Punjab: The Minor Agricultural and Pastoral Tribes

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montane tract, and in the hills where the proud Rajputs look upon labour  
 
montane tract, and in the hills where the proud Rajputs look upon labour  
 
at the plough as degrading. It is least numerous in the Derajat where  
 
at the plough as degrading. It is least numerous in the Derajat where  
the comprehensive name of Jat embraces all cultivators of this class.  
+
the comprehensive name of Jat embraces all cultivators of this class.
  
==The Mali and Saini ==
+
==The Reya==  
Caste Nos. 45 and 31
+
''' Caste No. 147 '''
  
The Sainis would 
+
Having thus disposed of the two
appear to be only a sub-division of the Malis. In Bijnor they are said to be
+
great inferior cultivating caytes of the hills; I shall take the others as far
identical, and I am informed that the two intermarry in many, but not in all,  
+
as possible in order of locality from east to west. The Reyas are a small
 +
Hindu caste found only in the Dehli district. They say they were Rajputs
 +
but were excluded from the caste because they took to practising 
 +
widow-marriage. They are now quite separate. They eat and smoke with
 +
Jats and agricultural castes of similar standing, jjut will not marry them
 +
except by karewa. They own nine villages in behli, and the names of their
 +
clans are soinetinies Rajput and sometimes not. They trace their origin from
 +
Mahrauli where the Qutb pillar stands.
  
parts of the North-West Provinces. It is probable that the Sainis are a Mali
+
==The Lodha and Kachhi==
tribe, and that some of the higher tribes of the same caste will not marry with
+
them. The Mali, the Mdlakdra or florist of the Purans, is generally a market
+
or nursery gardener, and is most numerous In the vicinity of towns where
+
manure is blentiful and there is a demand for his produce. He is perliaps the
+
most skilful and industrious cultivator we possess, and does wonders with his
+
land, producing three or even four crops within the year from the same plot.
+
He is found under the name of Mali only in the Jamna zone, including the
+
  
' Mr. Wilson notes that the Gujars and the Bargujar tribe of Rajputs are often found
+
''' Caste Nos. 105 and 142 '''
together; and suggests that the latter may be to the Gujars what the Khanzadahs are to
+
the Meos and what most Rajputs are to the Jats.
+
eastern portions of Hissar, his place being taken by the Saini in the eastern
+
sub-montane districts , and by the Arain or Baglibun in the remainder of the
+
Province. He is almost always a Hindu. Most of the few Malis shown for
+
the western districts were returned as Maliar, the Panjabi form of Mali ; and
+
some of them as Phulara or Phulwara (but see section 485 for the inclusion of
+
Maliar under Arain) .
+
  
The Sainis, who, as I have just explained, are probably a Mali tribe, are  
+
These are two
said to claim Rajput origin in Jalandhar ; but Mr. Barkley writes of the Sainis
+
well-known cultivating castes of Hindustan, and are found in the Panjub
of that district : They consider themselves the same as the Malis of the
+
chiefly in the Jamna districts, though a few of them have moved on westwards
North-West Provinces, and to be connected with the Arains, though the
+
to the great cantonments. They are almost without exception Hindus. The
latter know nothing of the relationship. They are not found west of the
+
Lodhas are said to be numerous In Hushangabad, and to be distinct from the  
Chanab, but are numerous In some parts of the Ambala district.They
+
Lodhi outcasts of Central India; but the LodhaS of Dehli would appear to  
appear from our figures to be all along the foot of the hills between the
+
be 'A very low social standing. It is said that there are two distinct castes of  
valleys of the Jamna and Ravi ,but not to have reached the Chanab valley.  
+
Lodnas, one spelled with the hard and the other with the soft d, and Tierhaps
Both they and the Mails are properly tribes of Hindustan rather than of the
+
this may account for f he apparent confusion. The Amijala Lodhas cultivate
Panjali. About 10 per cent, of the Sainis are Sikhs, and the remainder
+
hemp largely, and work it up into rope. The Kachhis are said to be the
Hindus. In Rawalpindi no fewer than 3,655 Mughals have returned their
+
market gardeners of Hindustan  and of low standing. In the Paujab 1 believe they are generally engaged in the cultivation of water-nuts and similar
tribe or clan as Salnl ; but It Is probable that these have no connection with  
+
produce ; indeed in many parts they are called Sing-hnri (from Singhcira, a
the caste under discussion, as It would not appear to have penetrated so far
+
water-nut) as commonly as Kachhi.  
westwards. The Sainis of Rupar In Ambala are described •' an ill-conditioned
+
set, first-rate cultivators, but refractory and Intriguing.
+
The Mails and Sainis, like all vegetable growers, occupy a very Inferior
+
position among the agricultural castes ; but of the two the Sainis are probably
+
the higher, as they more often own land or even whole villages, and are less
+
generally mere market gardeners than are the Malls.  
+
  
The largest of the Mali sub-dlvlslons are the Phul with 11,646, and the  
+
==The Sarrara== 
BhagartI with 15,658 persons. The  
+
''' Caste No. 118 '''
Sainis do not appear to have returned any  
+
 
large clans except In Hushyarpur, of  
+
It is perhaps probable that these men
which district some of the largest clans
+
are the same as those discussed under the head Sarera ''■' in the section on
are shown In the margin, and In Gurdas
+
Hill Menials. But I have separated them, as their identity is not at all
pur where 1,541 Sainis showed their clans
+
certain. The Sarraras which are found in Hazara belong to a race inhabiting
as Salahn. Mr. Barkley notes that some
+
Chibhal, or the hill country of Kashmir on the Hazara border, and according
of the clans of Arains and of Sainis In
+
to Major Waco belong to the same ethnic group as the Dhund, Satti, and  
Jalandhar bear the same names, and those
+
Kharral of the same tract. It might perhaps have been better to take them
not always merely names of other and dominant tribes.
+
with the Kharrals. They are chiefly found in the Abbottabad tahsil, where
 +
they are purely agricultural. They are all Musalman.
 +
 
 +
==The Ghosi==
 +
'''Caste No. 125'''
 +
 
 +
The Ghosi is I believe an Ahir tribe;
 +
but in the Panjab the name is only used for Musalmans, and is often applied
 +
to any cowherd or milkman of that religion, whether Gujar, Ahir, or of any
 +
other caste, just as Gwala is used for a Hindu cowherd. The Ghosi proper
 +
is only found in the eastern districts, though a few have strayed into the large
 +
cantonments to the west. But the 235 persons shown as Ghosi in the Rawal
 +
pindi division are, according to my papers, entered as Ghasiara or '* grass-cutter,^'
 +
 
 +
while the 337 of the Multan division are shown as Her, probably for Ahir. How
 +
these came to be classed as Ghosi I cannot explain. It was not done by my
 +
orders. It is said that Hindus will buy pure milk from the Musalman
 +
Ghosi, but will reject it if there is any suspicion of its having been
 +
watered by the latter, as they must not drink water at his hands ! The
 +
Ghosis are a purely pastoral caste, at any rate in the Panjab. They are
 +
however sometimes butchers.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
See [[The Mali and Saini ]]
 +
 
 +
[[The Kamboh ]]

Latest revision as of 22:05, 27 July 2014

This article is an extract from

PANJAB CASTES

SIR DENZIL CHARLES JELF IBBETSON, K.C. S.I.

Being a reprint of the chapter on
The Races, Castes and Tribes of
the People in the Report on the
Census of the Panjab published
in 1883 by the late Sir Denzil
Ibbetson, KCSI

Lahore :

Printed by the Superintendent, Government Printing, Punjab,

1916.
Indpaedia is an archive. It neither agrees nor disagrees
with the contents of this article.

Contents

[edit] Minor Agricultural and Pastoral Tribes

The group of castes for which the figures are given in Abstract No. 85 on page 266t are not tP. 190 separated from the castes and tribes already discussed by any clearly defined • line. Indeed it is quite a matter of opinion whether some of these should not have been ranked with the major and some of those with the minor tribes. But the group now to be discussed very generally hold an inferior position among the agricultural community^ and seldom if ever occupy the position of the dominant tribe in any considerable tract of countrv. They may be divided into three classes, though here again the lines of the demareation are indistinct. The first consists of the market gardeners proper or growers of vegetables, and includes the Mali, Saini, Arain, and Baghban, all four of whom are probably closely connected, and some of them almost undistinguish able. The cultivation of vegetables is looked upon as degrading by the agri cultural classes, why I know not, unless it be that nightsoil is generally used for their fertilisation ; and a Rajput would say : What 1 Do you take me for an Arain ? if anything was proposed which he considered derogatory. The second class comprises the Kanet and Ghirath, the low-class cultivators of the hills, and the Kamboh, Ahir, Mahtam, and other cultivators of inferior status. Some of these are closely allied to the vegetable-growers ; others again to the Ghosi and Gaddi which constitute the third class, and are pastoral rather than agricultural. The class as a whole is to be found in largest number in the fertile districts of the eastern plains and sub montane tract, and in the hills where the proud Rajputs look upon labour at the plough as degrading. It is least numerous in the Derajat where the comprehensive name of Jat embraces all cultivators of this class.

[edit] The Reya

Caste No. 147

Having thus disposed of the two great inferior cultivating caytes of the hills; I shall take the others as far as possible in order of locality from east to west. The Reyas are a small Hindu caste found only in the Dehli district. They say they were Rajputs but were excluded from the caste because they took to practising widow-marriage. They are now quite separate. They eat and smoke with Jats and agricultural castes of similar standing, jjut will not marry them except by karewa. They own nine villages in behli, and the names of their clans are soinetinies Rajput and sometimes not. They trace their origin from Mahrauli where the Qutb pillar stands.

[edit] The Lodha and Kachhi

Caste Nos. 105 and 142

These are two well-known cultivating castes of Hindustan, and are found in the Panjub chiefly in the Jamna districts, though a few of them have moved on westwards to the great cantonments. They are almost without exception Hindus. The Lodhas are said to be numerous In Hushangabad, and to be distinct from the Lodhi outcasts of Central India; but the LodhaS of Dehli would appear to be 'A very low social standing. It is said that there are two distinct castes of Lodnas, one spelled with the hard and the other with the soft d, and Tierhaps this may account for f he apparent confusion. The Amijala Lodhas cultivate hemp largely, and work it up into rope. The Kachhis are said to be the market gardeners of Hindustan and of low standing. In the Paujab 1 believe they are generally engaged in the cultivation of water-nuts and similar produce ; indeed in many parts they are called Sing-hnri (from Singhcira, a water-nut) as commonly as Kachhi.

[edit] The Sarrara

Caste No. 118

It is perhaps probable that these men are the same as those discussed under the head Sarera ■' in the section on Hill Menials. But I have separated them, as their identity is not at all certain. The Sarraras which are found in Hazara belong to a race inhabiting Chibhal, or the hill country of Kashmir on the Hazara border, and according to Major Waco belong to the same ethnic group as the Dhund, Satti, and Kharral of the same tract. It might perhaps have been better to take them with the Kharrals. They are chiefly found in the Abbottabad tahsil, where they are purely agricultural. They are all Musalman.

[edit] The Ghosi

Caste No. 125

The Ghosi is I believe an Ahir tribe; but in the Panjab the name is only used for Musalmans, and is often applied to any cowherd or milkman of that religion, whether Gujar, Ahir, or of any other caste, just as Gwala is used for a Hindu cowherd. The Ghosi proper is only found in the eastern districts, though a few have strayed into the large cantonments to the west. But the 235 persons shown as Ghosi in the Rawal pindi division are, according to my papers, entered as Ghasiara or '* grass-cutter,^'

while the 337 of the Multan division are shown as Her, probably for Ahir. How these came to be classed as Ghosi I cannot explain. It was not done by my orders. It is said that Hindus will buy pure milk from the Musalman Ghosi, but will reject it if there is any suspicion of its having been watered by the latter, as they must not drink water at his hands ! The Ghosis are a purely pastoral caste, at any rate in the Panjab. They are however sometimes butchers.



See The Mali and Saini

The Kamboh

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