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Tyagi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tyagi Brahmins originally called Taga Gaur, is a class of Adi Gaur Brahmins.[1] The landholding community is confined to Western Uttar Pradesh, Haryana, Delhi and Rajasthan. They are often considered the highest of the agricultural castes.[2] As of a 1990 report by the Backward Classes Commission, Government of Haryana, they were mostly engaged in farming.[3][4]

The name Tyagi is prevalent in both Hindu and Muslim communities.[5] Community members who converted to Islam are known as Muslim Tyagis,[6] Musalman Taga, Mahesra and Moolay Taga.[7]

References

  1. ^ Bhattacharya, Jogendra Nath (1896). Hindu Castes and Sects: An Exposition of the Origin of the Hindu Caste System and the Bearing of the Sects Towards Each Other and Towards Other Religious Systems. Thacker, Spink.
  2. ^ Satya Prakash Arya (1975). Sociological Study of folklore. Indian Publications. p. 116.
  3. ^ Haryana (India). Backward Classes Commission (1990). Report of the Backward Classes Commission, 1990, Government of Haryana. Controller of Printing and Stationery. p. 105.
  4. ^ Annapurna Chattopadhyaya (2002). The People and Culture of Bengal, A study in Origins. Firma K.L.M. p. 489.
  5. ^ Kripa Shankar Mathur, Binod C. Agrawal (1974), Tribe, caste, and peasantry, Ethnographic & Folk Culture Society, U. P., 1974, p. 189, ... The present Hindu and Muslim Tyagis are the descendants of a common ancestor ...
  6. ^ Brij Raj Chauhan, Unesco (1990), Rural-urban articulations, A.C. Bros., 1990, ISBN 978-81-85489-01-8, ... In Saharanpur district SC Dube described the Tyagi village where half of the population is of Muslim Tyagi and the other half of the Hindu Tyagi ...
  7. ^ History of origin of some clans in India, with special reference to Jats (1992), Mangal Sen Jindal, Sarup & Sons, p. 159

Further reading

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