Guest guest Posted October 26, 2002 Report Share Posted October 26, 2002 INDOLOGY, ymalaiya wrote: > Lynken Ghose wrote: > > > No, the Sanskrit dictionary is merely quoting smrti texts such as > > Yajnavalkya etc. We don't know that the particular mixture of varnas is > > truly the origin of the Kayastha jati; we just know that this > > particular text says so. > > That seems to be true. Origin of Yavanas and Turushkas etc has also > been given in some texts, assuming that they too are varna-sankaras. > > There is some indication that the Kayasthas originated as an > occupational group. If I remember correctly, Rajatarangini suggests that sometimes > Brahmins too were appointed as Kayasthas. In message #2467, Yashwanth Malaiya wrote: >It is my guess that kayasthas were occupational groups, in some cases >even brahmins served as kayasthas. It will be interesting if Sanskritists could tell what's in Rajatarangini about brahmins serving as kayasths. This was true in the south India. For centuries, Brahmins served as accountants and scribes at the village level. "In South India, the influence of the Brahmins was no less decisive Despite their division into a number of endogamous groups, which were unevenly distributed over the peninsula, the Brahmins asserted their supremacy on account of their high ritual status, their ownership of land, and their control of some of the key administrative positions in rural society. In the Andhra region, for example, the most important groups were the Niyogi Brahmins, settled predominantly in the Northern Circars. Through occupation of the best arable land in the area and their exclusive control of the key position of the karnam (village accountant), the Niyogis were able to sustain their power over many centuries during which they provided continuous local leadership in the Northern circars [14]" (p. 8) "In Andhra, village heads called Pedda Naidus, Pedda Kapus and Pedda Reddis, had to share power with the karnams. While the village heads belonged to the influentual non-brahmin castes and were dominant in the villages of the interior Telugu districts, the karnams were almost always Niyogi Brahmins ane were influential in the coastal areas." [...] "Walter Elliot, Commissioner of the Northern Circars, submitted to the Madras Government in 1854. Elliot's portrayal of village authority in this area showed that the real source of local influence, despite over half a century of British rule, was still the karnam, a position largely controlled by the Niyogi Brahmins. ... Moreover, Elliot found that the practice of payment by fees was a fertile source of corruption. Karnams used their power to extort various kinds of contributions from the cultivators for the ostensible purpose of supporting charities and religious institutions. Not surprisingly, the Niyogi Brahmins who dominated this office in the Northern Circars were anxious to safeguard it as a family preserve." (p.17) [14] R. E. Frykenberg, "Traditional processes of power in south India: An historical analysis of local influence," Ind. Econ. & Soc. His. Rev., 1:2 (1963), 123-126. >From R. Suntharalingam, Politics and Nationalist awakening in South India, 1852-1891. 1974: Univ. of Arizona press Regards, N. Ganesan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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