions which resemble caste in one or other of its
i
as separate social orders \ Similarly, in South Africa and in the
People of India (igis), f. j8o. The Tanula, pp. 137 sq., 143.
History of Madagascar, i, p. 164. Madagascar et les Horn, p. 97'
i"* Madagascar; or Robert Drurys- Journal etc,, and a Further description
. . by the Abb^ Alexis Rochon (ed. by Oliver, 1890), p. 368.
138 ORIGINS
at royal courts and at the courts of his vassals and subjects, who
imitate his behaviour, down to the mere cultivator of land.^*
food; the herald clanmay also be the one which dresses the
High Chief's head in life, watches over his corpse and buries
him when dead; sometimes there is a crier clan which proclaims
the Chiefs wishes; sometimes even chieftains of the dogs ',
*
with clansmen who are the High 'Chiefs dogs, follow him
about, and bite the disrespectful. These castes have nothing
to do with specialization of crafts, but are graded according to
their function. There are what appear to be specialized manual
workers forming castes in some tribes, but they appear to be of
Hocart, Les Castes, p. 11). Since the publication of the second edition
ot Caste in India, a detailed account and penetrating analysis of caste
in Ceylon has been made by Bruce Ryan in his Caste and Modern Ceylon,
Hocart, Kings and Councillors, pp, 105 sqq.; Les Castes, pp. 140 sqq.
ANALOGOUS INSTITUTIONS ELSEWHERE 139
24 A, b) mentions six classes ^priests, craftsmen (who are sub-
divided 'each keeps to its own craft without infringing on
another *), shepherds, hunters, farmers, and soldiers. It all
sounds as though a caste system not unlike that of India may
have existed in ancient Egypt. Revillout has gone into this
question carefully in his Cours de Droit dgyptien. He
instances the cases of a family of architects to the crown, so
to speak, who for several hundred years and under all the later
dynasties continued to exercise their hereditary calling, and of
a family of mummy-wardens in Thebes who followed the same
calling from 680 b.c. down to the Roman occupation. But he
comes to the definite finding that whatever the nature of these
so-called Egyptian castes there is nothing to show that there
'
'
was any caste system which really resembled that of India, nor
anything in the customary laws of Egypt which interfered with
social intercourse between these groups or prevented their inter-
marriage (no doubt with the possible exception of the case of
the pig-keepers), instances of which are known to have taken
place.^ Indeed, in so far as there seem to have been groups
analogous to caste in Egypt, they seem to have been rather of
the nature of administrative organizations like those of the
later Roman Empire, than of quasi-organic development like
142 ORIGINS
castes in India, a view supported incidentally by Diodoruss state-
ment already quoted. At the same time there is a passage in
the book of Genesis which states that when Josephs brethren
came down into Egypt and were entertained by him incognito,
food was served separately for Joseph, for his brothers, and for
to gild or regild a few square feet of its roof. But no such merit
pagoda in order. A
pagoda slave is such for and his
life, child-
in the last two respects the disabilities suffered are even more
severe than those of outcastes in India, though the element of
untouchability is not stressed in at all the same degree. The
pagoda slaves were largely drawn from prisoners of war, and
from prisoners convicted of some offence, but also from quite
inoffensive Burmese villagers, who had been nominated for the
service by some royal official and were too poor to buy them-
selves off. The other six outcaste classes consisted of, secondly.
Professional Beggars, that is, of vagabonds compelled to live
such a life and prohibited from any regular occupation, drawn
in the main from the same sources as the first dass and to be
distinguished from free beggars, who beg by choice and not by
compision; thirdly. Executioners, Jailors and Police, three
functions normally combined, under the rule of the Burmese
ANALOGOUS INSTITUTIONS ELSEWHERE 145
kings, in the same persons, who though
feared, no doubt, when
alive, and treated accordingly with circumspection, were treated
as offal when dead; fourthly, Lepers, and others suffering
from incurable diseases, who were compelled to live with other
outcastes outside the ordinary village
community; fifthly.
Deformed and Mutilated Persons, the horror of
the maimed in
Burma being very strong, so that death is commonly preferred
to the amputation of a limb. The sixth
class of outcastes con-
sists of Coffin-makers and
other persons occupied with grave-
digging, graveyards and the disposal
of corpses; the Burmese
word for such people is sandala, which is clearly the same word
as the Hindi chandal. The seventh class consisted of Govern-
ment Slaves, who were cultivators of the royal lands and drawn
from the same sources as pagoda slaves.
Persons of these outcaste classes in Burma
cannot enter a
monastery nor become a hpungyi (Buddhist monk). Indeed,
they may not enter a monastery even to study,
though such an
entry forms a normal part of the upbringing of
a Burmese child.
The effect of marrying persons of these classes
has already been
stated as regards the pagoda slaves, and is the
same in the case
of the second class and of -the last two classes.
How far it would
affect the other three classes it is a little
difficult to say, as the
third class at any rate presumably disappeared
as such with the
British occupation. Up to that time at least
these seven classes
constituted an outcaste population distinct from the people with
whom social relations were possible.^2 constitute
castes, so that there were, so to speak, only incaste and outcaste
in Burma, and no '
caste system but the analogy to one aspect
of the caste system in any case is clear enough.
The untouch-
ability in Burma is obviously based on taboo.
This element
can be seen to be present in most if not all of the seven groups
above mentioned. In the case of the grave-diggers it is probably
the fear of death infection, a fear which is associated with the
disposal of the dead among so many of the neighbouring hill
tribes. A similar taboo probably operates in regard to lepers
and deformed persons, for among the Chin and Kuki tribes on
the western frontier of Burma, tribes nearly allied to the Burmese
in language and probably of the same racial stock, persons dying
>2 $uway Yoe [Sir J. G. Scott], The Burman ; His Life and Notions, ri,
ca; XVI.
10
,46
ORIGINS
of leprosy ox from a.ny similEX
deforming disease are buried witb
orientation from otber persons and regarded as
having
j,
*3 See Parry, The Lakhers, pp. 406-8 and 413, and Shz'w, Notes on the
^4 yide supra,
Thadou Kukis, p, 1, . isi sq.
ANALOGOUS INSTITUTIONS ELSEWHERE 147
war land reforms, and the gulf between them and the ordinary
population has yet to be bridged. Their position is not without
analogies to that of the exterior castes of Hinduism, but
probably both here and in Burma what there is of caste is
closer to the Ceylon than to the Indian pattern. This is what
might naturally be expected, for Japan was once no less
Buddhist than Burma and Ceylon.
Indeed it is possible that light on the origin of the caste
system is really to be sought for in societies such as those of
Burma, Ceylon, and Japan, where traces of the Buddhistic
regime have survived unHinduized. Buddhism and Jainism
have much in common, and Professor Tucci has argued that
the Jain religion embodies a revival of very ancient rituals and
forms * probably even pre-Aryan The Buddhist movement of
the sixth century b c was a revolt against Brahmanism and
. .
and mothers of a higher caste) stand outside (the pale of) the
sacred law as well as those born in a regular order (anuloma)
from a Sudra woman, and the Institutes of Vishnu (xv, 37, 38)
tell us that children begotten by a husband of inferior caste on
a woman of a higher caste have no right to inherit, and *
their
sons do not even receive a share of the wealth of their paternal
grandfathers In passing, it is perhaps significant that the
Suta, who is the pratiloma offspring of a Brahman woman by a
Kshatriya man, takes a fairly high place in Manu's list, far
removed from the degraded position of a Chandal who is by a
Sudra out of a Brahmani. This would reflect, perhaps, the fact
that as between varna which were both patrilineal the question
of complete lack of status and inheritance would not arise, and
there seem to have been Brahman families both of invading and
of indigenous stock. It must also be pointed out here that
statements as to what constitutes a Chandal are not always
consistent, for there appear to have been Chandals by works
as well as by birth.
Besides the suggestion made above there are a number of other
survivals which suggest that a matrilineal system w,as once much
more widely distributed in India than it is now. Sir Denis
Brays account of the Brahui shows that the traces of a former
matrilineal system are clear enough; and the story recorded by
Lieut. Carloss of his visit to the cave dwellings of Gondrani
in 1838 March 1839), when he was shown the palace
of Badi-ul-Jamal,^ the princess married by the stranger, a son *
Biihlcr, Sacred Laws, pt. i, p. 197. Jolly, op. cit,, pp. 64, 65.
10 Minchin, Xfltf Gazetteer, p, 40, 11 Ibid., pp. 35 sq.
152 ORIGINS
venerationis probably the same goddess who was known to the
12 Haldich, India, p. 45. Nana or Nanai was the mother of Attis and
identified with Ishtar, Astarte, Artemis, Anaitis, or Aphrodite. Alone of
her pilgrims devotees and unmarried girls pay no tax to the State* Naina
Devi of the Kulu valley, where her image is a black stone 3 feet high, and
of places in Sirmur and Bilaspur States, and probably elsewhere in the
lower Himalayas, is likely to be the same goddess.
13 The cult of snakes is also strong in the lower Himalayas and is found
there in the significant company erf Naina Devi, megalithic monuments, and
marriage customs not unsuggestive of Babylon, and of fertility rites which
are spoken of by Rose in Punjab Castes and Tribes as * Paphian * but
which are not described, Devi in the hills is often spoken of as Devi Mai
or Devi Mata the Mother Goddess.
14 In the case of the Kalian it is to be noticed that they include a hoorae-
fang among their wedding gifts, practise circumcision, and bury their dead
and perform their Karuppan worship with the face to the north, probably
indicating migration into India by land. The rite of circumcision is paid
for by the boy's fathers sister, mother of his potential wife.
13 Banerji-Sastri,Mother-Goddess cult
whose heirs are their sisters children, not their own With
the exception of the Nambudris, who follow the Rigveda,
Brahmans in southern India, many of whom at any rate follow
the Samaveda, Yajurveda or Atharvaveda, are accustomed to
marry the daughter of their mothers brother. This is opposed
to the letter and spirit of the Brahmanic code and is clearly
suggestive of a survival of a matrilineal system; orthodoxy would
appear to enjoin the patrilineal prohibition of such marriages.
The Pandyan dynasty seems to have been originally matrilineal,
as Tamil poems are said to allude to its founder as a woman,
and the tradition recorded by Megasthenes^ is that it was
founded by a daughter of Heracles, while Pliny describes the
people as * gens Pandae, sola Indorum regnata f oeminis The
worship of goddesses in whose honour annual fairs are held is
more important in the Himalayas of the Punjab and United
Provinces than that of the orthodox gods, and such goddesses,
though now regarded as incarnations of Devi, are frequently
associated with the worship of snakes, while
it seems likely that
tribes such as the Bhils and the Chodhras would have continued
to occupy hill and forest areas in spite of previous migrations
into northern India from the west and north. If the pre-Rigvedic
civilization in the Indus valley had really declined, this may
have enabled such tribes to reoccupy parts of the open country.
The mention, however, e.g. in the 104th hymn of the first book
of the Rigveda, of the cities, casdes and great wealth of an
enemy whose womenfolk bathed themselves in milk suggests
that the ancient civilization was far from being extinct, and it
is not impossible but that many aborigines were employed as
self have been a tradition taken over from previous invaders and
*
telescoped in the matter of time and association. The deve-
'
daro mdthe Indus CiviUzation, voL ii, pp. 380, 4^55 sq. Both quote Schexl,
Revue d* dssyriologief xxii (igas). . ,
system, perhaps the best in the world when taken by itself, has
possibly in the past been exploited by the Nambudris to their
own profit. But it would be as great an error to replace the
marurnakkathayam system by the ordinary makkathayam one as ;
any way less respectable than the latter, although it is less widely
distributed. On the contrary, it seems likely that the marumak-
kathayam was the ancient and civilized system, which was >
derived from tribes, castes such as Chero and Kharwar, which are
probably Kolarian in origin, but also Gonds. Blunt mentions
the following other castes as using hina marriage: Bind, Ghasiya,
Majhwar, and Parahiya. Turner adds the names of some of
the Kanjar and Nat castes and mentions one division of Nats
among whom a bridegroom married in this way must stay and
serve as long as his wifes parents are alive, failing which he
becomes liable for a money payment, which is fixed by the
tribal panchayat to meet the case. As Turner points out,^ the
practice, in the case of a poor son-in-law who goes to live
ss Ibid.,
Census of the U.F., 1911, p. tso. 1931, pp. |ii sqq.
37 Loc. cit.
11
ORIGINS
permanently in the house of a rich father-in-law and is virtually
paid to become a ghar-jawai, is widespread and found in all
castes from Brahman downwards; he names a score of such castes
in the United Provinces in which either this practice has been
reported, or the analogous one of ghar baithna, where a man
goes to live in the house of a widow with no male collaterals, or
both. Marriage by exchange, either direct or (the more popular
form) three-cornered, is practised in the same areas, and in one
or two castes of Nats and Kanjars the custom of adopting a
daughter survives, though under strict Hindu law only a son
can be adopted.*
A probable survival of the matrilineal culture of south-west
Europe, south-west Asia and the Indian peninsula is to be found
in the practice in India of dedicating girls to the service of
the god in Hindu temples. Girls so dedicated are known as
devadasis and commonly live as prostitutes, but it has also to
be borne in mind that a life of immorality is not necessarily the
consequence of such dedication. In several castes in Madras,
particularly in Bellary and the neighbourhood, it is the practice,
if a male heir be wanting, to dedicate a daughter in the temple.
not only that she herself served the god in the capacity of a
harlot at his express command, but
that her mother and female
ancestors had done
same before her/ Strabo records a prac-
the
tice dE dedicating girls in the temple of Ammon in Egypt not
dissimilar to that in Armenia, except that in the case of Ammon
the deity was male and the dedicated girls, when given to a
human husband after serving their term as the wives of the
People of India, m, iii.
Kai allot de kat* euchm aei tines epidemousi, thusias te epitelountes
te theo . plethos gunaikcn ergazomenon apo ton somatos, hon hat
. .
Vide Fnzer, Golden Bough, n (The Megic Art and the Evolution of
ii), ch, xvm, The institution of kingship under a matrilineal system
seems to have accompanied the worship of 9ie mother goddess*
i66 origins
marumakkathayam inheritance rather suggests that the practice
of dedication in one form or another, real or symbolic, may
have at one time been the universal concomitant of the matri-
lineal system in India as in Asia Minor or in Cyprus. It is
that caste as
conditions found in India at the Rigveda
varna tradition upon
Man, xxxn,
*In wadew rtt GhiByei 'Cute and Race in India' in
isonipw.
TRADITIONAL ORIGIN 169
the same time the blacksmiths caste is very far from being more
highly esteemed, though it must presumably be later in point
of time, than that of the coppersmith or the goldsmith. More-
over, this scheme does not explain at all the varying positions
of agriculturists who arc of low castes in certain parts of southern
India but generally of respectable if not of high caste in northern
India. It should, however, be mentioned in this connexion that
it does appear to be a custom in southern India, or in parts
pf sqq.
'
1,7, ORIGINS
circumstances of a complex system of society
a society of classes
drawing its wives and with which it has been in more or less
intimate relation. The position of negroes in the southern states
of the U.S.A. has been cited as offering a parallel case, and the
view is supported by Westermarck;* it finds a certain measure
of confirmation perhaps in the laws passed in the Union of
South Africa against the intermarriage of white and coloured
races; but it fails to offer any satisfactory explanation of the
taboo on commensality. It is no doubt true that separate rail-
way carriages, separate restaurants, even separate townships, are
provided for negroes, but no pollution takes place ^ as a result
of employing negro servants, and there is no hard and fast line
which is really analogous to a caste division between, say, quad-
roons and octoroons, nor have the social factors which might
have tended to produce similar results in India ever succeeded
in. making Muslims, Anglo-Indians or Eurasians into a caste in
the Hindu and where Muslims do form a real caste it
sense,
is always one which has been converted to Islam from pre-Islamic
inhabitants while retaining its original caste organization. A
History of Human Marriage (1901), pp. $65-7.
At the same time it is necessary in this connexion to draw attention to
*
a passage quoted by Dr Little in * The Psychological Background of White-
Coloured Contacts in Britain in The Sociological Review, xxxv, 3, n. 4
'
There remains a strong feeling that the colour of the negroes is abhorrent
and that contact with them may be contaminating. There is generally a
strong feeling against eating or drinking from dishes used by n%roes, and
most of the whites provide separate dishes for the use of their servants.
The idea of uncleanlmess is also extended to any clothing worn by negroes,
as was dramatically shown when a negro customer returned a coat which
she had bought from a white clothing merchant. The clerk was unwilling
to accept the coat, and when the assistant manager accepted it, the clerk
said to another clerk: ** This is perfectly terrible; I think it is awful. We
can't put that coat back in stock." She hung it up very gingerly and did
not touch it any more than necessary.' {Deep South : A Social Anthropolo-
gical Study of Caste and Class, Allison Davis and B. B. and M. R. Gardner,
p. 16.)
The attitude to negroes indicated here is most suggestive of the caste
system.
But according to Professor Vesey-FitzGeraldexclusive Muslim commu-
nities having a caste organization exist outside India, the Tbadis of the
M'zab in Algeria, for instance, while Ismai'li sects in India tend to organize
themselves in secret societies with esoteric rituals and a dreadful penalty of
excommunication (review of Caste in India in the Bulletin of the School of
Oriental and African Studies, xii, p. atjfi).
FACTORS IN THE EMERGENCE OF CASTE 175
Levitical religion and has laid the greater stress on the tribe.
for the formation of certain castes, and no less dear that certain
castes are, or have been in the past, restricted to certain occupa-
tions, but Ibbetson's explanation of the origin of caste is really
only a summary of certain of its obvious features. These features
and religious monopolies ^have no doubt con-
tribes, guilds,
tributed to the growth and extension of the caste system, and
done much to consolidate and perpetuate it, but they cannot be
regarded as causes. They are features which are not unique but
common to many sodeties in many countries, whereas caste is
found in India and nowhere else. Given caste, a tribe, a guild,
or a priestly order may very easily become a caste, but failing
the essentials of the caste system there is nothing in them, with
the possible exception of the priesdy order, which will produce
a caste.
Quite a different origin for caste is argued by Hocart, who
apparendy regards the whole system as originating in ritual. He
regards the four vama as a division of the people devised pri-
marily for ritualistic purposes; they represent the four points ot
the compass, as do the colours white, red, yellow and black. The
ritual appears to be a duplication of some ancient fertility rite
in which two divisions of the people were involved, representing
the sky and the earth, and to be focused on the king as repre-
senting the deity, or as being himself the deity incarnate, and
the functions of various castes are derived from the offices per-
formed by them in the daily ritual of the royal court. Hocarts
conclusions are, however, based on his observation of the existing
ritual of the Buddhist Temple of the Tooth at Kandy and not
on direct acquaintance with caste in India. The functions of
the washerman and barber necessary to purificatory ceremonies
have struck him, and he seems to regard the corresponding castes
as having been created by local imitation of royal courts on a
small scale by petty rulers and landed proprietors, each of whom
must have, like the divine or royal model, a barber and a washer-
Les Castes, passim. Bruce Ryan, in a note on p. 180 of his Caste in
Modem Ceylon, remarks: Hocarts attempt to interpret caste in purely
ritual terms must be utterly discarded.
FACTOKS IN THE EMERGENCE OF CASTE 177
customary work than that association with the ritual led to the
formation of the caste. At the same time it must be admitted
that Hocart's theory does supply a unifying factor in the caste
system in that all over India castes are to be found with, up to a
point, similar ritual as well as social and economic functions
from Brahman down to washerman.
A theory of the origin of caste which combines both functional
and racial origins has been put forward by Slater in his
Dravidian Elements in Indian Culture. He emphasizes the
fact that caste is actually stronger in southern than in northern
India, and suggests that caste arose in India before the Aryan
invasion as a result of occupations becoming hereditary and
marriages being arranged by parents within the society of the
common craft because sexual maturity is early and trade secrets
were thus preserved. As a result of magic and religious cere-
monies also, exclusive occupational groups were built up,
marriage outside which became prejudicial and contrary to
practice. The Aryan invasion had the effect of strengthening a
tendency to associate difference of caste with a difference of
colour and of strengthening also a tendency for castes to be
placed in a scale of social precedence. Slater also maintains the
existence in the pre-Aryan society of India of an order of priest
magicians which he associated, rather unnecessarily perhaps, with
Egypt and a heliolithic cult. Dutt,^^ to whose views rrference
has been made above, takes a somewhat similar view of the
impact of an Aryan culture upon pre-Aryan occupational classes
IS op. cit., sqq., 106.
pp, i}8
12
,,8 ORIGINS
already endogamous on account of i
their own and ^that
was first associated with particular groups because that was their
customary work than that association with the ritual led to the
formation of the caste. At the same time it must be admitted
that Hocarts theory does supply a unifying factor in the t aste
system in that all over India castes arc to be fouiul with, up in a
point, similar ritual as well as social and ettmtunic fuiuiinri*
from Brahman down washerman.
to
A theory of the origin of caste which combines both fimt tintwl
and racial origins has been put forward }y ,Sla;cr in lii*
Dravidian Elements in Indian Culture, lie cniplusircs the
fact that caste is actually stronger in southern than iti muthein
India, and suggests that caste arose in India before the At van
invasion as a result of occupations becoming heirtiitaiv and
marriages being arranged by parents within the ioietv of the
common craft because sexual maturity is eatlv ami tiadr wuet*
were thus preserved. As a result of magic ;md religiom trie
monies also, exclusive occupatiotud groups were huils up,
marriage outside which became pieiiHiui.a and outuajs (
practice. The Aryan iiva.sin hati the effett of Jitfugihruiug
tendency to a-ssociate different e of caste with a thUnrmr ..i
colour and of .strengthening also a teiuirmy Un tasir. n. )w
placed in a scale of social* precedeme, .Slater also tuauuatut iltr
existence in the pre-Aryan society of India of an ortirr
of jtnrtj
magicians which he associated, rather tinnecessaiih
pnhap^ hidt
and a heliolithic cult. Uutt,*^ to whose cirws irfrim-r
has been made above, takes a soinewh.if
similar vjrw of j};-
impact of an Aryan culture upon pre,Aryan
ttctupaiimu! tUi-rs
Op. eit., pp. xH Mjij ,
at
i8o ORIGINS
jati applied to Brahmans, Kshatriyas, Chandalas, Nishadas,
etc.,
that is, to themrna and to tribal groups, whereas tradesmen and
artisans are termed kamma and sippa, and they appear to
be
organized in sreni or associations of persons following
the same
occupations which made their own laws or rules
and exercised
jurisdiction over their members. The occupations would tend
to become hereditary and their guilds, under
a system of restric-
tions due to fear of pollution, would become more and more
detached until they hardened into regular castes,
while racial or
tribal groups would follow a similar
course. Olden berg then
regards caste as derived from class, guild
and tribe segi^egated
into permanently separate groups by
heredity and by restrictions
on marriage and commensality and a fear of
pollution, which
were derived partly from the Aryan
invader and partly from
the aboriginal inhabitants.
This fear of pollution has also been
stressed by Ketkar, who
points out that the chief-principle
on which the entire system
depends is that of purity and pollution
a view which has
not escaped Ghurye and which
has been endorsed by Sarat
Chandra Roy.^^ Both these authors,
however, regard this
insistence on ceremonial purity as
inherently associated with the
Rigvedic Aryans, whereas it is not
improbable that it was taken
over m
part at any rate from, a more
ancient civilization, a view
which would probably receive the
support of Professor Murphy
w o suggests that the very ample provision
for washing and
civilization
itTdtTes that the ancient
indica inhabitants of India laid special
stress
oil ablutions and purification
long before the advent of the
emphasis on the
Uoly 1!5.
*' * ^ ' y-A S.B., vol. m. no. 7
FACTORS IJV THE EMERGENCE OF CASTE i8i
m iheir
origin of caste so far referred to mostly
Thc theorie* of the
ome important contribution to the subject. At the
cawwln
nufoe tia* *t <*<**' phenomena
than the causes of the caste system, and in particular
radber
fcarc^y one of them lays enough emphasis on the importance
of the primitive conceptions of taboo, mana and soul-stuff in
contributing to its formation. This cannot justly perhaps be
said of Sarat Chandra Roy, who docs indeed accept the hypo-
thesis that a belief in mam
and soul-substance has contributed
'
'
Caste, Race and Religion , in Mm in India, vol. xvn, no. 4, p. S54.
ofiAjpim XU
COMCLUSIOMS
Seeing that light is required on the origin of caste it would
seem not unreasonable, as in the ease of religion, to examine first
those cultures that survive in India least altered from antiquity
in case, they can illumine origins elsewhere obscured by changes
and developments due to growing civilization and to external
contacts. Caste, as it now is, is an institution which has grown
and developed through many centuries, but since it is so firmly
rooted in India, and since it is found nowhere else, it would
appear almost certain, on the face of it, that its first beginnings
are to be sought in India and not outside, and we have fortu-
nately in the more inaccessible corners of this vast country still
a few tribes whose primitive conditions of life have changed so
little in a thousand years as to be witnesses of value. Pliny the
Elder, writing in the first century a.d., mentions ^ a great valley
in the Himalayas called Abarimon inhabited by wild men; the
Assamese still speak of the hillmen who remain hostile and
have not come under the influence of the plainsmen in that pre-
cise term, abari manu, untamed folk; and Ptolemy,^ writing in
the second century, locates '
the Nanga-logae, that is the realm
of the naked precisely where the Naga log are found today,
some tribes of them still unclothed, still, in 1948, untouched by
contact with the people of the plains, tribes who had never seen a
white man nor a horse nor knew what
gunpowder, and whose is
CONCLUSIONS 187
name, and a mere form of words may have its own efficacy
like a mantram. Wherever the belief in mana prevails a
corresponding belief in the value of taboo as a protective measure
is also to be found. It is possible that ideas of mana and taboo
have been distributed to Indonesia and the Pacific from the
Indian peninsula. Hocart has pointed out the analogy between
the barber, amhattan in Tamil, whose business it is to shave
heads, and the mbota, a clan in Fiji, who alone can touch the
chief's head. The Malayo-Polynesian word tabu itself seems
to contain the basic meanings of segregation and refuge,'* but
it is abundantly clear that the ideas of mana, magic, and taboo
s '
India and the Pacific % C.J.S,, vol. i, pt. iv, p. 176.
I. H. N. Evans,
Kempunan *, in Man, xx, 38 (May igiso).
Polynesian Religion, p. 49.
'
Ckte, Race and Reiigion *, in Man in India, xiv, no. s, p. 111.
188 ORIGINS
with the chief's more powerful mana. This criticism is perhaps
inoperative when one regards the two systems as extreme develop-
ments in different environments from a common and primitive
basis. not suggested that the caste system has developed
It is
from ideas of soul-stuff, mana, magic and taboo alone; only that
without these ideas it could not have developed. If these ideas
alone were enough, one might expect to see a caste system in
every island from the Nicobars to Easter, instead of only in
India. At the same time Roy himself supplies evidence of a
precisely similar outlook to that of theMaori within the system
of Indian caste. If a Brahman enter the quarters of the Holeyas,
'
they turn out in a body to slipper him, in former times it is
-!i
said to death while a party of Brahmans who passed through
a Paraiyan hamlet had to run to escape cowpats and broomsticks
because contact with them meant ruin to Paraiyans.^^ The
taboo on a Brahman's entering a Barui's panbari has been
I'
mentioned earlier.^^ Again, when a Brahman has been in a
Kuricchan's house, the moment he leaves it, the place where he
was seated is besmeared with cowdung to remove the
pollution Roy himself again tells us that the pre-Aryan
inhabitants of India had developed the art of magic to such an
extent that the Aryan immigrants into northern India called it
from the top to the bottom of the caste system. The Brahman,
Vania, Rajput ana Kanbi castes must marry their girls within
their caste or subcaste, but they may eat together within
the large circle of their whole caste. . . . But the artisan and
depressed classes are both with regard to food and
more strict
Caste, Race and Religion (Man in India, xiv, no. si, p. 147). According
may not allow even his wife to cook for him, and if a stranger enters a
house in which he keeps his earthen drinking and cooking vessels, and
water pots, every vessel is polluted and the whole are destroyed or thrown
away.
18 Roy, Caste, Race and Religion, Man in India, xiv, no. s, p. 177.
20 Modi, Anthropological Papers, pt. u, pp. 63, 64, quoted by Roy, foe. cit.
21 Roy, loc. cit., 4). 155. 22 Abbott, Keys of Power,
p. 3.
IQO ORIGINS
does not deviate from the duties of caste. Observance of caste,
therefore, is equivalent to dharma, that is, to religious observance,
righteousness, moral obligation. Dharma is not easy to translate
accurately, but the term Dharmeswar the Righteous One? is
used for God. In any case it is clearly the result of this teaching
that social habits, caste customs, are inextricably tied up with
religion. The Brahmanic codes have insisted that every com-
munity should obey its own rules. That insistence took place
first a stage in social evolution at which law consisted, largely
at
at any rate, of a code of taboos. Hence the development erf
the caste system and the unusual success with which the growth
of a plural
society
' was attended in India. Inevitably
communities incorporated into such a society would overlap; a
person belonging to one group by tribal descent might belong
to another by occupation. Hence, perhaps, castes of mixed
origin like the Prabhu, Karan, or Kayastha, not to say Brahman.
Hence also the apparently irrelevant association of caste with
religion, coupled with a great variety of sanctions.
By way of conclusion an attempt may be made to recapitulate
a number of the more obvious factors which have been indicated
as probably contributing to the emergence and development of
the caste system.
The geographical isolation of the Indian peninsula as a whole
and of individual areas within it.
APPENDIX A
The term *
exterior *
for the Hindu castes hitherto known as
*
depressedwas originally suggested by the Census Superinten-
'
dent for Assam ana was adopted in the report ^ as the most
satisfactory alternative to the unfortunate and depressing label
'Depressed Classes'. It has been criticized as being the same
term as outcaste only of five instead of two syllables, and it
Percentage of
exterior castes on Percentage
Total Total of exterior
Total
Province or State exterior castes who
population Hindu castes Hindu Total are
popula- popula- literate
tion tion
?
18. Baroda State 2,443,007 2,152,071 203,043 9 8 10.3
19, Bengal States 973,336 641,662 30,822 5 3 ?
20. Bihar arid Orissa States 4,652,007 4,194,878 631,864 15 14 1.0
21. Bombay States 4,468,396 3,921,088 348,574 9 8 2.8
22. Central India Agency 6,632,790 5,852,204 797,902 17 12 0.3
23. Central Provinces States 2,483,214 1,788,401 252,732 14 10 0.5
24. Gwalior State 3,523,070 3,271,576 678,119 21 19 ?
25. Hyderabad State 14,436,148 12,176,727 2,473,230 20 17 0.6
26. Jammu &
Kashmir State 3,646,243 736,222 170,928 23 5 0.5
27. Madras States Agency 6,754,484 4,323,150 1,960,370 45 29 13.8
Cochin State 1,205,016 780,484 125,339 16 10 4.8
Travancore State 5,095,973 3,134,888 1,769,735 56 85 14.9
Other Madras States 453,495 407,778 65,296 16 14 8.5
28. Mysore State 6,557,302 6,015,880 1,000,326 17 15 1.4
29. North-West Frontier
Province (Agencies and
Tribal Areas) 46,451 13,651 542 4 1
30. Punjab States 437,787 383,883 94,347 25 221
0.3
31. Punjab States Agency 4.472,218 1,887,249 392,999 21 9)
32. Rajputana Agency 11,225,712 9,578,805 1,565,409 16 14 0.4
33. Sikkim State 109,808 47,074 2,029 4 2 ?
34. United Provinces States 1,206,070 950,724 208,864 22 17 i).2
35. Western India States
Agency 3,999,250 3.245,768 318,220 8 1.9
200 APPENDIX A
and Muslims, to a point
as Christians to which the untouchable
Hindus were never admitted at alL Itis, however, not quite
the teacher ifthe Dhed boys were allowed to sit with theirs, or
even to occupy the same classroom, with the result that the next
day the Dheds were refused admission to the school premises.
On the other hand, in Sind and in the central and southern divi-
sions of Bombay it was reported that there were no primary
schools managed by the local authorities which refusea admis-
sion to the children of the depressed castes. Similarly, in Assam
no inconvenience appears to have been experienced by the ex-
terior castes in the matter of school attendance. On the other
hand, in many parts of India the inconvenience is greater than
it is in Bombay. Very few of the exterior castes attend schools
nominally accessible to them in Negapatam, Kumbakonam,
Tinnevelly, Cocanada, Bezwada and Narsapur and other towns
in southern India, though in Madras, Madura, Sivaganga and
some other towns a number of children of the exterior castes
attend schools which are not especially reserved for them and
which are not boycotted by the higher castes. In most parts of
southern India it is necessary to have special schools for the
exterior castes, since it is not yet possible to induce the higher
castes to study in their company. In July 1931, when it was
decided to admit exterior castes into all the aided schools, a
number of schools had to close, and from some other schools the
higher caste children were withdrawn. Similarly, in Baroda State
the abolition of separate schools in November 1931 is reported
to have caused great resentment among the caste Hindus,
who in some cases withdrew their children from schools and in
others destroyed the crops of the exterior castes or poured
kerosene oil into the wells used by them. In Bengal the Rural
Primary Education Bill, passed in 1930, appears to have been
opposed by members representing the caste Hindus, and it is
alleged that this opposition was aimed at depriving the non-
caste Hindus, and also the poorer Muslims, of the benefits of
literacy. In Cochin State, on the other hand, much has been
done to open all educational institutions to the exterior castes,
though this has involved in some cases the removal of the
school to another site, while cases have occurred of some ill-
treatment of the castes now admitted to the schools. Generally
speaking, however, during the last decade [1921-31] the exterior
castes at school in Cochin increased in number from some 1,500
to some 14,000 and out of 700 recognized schools only three
were still reserved to the higher castes in 1931, and a Protector of
the backward and depressed classes had recently been appointed.
Cochin, however, is probably in many ways exceptionaL
In regard to the matter of the right to enter Hindu temples,
the exterior castes were advised by Mr Gandhi not to attempt to
gain entry, as God resided in their breasts. A
temple, however,
as has been pointed out, is more than a purely religious insti-
POSITION OF THE EXTERIOR CASTES 203
the vital criterion It had however long been the practice to enrol
Mazhbi Sikhs, who are Chuhra by extraction, in separate pioneer units.
ijo6 APPENDIX A
*
1. The Adi-Dravidas and Devendrakula Velalars should not
wear clothes below their knees.
*
2. The men and women of the above said depressed classes
should not wear gold jewels.
3. Their women should carry water only in mud pots and
not in copper or brass vessels. They should use straw only to
carry the water pots and no cloths should be used for that
purpose.
*
4. Their children should not read and get themselves literate
or educated.
'
5. The children should be asked only to tend the cattle of
the Mirasdars.
6. Their men and women should work as slaves of the
Mirasdars in their respective Pannais.
7. They should not cultivate the land either on waram or
lease from the Mirasdars.
They must sell away their own lands to Mirasdars of the
8.
village at very cheap rates, and if they don't do so, no water
will be allowed to them to irrigate their lands. Even if some-
thing is grown by the help of rain-water, the crops should be
robbed away, when they are ripe for harvest,
*
9. They must work as coolies from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. under
the Mirasdars and their wages shall be for men Re. 0-4-0 per
day and for women Re. 0-2-0 per day.
10. The above said communities should not use Indian
Music (Melam, etc.), in their marriages and other celebrations.
11. They must stop their habit of going on a horse in
procession before tying the Thali thread in Marriage, and they
must use their house doors as a palanquin for the marriage
processions and no vehicle should be used by them, for any
purpose.
the village for unwanted services, and if they do not get so fed
they steal the grain, no doubt regarding it as theirs by right.
In southern India again the exterior castes are generally derived
from various classes of cultivating serfs who until recently were
tied to the soil. In northern India their economic position
varies a good deal, since leather-workers for instance in industrial
towns find a ready livelihood, whereas the exterior castes in the
agricultural areas, where they can only obtain the worst land and
the worst wells, are very often extremely poverty-stricken.
The origin of the position of the exterior castes is partly racial,
partly religious, and partly a matter of social custom. There
can be little doubt but the idea of untouchability originates in
taboo. Reminiscences of such a taboo are still to be seen in
Burma, where grave-digging is a profession involving a social
stigma of a kind which will not permit of association with
persons of other professions. A comparison of this custom with
the position of those who dig graves for the hill tribes in the
surrounding areas leaves little doubt but that the repulsion
originates in the fear of some sort of death infection, and the
underlying idea is not that the person himself is polluted by
unclean work but that his mere association with death may infect
others, with whom the grave-digger comes into contact, with the
probability of dying. The treatment of washermen all over
India as a depressed caste is almost certainly traceable to a
similar taboo, the objection perhaps arising from an association
with the menstrual clothes of women and consequently an infec-
tion which, in the first instance, is magical, though it later comes
to be regarded merely as a matter of personal cleanliness. The
untouchability which has originated in taboo has undoubtedly
been accentuated by differences of race and the racial antipathies
which seem common to every branch of the human family and
have reinforced the magical taboo. An instance of this sort of
thing may again be found in Burma, which, as there is no caste
there in the Indian sense, is useful as providing indications
of the process of caste formation. Here pagoda slaves, the status
of whom is hereditary, are looked down upon by other classes.
In general, pagoda slaves have been recruited from non-Burmese
races. Large numbers of Arakanese, Talaings, Manipuris and
Siamese have been settled in various parts of Burma by various
conquering monarchs as slaves of different pagodas. This racial
element is probably to be traced again in the prohibition of
the wearing of ornaments by certain castes. Thus in the Ao tribe
in the Naga Hills of Assam one of the sub tribal groups, which
is apparently of different origin to the rest of the tribe, is not
allowed to wear ivory on both arms. Similar restrictions are
found in the Laccadive Islands. The same element probably
appears in the practice of hypergamy, and one of the first steps
which any sectiqri of an exterior caste takes in order to raise its
208 APPENDIX A
scMzial standing is to deny to pther sections the right to marry its
daughters though continuing for the time being to take wives
from among them. Thus have the Haliya Kaibartta severed
themselves from the Jaliya Kaibartta and established themselves
as a separate caste, no longer depressed, and even so a section
of the Namasudra is now attempting to segregate itself. Indeed,
as between different sections of the exterior castes prejudice is
just as strong as between the interior castes and the exterior
castes genermly. The Mahar in Bombay have objected to
sharing their counsels and conferences with Chamars, and
Mahar and Chamar have unanimously spurned the Bhangi,
Similarly, inMadras Pallans have objected to being classed with
Chakli whom they regard as no less inferior to them than the
Paraiyan, though all alike are untouchables to a good-caste
Hindu. Religion, of course, with its apparatus of holy vessels,
sacred animals and sacrosanct priests, has also contributed to the
creation of the idea of untouchability; and society in general
by its natural dislike of certain unclean occupations and by its
very proper antipathy to criminal professions lias done much to
depress and stereotype the position of the exterior castes.
In 1916, and again in 1920, the Government of India called
for a report as to the moral and material conditions of the
depressed classes and for proposals for their amelioration from
The records of the consequent reports
all local governnie^nts-
will be found under Proceedings of the Government of India
in the Home Department, nos. 130-1 of July 1916, 329-41 of
August 1920.
During the decade 1921-31 a good deal was done, particularly
in Madras, to benefit the exterior castes in various ways. Not
only did the Madras Government appoint a Commissioner of
Labour entrusted with the task of encouraging the education
of the depressed classes and of looking after their economic
interests, but many private societies were also at work. Besides
a number of Christian Missions, the Depressed Classes Union,
the Poor School Society, the Social Service League, the Andhra
Deena Seva Sangam, and the Depressed Classes Mission of
Mangalore are some of the institutions working for this object.
The Arcot Mission started an agricultural school, and Local
Boards were also spending money towards the same end. In
addition to this much was done by the Self-Respect movement
and the Depressed Classes Conference. The actual steps taken
by the Government of Madras included, besides the appointment
of a Commissioner of Labour, the insistence on the right of
admission of exterior caste pupils into all publicly managed
schools, the refusal of grants-in-aid to privately managed schools
which did not admit exterior caste pupils, the removal of
publicly managed schools from places inaccessible to exterior
castes, the opening of special schools and hostels for the exterior
POSITION OF THE EXTERIORCASTES iog
"
14
aio appendix a
prominent, little has yet been done. In November 1928 a Com-
mittee was appointed by the Government of Bombay to inquire
into the condition of the depressed castes and aboriginal tribes
in the Presidency. As a result of the recommendations of that
Committee an officer was appointed in 1931, charged with the
duty of watching over the progress of, and of upholding the
rights of, the backward classes. In addition to that, a Resolution
of the Government of Bombay directed the recruitment of
members of the depressed classes in the police. It is perhaps
significant that the Committee found it necessary to include in
their recommendations an addition to the Government Servants'
Conduct Rules framed with a view to enforcing polite treatment
of the depressed classes by the officials of Government. Many
of the Indian States have also recognized the necessity for special
measures for the uplift of exterior castes, in particular, Baroda,
Cochin and Travancore; while in Gwalior and Jaipur action
has been taken more particularly in regard to the criminal tribes,
of which there are considerable numbers in those States. In
Jaipur areas of land have been allotted to the criminal tribes
and special schools have been opened for the education of their
children, and the same has been done in Gwalior.
The occasion of the 1931 census, coming as it did at a time
when political reforms appeared imminent, complicated the
already plentiful difficulties in the way of getting an exact return
of numbers of exterior castes. A number of conflicting forces
were at work, as, apart from the natural desire of individuals
of exterior castes to raise their own social status by making
themselves out to be something other than they were recognized
to be by their neighbours, a definite movement was set afoot
by the Hindu Mahasabha for the return of ail Hindus as Hindu
simply, with no qualifications of caste or sect. In 1928 the Hindu
Mahasabha itself passed a resolution declaring that the so-called
untouchables had equal rights with other Hindus to study in
schools, and to use wells and roads and temples, and the same
resolution called on priests, barbers, and washermen to afford
their services to untouchables. At the 1931 census, however,
political considerations probably outweighed all else, and many
eflforts were made to induce untouchables to record themselves
as Hindus and nothing else. The exterior castes themselves
*
'
very doubtfully fall into that category and many of which have
been excluded on scrutiny. Generally speaking, however, it is
believed that the figures for the exterior classes obtained at the
1931 census have been accurate on the whole, and the methods
adopted in diflEerent provinces to determine what constitutes an
exterior caste have already been referred to, while extracts from
some of the Provincial Reports will be found below.
ASSAM .
caste which at this census has adopted the name of Bania and
^ i.e. Brittial-Bania
*
The term * Brittial-Bania * was itself a recently
adopted term, a substitute probably for Dom or Hari. The use of the
terra Bania (Baniya) is a mere usurpation from the name of the trading
In fact, in every district of the Assam Valley the opinion is
unanimous that the Brittial-Banias and the Kaibarttas (which
name may be taken to include Charals, Nadiyals, Hiras and all
the other names which from time to time have been applied to
various branches of this family) are the most exterior castes in
the whole of the Assam Valley.
These castes are socially outside the pale , and though the
Brittial-Banias have worked hard to improve their position and
have a considerable number of educated men amongst them
they appear to be as far off as ever from any sort of social
recognition.
Ancient custom and practice have ordained that members of
these castes are to be treated as practically untouchable. It is
true that the former necessity of taking a bath if touched by a
member of one of these castes has fallen into disuse, but a
Brahman officer of about 30 years of age has informed me that
when he was a small boy he had to take a bath if, by accident,
he was touched by one of the hated Dorns.
Again:
*
Surma Valley.
Conditions in that Valley are very different from those in
the Assam Valley. Sylhet is linguistically and ethnologically
connected with Bengal, and the inclusion of this large district
oi6 APPENDIX A
in Assam was originally merely a measure of administrative
convenience.
Sylhet and Cachar (which is largely populated by people of
Sylhetti origin) are therefore essentially Bengali in their culture.
Hence there are many more functional castes than in the Assam
Valley where, as I have already explained, caste is largely racial.
Moreover, the presence of a large upper-caste zamindar class in
Sylhet the arbitrators of social usagehas not tended to en-
courage any relaxation in the treatment of the lower orders of
society. Take, for example, the case of a M.A. of the Sylhet
. . .
true. If the Maharas are at all jal-chal, they are jal-chal only in
the sense that a man of higher caste can smoke a huka filled with
water by a Mahara. There is not a single graduate among the
Maharas in this sub-division and not even a single matriculate
can be found. The Deputy Inspector of Schools reports that the
only educated Maharas he has met in the whole sub-division are
three persons working as Vernacular teachers in Primary and
Middle English Schools. So the Maharas are depressed both
socially and educationally. . .
One gentleman from Karimganj ^himself a Nath ^has,
indeed, no hesitation in including his community among the
exterior castes. He writes as follows;
So far as my knowledge goes, amongst the Hindus inhabit-
ing this sub-division the Patnis, Jogis (Naths), Namasudras,
Malis, Dhubis and Duglas are to be properly included in the
list of depressed classes. The reasons of depression regarding
each of these communities are almost the same, namely:
(1) The members of these communities are not allowed by
the so-called high-caste Hindus to enter the temple; even their
shadow defiles the image in the temple.
(2) The high-class Hindus never take any food and water
touched or shadowed by these people.
(3) Brahmins of caste Hindus never agree to officiate as
priests in ceremonies performed by these people, even if they
request them.
"(4) Some of these communities are not allowed to have the
same barber who works amongst the high-class Hindus to work
for them.
In conclusion I beg to say that these are but few amongst
the many disadvantages from which these people suffer.
Previous census reports show that for the last forty years the
Naths have been endeavouring to raise their social position by
giving up widow remarriage and refusing food prepared by
other castes In spite, however, of these efforts the Nath com-
munity of the Surma Valley is still very much looked down upon
and I must, I consider, class them as an exterior caste ".
This classification may seem peculiar inasmuch as I have not
classed the Naths (Katonis) of the Assam Valley as exterior.
How far the Assam Naths are connected with the Sylhet Naths
is a matter intp which I intend to inquire further, but I doubt
whether there is any very close connexion. In any case, a
sufficient explanation of this difference in treatment would
appear to be that Hinduism in Sylhet is not so tolerant as it
is m
the Assam Valley. Even in the Murarichand College caste
restrictions seem to be much more closely observed than in die
Cotton College. I have received a note on the system of messing
i" i.e. Brahmans who officiate as prits for caste Hindus.
POSITION OF THE EXTERIOR CASTES sig
in that college, and it appears that even the Sahas [Shahas] are
not allowed to take their meals in the general dining hall reserved
for the upper-caste students. In fact, the jal-chal line is strictly
observed there at least nominally and the students who do
not belong to the upper castes have their meals served to them
either in their own room or in those set apart in the main
block or in two out-houses provided for the purpose
BALUCHISTAN.
Of the Chuhras the Census Superintendent (1931) of Baluchi-
stan writes:
The Chuhras censused in Baluchistan have returned them-
selves as belonging to the religious groups named below:
Caste or Tribe Keligion
Chuhra Hindu Balmiki
Chuhra Hindu Lai Begi
Chuhra Musalman Lai Begi
Chuhra Musalman Balashai
Chuhra Sikh Mazhabi
Chuhra Chuhra
Although these persons without exception are not allowed to
drink from wells belonging to real Hindus, Muslims or Sikhs,
and are not permitted to enter their places of worship, I include
them in the figures for the various religions to which they claim
to belong, giving separately the numbers (males and females) of
these untouchables in a footnote in each case.'
MADRAS.
The following extracts are taken from the Census Report
(1931) for Madras, where the Census Superintendent gives as
the total number of depressed classes 7,300,000 in round figures,
or 16| per cent of the population of that province. He goes on:
For reasons already given this figure cannot be taken as an
absolute tale of those to whom the peculiar disabilities summed
up in the broad term depressed" attach. There are many
Christian converts on whom disabilities press no whit lighter
than in the untouchable communities they owned before. These
are not included, for personal and local and sectarian variations
enter too largely allocation to be possible. There
are other bodies the difficulties oi whose life are hardly less than
those of any Adi-Dravida, but to whom the technical stigma of
untouchability does not apply. Such do not figure in the census
list. The census total therefore can fairly be termed only an
approximation. It is, however, a good approximation and, as
an indication of the general dimensions of untouchability and
through it of the depressed classes.problem, is absolutely reliable.
stsio APPENDIX A
Whether its approximation is above or below would depend on
of my
Report on the Census of India, 1931. Such changes as there are are
due to minor excisions, to a few alterations in wording or in punctuation,
and to the addition of references. 2 vide supra, ch. i.
S24 APPENDIX B
institutions as that of the devadasi,^ together with astronomical
lore and cults of the heavenly bodies and priestly institutions
which formed the basis of modern Hinduism; the final form
of which was no doubt determined by the successful coniiict of
this proto-Hinduism on the religious side with the imported
religion of Iranian and Aryan invaders, to whom, however,
it had to concede much socially, resulting in tire socio-religious
position of the priestly order so familiar in India.
The generally accepted view of the Hindu religion, or society,
used to regard it as originating in Aryan invaders of about
1500 B.c. who came in with a higher civilization and a fairer
skin to find the great peninsula inhabited by dark-skinned bar-
barians on whom they imposed the religion of the vedas. This
view can no longer be maintained, and the doubts cast on it
appear to be confirmed by discoveries including that of a figure
of Shiva among the remains at Mohenjodaro, while Sir
John Marshall has clearly shown that the pre-Aryan religion
of the Indus Valley involved a cult of the bull, and of the
snake typical Mediterranean cults, to be found in Crete and
also of phallic symbols, including ring and baetylic stones,
which are probably all part of the soul-fertility cult which is
associated throughout India with menhirs, dolmens, and a
megalithic culture generally; indeed, Heine-Geldern connects
the megalithic Mycenean theatre with India and so with the
Far East and the Pacific Islands. It has been pointed out with
some aptness that in modem Hinduism only those elements of
vedic rites have survived which are essentially social, such as
the marriage ceremonies; the argument being that though
society was or aimed at being Aryan, its religion is older than
that of the so-called Aryan invasion. The god of the Rigvedic
Indo-Europeans is Indra, the thunder god, who fills in later
developments an entirely minor role, apparently bein^ absorbed
into the Hindu pantheon, just as the minor gods of primitive
tribes have been, retaining, however, his personal identity by
virtue of a social prestige or privilege which other tribal gods
have lost in the process of assimilation. The historical Hindu
religion first appears not in the Punjab, which must be regarded
as the area most completely occupied by the Indo-European
invaders, but to the east of it in the Brahmarshidesha,
where stable fusion between these Indo-European invaders
and the previous inhabitants probably took place. When
alien cultures and religions fuse to form a new culture or
reli^on, it will not be found that this fusion takes place where
the intrusive culture is strong enough to predominate. It will
rather appear, away from the centre where the intrusion is
strongest, in some area where the previous culture was strong
enough to resist complete suppression and make its influence
3 supruy Tpy. sqq.
HINDUISM AND PRIMITIVE RELIGIONS
felt on the new one. Thus it is that the efflorescence of Greek
culture took place not in Sparta, where was the purest blood of
the northern invaders, but in Athens, where the grasshopper-
wearing inhabitants regarded themselves as autochthones and
where there was probably effective fusion between the fair-
haired northerner and the dark-haired Pelasgian. '
Similarly,
there is some reason to believe that Rome grew from a fusion
between the ancient Etruscans and later invaders, whether the
latter came from the east or from the north. In the same way
it is suggested that Hindu religion and society finally took form
and flourished as a result of the impact of the invading Indo-
European on the indigenous religion that he found in India. It
is quite clear that the previous inhabitants of India lived in
cities and had a high civilization, probably of western Asiatic
origin, and it is significant that Hinduism is remarkable for the
similarity of many of its tenets and practices to those of Asia
Minor and Mesopotamia. The indigenous religion of any
country inevitably starts with an advantage over that of an
invading people, since it is the priest of the country who knows
how to approaclx the gods of the soil and propitiate them, and
for that reason there is always a tendency for a local religion to
establish its ascendancy over an intrusive one. This appears to
have been the case in India, where the important position of
Shiva, Vishnu, and Kali, as compared to the unimportant one
which Indra now holds, signalizes the triumph of the older gods.
The religious history of pre-vedic India was probably similar
and parallel to that of the eastern Mediterranean and of Asia
Minor. Professor Tucci points out^ that though the moon does
not appear to have been an independent divinity, ancient lunar
cults have been assimilated by Devi in the forms of Durga, Kali
and Tripurasundari. The cult of snakes, and the worship of a
mother goddess, were probably brought in by earlier invaders
of Mediterranean or of Armenoid race, speaking no doubt a
Dravidian language, whose religion must also be associated with
fertility cults, phallic symbolism, the devadasi cult, and probably
human sacrifice. Recent discoveries in Crete have revealed a
remarkable snake cult associated with the symbol of the double
axe. With Mesopotamia, too, we must perhaps associate a moon
god and sun goddess, whose sex was changed with a change from
matrilineal to patrilineal descent perhaps under the influence
of the Rigvedic invaders. It is worth pointing out that the
deification and worship of kings, very typical of the Hindu atti-
tude to kingship, is stated by Langdon to be characteristic
of Sumerian religion in contrast to Semitic. It would also
appear not characteristic of the religion of the Rigveda, but on
^ In a note on *
Traces of Lunar Cult in India *
in Rivista degii Studi
Orientali, vol. xn (1930), fasc. iv, quoted in The Indian Antiquary iot
January 1931}. p. 17. 1931, p. 367.
15 ,.
n6 APPENDIX B
the contrary to be connected with the beliefs in the external
soul and in life-essence discussed below, inasmuch as the king
contains or represents the life principle of the community he
rules. Like the cult of the snake, the transmigration of souls
too appears to be a doctrine in no way typical of northern reli-
gions, in which the dead live on underground, and Fustel de
Coulanges has pointed out ^ that it is not a feature of any nor-
thern religion though it has survived and been incorporated in
them from the more ancient religions of Greece and Italy..
Ancestor worship again is very strong in India, and this, too,
would appear foreign to northern European reiigicm, and indeed
it is almost impossible that nomads should be ancestor wor-
shippers, and the Aryan invasion, so-called, was probably an
invasion of steppe-dwelling tribes, pastoral in habit and still
nomadic. Cremation they may have brought in, and if so, they
gave it a social cachet which is still leading to its gradual
adoption by tribes which have previously practised burial or
exposure, but it seems much more likely that the Rigvedic
Aryans buried their dead and adopted cremation from the
inhabitants whom they conquered. The eighth book of the
Rigveda contains the following words addressed to the dead:
*
I place this barrier (of stones) for the living that no other . . .
him not. Even as a mother covers her son with the end
. . .
for all time be his asylum. I heap up earth above thee,' etc.t
This passage seems very clearly to indicate burial in a tumulus,
and the word translated barrier is stated in a note to be
'
cow in India is older than the vedic religion In any case the
sanctity of the cow is foreign to the Rigveda and appears far
more suggestive of the religions of Asia Minor, Egypt, and Crete
than of the Indo-European invaders who came from the steppes
of the north-west to conquer northern India in the strength
of their horses and of their iron. Indra, moreover, appears as
the author of sacrifice, and in the Yajurveda it seems still to be
Indra and Varuna who are the principal recipients of sacrificed
cattle. Nor is it possible to accept Sir John Marshalls anti-
thesis between the worship of the bull and the worship of the
cow. Both are surely different aspects of the same reverence for
cattle which characterizes the pre-equine civilizations of the
Mediterranean basin, and in India are pre-' Aryan in origin.
The vedas after all enjoined gaumedha, and the Black Yajur-
veda lays down an elaborate list of deities to whom bulls, oxen
and cows can be appropriately sacrificed, Vishnu, Shiva, and
Kali, the great gods of Hinduism, are not Rigvedic deities at
all. Sakti is probably a cult derived from the Great Mother
goddess of Asia Minor, and the cult of Shiva is inevitably asso-
ciated with it, the two being bound up with the phallic religion
of southern Asia and of the eastern Mediterranean. It is prob-
ably significant that the word Ungam is definitely of non-Aryan
origin, as Przyluski has demonstrated, while the word puja is
also believed to be a non-Sanskritic loan word. With the
worship of Shiva, too, is to be associated the snake cult of which
there are so many survivals in southern India and which appears
to have been at an early date in definite opposition to Brah-
manistic Hinduism, the conflict between the two being indi-
cated, for instance, by Krishnas exploits against serpents, by
the destruction of serpents at the burning of the forests of
13 Yeatts, Report on the Census of Madras, 1931, p. 3ifo.
HINDUISM AND PRIMITIVE RELIGIONS stsig
cult from the direction of Asia Minor, the possibility that some
SJS APPENDIX B
tribal and totemic taboo has acted as a contributory factor in the
religious sanctity attaching to cattle cannot be entirely over-
looked. Thus the flesh of cattle is tabooed by certain clans
among primitive tribes of Assam and Indonesia who do not
appear to have come even remotely under the influence of
JElmduism, while on the other hand the cow is regarded as com-
pletely tabooed by the Shins of Chilas, who are described by
Leitner as a Hindu tribe with nowadays a veneer of Islam, the
highest caste in Dardistan, and really Brahmans themselves,
though expelled from India or from Kashmir by Brahmans.
Not only do they taboo the flesh of the cow but also its milk, and
they only touch a calf at the end of a prong.^
Pargiters view of the original conception of brahma as akin
to that of mana has already been mentioned, and the view
seems naturally to associate itself with the views on soul-matter,
or life itself, as a transferable and material substance, which are
so familiar in Indonesia and further India, but which are
actually common enough in India itself. It is on this theory
of the indestructibility and transferability of life-matter that
the underlying principle of head-hunting is based in Assam;
in other parts of the same cultural area it has been manifest in
human sacrifice or in cannibalism, the latter perhaps being its
most primitive manifestation and the former its most developed.
That the principle is still strong in India may be inferred from
a number of recent instances, several of which are given later.
In the form of head-hunting this theory involves that which
regards the head as the particular seat of the soul, and this
belief is apparent in India proper in the sanctity which attaches
to the headf or to the hair, as also in many cases where the (soul-
impregnated?) hair does duty for the individual. Thus, in the
case of the Naga who dies far from home, a portion of his hair
is brought back by his companions to be attached to the head
of the wooden effigy, which is then the subject of the usual
funeral ceremonies, and one may compare the way in which
the head-hunter so often substitutes the nair of his dead or even
of his living, and unwitting, victim for the head he cannot carry
off. The Ujli Minas when unsuccessful in dacoity will only
shave at home and after propitiating their goddess. Probably
they fear that they may be suffering from a loss of life-essence
as Samson did when his hair was cut. Conversely, a Korku
woman of the Central Provinces tries to obtain as a cure for
barrenness a hair from the mother of a large family which she
buries under her bathing stone. The same theory may per-
haps be the origin of the familiar caste mark placed in front
of the idea. Thus in Mysore the Hasala caste redeem the soul
with a pig from the magician who has caused the death and
domicile it in a pot where it is supplied with food and water.^s
The Nicobarese and some Naga tribes fashion wooden figures
on which the skull of the deceased is placed in order that the
soul may leave it and enter the wooden figure.^^ It is for a
(May 1935) ; Hutton, Two Tours East of the Naga Hills % in M.A S,B,, xi,
no. 1 (1929).
Playfair, The Garos, p. 113.
26 Hutton, Census of India, 193I, i, pt. iii b, p. 4. Dr Elwin writes in
1950 that he can find no trace among the Sawara of the use of such a conven-
tional wooden figure, but I saw one myself in March 1931, arid it was
explained to me as set down here.
27 Russell, op. cit., IV,
p. 39.
28 Mateer, Native Life in Tramneore, L. A. K. Iyer, Travancore
p. 75 ;
Castes and Tribes, i, pp. 179-90.
jje appendix s
Allusion 29has already been made to the theory of soul-matter
as a fertilizer of the aops and a producer of life generally, a
theory which appears to pervade magico-religious thought and
practice throughout Indonesia and south-west Asia and survives
in strength in farther India. The collective disposal of the
villages dead at the time of sowing is clearly associated in some
Naga tribes with their aspect as crop fertilizers, while the Oraons
of Chota Nagpur again, if the paddy has sprouted, inter their
dead temporarily to cremate them the following year before it
sprouts. The connexion between the souls of the dead and the
fertilization of the ground is reflected again in their very frequent
association with water. It is hardly necessary to call to mind
the value set by Hindus upon the immersion of their dead in
the Ganges, but there are a number of parallel beliefs in more
or less primitive tribes which do not seem to owe their existence
to Hindu influence but rather to share their origin with the
ingredients of that religious system. Thus the Meithei practice
of disposing of the frontal bone of the deceased in the Ganges
appears, at first sight, to be the result of their Hinduization, and
no doubt their choice of the Ganges is such a result, but their
neighbours the Kacharis, when yet un-Hinduized, used to con-
sign their frontal bones to the Kopili river after the harvest,
while the Rengma Naga make a pool for water at the grave
of any notable man that the rain, and rice, may be plentiful;
and at least one other Naga tribe pours water on a grave to
cause rain, while the Palaung of eastern Burma fetch a bier
pole from a grave and put it m
a stream for the same purpose.
The Santal again have the practice, at any rate under certain
circumstances, of consigning a piece of bone from the head and
another from the breast of the dead to the waters of the Damodar
river.99 The Panwar mourner, *1 besides throwing into the
Narbada the bones of the dead, throws in with them some of
his own hair also, thus perhaps vicariously accompanying the
soul. The Kunbi practice of consigning to the Ganges the
brass images of their ancestors has already been mentioned, and
the Bishnoi Brahmans of Sind were described by Tod as burying
their dead at their thresholds and raising over them small altars
on which they place an image of Shiva (sc., a lingam?) and a
jar of water.82 Though nothing is said of any fertilizing effect,
these various practices would seem not unconnected. It is even
possible that there may be some similar association with the
dead or their avenging spirits in the ordeal by water described
in a communication from Warren Hastings's as practised by
Hindus in tlie Ganges, the accused man submerging himself and
29 See above on p. S5* and, for an instance
of such a specific theory,
p. S50, below. so Dalton, Ethnology
of Bengal, p. Ji8.
SI Russell, op. cit., rv, Rajasthan, vni, ii (vol. in, p. 1*97).
p. 348.
ss On the Trial by Ordeal among the Hindus ,
by Ali Ibrahim Khan
in Asiatick Researches, 1, p. 390.
A. Obsolete type of Garo Grave Figure (Kima) from specimens now in the
Indian Museum, Calcutta.
B. Statue of dead man with skull receptacle on head. Ukha Village,
Konyak Naga.
C. Soul-figure of a woman at Chongvi, with horns for keeping her skull
in place (Konyak Naga tribe).
D. So-called
Devil-Scarer * in the Nicobars, with horns projecting from
his top hat.
E. Statue of Nicobarese with skull of deceased as head. The wooden body
serves as a cupboard for his bones (Teressa Is., 1930).
v
yem ,
me
JC^fjrjsfAo
ap
Sef >f.
^ASbkoJ
fem&ie,
G
,
sfApS^*
msie
B^
A tOocmorpe
effigies,
0eoerel%$^
jnemofjai
deM<f
Ih^
Kafir
HINDUISM AND PRIMITIVE RELIGIONS 3539
men' who slash round the legs and cut off the heads of
strangers The theory, however, on which it is based, that
Report on the Census of the Rajputana Agency, 1931, p. i5.
35 Thurston, Castes and Tribes, m,
pp. 411 sq.
36 Bray, Report on the Census of Baluchistan, igii, R. Hughes-
p. 186 ;
ishing at the knee % A Naga head-hunter who does not actually remove
and suspend from the village head-tree the foot and leg of his victim will
frequently slash the legs in order to entitle him to wear the embroidered
gaiters of a warrior who has taken his enemy's legs, while some tribes on
the north bank of the Brahmaputra are reported to cut off the hands and
feet of their enemies (though they do not decapitate), probably to hamper
possible attempts of the ghc^t to pursue and harm them.
3 Special importance often attaches to the lower jaw among
head-hunters
in both Asia and Africa, and sometimes to the tongue, which is regarded as
the seat of life.
39 portman. Relations with the Andamanese, i, p. i8a.
^0 Northey and Morris, The Gurkhas, p. tSg.
Conversely I have known a gardener in the Simla Hills refrain from
setting grafts himself since to do so would prejudice his chance of begetting
children, clearly on account of the loss of life-matter; instead he called
in an old man past the breeding age to do it for him.
BiNDUIS-M AND PRIMITIVE RELIGIONS $41
derived from one which involved, the taking of the child's life,
and comparable with that referred to below of branding children
offered to the Syrian goddess.'^^ And if head-hunting is rare in
India, human sacrifice, on the other hand, has been widespread
and has clearly been ultimately based on the same conception
of the necessity or at any rate the desirability of releasing soul-
matter to fertilize the earth. No doubt it was later interpreted
as the placation or propitiation of an earth deity, but this must
be regarded as a sophisticated justification of a practice the true
meaning of which had become obscure or been forgotten. The
Kondhs are described as having performed their meriah sacri-
fices to the earth mother, but the details of the ceremony and
the practice of distributing fragments of the sacrificial meat in
their fields and granaries show a very patent connexion with
the disposal of enemy flesh by head-hunting Nagas and the
underlying idea is undoubtedly the same. In one form of the
sacrifice the victim was squeezed to death in a cleft in a
green tree, and in another the tears caused by his sufferings
Drought rain in proportion to their profusion. Similarly, the
Wa of Burma definitely associate their head-hunting with the
sowing of the crop,^^ while the successful Kafir head-hunter was
greeted, on his return from the foray with his trophy, by a
shower of grain.-* In Kulu the transplanting of the rice is
accompanied by the sacrifice of a rough dough image of a man
to the house god.^ So again the Dasehra festival, now asso-
ciated by all Hindus with the killing of Ravana by Rama,
coincides throughout most of India with the sowing of the winter
crops, in particular with that of millet, a more ancient staple in
south Asia than rice, as well as with that of wheat. It is this
festival that is associated in western India with the worship of
weapons of war (and it is still regarded there as a proper day
on which to go forth and loot), while it is then that human
sacrifices used to be performed in eastern India; and it is still
on this festival that the gupta puja, the hidden rite, to ensure
the prosperity of the person, house or family, would be resorted
to it ever. The association of human sacrifice with the^ prosper-
ity of the individual and with the success of the State in war
seems clear enough, and its association with crops may be in-
ferred with equal safety. It was probably some such association
of soul-substance with fertility, and perhaps with some notion
p. 54, infra*
^3 Macpherson, Memorials of Service in India, pp. 113 sqq.; Thurston,
Castes and Tribes, ni, 369 sqq., and see Reclus, Primitive Polk, pp. 304-35.
Scott and Hardiman, Gazetteer of Upper Burma and the Shan States,
I, pp. 500 sq. Robertson, kdfirs of the Hindu-Kush, p, 153.
Grooke, Religion and Folklore, p. 853, and ct. Pant, Social Economy of
the Himalayans, p, 111, where he says that the women transplantinr rice
offer * a red powder ... to heaven ' and apply it to their foreheads. Ochre
has definitely some ceremonial association with fertility, probably being
associated with bloodand semen.
IS
APPENDIX B.
the victim and applied its gory blade to his forehead and to
his tongue. The action of applying the blood to the forehead
offers a very close parallel to that of the Angami Naga who never
drinks liquor without -applying on the tips of his fingers a drop
to his forehead for the bea^t of the materiai soui resident
within. The drinking of human blood and the tasting of human
flesh are common in Indonesia and Oceania, and it is likely
that it has at one time been more prevalent in India than it is
now. It was reported of the Wa
of Burma by Sir George Scott ^2
that probably human flesh was eaten on special occasions, poss-
ibly at the harvest festival. The Wa
are also credited by the
Shans with eating their dead relatives the Batak of
Sumatra, and this, a practice probably arising rather from a
belief in reincarnation than directly from that in life-, or soul-
matter, has also been reported of some tribes in India. Thus
Gardiner reports it of a tribe in the Himalayas, who eat the
heart and liver of their own dead'. The Kafirs too, he says,
occasionally eat the ashes of these organs, mixed with herbs, as
S44 APPENDIX U
Pcriiaps tile cFucIfist forni in whicli tiic doctrine
of soul
substance appears is the vujgar but widely credited
superstition
which attributes to the European the prattice of
catching fai
black boys and hanging them by the iieels over a slow
to fire
distilhorn a puncture in the skull the seven drops
of vifil
essence which impart to sahibs in general tiicir
eneiVy i
sports and their activity of mind and body.
Curiousiv enoudi
this life-essence, this momiyat, seems to
have startetl as' bitumen
simply, - or some similar mineral substance,
and to have been
used as a quite legitimate metlicine, then
to have become a
spurious substitute in the form of resin, the
supiJosed virtues of
which were later attributed by confusion to
the embalmed bodies
from which this resin was most readily obtained.
body a fourth transfer has taken place
From the dead
and superstition now
imputes the virtue of the medicine to
its distillation from
the
living body in the form of
blTn
hgo
f its life-essence.
strangers to be beaten in Saharanpur
on the suspicion that they were
not long
'Fins belief cau ed
attached in India
to hi rSrSuetToi 3 is
he nexT^generaS L 1 reduplicated to
primftive tribes
me SitvTf
the penalty of fS;,. ?o m
failure to marry is extinction
at the hands of a
demon who bars the pathway of the
her of Hmdu cartes, as also
dead, while aj^ona a
among dte Toda of
mm
InS"' iSerf
* Crooke, Religion and Folklore,
pp m sq.; CJordon, '
MomiySi ', in
Nazaror^e
Nazaroff, The White m "aL'p.f'll*
Lady^ fn
White' LI?-' of regasus,
Pegasus, ch. via;
cb. viii
y? S(J.: Huntingford, ^oiiyai f In
iPP- '
!vy A, red..,
HINDUISM AND P R*I M 1 T 1 V E RELIGIONS
the corpse of a person dying unmarried is married before crema-
tion as a necessary qualification for future happiness.^ The
doctrine of soul-substance as a fertilizer is naturally not less
applicable to animals than to human beings, and it is therefore
not surprising to find the Mala of southern India and Ahir at
the Gaidaur festival causing their cattle the young in particu-
lar to trample a pig to cleath, after which, according to the
ancient custom, the corpse of the pig is eaten by the Aliir who
thus share in the transfer of the porcine life-substance to their
cattle. In the case of the Korava, who have a similar practice,
an instance of the substitution of a human being for the more
usual pig is actually on record,*^ the unfoitiniate victim having
been buried to his neck before the cattle were driven over him.
Involved again in the belief in soul-matter probably are the
practices of erecting megalithic monuments ana wooden images
of the dead. The two practices are not completely separable,
as both appear primarily to be intended to afford a texmporary
dwelling lor the soul pending its operation as a fertiK/er of the
crop. The megalithic monument appears very often as merely
a permanent substitute for the impermanent wooden statue
which can be given greater resemblance to the human body.
Thus the. wooden statues of the dead put up by the Angami
Nagas of Assam are in some villages destroyeci after the harvest
and the others have a small stone erected behind them to do
duty when they have perished. In other villages again a mans
\youngest son, on succeeding as he does to his fathers dwelling-
liouse, must put up a monolith for his deceased parents, an act
corresponding to tnat of some other villages in which the mono-
liths are erected during their lifetime by specially prosperous
persons to enhance the prosperity of the community as a wnole.
The significance of the latter monolith is quite definitely phallic,
and ancient specimens still exist elsewhere in Assam whose
form puts this beyond dispute, both as solid menhir and as
hollow monolith which contained the ashes of the dead; and
there is no doubt but the association is here again with the soul-
matter as a fertility agent, and an echo of the doctrine is perhaps
to be found in the Vijayanagara legend of the head of the hero
Ramanatha which, when returned to Kummata, became united
with the lingam of Shiva, It may be noted that ICampila, the
defender of Rumraata, appeared, or at least his troops did, under
Thurston, ibid,, pp, 106 sq.; Omens mid Siiperstitions, p, 51 Castes ana
Tribes, I, pp, 5Q sq.i v, p. 197, vi, pp, m ; Iyer, Coc/iin
;
and
Malabar Marriage Gomnussion,
Tribes
Castes, n, p, 19S (quoting the report of the
which his own inquiries did not confirm); Wilson. Indian Caste, n, pp. 75,
77, Thurston, Castes and Tribes, m, pp, 463 sq,
s Hutton, Angami Nagas, pp. 13(1, 533 ; Monoliths at Dimapur, pp. 58,
Erection of Monoliths, pp. sq,; Use of Stone, p, 85.
67 ;
!|
||
Konyak Nagas on their phallic stone skull cists, and the practice I
ij
the Punjab hills again (in Chamba, for instance), monoliths, |i|
or wooden substitutes, are put up for the dead, with feasting jii
bread, fowls, cheroots and brandy. The spirit of Muhammad even is said i j:
of disease, rain, and other boons, panja ahd cheroots are the form the j
offerings take, these being considered peculiarly attractive to Muhamma-
chair of St fiacre in the church of the village of that name, the stone seat [
ji
of which, like the pillar at Orcival, had the power of rendering barren
women fertile. It was necessary, however, that there should be no garment
between the stone and the sitters body. Similarly in the chapel of St H
Antoine de Paule at S^agossa there was a tombstone on whi^ barren
women lay in order to become fruitful. (Dulaure, Des Dwinim GMra- rj
irtc^Sy p. 151.) .
APPENDiK B
effigy of the dead and put it into a miniature cist of stone verti-
cals and a capstone which is erected on high ground and wor-
shipped annually. Even the method of transporting megaliths
seeim to have lett traces in western India. The Naga of Assam,
like the people of Nias in the Indian archipelago, transport
megaliths on wooden sledges made from the forked trunks of
trees which are dragged by very large numbers of men pulling
on cane or creeper ropes. In the case of the Naga, at any rate,
an essential implication of the ceremony is the infection of the
village with the prosperity of the celebrant, and when the cere-
mony is performed with wooden instead of stone emblems these
emblems are formally dragged all round the village with this
express purpose.'^ Very suggestive of a degenerate form of this
ceremony is the village festival (ghasbavji) in Rajputana at
which the god, consisting of a large waterworn boulder,
is dragged round the village on a sled made out of a forked tree
trunk. Probably of similar origin also is the general veneration
paid to stones throughout India, particularly of course to those
of queer or unusual shape. Crooke gives a very large number
of examples which it is unnecessary to recapitulate, but it
may be recorded here that a suit was argued in the Calcutta
High Court on 2S April 1929 about a stone about 5 ft. stjuare,
apparently of black slate or marble from Jaipur Qeypor^, which
*
changed hands for Rs. 10,000 (75(^ as being very efficacious
in the matter of getting a son'. 'The suit arose because the
stone failed to function, and it was stated in evidence that num-
bers of even quite well-educated Hindus believed in the efficacy
of stones of this kind when used with the correct rites, and that
so much as a lakh might be paid for such a stone. It was also
mentioned that sitting on a stone is an essential feature in many
Jain rites.
It may here be urged that the reverence and superstition
paid to stones in general, Is not. as Crooke suggests, a vague
superstition which develops into the use of memorial stones,
but on the contrary is the degenerated remnant of the life-
essence fertility Cult. The use of a stone or mere pebble as a
pretyasila, 'stone of the disembodied spirit', by Hindus in
western India seems a definite instance of this process of decay.
The stone is picked up by the chief mourner at the place where
the corpse was put down and is anointed with oil (recalling the
baetyls of Naga fertility cults ). a crow Is induced to eat corn
scattered about it and the pebble is then thrown into running
water or kept among the household deities. Similarly, the
Koraati caste of Mysore invokes the soul of the deceased to
enter a pebble temporarily, while the ashes of the deceased
n Hutton. Carved Mcmollffia M Biinapur and an Angami Naga Cere-
mony (j Meaning and Method of the Erection of Monolithli by the Angami
Nagas , in wi. Migion and Fotklore, eh, wi.
n Hutton. Thi Sm Nagat. p. 154.
HINDUISM AND PRIMITIVE RELIGIONS S49
leaves the dying body to enter the herbs of the field or the seeds
of the earth, and which then passes through grass into cattle
and through grain, or indirectly through the meat of grazing
animals, into man and passes through the seminal fluid to
generate fresh life, almost as if it consisted of carbohydrates.^
This doctrine may perhaps be regarded cs having arisen very
early in the history of mankind as a natural result of speculation
as to the cause of the change that takes place at death and as
to the nature of that which has left the body. Speculation of
some kind would be inevitable, if only as a result of the natural
curiosity required by any animal, human or otherwise, to adapt
itself to environment in the struggle to survive. Abstract ideas
come late in the development of a language and presumably
therefore late in the development of thought, and hence the
necessity, before any philosophic idea of life can be framed, of
regarding it as a material substance and of thinking of that
substance as taking some form. The idea then of a manikin
living Dehind the forehead whose movements are registered on
an infants fontanelle is a not unnatural symptom of the deve-
lopment, or degeneration, of the life-substance theory and may
perhaps be traced in that doctrine of the Vedanta school of
Hindu philosophy which regards the soul as encased in a series
of sheaths, the interior of which accompany the soul on it?
migration while the exterior constitute the material body; and
the location of the soul in the head is illustrated by the Hindu
belief that it escapes through the crevice of Brahma *, through
*
which ascetics can project their soul (and so die) at will, while
for less holy persons it is necessary to fracture the skull with a
conch shell to let out the soul. The saldgramd held to the
aperture perhaps served the same purpose as the pretyasila
mentioned above. One is also reminded of the story in the
Aitareya Brahmana^ of how the gods killed a man for their
sacrifice, but the part in him fit for an offering went out, leaving
him deformed, and entered a horse, and so on through an ox
(which turned to a gayal when the fit part left it), a sheep and
a goat and entered the earth, where the gods surrounded it so
that no escape was possible, when it turned into rice. Father
Schmidt considers that in India the materialistic Sankhyan
philosophy most certainly arose from matrilineal animism,
and he suggests that the spiritual philosophies of classical Greece
may have had at least in part a similar source. Having ^t as
far as materializing our life principle, its conception as similar
in feature to the human body is inescapable, and the way is clear
*3 It seems certain that the strange provision in the Brahmanical code
which makes the Telis an untouchable caste (but not the Tilis, who only
sell and do not press oil) is due to their practice of destroying the seed
in the pursuit of their occupation without provision for its transfer to
another living organism, a suggestion confirmed, I think, by Manti, iv, 85.
** Vide itajendralaia Mitra, Indo-Aryans, 11, p. 76.
'
S5a appendix B
for the doctrine of reincarnation. The doctrine reached is logi-
cally irreconcilable with the theory with which we started, but
experience shows that the two can be held simultaneously, at
any rate by primitive man, without any consciousness of incon-
sistency. There are probably, however, steps by the way which-
contribute to this belief the idea of the soul coming back as
an insect is one, and one to which the conception of the soul
as able to leave the body and flit about at night, derived in
pan no doubt if not entirely from the phenomena of dreams,
has contributed. As instances the Lhota Naga of Assam, the
Kunbi of Bombay, and the Kami and Bhuiya of Bengal may
all be quoted as watching for an insect after a persons death,
or the Ahir and Gond who go to a river and bring back an
insect or a fish as containing the soul and sometimes, the case m
of the Gond at least, eat it to ensure its rebirth.* Another con-
tributory observation to the insect notion is perhaps the
mysterious way in which large numbers of in.sccts appear from
nowhere in particular, as if caused by superfluity as it were of
life-substance, an idea which would have been comprehensible
-nough to the ancient world, which regarded, for instance, insect
life as spontaneously engendered in dung dropped under a wax-
ing moon, ctc.,8 which regarded the Nile floods as pouring
soul into the sods so as to fashion live creatures from the very
soil, bringing us back again to that fertility cult which asso-
ciates soul with water. Similarly, Diodorus Siculus says,
moisture venerates creatures from heat, as from a seminal prin-
ciple aiiw a little farther on, they say that about Thebes in
Egypt, after the overflowing of the river Nile, the earth thereby
being covered with mud and slime, many places putrify through
the heat of the sun, and thence are bred multitudes of mice. It
is certain, therefore, that out of the earth animals are gene-
. . ,
Rlsley,
Tribes and Castes, i, p. sgs ,UMU op, cit, II* p. tS, iii,,p,
Vide Pliay, Nat, Hist1,. f-k. xvui, ch. xxx;
ixlii oditof *1 ooto,
*^[Nilus] . . . glaebis ett infuniul mirms, m ipaqm hmm
viulk
f^ngaiPoBiponiui Mela, i, ss
mtory, 1,1. Fiopit 0/ indk, ppvjp iq* cli, ill)*
EiNBUISM AND PRIMITIVE RELIGIONS
a tendency ^to which is everywhere apparent. This reincarna-
tion belief is to t . seen very clearly m
the ancient Brahmanic
theory that after the birth of a son the sexual relationship of
husband and wife should end, since the son is the father's self
and the father's wife has become his mother also. It is stated
of the Kochhar subcaste of the Khatri, a trading caste of the
Punjab, that funeral rites are performed for a father in the
fifth month of his wife's first pregnancy, which points to the
same idea. The Bishnoi of Hissar bury an infant at the thres-
hold that its soul may re-enter the mother and be born again.^
Among the Bhuiya every child is regarded as a reincarnation of
some deceased relative,^ while the Mikir, it may be noticed,
believe in reincarnation except for the souls of those who have
been killed by tigers. Among the Lushei the reincarnated soul
sometimes appears as a hornet, sometimes as dew, and in the
latter form the belief is hardly distinguishable from the Karen
theory of life-substance. So again it is a common practice with
the tribes mentioned that while a dead grandfather's name or
that of another ancestor must be given to a child, the name of
a living ancestor shall not be given, as, if it were, either he or
the new-born child would die. The practice was perhaps similar
in ancient Indian society, as in old lists of kings it is common
to find a grandson named after the grandfather. This practice
seems, however, to have changed, as the name of any ancestor
living or dead is reported now to be avoided by Hindus.
The association of reincarnation with the soul-fertility cult is
perb .ps confirmed to some extent by Malcolm's record^ of the
practice of jumping off certain high rocks in central India in
order to be reborn in a royal house. Forsyth also records 5 the
account of an eyewitness, Caplain Douglas, Political Assistant in
Nimar, of a scene at Omkar, a shrine of Shiva on Mandhatta
island in the Narbada, at which a young man leaped off a rock
90 ft. high to his death in 1822, and mentions a later case of
an old woman who hesitated and was pushed over. In the case
of this rock apparently if the jumper survived he was killed by
a priestess with a dagger, but in the case of another of these
'
rocks if a man survived the fall he was made Raja, and the asso-
ciation between the soul and the fertility of the land impinges
on that between the fertility of the land and the king as the
living receptacle or embodiment of the life-spirit, and one which
must not be allowed to grow old. One is reminded, however,
by this habit of jumping off a cliff to royal incarnation, of a
number of similar practices associated in each case with the
Golden Bough, iv, p. 189, and cf. Crooke, Northern India,
pp. Jtos sq. Kaul, Report on the Census of the Punjab, 1911, i, p. 1199.
Roy, Hill Bhuiyas, p. 186.
93 Shakespear, Kuki Clans, pp. 6439.
94 Memoir of Central India, ii, p. aio,
highlands oj Central India, pp. 180 sqq.
554
APPENDiX B
*
tenues, tant que le mots de mat durait, de faire le lit du rot des ribands
(Dulaure, op. cit, pp. Si% sq a8o); and sometimes even undei its auspices,
as at Isernia.
have heard a Sema chief of great tribal authority and experience,
I
Inato of Lumitsami, affirm thatit was ridiculous to suppose that pregnancy
would result from coition on one occasion only, which indicates that even
now the relation between cause and effect in this particular is not com-
pletely grasped in that tribe. Vide supra^ pp. 163 sqq.
u' Marco Polo, i, p. ai* n.; 11, p. 56 n.
18 Census of India, 1911, i, p. aoo. ^^ Vlde Ynh, Marco Polo, loc. cit
j6,
appendix B
involves leaping up in the air to encourage the growth of paddy,
and Russell has acutely suggested that acrobatic displays have
originated in die same idea. Similarly, animal dancing, such
as that for instance of the Gonds and Bhatras of the Central
Provinces, probably originates in an attempt to increase, or
perhaps merely to assemble, by magic the wild animals on which
the community partly depends for its food supply. Even the
20 may have
highly mimetic dancing of the Juang of Orissa
originated in that way. When, however, the spring hunting is
considered, it is apparent that the soul-matter cult is again
prominent. The Aheria of the Rajput in western India, the
hunting festival of the Halvakki Vakkals in Kanara, the Jur
Sital of Bihar, the spring hunt of the Chota Nagpur tribes, and
of the Bhatras, Gonds and Gadabas of the Central Provinces
and Orissa, the Sekrengi hunt of the Angami Nagas and the
corresponding festivals of other Assam tribes are all designed to
secure prosperity through the coming year, and inasmuch as
all manner of living things are destroyed they are probably
intended (the Sekrengi certainly is) to collect a supply of life-
essence and are to be regarded in much the same light as the
spring man-hunt of the Wa of Burma.
It would be impossible here to go into all the aspects of the
tribal religion in India, but enough has perhaps been said to
show that the beliefs held are not mere vague imaginings of
superstitious and untaught minds, 'amorphous as they were
described in the Census report of 1911, but the debris of a real
religious system, a definite philosophy, to the one-time wide-
spread prevalence of which the manifold survivals in Hinduism
testify, linking together geographically the Austro-Asiatic and
Australoid cultures of the forest-clad hills where the isolated
remains of the original religion still hold out in an unassimilated
form. It is probably this philosophy of life-matter which
accounts for the fact that in so many parts of the world, e.g. in
India and southern and eastern Europe, Greece and Italy in
larticular, the real religion of the people is hagiolatry. It is
{ess the orthodox gods of the religion who are worshipped than
rfirines and holy places, generally tombs particularly associated
with some deceased saint or hero likely to have been rich in
soul-stuff, the benefit of which may be obtained at the grave,
originally no doubt in the form of material emanation. Be
tihat as it may, showing traces in Europe on the one hand and
stretching down into Australasia on the other, this creed must
have been in its time a great religion, not so great perhaps in
altruism, but great in extent and in constituting a very definite
rung in that poor ladder up which our race still tries to climb
in its effort to ascertain the unknowable, to scale the ramparts
of infinity.
PART FIVE
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Reference willbe found in the text or notes to the following
periodicals and works. Both the periodicals and books are
sometimes referred to by the abbreviated letters or titles indi-
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Where the book has not been published in London the place of
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PERIODICALS
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I, A. The Indian Antiquary, Bombay.
J, A,O.S.
'
AUTHORS
Abbott, J. The Keys of Power, a Study of Indian Ritual and Belief, 19311.
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Buchanan, F. Journey through Mysore, Canara and Malabar, xSoy. (The
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An Account of Assam with some notices concerning The Neighbouring
Territories. By Francis Hamilton, M.D., F.R.S. Edited by Dr S. R.
Bhuyan. Gauhati, 1940.
BilHLER, G. The
Sacred Laws of the Aryas as taught in the Schools of
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n
Sacred Laws.)
BIBLIOGRAPHY *65
BiiHLER, G. The Laws of Manu, translated with extracts from seven com-
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BURNELJL, A. C. See Yule.
Burton, R. F.Sindh, and the Races that inhabit the Valley of the Indus;
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(Editor).
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Oxford, loao
Edgeworth, M. P,
Abstract of a Journal kept by Gardiner during Mr
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no. 3 of 1853.
Ehrenfels, 0 , R, Mother^right in India, Hyderabad, Deccan, 1941.
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Ghosh, A. The
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Guha, B. S. *
An Outline of the Racial Ethnology of India in An Outline
of the Field Sciences of India, Calcutta, 1937.
Gordon, P, R, T. The Khasis. 1907. (The edition used is that of 1914.)
.
_
268 BIBLIOGRAPHY
Hocart, a. M. India and the Pacific % in the Ceylon Journal of Science^
*
Huntingfori), G. W. B. Letter on
Momiyai *
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1934 -
The Use of Stone in the Naga Hills *, in J,R,A,L, voL tvi, 1926.
The Disposal of the Dead at Wakching in Man, xxvii, 44, 1927.
The Significance of Head-hunting in Assam', J,R,AJ voL Lviii,
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Diaries of Two Tours in the Unadministered Area East of the
* Naga
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See also Mills.
Jackson, A. M. T. *
Note on the History of the Caste System ', in
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^
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on the B(Kes, Castes and Trades
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GLOSSARY
Abor Assam tribe now known as Adi (al?ar*i *
uncivilized
or * untamed *)
AgSriya A primitive tribe of central India whose principal
occupation is smelting and forging iron.
Agarwala An important mercantile caste of upper India with
traditions of descent from a Naga (snake) ancestress.
Many are Jains by religion (see Crooke, Tribes and
Castes, i, pp. 13 sqq.).
Aghoripanthi A mendicant sect whose philosophic tenets lead them
to feed on human corpses and excrement..
Agnikula Division of the RSjputs regarded as descended from
Fire (agni), as distinct from those descended from the
sun and moon, probably because descended from
foreign tribes * reborn '
as Rajputs after a symbolic
purification by fire.
18
78
GLOSS ART
by kind (cf. ChSran '). There are some
threats of this '
muni *
A holy sage, a pious and learned person, endowed
with mote or less of a divine nature, or having
'
obtained \t by rigid abstraction and mortification
(Haughton p. The title is applied to rishis
and others.
MusShar A caste (or primitive tribe) of Kolarian affinities in
Uttar Pradesh and Bihar.
Musalli Muslim of inferior status socially on account of the
low status of the Hindu caste of his extraction.
^ ,
ago Q LOSS A
NadiySl An boatmen and fishermen in Assam.
exterior caste of
G LOSS ARt
Occhasi A caste of temple priests at village shrines in .southern
India.
Odde 5= Odh, q.v,
10
m GLOSS ARY
SSmaveda See Rigveda.
Mongolian element in, 57, 2gi and Baluchistan, 24, 40; nomadism in, 41;
245-8
Banerjee, A. R., 7
Abor, 27, 183, Banerji-Sastri, A., 152, 264
tribes in, 3, 28, 183;
Ahom, 27; Apa Tani, 28; barbers, 72, 187
276;
Dafia, 27; Garo, 29, 30, 230, 235; Barbosa, Duarte. 78, 160, 264
Kachari, 30, 114, 236; Khasi, 29, barga, 57
50s
INDEX
Brahui, 4, S 9 ^19 Cape Comorin, 10, 13
Carloss, Lt, 151
brass, vessels of, 1401 soul-figures, ^35,
Carnatic, the, 10
2SQ
Bray, D., 4 > ^ 39
Carr^, TAbb^, 70, 265, 291
taboo in, 144, 307; seven outcaste divisions of, and subcaste, definition
classes in, 144, 145; system analo- of, 48; marriage between, 48-54
*
gous to caste in, 143, 145, 146, 207
exterior castes (or untouchabies*
Burton, R, F., 40, 365 amelioration of, ix, ,x, .208, 3'09,
.199; in
Canara 10 Madras, 319
cannibalism, 187, 339, 343, 343, 344; outcastes and, in Burma, 144-7,
ceremonial, 243; funerary, 35, 343 307; in Japan, 147, 14S
INDEX 303
Caste {conU) 173; Slater, 177; Westermarck,
pollution by, ^V-83; through 174
water, 71, 75?, ^11, aist; of wells, ornaments and, 85 sq., 305, ao6
196, oi Pali literature and, 179
famine and, 186 panchayat, 90, 98-109, x7a; head-
fluidity of, 50, laa, las; fissipaxous men of, 101, xoa; in low and
nature of, 50, 51; isolating high castes, loa; procedure, 105,
tendency of, 116, 117, 118 xo6; punishment by, X06-9
functional, lai, 170-7; villages, 138, pollution, 71-88; by childbirth and
3139, 184 by death, 83, 84, 85; court house
functions of: 111 sqq.; economic, 89, and, 8; distance, 79-83, 195 sq.,
xsij genetic function, 131, 135; a:?o;food and, 184-9, ^^75 gtave-
as a guild. 114; and the indivi^ digging and, 507; and menstrua-
dual, IIS, list; and medieval tion, 83, lag; Muslims and
guilds, 140, 171, 180; and plural Christians, 8a; relaxation of, a34;
society, 1x5, 1x9, 1^7, ia8, 133, rock, 80; by sight, 80, 81, lai,
iS4 2is a social unit, 1, a; ia6, aoo sq.; temples and, 8a, 83,
as a stabilizer, 44, 45, lao, lai; xa8 sq.; untouchability, 77-83, xai,
and State, 115 130, 180, 195, 196, ai8, aig,
genetics and, 131 -a aao, a34; from wells, 81 sq., 193,
geographical aspect and, 178, 190 195, 196, aoi
goira, 47, 55-6a, 17a, 173 position of women and, lag
inheritance and, 88 purification after pollution, 78, 85,
48, 64
jati, 107, 108, 109, 176, 180, a 14; by
magic and, 177 panchgavya, 88, 108
mark, asa sq. race and caste: and colour pre-
marriage and, 47-70, 85, i58-6a; judice, i7a-5; conquest and
endogamy, 47, 5a; hypergamy, colour bar, and racial inbreeding,
53-5, 173; matrilineal system, 13, i35> racial taboo, ao7
14, 70, 150-63, 168 sq., a5 religion and, 114, lai sq.; and taboo,
occupation and, 33, 51, 11 1> 116; mana and soul-stuff, 177, i8a-7,
groups, X16, 179; villages, 139, 189
184, 185 restrictions: building, 87; commen-
omnivalencc of, 90, 9x sality, 184; on dress, etc., 85, ao5
origin of, 46, 190; traditional, 149 sq.; on food, etc,, 7a-8; on
sqq.; mrna and, 48, 64-7, 149, language, 86; on marriage, 47-64;
171, I7 i 3 ; theories of: Blunt, on occupation, 87-90, 170-a; re-
171, 17a; Bonnerjea, 178; Chanda, laxation from, a6, on the use
17a; Colebrooke, 180; Bahlmann, of roads, 195, aoo, aoi; on schools,
171; Dubois, 170; Butt, 175, 177; 195, 196, aoi, aoa; on smoking,
Ghurye, 175, 178; Gilbert, 178; 76 sq.;, on spittings 81, aoo; on
Hayavadana Kao, 175; Hocart, temple entry, 8a, i98-ao4; on
176; Ibbetson, 175 sq.; Jackson, water, 71, 7a, 8a, 196, aoi, an
iBo; Ketkar, 180; Linton, 181; sqq.
Murphy, 180; Nesfield, 176; Rigvedic invaders and, 180, 188, 189
Oldenberg, 179; Rice, 178; Risley, ritual and, 176, 177
173: Roy, 175, 180; Senart, 17a, sapinda, 60, 6i
m INBSX
Caste (cont.) Ben-i -Israel, 19
secular control, 93-7, u8, 181; and Beri, 68
religious jurisdiction, 97, 98 Bhangt, 34, ao8, A77
Sikhs and, 117 sq., 204 Bhar, 34, 173?, 577
social status and, 139, 149, 150, 151; Bliarbunja, 7s, 75, 577
of castes and subcastes, 51 sqq,; Bhat, 3 S. 34, 37, 577
and education, 113, 114; and Bhatia, 18, 39, 57S
movement between, 49, 64, 65; Bhoksa, io, 578
and new castes, 90, n6, i6an,; Bhuinmali, si5, 517, sx8, ^78
and occupation, 34, 51, ii; social Bind, x6i, 578
positionand food taboo, 75-8 Bohra, x8, 578
system, 6, 44, 45; and culture
1, Boria = Sut, q.v.
patterns, lu, 114, 1x5; defined, Brahman, castes and subcastes,
50; development of, 189, 190, 191 main index s.v. Brahman
Theodosian code and, 134, 135 Brittial Baniya, 113, ,13, S14, ai^
totemism and,
7759., i57n., 178 Chakkiliyan, 68, 69, 86,
379
travelling and, 88
Chakli, S08, ^79
tribes and, ii6 Chaliyan, 68,
Castes Chamar, 33. 34, j0, 70, yg_ gg_
Agariya, 76, 116, ^76
203, mi, ..208, 259, 279
Agarwala, 18, 276
35, 77, Chamargaur, 105, 279
Aghoripanchi, 244, ^76
Chandal (or Chandala), 30, 86, 112,
Ahar, 50, 376
136, 145, X^X* rSo^ 2'ygj
34, 38, 50, 60, 1x3, *45, 55:?, Namasudra
^76 Charal (or Namasudra), 214
Ambalavasi, 48, 83, 576
CbSran, 34, 35, 181, 279
Ambattan, 68, 187, ^76
subcastes: Gujar Kachela, , 1x9
Ande Koraga, 81, aoo, 385
Chasa, 48, 49, 256,
Arora, 38, 376 279
Chattarkhai, 186, 279
Ayar, 179
Chaubf, 33, 279
B 5 bhan (or Bhuinhar),
33, 56* *77 Chero, x6x, 279
Badaga, ifi, 116
Cheniman, 78, 79, 80, 83, 279
Badi Banjara % 90
Chetti, 12, 57, 68, 28a
Bagdi, 31, 87, 577
subcaste: Let, 87
Chitpavan, 20, 2S0
Baidya, 30, 49, 157, Chodbra, 21, 155, 204, 280
J177
Baiti, ^77
*
Chogan *, 86 and see Izhavan
Balija, Chuhra, 38, 39, xx6,
^{77 204, 219, 2S0
Banajiga, 68, j?77 Barzi, 280
Baniya, ^0, 35, 189, :^x3n,, 5x77
subcaste: Gujar, 119
subcastes: Gujar, 1x9; Modh, 119 Beori, 2x3, 280
Banjara or Lambadi, x, 90. JJ77
Beshasth, 62, 2S0
Baoti, :?77 Bevanga, 68, 280
Barhai, ^77 Bhangar, 19, 20, 280
BarUi. 87, 188 Bhanuk, 52, 280
Bauri, 31, 640,,
*77 subcastcs: Badhik, Hazarl,
latha^
Beda, 254
riya, Laungbawa, Taihal,' 52
Bedar, 68, ir77
Bhlrhi, 121, 2^
BEX
Castf'i (rtwif.) jalna, 214 , 3 %
DIud, S 4 W, tHD Jaoappaiii, 68, 283
Idi|ai, Siiiali U' J**C 17 , 38, 39, tyt
Dhaht (ur niuipi), :I4 ity, 136, till. JiKib, tiy, 283
21 S, Jtilaha, iti, f%
l)U\ii [M Du:;la). ti^. *uH. si Jiigi Naih), S15, 217, tt8, 283
(or
pp, iptsipp; fir puMiitiii Etkr Kaibartta, |i, 51, 52, 113, 2,14., 283;
caste s)su*iii hft undrr Caste see alsG Mahisbya
Fernigjtec, 5 K Kalkolaii;, %, 167, 283
Ciitlili, Kalita, 27, 284
Ciayawal, 5:^* sHi Kalhui.., it, 127, 152, tor,, go6 284,
Glutiiiiii. ii*;p iHs, Hi tSS
suhrasicv; Moilli, Huraii, up; Kalta, t6, 101, 284
Aliiiiailah.itii aiitl Chaiypatieri. Kalwar, 34, 55, 76
lii Kami, 252, 284
Ghasiya tSi, fBi Kaaikar, 90
Goala. i. 50* 57, 61 73 it|, til Kamma, 10, 284
subcasies: Satmylia. 57. Bi; Nao- Kammilan (or Panchaia), 12, 68,
niulia, 61 tQt
Golapurab, 56, tSt Kamma van, 63, 284
Golla, 50, 0S, tSi Kanbi, see Kunbi
Gopa, 50, 113, til Kanet, 43, 44, 255
Goriya, i6o. Kaniyan, 80, 284
Glial Nat, 90 Kanjar, 161, 162, 284
Gujar, 38, mh ui. sBt; .as siil> Kansara, 181, 284
castt\ 119 siibcastc: Champaneri, 181
llaliya Kaihartta, 5. 115* soS 'sSt Kapu (Reddi), 10, ii
m :
$10 INDEX
exogamy (conu) Furnivall, S
J. 115,
in tribal India, 57; sec also Caste, iS4> 67
marriage and Ffirer-Haimendorf, Ch. von, xi, ,^67
exterior castes, see Caste, exterior Fustel de Coiilanges, N. B.,
u6, *67
Sind, 39
n, i3, !5 sq., *9, 154, 160, 161 and
Hunter. W. W., mi *41 *7 see Marunmkkathayam; Nambudri,
(0 ()
(is) *45
invasions, ,5, 6, 13, 15; brachycephalic,
hypogamy, 53, 55, 64; and bride Iranian, plateau, 5; stock, source of
price, 55 Baloch, 40
Iraq, 157
Isernia, 333, 36in.
Ibbetson, D., 37, 38, 39, 89, 94, 93, Islam, 39, 183; and exterior castes,
Karandikar, S. V,, 58, 269 286, 287, 292, 293; and Brahmans,
doctrine of, 121, 125, 146, 182 151, 156, 157; gotras ot 55J T^ajanya,
m INDEX
Kulu, ail law, customary and caste, n6, 124,
Bravidian, 4, 10, 21, 22, 23, 24, 41, Love, H. D., 68n., 270
Tibeto-Burraese, 29 Madura, 8, 57, 154
Tulu, 10 Mafuhi of New Guinea, 186
INDEX S15
magic, and caste, 177, 178; for food marriage, of Agariya, 63; Australian
supply, 6o, 6i; and soul-matter, system, 33, 63; of Baiga, 33, 63, 63;
^59; sympathetic, *58; tribal, j6o and after-life, 159, 160, 344; bina,
MShabharata, 154, a9* 9, ^94 161; of Brahmans, 63; child marri-
mUhUjanam, 67 age, 159; consanguinity and, 59
Maharashtra, 10, ao sqq.; cross-cousin, 9, 61, 63; and
Mahftvlra, 148 endogamy, 47, 53, 58, 160; and
Mahishmati, matrilineal system in, exogamy, 47, 54, 57, 58; of Garo,
154 39; ghar baithna, 163; ghar^jawai,
mahwa, 34, 187 161; in Goriya custom, i63n.; and
Maine, H. S., 154, *70 gdtra 55 sqq.; and hyper-
system,
Majumdar, B. N., a7oj (i) 55, 67; (a) gamy, 53 sqq., 159; of Kadva Kunbi,
357: (S) 44 and to flowers, 19, 30; of Khkngars,
makkathayam system, 70, 160, 163, 187 57; Khasi, 39;and Kulinism, 53, 54;
Malcran coast, 4a, 15a on Malabar coast, 63; and maru^
Malabar, 5, 10, 13, 14, 15, 79, 80, 8a, makkathayam system, see Maru~
83* 84, 86, ui, 158, 159, aoo; raste makkathayam) in matrilineal society,
division in, 166; child marriage 63, 65; and pagoda slaves, 144; and
absent in, 159; inheritance in, 88; pravara, 58; restrictions and re-
king of, 74, 555; language, 86; incarnation, 63; and sambandham,
marriage in, 6a; pollution in, 83, 160; of subcastes, 51 sqq.; see also
84, aao, snn. Caste, restrictions
MalSn mountains, 15a Marriott, McK., viii, xi, 370
Malaya, pygmy tribes of, a Marshall, H. I., 186, 350, 370
Malayllam language, 10, 70, a88 Marshall, J., 157, 370
Malcolm, J., 34, a53, syo Martin, M., 370, 383, 390
malik, 4a marumakkathayam system, 70, x6o,
Malto, 4 161, 163, 166, 167, 388
mana, st4g, a88; and brahma, a3a; and Masai, 143
caste, and soul-stuff, 18a, 187; and Mateer, S., 370; (1) 80, 87; (3) 81,
taboo, 177, i8a, 184-9 8s. *35
Mangalore District. 81 Mathura, 33
Manipur, ag, ago; Maharaja of, ag, 49, matrilineal system, 9, 13, 13, 39, 150,
93, 94, 118, 134 , H9 150^ tion, 165; inheritance under, 13, 14,
m
Maoris, 136, 188; and tapu, 186
39, 88;
basavi
and ghatjawai, 161; see also
McCrmdle mul, 57
Mela, Pomponius, if 5a, ^71 muni, 65
Melanesians, 3, 7 Mura (Men*, Bokhara), 155
Meman (or Momin), 40, aSg Murphy, J., 180, 371
memorial figures, see stone Murray, M. A., 356, 374
menhir, see stone Muslims, 37, '69; and caste, 174; castes,
Menon, C, A., 94, 7)i 89 4 o w. (for names see
menstruation and pollution, 83, lap Casta); in .Bengal, 3,1; burial by,
Mer, Merat, 35, st^g 18; conception belief of, 357; and
meriah sacrifices, a6, 241 , *54, sSg entry into temples, 300; invasion of,
Mesopotamia, 5, 157, 165, 3 6, 159; and pollution* 83 sq., 186
Me war, 18 mutilation (ol fingers), 11, 391; of
Mexico, half-breeds in, 136; chiquea- genitals, 565
dorest Mylitta, temple of, 163
Micronesia and plantain tree, jt57 Mysore, 5, 10, 335
Midgan, 141?
' '
Plutarch,
m xion., i4on., aya
Purchas*
pufdnh, 158
S., 154, 17a
Provence, hull-haiting in, 15a in pre-vedic India, 180, ^24; see also
51-7 passim, 61, 73, 76, 87, 257, Samaveda, 154, 293
90i 594;* (2) 31; (3) 57, sambandham, 160
157. 39l (4) 54 i34 Sambhar, 36
ns Sandur, 10
Rivers, W. H. R., 273; (1) 160, 244; Sanskrit, xiii, 43
Santal Parganas, 24, 76, 236, 242
() 54
Robertson, G. S., 43, 241, 273
sapinda, 60, 61, 294
Rochon, A., 137, 271 Sarkar, B. K., 154, 273
Rodriguez, E. A., 273 Sarkar, S. S., 7, 273
Roe, Sir T., quoted, 291 sastri, 95, 294
Roman Empire, analogies to caste in, sati,35, 294; Rajput, 227, 246
Satpura Range, 22, Map B
134 sq,
Rome, 225 satra, 98
rope-sliding (human sacrifice), sattva guna, 182
254
Roscoe, Saurashtra, 255
J., 71, 139, 273
Sayce, A. H., 157, 273
Rose, H. A., 273: (1) 37, 38, 39, 43, 44,
scapegoat, 109
49 53 64, 66, 1520., 158, 254, 78.
Scheil, V., 1570.
281, 287; (2) 1670.
Schniidt, Father, quoted, 251
Rowe, G. S., see Williams
Schoebel, C., 67, 273
Rowlands, Martin, xiii
schools, exterior castes and, 201, 202,
Rowney, B,, 243, 273
208 sqq., 215, 222
Roy, Sachin, 1830., 273
Scott, J. G., 273; (1) 241, 243; (2) 145
Roy, S. C., 273; (1) 24; (2) 252, 253;
Scythians, 6, and see Saka
(3) 243; (4) i75
secular rulers, power of, 93-7
iBg Sedgwick, L. J., 131, 274
Roy, S. N., 250, ,273 Sekrefigi hunt and fertility, 262
Ruanda, 142, 141 Seligman, C. G., 256, 274
Russell, R. V., 20, 37, 57, 63, 71, 73, Senart, E., 49, 50, 150, 168, 172 sq.,
74, 232, 235, 243, 244, 252, 262, 273, 185, 274
278, 287 Sen Gupta, Professor, quoted, 215
Ryan, B., xi, i38n., 17611., 273 seniority of sons, 88
Sephardim, 15
septs, and exogamy, 56, 58; of Pathans,
S50
INDEX
shadow and soul, and head, 239 sqq,.; and human
Shaiva sect, 7*7
sacrifice, 239-42; and magic, 258,
259; and megaliths, 245 sqq.; and
Shakespear, J., S53, 274
Shamash, 165 plantain tree, 257; and totemism,
Sikhs, Akali, 37; as carpenters, 123; Steele, A., 62, 84, 88, 274
castes in,
Turner,
m G. S., 557, 574
Vyasa, 65, 156
Vyasokta, 65
J.
Tussi, or Tutsi, 14a
Twa, 14a
*
twice-born {dvtja), 57 sq., 64, laa Warneck, 186; quoted, 187
*
Twin Brethren
^ 157 Warren Hastings, a69 97, asC,
twins, seniority of, 88 water, and pollution, 71, 7a, 76, 77,
ail, aia, ai7, ai8, and s.v. wells;
and fertility, a36, asg, a47, a49,
Udaipur, 36 a6on.
Uighur, a6i Webb, A. W. T., las, a74
Umia Mata, 19 wells and pollution, 81, 195, 196, aoi,
United Provinces, 51, 5a, 66, 78, 101, aio
116; bina in, 161 Westermarck, E., 131, 174, a75
United States, negroes in, 119, 136, Western Ghats, 5, 10, 13
174 Williams, T., 160, a75
Unja, 19 Wilson, J a75; (i) aa7; (a) 54n., .56,
unseeables
*
81, ia6, aga 65, egn., 80, 90, 93, 100, ia4, ia6n.,
untouchables, see exterior castes i 49 > HSf 2540., a87, ago
up&nitydnd ceremony, 58, 64 Wise, J., 51, 5a, 7in., 74, 1580., i67n.,
Upanishads, 156, aag, age aa7n., a75
witchcraft, ai, as, asg; and sacrifice,
a6o
Vatshnava, 77, agb women, position of, among the Ban-
Vaishya, 64, 65, 66, 84, 85, ga, 113, jara, ai; among the Bhils, ai; and
laa, 149* ^9 caste, lag; on Malabar Coast,* 14;
Vajrasuchi, 65, isyn. among the Marathas, ao; panchayat
Vamsadhara Eiver, 10 of, loa
vamu, 48, 56, 64, 65, .66, 67, 84, 85, wooden *
monoliths *,
347; post in
93, 118, lag, 137, 149, 150, 151, 168, Sulagava ceremony, aso; sledges, a48
171, 17a, 176, 180, 18a; connotation wooden soul figures, 43, asa, a35, 237,
of, 64-7; and marriage, 66, 149-51; 238, 246, 247
and Rigvedic society, 65 sq. Woodthorpe, R. G., 238
SH INDEX
(iCTclopment of, 155, 156 Ycniiba,
writing.
Wukari, Yule, H. 475; (t) t6i; (t) see B.ohson-
139
Social
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