Darbar (title)
Darbar, also spelled as Durbar, is a title of honor or respect used generally in the western Indian State of Gujarat to refer to a Koli and Rajput. Darbar is equal to the Sanskrit word Kshatriya. Chieftain or Lord of small Principality, which existed in the pre-independence era.[1][2][3][4]
As such any caste of Rajput people or hereditary chieftain of erstwhile princely states may be referred to as Darbar caste in general use of the word,[5] although there is no separate notified caste as Darbar. It was a title of honor more in use during princely India, which was used to refer to Rajput chieftains and is prevalent in use even today mainly in rural Gujarat.
Darbar Shri[]
Darbar Shri was the formal title of the ruler of a princely state in :
- Chotila, in Eastern Kathiawara, Hindu Rajput Khachar dynasty[citation needed]
See also[]
- Desmukh
- Diwan
- Jagirdar
- Thakur
- Mankari
- Zamindar
- Zaildar
- Mansabdar
- Sardar
- Thakur, Thakore
- Feudalism in India
- Feudalism in Pakistan
References[]
- ^ Gujarat - Part 3. 2003. p. 1173. ISBN 9788179911068.
- ^ Basu, Pratyusha (2009). Villages, Women, and the Success of Dairy Cooperatives in India: Making Place for Rural Development. Cambria Press. ISBN 978-1-60497-625-0.
- ^ Williams, Raymond Brady; Trivedi, Yogi (2016-05-12). Swaminarayan Hinduism: Tradition, Adaptation, and Identity. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-908959-8.
- ^ Lobo, Lancy (1995). The Thakors of north Gujarat: a caste in the village and the region. Hindustan Pub. Corp. ISBN 978-81-7075-035-2.
- ^ Roy Burman, J. J. (2005). Gujarat Unknown: Hindu-Muslim Syncretism and Humanistic Forays By J. J. Roy Burma. p. 140. ISBN 9788183240529.
External links and Sources[]
Categories:
- Men's social titles
- Titles in India
- Heads of state
- Cultural history of India
- Honorifics
- Prefixes
- Koli titles