Nagar Brahmin

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Nagar Brahmins
Nagar Brahmins (9969683734).jpg
Nagar Brahmins in Western India (c. 1855-1862)
ReligionsHinduism
LanguagesGujarati, Hindi, English
CountryIndia
Populated statesGujarat, Rajasthan
RegionNorth West India
EthnicityIndian

The Nagar Brahmin are a Hindu caste of India. They are primarily found in Gujarat but have a history of migration to Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh, in the north and central, Maharashtra and Karnataka further west and into the south, and as far as West Bengal in the east.

In North India, the Bias Brahmin community includes Nagar Brahmins and two other Brahmin groups from Gujarat: the Audichya Brahmins and the Bardai Brahmins.

One notable member of the community was the educationist Hansa Jivraj Mehta, whose inter-caste marriage to Jivraj Narayan Mehta in the 1920s provoked what historian John R. Wood describes as a "mild sensation". Her husband was from the Bania caste.[1]

They are known for travelling and settling across the subcontinent, adopting the local language but writing in their own Nagari-variant of Kaithi instead.[2] This is the case in Sindh, Multan, Sylhet and Varanasi. Baitali Kaithi was a former script used to write Hindustani at a similar time, and it was identical to Sylhet Nagri with the exception that the latter had a matra (upper horizontal line used in Brahmic scripts).[3] Many converted and became Nagar Muslims, though retained the practice of the Nagri script (named after them) for poetry.[4]

Origin[]

The oldest account of the Nagars, who originally belong to Vadnagar, is given in the Nagar Khand, a part of the Skanda Purana, considered to be written in the 4th century CE, though some consider that the Nagar Khand may have been incorporated much later between 1000 and 1200 CE. The Nagar Brahmins claim superiority over other Brahmin groups; the basis of such claims remain uncertain.[5]

Historians P. C. Choudhuri, K. R. Medhi and K. L. Barua state that the Brahmins mentioned in the Nidhanpur and Dubi inscriptions of king Bhaskaravarman bore surnames "which are at present used by Kayasthas of Bengal and Nagara Brahmins of Gujarat".[6] Historian D. R. Bhandarkar also pointed out that the surnames used by the Nagar Brahmins in the recent past are amongst the surnames of Brahmins in whose favour the Kings made grants, as found in early inscriptions between the 6th and 8th centuries AD.[7] Dr. Bhandarkar has tried to show that the Sapadalaksha Brahmins were the same as the Nagar Brahmins, who seems to be of Alpine origin. Alpine Aryans are believed to have entered India as part of Aryan immigration during the third millennium BCE. It has been suggested that the Nagar Brahmins along with the present-day Bengali Kayasthas were originally the Brahmin priests of the Alpines, as evident from several early inscriptions.[8]

References[]

  1. ^ Wood, John R. (November 1984). "British versus Princely Legacies and the Political Integration of Gujarat". The Journal of Asian Studies. 44 (1): 65–99. doi:10.2307/2056747. JSTOR 2056747.
  2. ^ Nagendranath Basu (ed.). "Devanagar". Bangla Bishwakosh (in Bengali). Vol. 12. p. 731.
  3. ^ Saha, RN (1935). "The Origin of the Alphabet and Numbers". In Khattry, DP (ed.). Report of All Asia Educational Conference (Benares, December 26-30, 1930). Allahabad, India: The Indian Press Ltd. pp. 751–779.
  4. ^ Basu, Nagendranath (1933). "Bengali Section: Presidential Address". Proceedings And Transactions Of The Sixth All India Oriental Conference, December 1930. Patna, Bihar: Bihar and Orissa Research Society. pp. 262–264.
  5. ^ Dhirendra Narain (1989). Research in Sociology: Abstracts of M.A. and Ph. D. Dissertations Completed in the Department of Sociology, University of Bombay. Concept Publishing Company. p. 100. ISBN 978-81-702-2235-4.
  6. ^ S. R. Bakshi; S. R. Sharma; S. Gajrani (1998). "Land and the People". Contemporary Political Leadership in India. APH Publishing Corporation. pp. 13–14. ISBN 81-7648-008-8.
  7. ^ S. K. Sharma, U. Sharma (2005). Discovery of North-East India: Geography, History, Culture, Religion, Politics, Sociology, Science, Education and Economy. North-East India. Volume 1. Mittal Publications. p. 182. ISBN 978-81-83-24035-2.
  8. ^ S. K. Sharma, U. Sharma (2005). Discovery of North-East India: Geography, History, Culture, Religion, Politics, Sociology, Science, Education and Economy. North-East India. Volume 1. Mittal Publications. pp. 48, 176. ISBN 978-81-83-24035-2.

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