Talk:Maratha (caste)/Archive 3

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Marātha List of Paragraphs 1. Numerical statistics 2. Double meaning of the term Marātha 3. Origin and position of the caste 4. Exogamous clans 5. Other subdivisions 6. Social customs 7. Religion 8. Present position of the caste 9. Nature of the Marātha insurrection 10. Marātha women in past times 11. The Marātha horseman 12. Cavalry in the field 13. Military administration 14. Sitting Dharna 15. The infantry 16. Character of the Marātha armies 1. Numerical statistics Marātha, Mahrātta.—The military caste of southern India which manned the armies of Sivaji, and of the Peshwa and other princes of the Marātha confederacy. In the Central Provinces the Marāthas numbered 34,000 persons in 1911, of whom Nāgpur contained 9000 and Wardha 8000, while the remainder were distributed over Raipur, Hoshangābād and Nimār. In Berār their strength was 60,000 persons, the total for the combined province being thus 94,000. The caste is found in large numbers in Bombay and Hyderābād, and in 1901 the India Census tables show a total of not less than five million persons belonging to it.

2. Double meaning of the term Marātha It is difficult to avoid confusion in the use of the term Marātha, which signifies both an inhabitant of the area in which the Marāthi language is spoken, and a member of the caste to which the general name has in view of their historical importance been specifically applied. The native name for the Marāthi-speaking country is Mahārāshtra, which has been variously interpreted as ‘The great country’ or ‘The country of the Mahārs.’1 A third explanation of the name [199]is from the Rāshtrakūta dynasty which was dominant in this area for some centuries after A.D. 750. The name Rāshtrakūta was contracted into Rattha, and with the prefix of Mahā or Great might evolve into the term Marātha. The Rāshtrakūtas have been conjecturally identified with the Rāthor Rājpūts. The Nāsik Gazetteer2 states that in 246 B.C. Mahāratta is mentioned as one of the places to which Asoka sent an embassy, and Mahārashtraka is recorded in a Chālukyan inscription of A.D. 580 as including three provinces and 99,000 villages. Several other references are given in Sir J. Campbell’s erudite note, and the name is therefore without doubt ancient. But the Marāthas as a people do not seem to be mentioned before the thirteenth or fourteenth century.3 The antiquity of the name would appear to militate against the derivation from the Rāshtrakūta dynasty, which did not become prominent till much later, and the most probable meaning of Mahārāshtra would therefore seem to be ‘The country of the Mahārs.’ Mahāratta and Marātha are presumably derivatives from Mahārāshtra.

3. Origin and position of the caste The Marāthas are a caste formed from military service, and it seems probable that they sprang mainly from the peasant population of Kunbis, though at what period they were formed into a separate caste has not yet been determined. Grant-Duff mentions several of their leading families as holding offices under the Muhammadan rulers of Bījapur and Ahmadnagar in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, as the Nimbhālkar, Ghārpure and Bhonsla;4 and presumably their clansmen served in the armies of those states. But whether or no the designation of Marātha had been previously used by them, it first became prominent during the period of Sivaji’s guerilla warfare against Aurāngzeb. The Marāthas claim a Rājpūt origin, and several of their clans have the names of Rājpūt tribes, as Chauhān, Panwār, Solanki and Suryavansi. In 1836 Mr. Enthoven states,5 the Sesodia Rāna of Udaipur, the head of the purest Rājpūt house, was satisfied from inquiries conducted by an [200]agent that the Bhonslas and certain other families had a right to be recognised as Rājpūts. Colonel Tod states that Sivaji was descended from a Rājpūt prince Sujunsi, who was expelled from Mewār to avoid a dispute about the succession about A.D. 1300. Sivaji is shown as 13th in descent from Sujunsi. Similarly the Bhonslas of Nāgpur were said to derive their origin from one Bunbir, who was expelled from Udaipur about 1541, having attempted to usurp the kingdom.6 As Rājpūt dynasties ruled in the Deccan for some centuries before the Muhammadan conquest, it seems reasonable to suppose that a Rājpūt aristocracy may have taken root there. This was Colonel Tod’s opinion, who wrote: “These kingdoms of the south as well as the north were held by Rājpūt sovereigns, whose offspring, blending with the original population, produced that mixed race of Marāthas inheriting with the names the warlike propensities of their ancestors, but who assume the names of their abodes as titles, as the Nimalkars, the Phalkias, the Patunkars, instead of their tribes of Jādon, Tüār, Püār, etc.”7 This statement would, however, apply only to the leading houses and not to the bulk of the Marātha caste, who appear to be mainly derived from the Kunbis. In Sholāpur the Marāthas and Kunbis eat together, and the Kunbis are said to be bastard Marāthas.8 In Satāra the Kunbis have the same division into 96 clans as the Marāthas have, and many of the same surnames.9 The writer of the Satara Gazetteer says:10 “The census of 1851 included the Marāthas with the Kunbis, from whom they do not form a separate caste. Some Marātha families may have a larger strain of northern or Rājpūt blood than the Kunbis, but this is not always the case. The distinction between Kunbis and Marāthas is almost entirely social, the Marāthas as a rule being better off, and preferring even service as a constable or messenger to husbandry.” Exactly the same state of affairs prevails in the Central Provinces and Berār, where the body of the caste are commonly known as Marātha Kunbis. In Bombay the Marāthas will take daughters from the Kunbis in marriage for their sons, though they will not give their daughters [201]in return. But a Kunbi who has got on in the world and become wealthy may by sufficient payment get his sons married into Marātha families, and even be adopted as a member of the caste.11 In 1798 Colonel Tone, who commanded a regiment of the Peshwa’s army, wrote12 of the Marāthas: “The three great tribes which compose the Marātha caste are the Kunbi or farmer, the Dhangar or shepherd, and the Goāla or cowherd; to this original cause may perhaps be ascribed that great simplicity of manner which distinguishes the Marātha people.”


Statue of Marātha leader, Bīmbāji Bhonsla, in armour


It seems then most probable that, as already stated, the Marātha caste was of purely military origin, constituted from the various castes of Mahārāshtra who adopted military service, though some of the leading families may have had Rājpūts for their ancestors. Sir D. Ibbetson thought that a similar relation existed in past times between the Rājpūts and Jāts, the landed aristocracy of the Jāt caste being gradually admitted to Rājpūt rank. The Khandaits or swordsmen of Orissa are a caste formed in the same manner from military service. In the Imperial Gazetteer Sir H. Risley suggests that the Marātha people were of Scythian origin:

“The physical type of the people of this region accords fairly well with this theory, while the arguments derived from language and religion do not seem to conflict with it.... On this view the wide-ranging forays of the Marāthas, their guerilla methods of warfare, their unscrupulous dealings with friend and foe, their genius for intrigue and their consequent failure to build up an enduring dominion, might well be regarded as inherited from their Scythian ancestors.”

4. Exogamous clans In the Central Provinces the Marāthas are divided into 96 exogamous clans, known as the Chhānava Kule, which marry with one another. During the period when the Bhonsla family were rulers of Nāgpur they constituted a sort of inner circle, consisting of seven of the leading clans, with whom alone they intermarried; these are known as the Sātghare or Seven Houses, and consist of the Bhonsla, Gūjar, Ahirrao, Mahādik, Sirke, Palke and Mohte clans. [202]These houses at one time formed an endogamous group, marrying only among themselves, but recently the restriction has been relaxed, and they have arranged marriages with other Marātha families. It may be noted that the present representatives of the Bhonsla family are of the Gūjar clan to which the last Rāja of Nāgpur, Raghūji III., belonged prior to his adoption. Several of the clans, as already noted, have Rājpūt sept names; and some are considered to be derived from those of former ruling dynasties; as Chālke, from the Chālukya Rājpūt kings of the Deccan and Carnatic; More, who may represent a branch of the great Maurya dynasty of northern India; Sālunke, perhaps derived from the Solanki kings of Gujarāt; and Yādav, the name of the kings of Deogiri or Daulatābād.13 Others appear to be named after animals or natural objects, as Sinde from sindi the date-palm tree, Ghorpade from ghorpad the iguana; or to be of a titular nature, as Kāle black, Pāndhre white, Bhāgore a renegade, Jagthāp renowned, and so on. The More, Nimbhālkar, Ghātge, Māne, Ghorpade, Dafle, Jādav and Bhonsla clans are the oldest, and held prominent positions in the old Muhammadan kingdoms of Bījapur and Ahmadnagar. The Nimbhālkar family were formerly Panwār Rājpūts, and took the name of Nimbhālkar from their ancestral village Nimbālik. The Ghorpade family are an offshoot of the Bhonslas, and obtained their present name from the exploit of one of their ancestors, who scaled a fort in the Konkan, previously deemed impregnable, by passing a cord round the body of a ghorpad or iguana.14 A noticeable trait of these Marātha houses is the fondness with which they clung to the small estates or villages in the Deccan in which they had originally held the office of a patel or village headman as a watan or hereditary right, even after they had carved out for themselves principalities and states in other parts of India. The present Bhonsla Rāja takes his title from the village of Deor in the Poona country. In former times we read of the Rāja of Satāra clinging to the watans he had inherited from Sivaji after he had lost his crown in all but the name; Sindhia was always termed [203]patel or village headman in the revenue accounts of the villages he acquired in Nimār; while it is said that Holkar and the Panwār of Dhār fought desperately after the British conquest to recover the pateli rights of Deccan villages which had belonged to their ancestors.15

5. Other subdivisions Besides the 96 clans there are now in the Central Provinces some local subcastes who occupy a lower position and do not intermarry with the Marāthas proper. Among these are the Deshkar or ‘Residents of the country’; the Waindesha or those of Berār and Khāndesh; the Gangthade or those dwelling on the banks of the Godāvari and Wainganga; and the Ghātmāthe or residents of the Mahādeo plateau in Berār. It is also stated that the Marāthas are divided into the Khāsi or ‘pure’ and the Kharchi or the descendants of handmaids. In Bombay the latter are known as the Akarmāshes or 11 māshas, meaning that as twelve māshas make a tola, a twelfth part of them is alloy.

6. Social customs A man must not marry in his own clan or that of his mother. A sister’s son may be married to a brother’s daughter, but not vice versa. Girls are commonly married between five and twelve years of age, and the ceremony resembles that of the Kunbis. The bridegroom goes to the bride’s house riding on horseback and covered with a black blanket When a girl first becomes mature, usually after marriage, the Marathas perform the Shāntik ceremony. The girl is secluded for four days, after which she is bathed and puts on new clothes and dresses her hair and a feast is given to the caste-fellows. Sometimes the bridegroom comes and is asked whether he has visited his wife before she became mature, and if he confesses that he has done so a small fine is imposed on him. Such cases are, however, believed to be rare. The Marāthas proper forbid widow-marriage, but the lower groups allow it. If a maiden is seduced by one of the caste she may be married to him as if she were a widow, a fine being imposed on her family; but if she goes wrong with an outsider she is finally expelled. Divorce is not ostensibly allowed but may be concluded by agreement between the parties. A wife who commits adultery is cast off and expelled from the caste. The caste burn their [204]dead when they can afford it and perform the shrāddh ceremony in the month of Kunwār (September), when oblations are offered to the dead and a feast is given to the caste-fellows. Sometimes a tomb is erected as a memorial to the dead, but without his name, and is surmounted usually by an image of Mahādeo. The caste eat the flesh of clean animals and of fowls and wild pig, and drink liquor. Their rules about food are liberal like those of the Rājpūts, a too great stringency being no doubt in both cases incompatible with the exigencies of military service. They make no difference between food cooked with or without water, and will accept either from a Brāhman, Rājpūt, Tirole Kunbi, Lingāyat Bania or Phūlmāli.

The Marāthas proper observe the parda system with regard to their women, and will go to the well and draw water themselves rather than permit their wives to do so. The women wear ornaments only of gold or glass and not of silver or any baser metal. They are not permitted to spin cotton as being an occupation of the lower classes. The women are tattooed in the centre of the forehead with a device resembling a trident. The men commonly wear a turban made of many folds of cloth twisted into a narrow rope and large gold rings with pearls in the upper part of the ear. Like the Rājpūts they often have their hair long and wear beards and whiskers. They assume the sacred thread and invest a boy with it when he is seven or eight years old or on his marriage. Till then they let the hair grow on the front of his head, and when the thread ceremony is performed they cut this off and let the choti or scalp-lock grow at the back. In appearance the men are often tall and well-built and of a light wheat-coloured complexion.

7. Religion The principal deity of the Marāthas is Khandoba, a warrior incarnation of Mahādeo. He is supposed to have been born in a field of millet near Poona and to have led the people against the Muhammadans in early times. He had a watch-dog who warned him of the approach of his enemies, and he is named after the khanda or sword which he always carried. In Bombay16 he is represented on horseback with [205]two women, one of the Bania caste, his wedded wife, in front of him, and another, a Dhangarin, his kept mistress, behind. He is considered the tutelary deity of the Marātha country, and his symbol is a bag of turmeric powder known as bhandār. The caste worship Khandoba on Sundays with rice, flowers and incense, and also on the 21st day of Māgh (January), which is called Champa Sashthi and is his special festival. On this day they will catch hold of any dog, and after adorning him with flowers and turmeric give him a good feed and let him go again. The Marāthas are generally kind to dogs and will not injure them. At the Dasahra festival the caste worship their horses and swords and go out into the field to see a blue-jay in memory of the fact that the Marātha marauding expeditions started on Dasahra. On coming back they distribute to each other leaves of the shami tree (Bauhinia racemosa) as a substitute for gold. It was formerly held to be fitting among the Hindus that the warrior should ride a horse (geldings being unknown) and the zamīndār or landowner a mare, as more suitable to a man of peace. The warriors celebrated their Dasahra, and worshipped their horses on the tenth day of the light fortnight of Kunwār (September), while the cultivators held their festival and worshipped their mares on the ninth day. It is recorded that the great Rāghuji Bhonsla, the first Rāja of Nāgpur, held his Dasahra on the ninth day, in order to proclaim the fact that he was by family an agriculturist and only incidentally a man of arms.17

8. Present position of the caste The Marāthas present the somewhat melancholy spectacle of an impoverished aristocratic class attempting to maintain some semblance of their former position, though they no longer have the means to do so. They flourished during two or three centuries of almost continuous war, and became a wealthy and powerful caste, but they find a difficulty in turning their hands to the arts of peace. Sir R. Craddock writes of them in Nāgpur:

“Among the Marāthas a large number represent connections of the Bhonsla family, related by marriage or by illegitimate descent to that house. A considerable proportion of the Government political pensioners are Marāthas. [206]Many of them own villages or hold tenant land, but as a rule they are extravagant in their living; and several of the old Marātha nobility have fallen very much in the world. Pensions diminish with each generation, but the expenditure shows no corresponding decrease. The sons are brought up to no employment and the daughters are married with lavish pomp and show. The native army does not much attract them, and but few are educated well enough for the dignified posts in the civil employ of Government. It is a question whether their pride of race will give way before the necessity of earning their livelihood soon enough for them to maintain or regain some of their former position. Otherwise those with the largest landed estates may be saved by the intervention of Government, but the rest must gradually deteriorate till the dignities of their class have become a mere memory. The humbler members of the caste find their employment as petty contractors or traders, private servants, Government peons, sowārs and hangers-on in the retinue of the more important families.

“What18 little display his means afford a Marātha still tries to maintain. Though he may be clad in rags at home, he has a spare dress which he himself washes and keeps with great care and puts on when he goes to pay a visit. He will hire a boy to attend him with a lantern at night, or to take care of his shoes when he goes to a friend’s house and hold them before him when he comes out. Well-to-do Marāthas have usually in their service a Brāhman clerk known as divānji or minister, who often takes advantage of his master’s want of education to defraud him. A Marātha seldom rises early or goes out in the morning. He will get up at seven or eight o’clock, a late hour for a Hindu, and attend to business if he has any or simply idle about chewing or smoking tobacco and talking till ten o’clock. He will then bathe and dress in a freshly-washed cloth and bow before the family gods which the priest has already worshipped. He will dine, chew betel and smoke tobacco and enjoy a short midday rest. Rising at three, he will play cards, dice or chess, and in the evening will go out walking or riding or [207]pay a visit to a friend. He will come back at eight or nine and go to bed at ten or eleven. But Marāthas who have estates to manage lead regular, fairly busy lives.”

9. Nature of the Marātha insurrection Sir D. Ibbetson drew attention to the fact that the rising of the Marāthas against the Muhammadans was almost the only instance in Indian history of what might correctly be called a really national movement. In other cases, as that of the Sikhs, though the essential motive was perhaps of the same nature, it was obscured by the fact that its ostensible tendency was religious. The gurus of the Sikhs did not call on their followers to fight for their country but for a new religion. This was only in accordance with the Hindu intellect, to which the idea of nationality has hitherto been foreign, while its protests against both alien and domestic tyrannies tend to take the shape of a religious revolt. A similar tendency is observable even in the case of the Marāthas, for the rising was from its inception largely engineered by the Marātha Brāhmans, who on its success hastened to annex for themselves a leading position in the new Poona state. And it has been recorded that in calling his countrymen to arms, Sivaji did not ask them to defend their hearths and homes or wives and children, but to rally for the protection of the sacred persons of Brāhmans and cows.

10. Marātha women in past times Although the Marāthas have now in imitation of the Rājpūts and Muhammadans adopted the parda system, this is not a native custom, and women have played quite an important part in their history. The women of the household have also exercised a considerable influence and their opinions are treated with respect by the men. Several instances occur in which women of high rank have successfully acted as governors and administrators. In the Bhonsla family the Princess Bāka Bāi, widow of Raghūji II., is a conspicuous instance, while the famous or notorious Rāni of Jhānsi is another case of a Marātha lady who led her troops in person, and was called the best man on the native side in the Mutiny.

11. The Marātha horseman This article may conclude with one or two extracts to give an idea of the way in which the Marātha soldiery took the field. Grant Duff describes the troopers as follows: [208] “The Marātha horsemen are commonly dressed in a pair of light breeches covering the knee, a turban which many of them fasten by passing a fold of it under the chin, a frock of quilted cotton, and a cloth round the waist, with which they generally gird on their swords in preference to securing them with their belts. The horseman is armed with a sword and shield; a proportion in each body carry matchlocks, but the great national weapon is the spear, in the use of which and the management of their horse they evince both grace and dexterity. The spearmen have generally a sword, and sometimes a shield; but the latter is unwieldy and only carried in case the spear should be broken. The trained spearmen may always be known by their riding very long, the ball of the toe touching the stirrup; some of the matchlockmen and most of the Brāhmans ride very short and ungracefully. The bridle consists of a single headstall of cotton-rope, with a small but very severe flexible bit”

12. Cavalry in the field The following account of the Marātha cavalry is given in General Hislop’s Summary of the Marātha and Pindāri Campaigns of 1817–1819:

“The Marāthas possess extraordinary skill in horsemanship, and so intimate an acquaintance with their horses, that they can make their animals do anything, even in full speed, in halting, wheeling, etc.; they likewise use the spear with remarkable dexterity, sometimes in full gallop, grasping their spears short and quickly sticking the point in the ground; still holding the handles, they turn their horse suddenly round it, thus performing on the point of a spear as on a pivot the same circle round and round again. Their horses likewise never leave the particular class or body to which they belong; so that if the rider should be knocked off, away gallops the animal after its fellows, never separating itself from the main body. Every Marātha brings his own horse and his own arms with him to the field, and possibly in the interest they possess in this private equipment we shall find their usual shyness to expose themselves or even to make a bold vigorous attack. But if armies or troops could be frightened by appearances these horses of the Marāthas would dishearten the bravest, actually darkening the plains with their numbers and clouding the horizon with [209]dust for miles and miles around. A little fighting, however, goes a great way with them, as with most others of the native powers in India.”

On this account the Marāthas were called razāh-bazān or lance-wielders. One Muhammadan historian says: “They so use the lance that no cavalry can cope with them. Some 20,000 or 30,000 lances are held up against their enemy so close together as not to leave a span between their heads. If horsemen try to ride them down the points of the spears are levelled at the assailants and they are unhorsed. While cavalry are charging them they strike their lances against each other and the noise so frightens the horses of the enemy that they turn round and bolt.”19 The battle-cries of the Marāthas were, ‘Har, Har Mahādeo,’ and ‘Gopāl, Gopāl.’20

13. Military administration An interesting description of the internal administration of the Marātha cavalry is contained in the letter on the Marāthas by Colonel Tone already quoted. But his account must refer to a period of declining efficiency and cannot represent the military system at its best:

“In the great scale of rank and eminence which is one peculiar feature of Hindu institutions the Marātha holds a very inferior situation, being just removed one degree above those castes which are considered absolutely unclean. He is happily free from the rigorous observances as regards food which fetter the actions of the higher castes. He can eat of all kinds of food with the exception of beef; can dress his meal at all times and seasons; can partake of all victuals dressed by any caste superior to his own; washing and praying are not indispensable in his order and may be practised or omitted at pleasure. The three great tribes which compose the Marātha caste are the Kunbi or farmer, the Dhangar or shepherd and the Goāla or cowherd; to this original cause may perhaps be ascribed that great simplicity of manner which distinguishes the Marātha people. Homer mentions princesses going in person to the fountain to wash their household linen. I can affirm having seen the daughters of a prince who was able to bring an army into the field much larger than the whole Greek confederacy, [210]making bread with their own hands and otherwise employed in the ordinary business of domestic housewifery. I have seen one of the most powerful chiefs of the Empire, after a day of action, assisting in kindling a fire to keep himself warm during the night, and sitting on the ground on a spread saddle-cloth dictating to his secretaries.

“The chief military force of the Marāthas consists in their cavalry, which may be divided into four distinct classes: First the Khāsi Pagah or household forces of the prince; these are always a fine well-appointed body, the horses excellent, being the property of the Sirkār, who gives a monthly allowance to each trooper of the value of about eight rupees. The second class are the cavalry furnished by the Sillādārs,21 who contract to supply a certain number of horse on specified terms, generally about Rs. 35 a month, including the trooper’s pay. The third and most numerous description are volunteers, who join the camp bringing with them their own horse and accoutrements; their pay is generally from Rs. 40 to Rs. 50 a month in proportion to the value of their horse. There is a fourth kind of native cavalry called Pindāris, who are mere marauders, serve without any pay and subsist but by plunder, a fourth part of which they give to the Sirkār; but these are so very licentious a body that they are not employed but in one or two of the Marātha services.

“The troops collected in this manner are under no discipline whatever and engage for no specific period, but quit the army whenever they please; with the exception of furnishing a picquet while in camp, they do no duty but in the day of battle.

“The Marātha cavalry is always irregularly and badly paid; the household troops scarcely ever receive money, but are furnished with a daily allowance of coarse flour and some other ingredients from the bazār which just enable them to exist. The Sillādār is very nearly as badly [211]situated. In his arrangements with the State he has allotted to him a certain proportion of jungle where he pastures his cattle; here he and his family reside, and his sole occupation when not on actual service is increasing his Pagah or troop by breeding out of his mares, of which the Marātha cavalry almost entirely consist. There are no people in the world who understand the method of rearing and multiplying the breed of cattle equal to the Marāthas. It is by no means uncommon for a Sillādār to enter a service with one mare and in a few years be able to muster a very respectable Pagah. They have many methods of rendering the animal prolific; they back their colts much earlier than we do and they are consequently more valuable as they come sooner on the effective strength.

“When called upon for actual service the Sillādār is obliged to give muster. Upon this occasion it is always necessary that the Brāhman who takes it should have a bribe; and indeed the Hāzri, as the muster is termed, is of such a nature that it could not pass by any fair or honourable means. Not only any despicable tattus are substituted in the place of horses but animals are borrowed to fill up the complement. Heel-ropes and grain-bags are produced as belonging to cattle supposed to be at grass; in short every mode is practised to impose on the Sirkār, which in turn reimburses itself by irregular and bad payments; for it is always considered if the Sillādārs receive six months’ arrears out of the year that they are exceedingly well paid. The Volunteers who join the camp are still worse situated, as they have no collective force, and money is very seldom given in a Marātha State without being extorted. In one word, the native cavalry are the worst-paid body of troops in the world. But there is another grand error in this mode of raising troops which is productive of the worst effects. Every man in a Marātha camp is totally independent; he is the proprietor of the horse he rides, which he is never inclined to risk, since without it he can get no service. This single circumstance destroys all enterprise and spirit in the soldier, whose sole business, instead of being desirous of distinguishing himself, is to keep out of the way of danger; for notwithstanding [212]every horseman on entering a service has a certain value put upon his horse, yet should he lose it even in action he never receives any compensation or at least none proportioned to his loss. If at any time a Sillādār is disgusted with the service he can go away without meeting any molestation even though in the face of an enemy. In fact the pay is in general so shamefully irregular that a man is justified in resorting to any measure, however apparently unbecoming, to attain it. It is also another very curious circumstance attending this service that many great Sillādārs have troops in the pay of two or three chiefs at the same time, who are frequently at open war with each other.

14. Sitting Dharna “To recover an arrear of pay there is but one known mode which is universally adopted in all native services, the Mughal as well as the Marātha; this is called Dharna,22 which consists in putting the debtor, be he who he will, into a state of restraint or imprisonment, until satisfaction be given or the money actually obtained. Any person in the Sirkār’s service has a right to demand his pay of the Prince or his minister, and to sit in Dharna if it be not given; nor will he meet with the least hindrance in doing so; for none would obey an order that interfered with the Dharna, as it is a common cause; nor does the soldier incur the slightest charge of mutiny for his conduct, or suffer in the smallest manner in the opinion of his Chief, so universal is the custom. The Dharna is sometimes carried to very violent lengths and may either be executed on the Prince or his minister indifferently, with the same effect; as the Chief always makes it a point of honour not to eat or drink while his Diwān is in duress; sometimes the Dharna lasts for many days, during which time the party upon whom it is exercised is not suffered to eat or drink or wash or pray, or in short is not permitted to move from the spot where he sits, which is frequently bare-headed in the sun, until the money or security be given; so general is this mode of recovery that I suppose the Marātha Chiefs may be said to be nearly one-half of their time in a state of Dharna. [213] 15. The infantry “In the various Marātha services there are very little more than a bare majority who are Marāthas by caste, and very few instances occur of their ever entering into the infantry at all. The sepoys in the pay of the different princes are recruited in Hindustān, and principally of the Rājpūt and Pūrbia caste; these are perhaps the finest race of men in the world for figure and appearance; of lofty stature, strong, graceful and athletic; of acute feelings, high military pride, quick, apprehensive, brave, prudent and economic; at the same time it must be confessed they are impatient of discipline, and naturally inclined to mutiny. They are mere soldiers of fortune and serve only for their pay. There are also a great number of Musalmāns who serve in the different Marātha armies, some of whom have very great commands.

16. Character of the Marātha armies “The Marātha cavalry at times make very long and rapid marches, in which they do not suffer themselves to be interrupted by the monsoon or any violence of weather. In very pressing exigencies it is incredible the fatigue a Marātha horseman will endure; frequently many days pass without his enjoying one regular meal, but he depends entirely for subsistence on the different corn-fields through which the army passes: a few heads of juāri, which he chafes in his hands while on horseback, will serve him for the day; his horse subsists on the same fare, and with the addition of opium, which the Marāthas frequently administer to their cattle, is enabled to perform incredible marches.”

The above analysis of the Marātha troops indicates that their real character was that of freebooting cavalry, largely of the same type as, though no doubt greatly superior in tone and discipline to the Pindāris. Like them they lived by plundering the country. “The Marāthas,” Elphinstone remarked, “are excellent foragers. Every morning at daybreak long lines of men on small horses and ponies are seen issuing from their camps in all directions, who return before night loaded with fodder for the cattle, with firewood torn down from houses, and grain dug up from the pits where it had been concealed by the villagers; while other detachments go to a distance for some days and collect proportionately [214]larger supplies of the same kind.”23 They could thus dispense with a commissariat, and being nearly all mounted were able to make extraordinarily long marches, and consequently to carry out effectively surprise attacks and when repulsed to escape injury in the retreat. Even at Pānīpat where their largest regular force took the field under Sadāsheo Rao Bhao, he had 70,000 regular and irregular cavalry and only 15,000 infantry, of whom 9000 were hired sepoys under a Muhammadan leader. The Marāthas were at their best in attacking the slow-moving and effeminate Mughal armies, while during their period of national ascendancy under the Peshwa there was no strong military power in India which could oppose their forays. When they were by the skill of their opponents at length brought to a set battle, their fighting qualities usually proved to be distinctly poor. At Pānīpat they lost the day by a sudden panic and flight after Ibrahīm Khān Gārdi had obtained for them a decided advantage; while at Argaon and Assaye their performances were contemptible. After the recovery from Pānīpat and the rise of the independent Marātha states, the assistance of European officers was invoked to discipline and train the soldiery.24 [215]


1 Sir H. Risley’s India Census Report (1901), Ethnographic Appendices, p. 93.

2 P. 48, footnote.

3 Nāsik Gazetteer, ibidem. Elphinstone’s History, p. 246.

4 The proper spelling is Bhosle, but Bhonsla is adopted in deference to established usage.

5 Bombay Census Report (1901), pp. 184–185.

6 Rājasthān, i. 269.

7 Ibidem, ii. 420.

8 Sholapur Gazetteer, p. 87.

9 Satāra Gazetteer, p. 64.

10 Ibidem, p. 75.

11 Bombay Census Report (1907), ibidem.

12 Letter on the Marāthas (India Office Tracts).

13 Satāra Gazetteer, p. 75.

14 Grant-Duff, 4th edition (1878), vol. i. pp. 70–72.

15 Forsyth, Nimār Settlement Report.

16 Bombay Gazetteer, vol. xviii. part i. pp. 413–414.

17 Elliott, Hoshangābād Settlement Report.

18 The following description is taken from the Ethnographic Appendices to Sir H.H. Risley’s India Census Report of 1901.

19 Irvine’s Army of the Mughals, p. 82.

20 Ibidem, p. 232. Gopāl is a name of Krishna.

21 Lit. armour-bearers. Colonel Tone writes: “I apprehend from the meaning of this term that it was formerly the custom of this nation, as was the case in Europe, to appear in armour. I have frequently seen a kind of coat-of-mail worn by the Marātha horsemen, known as a beuta, which resembles our ancient hauberk; it is made of chain work, interlinked throughout, fits close to the body and adapts itself to all its motions.”

22 In order to obtain redress by Dharna the creditor or injured person would sit starving himself outside his debtor’s door, and if he died the latter would be held to have committed a mortal sin and would be haunted by his ghost; see also article on Bhāt. The account here given must be exaggerated.

23 Elphinstone’s History, 7th ed. p. 748.

24 Ibidem, p. 753.

Link:- http://www.gutenberg.org/files/20668/20668-h/20668-h.htm

—Preceding unsigned comment added by 121.247.253.191 (talk) 06:44, 26 November 2007 (UTC) 

Raj Thakre is Maratha??????

Hi, As per my information Raj Thakre is not Maratha. By Definition Maratha status is not applicable to people those have close relatives other than Maratha. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 202.80.57.2 (talk) 05:53, 2 April 2008 (UTC)

Bal Thakre is Maratha?

Hello, why wrong information is being put here? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 202.80.57.2 (talk) 05:55, 2 April 2008 (UTC)

caste or no caste

the 1911 Britannica clearly states that the "Mahrattas" did not form a caste. Since caste has been abandonded since then, I should be surprised to learn that this has has changed and the term now does denote a caste. It also clearly states that the term can be used in two senses, in a narrow sense denoting the upper class, in the wider denoting all Marathi speakers. Now, I realize this source may be hopelessly outdated. It is still better than no source at all: we should stick with the Britannica definition until someone presents a more recent encyclopedic source. Unless we can somehow establish that the Mahrattas are a caste in spite of Britannica, the "caste" templates and categories should be removed. dab (𒁳) 07:56, 9 May 2007 (UTC)

The term , concept is present every part , entity , politics in India. Even you go to goverment all recrutement forms needs compulsoury identification of candidate's caste. Sir , you have refferd to western ideology that nowdays hate the word caste because their moral , ethical values have fallen so sevearly that in the same context it equals the term basterds , illegitimate offsprings. The White peoples , rase were never known , famous for ther purity , loyalty , infact these pepols all acts ,religious consepts are directly opposite to nature and now they are paying prise for the sins to mankind and nature. So my request is do not give importance to western politics , consepts. Stick to ground level facts of our Arya Vaidik Hindu Darma consepts.-- Vishal Prakash Dudhane -- Vishal1976

what are you talking about? I am asking for a reference that either confirms or contradicts the 1911 claim that the Marathas are not a caste. In passing, In case you have not seen a newspaper since 1947, may I inform you that the Republic of India does not keep official statistics of "forward castes", and that the notion of "caste" has no official meaning now: it is traditional folklore. Hence, you will not be able to give an official (post-1947) census for "Maratha population", unless you take the term to mean "Marathi speakers" (for which we have Marathi people). dab (𒁳) 07:12, 11 May 2007 (UTC)
Your comments reaffirm my assertion that while you may have appreciable knowledge of linguistics of early Sanskrit, it does not translate into any useful knowledge of social dynamics of modern day India. It is better you refrain from interfering into any Indian caste or tribe related article without checking with the experts first.
You say "caste has been abandoned". However much as enlightened Hindus would like to abandon caste, it is still a living reality in Indian populace. What has been abandoned, or more correctly outlawed, is the negative discrimination based on caste. The positive discrimination based on caste much like the affirmative action programs of US is very much in place. And as a direct consequence of this caste-based affirmative action, the caste identity of a person is fully recognised by the Indian government.
Coming to your assertion that Marathas are not a caste, Let me assure you that it is very much of a caste. And believe me, it is neither a pro-Hindutva nor an anti-Hindutva statement, so don't get all worked up. Just go to any Indian matrimonial website and check for yourself how many Indian people self describe their caste as Maratha. Do you mean to inform these poor folks that they were wrong all along and you know better than themselves?
Sisodia 16:25, 11 May 2007 (UTC)

The entire freaking article seems to be conjured up. Maratas were never designated as a "martial" race. They are not a martial race.

Furthermore, regarding this


In case you have not seen a newspaper since 1947..
Cease and desist!
Sisodia 16:33, 11 May 2007 (UTC)

Marathas was designated as martial race or not..is immaterial.. bcoz by time Mighty marathas have proved what they were..

In 1798 Colonel Tone, who commanded a regiment of the Peshwa’s army, wrote(ref)Letter on the Marāthas (India Office Tracts).(/ref>) of the Marāthas: “The three great tribes which compose the Marātha caste are the Kunbi or farmer, the Dhangar or shepherd, and the Goāla or cowherd; to this original cause may perhaps be ascribed that great simplicity of manner which distinguishes the Marātha people.”(ref)The Tribes and Castes of the Central Provinces of India By R.V. Russell.Vol. IV. Macmillan and Co., Limited St. Martin’s Street, London. 1916 •Marātha (Soldier, cultivator and service) Origin and position of the caste pg 198(/ref)

== From Vishal1976 ==

I have been blocked by vandalist from editing Wikipedia. But now more extrime , dangerious tacticks, moves are taken by these vandalist to abouse, thetraened me. I was watching , searching Extrem beheading vedios on net. First i had no problem in it. But suddenly i faced vandalisim that those sites, videos i use to watch were altered , deleted, vandalis from my net cafe. Even when i gave search at serch engine such as Google and Yahoo , the search results were also vandalised and altered. Now how can we put , clarefy, justify this vandalism , abuse ??? Is this legal ?? Who is behind this ???? How can we stop this ??? . TI is pretty sure that i am beaing spyed , thretend , vandalis by my foes , enimies. Where this will end ???. And more important what is my offence ?? Telling eternal truth , unwanted truth is this my offence ?? You IT experts can easely find out who is behind this

Entire talk sounds like the rant of an insane person.--Deepak D'Souza (talkcontribs) 09:25, 4 April 2008 (UTC)

Rajputs vs. Marathas

We say:

Since the Marathas ruled much of India in the period immediately preceding the consolidation of British rule in India, the Maratha states came to form the largest bloc of princely states in the British Raj, if size be reckoned by territory and population.

Is this true? I'd have thought the Rajputs - who controlled Kashmir and almost all of Rajputana - would have to be pretty close, wouldn't they? The Marathas had the various Deccan states, and many of the states in Central India and Gujarat, but that doesn't necessarily seem like it would be larger than the Rajput bloc. And they didn't even control all of the states in those areas, as there were a number of significant Muslim rulers in the heavily Maratha regions - Junagadh and Bhopal, most notably - as well as a fair number of Rajput rulers in those regions - Orchha, Rewah, and so forth. Could a source be provided for the claim that the Maratha states had the highest population and the largest area? john k (talk) 17:24, 17 December 2008 (UTC)

Rajputs never created a coherent entity like the Maratha confederacy. Additionally marathas did dictate affairs in Delhi and Rajputana itself between 1720-1761! AMbroodEY Reloaded 08:26, 6 June 2009 (UTC) ok

Every single article in Category:Maratha clans needs work

The category Category:Maratha clans is largely the work of one editor, who I've been prodding for two years to learn WP formatting and copyedit his slapdash work. The articles are full of caste-puffery, unsubstantiated legendary claims, and almost all references are unlinked (though in some cases the books themselves are on gBooks), which is not encouraging for Verifiability. If anyone is interested in tackling Maratha topics, this would be a great place to chip in. The user has a relatively standardised section of "Details" including heraldry, devaks, favourite colours and ice-cream flavours, etc. that is rather clunky inline but could make (if referenced) a very nice infobox with Maratha flag and such niceties. Thanks for any help in sorting out this mess of otherwise interesting topics. MatthewVanitas (talk) 15:19, 6 May 2011 (UTC)

What is a Maratha Sardar?

This new article uses the term "Maratha Sardar", but there is no article for the term on WP (yet!). I think it means "chieftain".. Does anyone know? --Surturz (talk) 15:52, 6 January 2012 (UTC)

Possible wiki-copy published work?

Just to avoid any copyvio accusations or circular-citations, the following book ("first published in 2011") appears to have much text that's a word-for-word copy of this article as far back as at least 2010. Occam's Razor leads me to wonder if this PhD has just copied WP:

Dr. Sunil K. Saxena. History of Medieval India. Pinnacle Technology. ISBN 978-1-61820-263-5. Retrieved 23 March 2012.

Oh, and for extra class, the search engine indicates no occurrence of the word "Wikipedia" in the work, so it appears he doesn't even acknowledge. Is there any good way to check on this, and if so add his book/him/his publisher to the non-RS list? MatthewVanitas (talk) 00:34, 24 March 2012 (UTC)

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Recent additions/reverts

I have been reverting an IP contributor - eg: [1] - because I have some doubts concerning the reliability of sources that are being used and have limited access to them. Can anyone confirm their reliability etc? - Sitush (talk) 09:40, 24 July 2012 (UTC)

Edit request on 12 September 2012

The caption on the picture of the palace says "built by built by". Fast Clear (talk) 09:38, 12 September 2012 (UTC)

Varna in infobox

There was some dispute going on in the article regarding inclusion of varna in infobox. Sitush removed varna from the infobox here giving the reason that a consensus was passed that varna is not to be mentioned in the infobox. I noticed this in Raju also.

Sitush, Please show that discussion where such consensus was passed. You must provide the link of the archive page on which such discussion took please so that it can be verified. -Ashish57 (talk) 10:21, 15 September 2012 (UTC)

WP:AGF or search WT:INB], WP:DRN and umpteen caste article talk pages. I am on a mobile device for a few days and it makes things difficult, sorry. Sitush (talk) 18:57, 16 September 2012 (UTC)
Ashish57 now blocked per WP:CHK. - Sitush (talk) 08:31, 20 September 2012 (UTC)

Maratha

Editors should stop writing that Holkars Marathas and Maratha cast is comprised of Dhangar. AS deed in some google books having poor references.--Starrahul (talk) 13:06, 2 October 2012 (UTC)

As you should know by now, you need to provide some sources to support your claim, or you need to demonstrate why the existing sources are not reliable. - Sitush (talk) 13:10, 2 October 2012 (UTC)

thank you and i will prove my point soon.--Starrahul (talk) 13:13, 2 October 2012 (UTC)

Preferably in English. There are far too many non-independent writers and dubious publishers using the Marathi language for this topic area. See WP:NOENG for how we handle non-English stuff generally. - Sitush (talk) 13:38, 2 October 2012 (UTC)

Lack of history 1818-1947, and other gaps

This article has a real history gap from 1818-1947; so what was happening with Marathas during this period? Also, weren't the Marathas heavily involved in the politics of forming Maharashtra state? That'd be useful to mention as well. The article spends a lot of time talking about the Empire (which is important but only 150yrs of the last 1000), the pre-Empire Chinese history bit seems a bit tenuous, and it's got almost nothing following the 3rd Anglo Maratha War except what I added today and some brief military history. MatthewVanitas (talk) 17:30, 2 October 2012 (UTC)

Maratha are shudras

The article mentions the marathas as kshatriyas but they are Shudras. Can we change the article please to mention this.

Dr. Ambedkar And Untouchability: Fighting The Indian Caste System By Christophe Jaffrelot - Columbia university press. — Preceding unsigned comment added by ACHARYA11 (talkcontribs) 17:38, 20 September 2012 (UTC)

Jaffrelot is a reliable source but I cannot see the relevant pages. Please note that even if these come to light, we would not be showing the varna status in the lead section or infobox as there is a consensus that such things cause only problems. The statement would appear within the body of the article. - Sitush (talk) 14:41, 21 September 2012 (UTC)

Its quite obvious that a shudra like B.R. Ambedkar will claim other castes as low or shudra. Tyhgrewskl (talk) 14:49, 21 September 2012 (UTC)

I couldn't care less, to be honest. I just want to see the source because we base our articles on such things. Jaffrelot is reliable and modern, so if he passes comment then it can be included. For all I know, he may be saying the Ambedkar was wrong: it is by no means unusual for people to cherrypick sources in caste articles. - Sitush (talk) 14:54, 21 September 2012 (UTC)

No citations, no proper sources given by the thread starter. -Tyhgrewskl (talk) 15:10, 21 September 2012 (UTC)

The source is fine. There is no requirement for "proper citations" on talk pages - we all know what book is referred to and the problem is merely accessing it. I'll be able to do that via WP:RX. - Sitush (talk) 15:12, 21 September 2012 (UTC)
I'm on it, page 39 (I gave just enough text around it to provide context while aiming for Fair Use):

Ambedkar based his theory on the hypothesis that there were, form the outset, only three varnas and consequently Shudras appeared on the scene only much later. He argued that this ‘’vanra’’ emerged after some Kshatriyas had been demoted to this rank by Brahmins, who simply achieved their objective by refusing them Upanayana, a rite marked by the bestowing of the sacred thread to the songs of the three superior varnas which consecrated their passage to the other of the ‘twice born’.[36] Their aim was to take some revenge for the violence and humiliation imposed upon them by some other Kshatriyas.

Obviously Ambedkar had in mind the Brahmin’s refusal to recognize Shivaji as a Kshatriya.[37]. His theory, which is based on scant historical evidence, doubtless echoed this episode in Maharashtra’s history, whereas in fact Shivaji, a Maratha-Kunbi, was a Shudra. Nevertheless, he had won power and so expected the Brahmins to confirm his new status by writing for him an adequate genealogy. This process recalls that of Sanskritisation, but sociologists refer to such emulation of Kshatriyas by Shudras as ‘Kshatriyaisation’ and describe it as a variant of Sanskritisation...

Some good material here, though I've not yet been able to rally enough troops to take on the entrenched hagiographers at Shivaji with this data. I submit some of these pages would be good to add to Shudra and Kshatriya, and Kshatriyaisation would be a great article. MatthewVanitas (talk) 17:23, 21 September 2012 (UTC)
Thanks, and woah! Jaffrelot is reliable and if I am reading it correctly, it is he who is saying Shivaji was a shudra. See also Kunbi#Maratha-Kunbi. - Sitush (talk) 17:34, 21 September 2012 (UTC)

There is plenty of source to show that the marathas are shudras.

Castes and Tribes of Southern India, Volume 1 By Edgar Thurston, K. Rangachari

Women's Buddhism, Buddhism's Women: Tradition, Revision, Renewal edited by Ellison Banks Findly

Emperors of the Peacock Throne: The Saga of the Great Mughals By Abraham Eraly

Marathas are peasant turned soldiers and they fall under the category of shudras. — Preceding unsigned comment added by ACHARYA11 (talkcontribs) 02:42, 22 September 2012 (UTC)

who the ediot is talking about shudra varna of Marathas? and making references here and there which does affecting the quality of WP articles. You have given lesser Important references but i can provide many references which does entitle a Kshatriya status to Marathas. Edit request Please. Infact, this is online editing otherwise this bad referencing which including Shudra issue could have been resulteed into Riot in Maharashtra. Dont make useless researches.--Starrahul (talk) 13:11, 2 October 2012 (UTC)

"The word Maratha is used for the Kshatriya caste belonging to Maharashtra.Different clans of Marathas claim different Kshatriya origins." needs to be modified to: "The maratha claim kshatriya status but they traditionally classified under the Shudra varna and are peasants turned warriors." The references are provided.

" The — Preceding unsigned comment added by ACHARYA11 (talkcontribs) 22:05, 1 October 2012 (UTC)


Dr Ambedkar the person who framed the Indian constitution has clearly mentioned that in Madras the Maratas were declared as Shudras.

Concrete Steps By Indian Industry On Affirmative Action For Scheduled Castes By By Dr. Ambedkar

Dr. Ambedkar is avery reliable source. and it is very clear that the Maratas were declared as Shudras by the High court itself. I kindly request the editors to include this in the article. — Preceding unsigned comment added by ACHARYA11 (talkcontribs) 18:03, 2 October 2012 (UTC)

Ambedkar is an old source, he is dead, and on this subject some would consider him to be a polemicist. He is not a good source. Worse, even if we did include tha information we would need to word it very carefully as the age of the thing means that we cannot be certain that whatever judgements were made have not been superseded/rescinded. The article now refers to the shudra point, using a modern source. - Sitush (talk) 18:08, 2 October 2012 (UTC)

Thanks for the feedback.. I think Christophe Jaffrelot is good source. CJ ha clearly mentioned that the maratas are a caste of farmers who fall under the category of shudras. can you please take a look

Religion, Caste, and Politics in India By Christophe Jaffrelot — Preceding unsigned comment added by ACHARYA11 (talkcontribs) 18:29, 2 October 2012 (UTC)

Acharya11: you can't just chuck a link up, can you please also quote at least part of a sentence or two to indicate what you want us to look at? I assume that you're referring to the line "(a caste of farmers)". While we could read that as "Shudra", it doesn't specifically say that, and doesn't really go into much more detail.
If you want changes made, you have to choose good books (and you are correct that Jaffrelot is a good book), give suggested text (getting better there), and specifically point out that you want us to read on a given page. As a minor formatting note, please put brackets [ like this ] around links so they display as small boxes, not as huge links. Or alternately, put single brackets around the link, and then add a brief text afterward still within the brackets, like this: The ruling dynasty of Kohalpur was of the Maratha caste (a caste of farmers) - Jaffrelot page 522, 2/3 down the page. If we all do this we'll all have an easier time understanding each others' statements. MatthewVanitas (talk) 18:40, 2 October 2012 (UTC)
I've always liked Jaffrelot but we need to be aware of WP:CITEKILL. If he adds something to what the article already says then perhaps it has a place but otherwise I would tend to argue that we should only start stacking up citations when and if people start to challenge the point. Alas, experience tells me that they will do! Until then, no more than a couple of sources should do the trick. - Sitush (talk) 18:37, 2 October 2012 (UTC)
Acharya11, hope you don't mind, but I've linkified all your GoogleBooks links for easier reading; looks better, no? Might want to make that a general practise; you're finding some good cites, we just need to smooth out our use of sources. MatthewVanitas (talk) 18:46, 2 October 2012 (UTC)

Kshatriya category

I've just remove the Kshatriya category because the situation is far from clear-cut. It would make no sense to also include the Shudra category. This problem is quite common and I am seriously contemplating whether the category should exist - we cannot even really rename it as something like Category:Communities who claim Kshatriya origin because we'd also need Category:Communities whose claims of Kshatriya origin are contested. Obviously, this would be a discussion to be had elsewhere than here but hopefully my rationale for removal here makes sense. - Sitush (talk) 15:11, 3 October 2012 (UTC)

Holkars are Dhangars not Marathas

Ramchandra Chintaman Dhere (10 October 2011). Rise of a Folk God:Vitthal of Pandharpur: Vitthal of Pandharpur. Oxford University Press. pp. 237–. ISBN 978-0-19-977759-4. Retrieved 4 October 2012.--Starrahul (talk) 15:22, 4 October 2012 (UTC)

You cannot just remove sourced content because you have found a source that says differently. If there is disagreement then we show all sides; if a source is unreliable then it is for you to gain consensus for that before removing it. - Sitush (talk) 15:32, 4 October 2012 (UTC)
Did you bother to take on board what I said at Talk:Maratha#Maratha above? And why have you created a new section when the previous thread is current? - Sitush (talk) 15:34, 4 October 2012 (UTC)
Your source speaks of the Dhangar in Andhra and Karnataka. What has that got to do with what the Dhangar call themselves in Madhya Pradesh, which is what the article is saying? Are they even the same caste, given that some castes are distinct but share the same name. Furthermore, "call themselves" is the operative phrase: nobody is saying that they are Maratha. - Sitush (talk) 15:43, 4 October 2012 (UTC)

Edits adding Kshatriya warrior caste

Checking The Culture of India, used as a source for this, it clearly doesn't back it.[2] says "The Maratha group of castes is a largely rural class of peasant cultivators, landowners, and soldiers. Some Maratha and Kunbi have at times claimed Kshatriya (the warrior and ruling class) standing and supported their claims to this rank by reference to clan names and genealogies linking themselves with epic heroes, Rajput clans of the north, or historical dynasties of the early medieval period." It does say they are famed as yeoman warriors, but that doesn't make them Kshatriya. Dougweller (talk) 09:41, 7 August 2014 (UTC)

Warrior class vs "famed as warriors"

As it stands (and ignoring fact that the reference style isn't acceptable), this is just confusing. Eg, one sourcewas carving out a self-sufficient state within the enfeebled shell of the Sultanate of Bijapur. The Bhonsla regime offered a new option for ambitious and aggressive men from both the Maratha warrior caste and literate Maratha Brahmin castes. So successful was Shivaji that by the 1660s he seriously threatened Mughal prestige and says The Bhonsla regime offered a new option for ambitious and aggressive men from both the Maratha warrior caste and literate Maratha Brahmin castes." That does not call the Maratha a warrior class, it clearly states that within the Maratha there was, at least, a warrior caste and literate Brahmin castes. This books.google.co.in/books?id=vRwS6FmS2g0C&pg=PA91&dq=maratha+warriors&hl=en&sa=X&ei=o6riU9z6Ddbd8AXuvYKYDw&ved=0CDYQ6AEwBjgK#v=onepage&q=maratha%20warriors&f=false simply refers to Maratha warriors. Of course there were Maratha warriors. Again, that doesn't make them a "warrior class" and doesn't even say they are. Ditto[3] which again just mentions Maratha warriors. Ditto[4] and [5] and [6]. They were "famed as warriors", which is different. Dougweller (talk) 10:13, 25 August 2014 (UTC)

About adding Maratha word in Marathi or Devanagari script

Hello, can we add maratha word in Marathi or Devanagari script. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Sangram-Salunkhe (talkcontribs) 17:43, 4 January 2015 (UTC)

Regarding changes in wikipage of caste :" Maratha"

I do have explanation for removing the quote from colonel i.e.

"In 1798 Colonel Tone, who commanded a regiment of the Peshwa’s army, wrote[2] of the Marāthas: “The three great tribes which compose the Marātha caste are the Kunbi or farmer, the Dhangar or shepherd, and the Gawli or cowherd; to this original cause may perhaps be ascribed that great simplicity of manner which distinguishes the Marātha people.”[3]"

1) Maratha caste do exists far before the 1798. A people from a certain caste do know what there caste is. Dhanagar, Gawali,Maratha are absolutely different castes( I do believe , you live in India and aware of the caste system here.) 2)I take it highly offensive to categories/refer these Kunbi as a "Tribe" by someone outsider and mention four different caste as a single caste , even-if they are registered as separate different caste today. 3)If it is the question of quotes only by someone in a history(past-Independence Era), I do have many quotes which referring "Maratha" as an independent caste and it is having absolutely no relation with Caste Dhanagar ,Gawali. Kunbi is subcaste of Caste "Maratha" and for which ,we certainly not required a Great Quote from someone outside the India.

Needing a explanation from people who are interested in putting above quote in this web-page —Preceding unsigned comment added by Ingale 74 (talkcontribs) 13:18, 14 October 2009 (UTC)

You're removing one of the only reliably sourced statements/sections in the entire article. If you can find Reliable Sources - that means academic, neutral, third-party, published sources - then feel free to improve the article. If you want to remove material, you can start with everything after the lead section. Everything after the lead section is entirely unreferenced. I wouldn't be opposed to everything there being deleted. Or better yet, improved with reliable sources. Priyanath talk 17:18, 14 October 2009 (UTC)

gawali maratha have origin from shivaji maharaj empire. they used to serve milk at shiv temple. hence they got the name gawali. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 123.252.218.178 (talk) 16:35, 19 February 2016 (UTC)

Let truth prevail

Here about varna status of marathas , wrong facts are given , hence I edited . Maratha varna status was challenged by brahmins of wai against pratapsing of satara and second time chitpavans led by Tilak against Shahu of Kolhapur . One must remember shivaji's 7 ministers of 8 were brahmins and it was shahu who brought forward the chitpavans including bajirao . It is worth to mention that these brahmin ministers or chitpavan peshwas were paying respect and addressing maratha kings as ' Kshatriya kulavantas' . Were these brahmins or chitpavans were liar ? or just for the job they served maratha kings ? We have to understand marathas brahmins fought on this nonsense issue and thereby lost their position in india or even in mumbai --what is the real status of all maratha /marathi in mumbai ? So before writing some garbage on wikipedia do some introspection and put forward facts not opinions . let truth prevail . welcome to intellectual debate -dbkasar . — Preceding unsigned comment added by 112.133.245.33 (talk) 04:15, 18 February 2017 (UTC)

Prejudice

I want to add this here:-

The National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT), the apex organisation that provides advice and support for the improvement of school education has been avoiding mentioning that most of the Indian subcontinent was ruled by the Marathas before the British East India Company conquered it in History books in India according to historian Sadanand More.[1]

References

  1. ^ "NCERT cuts short Shivaji's journey in std VII textbook". DNA India. Pune: DNA India. May 3, 2013. Retrieved August 9, 2017.

Any objections? - Dona-Hue (talk) 18:16, 12 August 2017 (UTC)

Raj Era source ->Pereira, A B de Bragnanca (2008). Ethnography of Goa, Daman and Diu

The book is actually a 1940 publication. The Author, Mr. Pereira died in 1956 as the book mentions. This is simply the English translation of the book(2nd volume) published in 1940 - that was in the Portuguese language. All this information is given in the first few pages of this book - see google books. Hence, I am removing this reference. But not removing any associated text from the wiki page . Just adding [full citation needed] . Thanks.-Acharya63 (talk) 08:37, 22 January 2018 (UTC)

widow remarriage in Marathi women

I have added exact quote about this from the cited source on the page..(not from the book mentioned below).

Coincidentally, recently, I borrowed another book from a Univ library in the US, the book 'Women in distress' by N.Dabir, PhD -currently a professor and researcher on sociology. She has made an interesting research and analysis of the status of widowed and divorced marathi women by caste from 1922 to 1998. She divided the women into three categories 1)Upper caste: Brahmin, Prabhu(CKP), Saraswat 2)Maratha caste 3)Other Marathi women. Her observation was that divorced/widowed women in the upper caste category suffered the most because(in her words) being (the so-called) 'higher castes', they followed the same orthodox family norms and their culture prevented widow remarriage although the Indian law allowed it. This made these upper caste widows join ashrams as they had no way out to have a normal life . Even the Marathas from politically powerful and rich families on the other hand in the 20th century, allowed widow remarriage and hence the maratha widows could get settled and start new lives. They were not condemned to live as widows unlike the Brahmin, saraswat or prabhu women. Acharya63 (talk) 21:14, 29 January 2018 (UTC)

The reason for stating the information above is that it contradicts what Steele says about window remarriage in the maratha community. Perhaps it is possible that both are correct and the 19th century customs were to prohibit but then in the 20th century, the prohibitions might have been removed.Acharya63 (talk) 03:16, 30 January 2018 (UTC)

Dear Mr. Acharya, Ms.Dabir's findings on upper caste widows may have been true early in the 20th century.In latter part of the century,however,young upper caste widows and divorced women did remarry if they wanted to.It did not apply to older widows though.Unfortunately, unlike western culture,Hindu culture in general does not allow older single people to have romantic relationships past a certain age.See whether you can find any sources on what I just wrote.If not,then this could be a possible topic for your PhD research a few years from now! Just kidding! Cheers.Jonathansammy (talk) 21:28, 30 January 2018 (UTC)
Dear Mr.Jonathansammy, Your observation about western(white) couples forming romantic relations even in their 50s or 60 (or even later) is absolutely 100% correct. There are many so called 'aajis'(grandmothers in marathi) and 'ajobas'(grandfather in marathi) who form new romantic relationship after being widowed in the US. In fact, there are also couples and marriages where the the men are much older than the women. Hugh Heffner is an extreme example. Donald Trump's wife is 24 years younger to him. This is extremely common in celebrities in the US - but is also common in 'normal' people also. It is not at all uncommon for a man in his late 40s or early fifties (having children from previous marriages) to marry a women in her twenties. I personally can think of at least 3 couples that I am friends with where the husband is 15-20 years older and the husband is neither rich nor famous. I guess western culture does not look down on such couples. That is why it is accepted.-Acharya63 (talk) 07:00, 31 January 2018 (UTC)

Material to be fact-checked and copyedited

This material has some decent-looking citations, but needs copyediting and fact-checking. Please feel free to edit the following passage directly, so we can include it in the article once it is checked. MatthewVanitas (talk) 10:11, 7 March 2018 (UTC)

Some of the Maratha clans claiming Rajput descent include Bhonsales (from Sisodias),[1] Chavans (from Chauhans),[2] and Pawar (from Parmar).[3]However, according to prominent historians and scholars, Kunbi and Maratha originally belonged to the same caste and that the Marathas were originally Kunbis. Their exogamous "Kuls"(families) and Devaks are also identical. Iravati Karve also used the census numbers to prove the Kunbi origin of the Marathas. Professor Dr.D.Sathe, University of Pune opines that as per Karve's research, the line between the Kunbi and Maratha communities is "thin" and difficult to ascertain. Dr.John Vincent Ferreira, anthropologist and professor, says that Kunbi cultivators are also Marathas but of a somewhat inferior social standing. According to him, the Maratha claim to belong to the 96 clans has no foundation in fact and may have been adopted after the Marathas became with Shivaji became powerful.[4] Historian Vijaya Gupchup from the University of Mumbai also quotes a marathi phrase used by the Brahmins of Pune that implies that when Kunbis became prosperous, they started calling themselves Maratha. Although the Maratha, Kunbi and Mali were the three main agricultural communities of Maharashtra, Kunbis and Marathas were "dry-farmers" who depended on the monsoon season, as opposed to the Mali who worked on their fields all year long.[5] [6] [7] [8]

Hi MatthewVanitas, for the fact checking of the quotes of the part regarding the Kunbi and maratha relation, you can search for the quote itself in the citation on google books, it will show the page. For example if you click on the links below you will be able to verify all quotes mentioned.
https://www.google.com/search?tbm=bks&q=Together+with+the+Marathas%2C+the+Maratha+Kunbi+belonged+originally%2C+says+Enthoven%2C+to+the+same+caste%3B+and+both+their+exogamous+kuls+and+exogamous+devaks+are+identical+with+those+of+the+Marathas
https://www.google.com/search?tbm=bks&q=The+agricultural+community+of+the+Maratha+country+is+made+up+of+Kunbis%2C+Marathas+and+Malis
https://www.google.com/search?tbm=bks&q=If+a+Pune+Brahmin+were+asked+the+distinction+between+a+Maratha+and+a+Kunbi+he+would+euphemistically+say+%27Kunbi+majla+Maratha+jhala%27+meaning+when+a+Kunbi+attains+to+prosperity+he+becomes+a+Maratha
https://www.google.com/search?tbm=bks&q=Either+the+recorders+had+made+wrong+entries+or+what+is+more+probable%2C+%22Kunbi%22+as+a+caste-category+was+no+longer+acceptable+to+cultivators+who+must+have+given+up+their+old+appellation%2C+Kunbi%2C+and+taken+up+the+caste+name%2C+Maratha.
https://www.google.com/search?tbm=bks&q=In+fact+the+Maratha+Kunbis+are+generally+regarded+as+originally+the+same+caste+as+the+Marathas
Thanks -Acharya63 (talk) 10:37, 7 March 2018 (UTC)
Also, https://books.google.com/books?id=0Q5uAAAAMAAJ&q=sisodia+bhosle&dq=sisodia+bhosle&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjtp-aN4tvZAhUP72MKHRh9AcU4ChDoAQhGMAc is another source for the Bhosle-Sisodia claim. Thanks-Acharya63 (talk) 03:22, 8 March 2018 (UTC)
I removed URLs from the citations themselves as they do not lead to the correct pages. The URLs listed here show the quotes correctly.

I think everything other than Chauhan and Parmar is now verified (Sisodia Bhosle is verified). BTW, IMO the marathi quote by Dr.Gupchup should not be directly included in the wiki text although Rosalin'O'Hara also uses it in her book because the word 'majla' in marathi is considered quite rude. The translation 'prospers' is actually not an exact translation but is not rude. Although I am against censorship of any sort, I think there is no need to be provocative when exactly the same thing can be conveyed in more non-provocative terminology. Hence, I included it in the quote in the citation but not the main text.Still copy editying...Trying to find the Chauhan/Parmar quotations also.Thanks-Acharya63 (talk) 00:54, 24 March 2018 (UTC)

References

  1. ^ Singh 1998, p. 2211.
  2. ^ The Illustrated Weekly of India Volume 92, Part 2. Bennett, Coleman & Company. 1971. p. 7.
  3. ^ A. Aiyappan; L. K. Bala Ratnam. Society in Indiayear=1956. Social Sciences Association. p. 41.
  4. ^ Dhanmanjiri Sathe (2017). The Political Economy of Land Acquisition in India: How a Village Stops Being One. Palgrave Macmillan. For Maharashtra, Karve has reported that the line between Marathas and Kunbis is thin and sometimes difficult to ascertain
  5. ^ John Vincent Ferreira. Totemism in India. Oxford University Press. p. 191. 191:Together with the Marathas, the Maratha Kunbi belonged originally, says Enthoven, to the same caste; and both their exogamous kuls and exogamous devaks are identical with those of the Marathas. Enthoven opines that the totemic nature of their devak system suggests that they are largely of a non-Aryan origin.page202:The Kunbi cultivators are also Marathas but of a somewhat inferior social standing. The Maratha claim to belong to the ancient 96 Kshatriya families has no foundation in fact and may have been adopted after the Marathas became with Shivaji a power to be reckoned with.
  6. ^ Dhanmanjiri Sathe (2017). The Political Economy of Land Acquisition in India: How a Village Stops Being One. Palgrave Macmillan. For Maharashtra, Karve has reported that the line between Marathas and Kunbis is thin and sometimes difficult to ascertain
  7. ^ Dr.Vijaya V. Gupchup (1993). Bombay: Social Change, 1813-1857. p. 167,168. pg 167: If a Pune Brahmin were asked the distinction between a Maratha and a Kunbi he would euphemistically say 'Kunbi majla Maratha jhala' meaning when a Kunbi attains to prosperity he becomes a Maratha.page 168: terms Maratha and Kunbi are used synonymously and it is difficult to draw a line of distinction between the two communities. In fact the Maratha Kunbis are generally regarded as originally the same caste as the Marathas.
  8. ^ Irawati Karmarkar Karve (1948). Anthropometric measurements of the Marathas. Deccan College Postgraduate Research Institute. p. 14. page 14:These figures as they stand are obviously wrong. The Marathas had not doubled their numbers between 1901 and 1911 nor were the Kunbis reduced by almost three- fourths. Either the recorders had made wrong entries or what is more probable, "Kunbi" as a caste-category was no longer acceptable to cultivators who must have given up their old appellation, Kunbi, and taken up the caste name, Maratha. In 1921 under the common heading Maratha and Kunbi, the figure 48,86,484 is given and a note added that this head includes Marathas, Cabit, Kunbi and Khandesh Kunbis. (Vol. VIII, Bombay, Part I, pages 185-189.) ...page13: The agricultural community of the Maratha country is made up of Kunbis, Marathas and Malis. The first two are dry farmers depending solely on the monsoon rains for their crop, while the Malis work on irrigated lands working their fields all the year round on well-water or canals and growing fruit, vegetables, sugarcane and some varieties of cereals

Deshastha and Maratha

https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Maratha&diff=844568115&oldid=844567883


Someone had added this completely untrue/synthesized statement. Thankfully, it was reverted by Sitush. Here is the statement that was reverted: According to the hypotheses, Deshastha Brahmins and Maratha belonged to the same ethics group in the past from which some individuals of them got trained in ancient universities and established a separate cast of Brahmins.[1][2]

Not only is it a fact that these govt sources are not reliable as Sitush pointed out but the more important fact is that this is not what the sources say. In fact, page 54 of the first source says that there might not be genetic difference between the two. That is all. Nothing about universities etc. That is why I think we should insist on quotes for extraordinary claims - to prevent synthesis. In fact, most modern historians as well as anthropologists are saying that Maratha and Kunbi were originally same (see Karve's book as well as Dr.Stewert Gordon's "The Marathas"pg 15 [7] ..we need to add this information to this page for completeness. O'Hanlon, Rosalind and Richard Eaton also agree with this (although Eaton is simply quoting Gordon). Deshpande, Sathe etc. also agree and it is in the news too these days. Yet, not a word on this page. See https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/kolhapur/commission-gets-over-1l-petitions-proof-for-maratha-reservation/articleshow/64263505.cms I will add it from multiple reliable sources(not just news) but will need to visit the library first as I can see some books only partially. May take a few weeks. Thanks Acharya63 (talk) 01:13, 6 June 2018 (UTC)

References

  1. ^ (India), Maharashtra (1968). Maharashtra State Gazetteers: General Series: Maharashtra, land and its people. Directorate of Government Print., Stationery and Publications. p. 54.
  2. ^ Singh, Kumar Suresh (2004). People of India: Maharashtra. Popular Prakashan. p. XXXI. ISBN 9788179911006.
Just bear in mind that we don't usually allow sources about genetics/DNA etc in individual caste articles. There is a whole raft of reasons why this is so. - Sitush (talk) 05:54, 6 June 2018 (UTC)
Yes, none of this is based on Genetis/DNA. ThanksAcharya63 (talk) 06:09, 6 June 2018 (UTC)

Very incomplete page

We have some historical information but more can be added. Political situation is also incomplete. But it can be added. But other than history and politics etc. the section about culture is missing: Please can someone add a section on "Festivals and Culture"? 1. Are there any Hindu festivals unique to Marathas (that other marathi hindus do not celebrate)? 2. How long do the marriage celebrations last?Just one day or several days? Do they have religious celebrations for the first birthday? 3. What Gods are worshiped more? Is Bhavani (wife of Lord Shiva) worshiped more than others? She was the family Goddess of Shivaji Maharaj. 5. Are any hindu festivals celebrated any differently by the Maratha community? 6.Any specific food items, diet that is popular in the community?

Thanks -Acharya63 (talk) 03:30, 7 July 2018 (UTC)

Images

Is this article on the Marathi/kunbi community or on the Marathi people? If it is former then how relevant are these images to the article? Afterall, in the 1700s, the Maratha empire had rulers,generals and soldiers from many different communities including muslims. Please comment.ThanksJonathansammy (talk) 19:23, 30 June 2018 (UTC)

 
Maratha soldier
Maratha armour
Maratha Armour from Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg, Russia.
Dear Mr.Jonathansammy, I agree with you. The images(especially the armor as well as the weapons) do not make sense for any caste. They make more sense for the Maratha Empire page. The other problem in general is that some (especially non-Marathi) historians called all Marathi people as Marathas (irrespective of caste).[1]. I have come across many books where Peshwas(Chitpawan Brahmins) have been referred to as "maratha warriors". That is why it is very important to use context (and Google books are notoriously bad for that). ThanksAcharya63 (talk) 07:43, 27 July 2018 (UTC)
Jonathansammy, Just a suggestion: How about adding images of notables from this caste instead? Examples: Shivaji Maharaj, Shahu of Kolhapur etc? Acharya63 (talk) 21:15, 27 July 2018 (UTC)
Acharya63, Thanks for the suggestion but I believe caste, tribe or community pages should be about the common people of that particular group rather than the notables. Regards.Jonathansammy (talk) 21:34, 27 July 2018 (UTC)

References

  1. ^ J. S. Grewal, ed. (2005). The State and Society in Medieval India. Oxford University press. p. 226. He[Shivaji] drew his military strength mainly from the mawales, the kunbis of the Mawal region. In the north, particularly in the eighteenth century, the term 'Maratha' was used with reference to all the people of Maharashtra, irrespective of their caste...

britannica

https://www.britannica.com/topic/Maratha

"Maratha, a major people of India, famed in history as yeoman warriors and champions of Hinduism. Their homeland is the present state of Maharashtra, the Marathi-speaking region that extends from Mumbai (Bombay) to Goa along the west coast of India and inland about 100 miles (160 km) east of Nagpur."

This is the quote on which the edit was based. It is clear that when it says "maratha, a major people of India", it is referring to marathi speaking "people" and not the "caste". Otherwise it would have said something like -"Maratha, a major caste in Maharashtra". The source starts discussing the maratha caste in the third paragraph. In the second paragraph, it clearly says that the term maratha is used by non-Maharashtrians to refer to marathi speaking people. Marathi speaking people were usually referred to as marathas(irrespective of their caste). For example: Chitpawans were called "maratha brahman". In any case, even if ambiguous, not a good idea to keep in the head section. Thanks-Acharya63 (talk) 23:27, 22 April 2018 (UTC)


[update 8/28] If you read this https://www.britannica.com/topic/Maratha carefully , it should be pretty obvious that the page is about Maratha people (maharashtrians) not the Maratha caste specifically because on the right side Mahadev_Govind_Ranade, a Brahmin is identified as a "Key Person" on the Maratha page. Acharya63 (talk) 07:23, 28 August 2018 (UTC)


Hi Mr.Nishant,

You can also see https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.215170 which is Dr.Iravati Karve's research available online on the Maratha caste- please see page 13 and 14. quote on page 13: "The agricultural community of the Maratha country is made up of Kunbis, Marathas and Malis. The first two are dry farmers depending solely on the monsoon rains for their crop, while the Malis work on irrigated lands working their fields all the year round on well-water or canals and growing fruit, vegetables, sugarcane and some varieties of cereals".
And this is not an isolated view of one researcher. In fact, the current OBC demand is mostly based on the fact that many are still in the farming occupation and were originally Kunbis. Please check any source on this. Specifically Dr.Sathe's/Dr.Deshpande's research also talks about this.
Also see "Farmers of India - Volume 4 - Page 295" (Indian Council of Agricultural Research)
Marathas , Kunbis, Malis Agris have all been classified as farming communities on this page. There are more sources that support this.

So to say that only Kunbis are farmers is not accurate.

Also, the Kunbi-Maratha common origin has been mathematically demonstrated by Karve and subsequently mentioned by a lot of modern sources like Dr.Sathe, etc. It has been shown by many researchers(Karve,Deshpande, etc.) that Kunbis started calling themselves marathas in large numbers in the beginning of the 20th century. But this is not even mentioned.
We cannot rewrite history. It is not isolated to marathas, it is true for the Saraswat page too. If you are a Marathi Brahmin reading this you will know that Saraswats in maharashtra are not considered in the Brahmin varna although they call themselves Saraswat Brahmins. But no mention of this on the Saraswat page. It is very difficult to maintain a page when people keep disrupting by adding their personal opinion rather than reflecting sources. I am certainly not advocating that one line from one source should be cherry picked. But when almost all sources say the same thing, why is it ignored? I have access to tons of material from American libraries and also got Dr.Gordon's book ("The Marathas") recently, but do not feel like editing this page because someone will start disrupting it if it does not match their personal opinion or if they do not like it. All the hard work will be wasted. :-( Thanks -Acharya63 (talk) 01:13, 25 April 2018 (UTC)


The term Maratha is used in three overlapping senses: within the Marathi-speaking region it refers to the single dominant Maratha caste or to the group of Maratha and Kunbi (descendants of settlers who came from the north about the beginning of the 1st century CE) castes; outside Maharashtra, the term often loosely designates the entire regional population speaking the Marathi language, numbering some 80 million; and, used historically, the term denotes the regional kingdom founded by the Maratha leader Shivaji in the 17th century and expanded by his successors in the 18th century.

User Acharya is misreading the source given. The Britannica page refers to *all* groups, castes, dialect speakers covered by the term or those who use this term to refer to themselves. Hence the use of this quote is completely justified, both for the caste as well as the Marathi speaking People page.103.239.169.141 (talk) 12:52, 28 August 2018 (UTC)

Discrimination of caste

Medha Vinayak Khole is living in 21st century and she is highly educated also put is very mean minded person how can she discriminate against her servant yadav because she was a non brahmin and abuse her, people like khole are the main culprits for lack of national integration in India and discrimination based on religion should be a serious crime and muslims are no exception , recently Shahrukh Khan was abused by fellow muslims for participating in Sri Krishna Janmashtami celebrations. This clearly shows Islam itself encourages religious discrimination and India wake up and make strict laws against religious discrimination too . Rajshekhar Reddy Arya (talk) 11:18, 7 September 2018 (UTC)

This is not simply a Brahmin vs non-Brahmin issue as Khole allegedly insulted the Maratha gods (Mhasoba is generally not worshiped by other castes). However, I agree with your sentiments on Khole and these incidents prove that caste is not just "trivia" as some non-Indian editors(who are not familiar Indian culture) seem to think. I don't know much about Islam and cannot comment on that. But based on what little I know, I don't think Islam encourages discrimination by muslims against their fellow muslims and they do not have a caste system. In any case, we cannot use the Maratha talk page to discuss issues that are not relevant to Maratha caste here(like Islam). Acharya63 (talk) 20:24, 8 September 2018 (UTC)

Kshatriya vs. Shudra issue

In response to a revert today: the article previously was far too biased towards discussion of the Maratha as a Kshatriya caste. The academic consensus is far nuanced, with a general belief that the various Maratha clans were Shudra cultivators, who then gained military power under Shivaji. As Shivaji gained power and demanded corontation, local Brahmin made a pragamtic decision to "discover" a Rajput-linked genealogoy to justify his rulership as a Kshatriya. Thus they avoided offending now-powerful classes, and saved face by not having to admit crowning a Shudra. Though it is certainly the case that the Maratha claim a Kshatriya origin, and that is certainly notable and worth including in the article, we can't whitewash away their Shudra links, and they must be discussed in an NPOV academic manner. Thoughts? MatthewVanitas (talk) 18:42, 25 May 2011 (UTC)

So if you are claiming that there is an open discussion whether Marathas are considered 'Kshatriya' in Maharashtrian community or whatever, there simply isn't one. Notion that Marathas were cultivators who gained martial bent under Shivaji is actually historically incorrect. Term Maratha historically hasn meant different things during different time periods. Broadly speaking around Shivajis time, term Maratha was used by Marathi speaking soldiery, feudal land owners and jagirdars in the service of Deccani kingdoms, remnants of the gentry and soldiery of the Yadava kingdom. I can give you definite references from Sarkar's book, but I sort of gave up on Marathi articles (and wikipedia) since these tend to attract the most vicious of trolls.

Also regarding the coronation, local Brahmins refused to coronate since according to them last Kshatriyas died when Parshuram killed all the kshatriyas or something to that extent. He needed a Brahmin from Benares to come down and coronate him. Eitherway caste groupings and caste labels were never set in stone and were always fuzzy especially in a society like Maharashtra and multiple groups changed their status in the hierarchy like Konkan Brahmins for instance who are thought to be Iranian immigrants co-opted into Marathi caste ladder! To add to the confusion there is a caste group Kunbi who are nominally regarded to be Marathas and are most definitely a peasant community, however Supreme Court of India draws a clear distinction between Marathas and Kunbis. AMbroodEY Reloaded

I have found that people have very half and poor knowledge about Maratha. They are making very misleading statements about Maratha and Shivaji Maharaj. Maratha has two meanings one is Maharashtriyan(Marathi speaking) other is Kshatriya(warriors) Marathas. Marathas are descendant of "Maharashtriks" who were worriors(from Kshatriya clan) ruling majaor part of India including present day Maharashtra. 1)Chatrrapati Shivaji was not Shudra: Brahmin(who were opposing Coronation) at that time had belief that last Kshatriy clan ruling India was "Nand" of Magadh as "Maurya" was not Kshatriy. So After the fall of Nand India has only two "Varnas" Brahmin and Shudra. That was the reason why Brahmin called Chatrapati Shivaji as Shudra. So if you accept this Shudra theory of Brahmins then you have to accept in India there is no "Kshatriy" and "Vaishya" clans present. Chatrapati Shivaji was from Suryavashi Kshatriya Clan. His mother, Jijabai from Jadhav family of Sindakheda village, daughter of Lakhuji Jadhav who was descendant of Yadav clan of Devgiri. "Jadhav" is corrupted form of "Yadav". In old Marathi texts Yadav of Devgiri are reffered as Jadhav. I request all the people to refer "Mahikawatichi Bakhar" which was first "Bakhar"(type of historical book) written in Marahti. Mahikawati means present day Mahim in Mumbai. It cleary states "Shahannyav Kuli"(96 clans) as differnet caste. Sinda Sheshvanshi (talk) 07:11, 15 December 2011 (UTC)

Maharashtrikas were an ancient tribe consisting of a single tribe and had been mentioned in Ashokan rock edicts ; the maratha force of Chatrapathi Shivaji Maharaj was drawn from many castes which formed his Army of warriors, they can not be compared with Maharashtrikas , it's common sense . Rajshekhar Reddy Arya (talk) 12:12, 7 September 2018 (UTC)

Maharashtrikas were an ancient tribe consisting of a single tribe and had been mentioned in Ashokan rock edicts ; the maratha force of Chatrapathi Shivaji Maharaj was drawn from many castes which formed his Army of warriors, they can not be compared with Maharashtrikas , it's common sense . Rajshekhar Reddy Arya (talk) 12:12, 7 September 2018 (UTC)

!! मराठा !!

1] मराठा या शब्दाचे संस्कृत रुप महाराष्ट्र आहे अर्थात ज्यांचे राष्ट्र मोठे आहे ते मराठे.महारठ्ठा,मरहट्टा,महारथ,महारथी म्हणजे मराठा उर्फ राष्ट्रपती या संद्या प्राचिनकाळी अत्यंत शौर्यशाली रणधुरंधर क्षञिय राजबिंडे पुरुषानाच लावित असत.याला आधार रघुवंश सर्ग 6 मधिल पुढिल श्लोक आहे'

"एकोदश सहस्त्राणी योद्धयेद्यस्तु ध्वनिनाम् !
   शस्त्रशास्त्र प्रवीणश्च विद्नयः स महारथः !!  

भावार्थ = शस्त्रशास्त्रात म्हणजे रणविद्येत प्रविण होऊन जो क्षत्रिय एकटा दहा हजार योद्ध्याबरोबर लढु शकतो त्या रणधुरंधरासच महारट्ट- महारथ/महारथी म्हणतात." या संबंधाने डा भांडारकर म्हणतात,"महारथ,महारथी,मरहट्टा व मराठा यांचे संस्कृत रुप महाराष्ट्र असे आहे.अर्थात महाराष्ट्र म्हणजे महारथ्यांचा/महारट्ट्यांचा उर्फ मराठा क्षत्रियांचा देश होय.

 2 ]ख्रिस्ती सनापुर्वी 7 व्या शतकात क्षत्रिय दक्षिणेत आले  विँध्य पर्वताच्या दक्षिणेकडील देशसंबंधाने पाणिनीच्याही पुर्वी कात्यायनाने आपल्या कार्तिकात उल्लेख केला आहे.हा या बाबिस सबळ पुरावा होय.तसेच ख्रिस्ती शकाच्या पुर्वी 3 र्या शतकाच्या अशोकाच्या शिलालेखावरुन जास्त पुरावा मिळतो,या लेखात राष्ट्रिक पैठेणिक अशी नावे आढळतात.पैठण येथे राहणार्याना पैठेणिक व हल्लीच्या मराठ्यांचे पुर्वज ते राष्ट्रिक होत.अशोकाच्या कुंडे येथिल शिलालेखात महाभोजाचाही उल्लेख आहे.याप्रमाणे पतंजलीच्या पुर्वि 100 वर्षे उत्तर व दक्षिणेत दळणवळण चालु होते व महाराष्ट्रात राष्ट्रिक,महाराष्ट्रिक व भोज लोकांची राज्ये होती.(भांडारकृत दक्षिणचा इंग्रजी इतिहास पेज 11).      
  3]     तसेच हरिवंशात नाग उपनावाच्या क्षत्रिय राजकन्यापासुन झालेल्या यदुच्या 4 पुत्रानी सह्याद्रीपासुन थेट कन्याकुमारी पर्यँत 4 राज्ये स्थापिली असा उल्लेख सापडतो.त्याचप्रमाणे विदर्भ देशाचे भोज राजे सोमवंशी असुन ते यदुच्या कुळात उत्पन्न झालेले आहेत असा उल्लेख हरिवंशात आढळतो.यावरुन महाराष्ट्र व वर्हाडात राहणारे लोक चंद्रवंशी यादव-जाधव मराठे क्षत्रिय होते हे सिद्ध होते.ख्रिस्ति सनापुर्वी 7 व्या शतकापासुन इसवी सनाच्या 3 र्या शतकापर्यँत वर्हाड व महाराष्ट्रावर राष्ट्रे (रठ्ठे) उर्फ महाराष्ट्रे(महारठ्ठे) यांचे राज्य होते.पुढे ते अशोकाचे मांडलिक राजे झाले आणी पुढे स्वतंत्र होऊन इ स 6व्या शतकापर्यँत त्यानी राज्ये केली.
       

4 ]मराठ्यांचे प्राचिनत्व = श्री वाल्मीकि रामायण , अयोध्याकांड,सर्ग 51 श्लोक 6 यात दशरथाला महाराष्ट्रे(महारठ्ठे) विवर्धन असे म्हटले आहे.तसेच इ सनापुर्वी 6व्या शतकात जैन लोकांच्या "कृत्तांग सुत्र" या भद्रबाहुने लिहिलेल्या ग्रंथात महाराष्ट्र शब्द आढळतो,तसेच या ग्रंथाच्या आधाराने इ सनापुर्विच्या 2र्या शतकात शामाचार्यानी लिहिलेल्या "श्री प्रद्न्यापना उपांग सुत्र"यात महाराष्ट्र शब्द आढळतो.

5] तसेच पश्चिम घाटात कार्ल्याजवळ भाजे नामक कोरीव लेणे आहे तेथिल पाण्याच्या हौदावर -"महारथी साकोसिकी पुतसा ! विष्णुदत्तसा देयाधमपोदी"= म्हणजे कौशिकपुञ महारथी/महारठी/महारट्टी विष्णुदत्त याने हे बांधले असे लिहिले आहे आणी या लेण्याचा काळ इ स पुर्व 300 वर्षाचा आहे.तसेच मगध देशावर नंदाचे राज्य असताना म्हणजे सुमारे 2300 वर्षापुर्वी वररुची होऊन गेला त्याच्या प्राकृत प्रकाश या ग्रंथात "शेषं महाराष्ट्रिवत्" असा उल्लेख आहे यावरुन महाराष्ट्र व मराठा शब्दाचे प्राचिनत्व स्पष्ट होते.

6] तसेच महाराष्ट्रकुलवंशावली ग्रंथात पुढिल श्लोक आढळतो= " सर्वेषु एक वर्णा ये कृष्यादि कर्मतत्परः ! नमस्कारेण मंञेण पंचयद्ना सदैवहि ! एषां द्नाति समुद्धोतु कुलानि षण्णवत्यपि ! वंशाश्चत्वार एवाञ सुर्येँचद्रु यदु शेषकः!!"

भावार्थ = महाराष्ट्रिक,महाराष्ट्रे उर्फ मराठे हा एक वर्ण आहे.या वर्णाचे लोक शेतकर्यापासुन राजापर्यंतच्या सर्व कार्यात तत्पर असतात.ते नमस्कारात्मक मंञाने पंचयद्न स्वतःच करतात.आपल्या वर्णाची विवाहादि सर्व कर्मे स्वतः करतात.त्यांच्या जातित 96 कुळे आणी सुर्यवंश,चंद्रवंश ,यदुवंश व शेषवंश असे चार वंश आहेत. यावरुन मराठा व महाराष्ट्र शब्दाची प्राचिनता सिद्ध होते.... (संदर्भ = क्षञियांचा इतिहास-भाग 2 डा के बी देशमुख पेज 115 ते 117..... )

7] यानंतरचा महत्वाचा पुरावा म्हणजे शंवरभाष्य {इ सनाचे 3 शतक} यातील पुढिल वाक्य=

" ननु जनपदपुररक्षणव्वृत्तिमनुपजीत्यपि क्षञिये राजशब्दमांध्राः प्रयुंजते "
यावर कुमारिलाने सातवे शतक पुढिल टिप्पणी जोडली आहे," दाक्षिणात्यसामान्येन आंध्राणामिति भाष्यकारेणोक्तम "{मध्ययुगीन भारत भाग 2}.

शवराच्या वेळी महाराष्ट्रात आंध्राचे राज्य होते यामुळे शवर नुसतेच म्हणतो कि,'आंध्रामध्ये क्षत्रियकर्म करित नसलेले म्हणजे देश किंवा पुर यांचे रक्षण न करणारे क्षत्रिय सुद्धा आपल्यास राजा असा शब्द लावतात. कुमारिलाच्या वेळी महाराष्ट्र स्वतंञ झाला होता,म्हणुन त्याने असे लिहिले कि,'दाक्षिणात्य सामान्यतः राज्य न करणारे क्षत्रिय आपल्यास राजा हि पदवी लावतात.त्याचप्रमाणे महाराष्ट्रात आजही 96 कुळी मराठा राज्य नसताना देखिल स्वतःस राजे म्हणवितात,म्हणजे शवरने 3र्या शतकात व कुमारिलाने 7व्या शतकात वर्णिलेले महाराष्ट्रातील क्षत्रिय हे मराठाच होत हेच सिद्ध होते.................. [ सदरील पोस्ट कोणीही जातीवाचक किंवा जातवर्चस्वता या दृष्टीने न घेता मराठा क्षत्रियत्वाचे प्राचिनत्व असा अभ्यासात्मक दृष्टीने घ्यावी हि विनंती ] CO @ Rajenaresh Jadhavrao मराठा प्राचीनत्व व क्षत्रियत्व असल्याचे वरील संदर्भ उपलब्ध असताना विकीपिडीयावर चुकिची माहिती अपडेट का केली जात आहे Rajenaresh Jadhavrao (talk) 01:46, 11 February 2019 (UTC)

मराठा शब्दाचे दोन अर्थ आहेत १) मराठा प्राचीन क्षत्रिय जात ,जी माहिती महाराष्ट्रात बहुसंख्येने राहतात.ज्यांचे ९६ कुळे स्वतंत्र आहेत.यात शेतकऱ्यांपासुन राजापर्यंत समावेश आहे.हा अर्थ स्पष्टपणे मराठा जात अस्तित्वात असल्याचा आहे २) छत्रपती शिवराय महाराज यांनी स्थापन केलेल्या मराठा स्वराज्यात सामील झालेले समस्त जाती-धर्माचे लोक.याना देखील मध्ययुगीन कालखंडापासुन मराठा या प्रांतवाचक शब्दाने संबोधले जाते...मग या दोन्ही अर्थाचा विपर्यास करून मराठा जातच अस्तित्वात नाही असा अपप्रचार करण्याचे नेमके कारण काय? Rajenaresh Jadhavrao (talk) 01:52, 11 February 2019 (UTC)

Biased

Not balanced. Focuses on negatives, and seems to be written with the intent of giving a bad name to the Maratha community. NBrainkar (talk) 11:28, 20 January 2019 (UTC)

Can you please be more specific? Provide some examples and explain why they seem biased, including by use of rebuttal sources if needed. - Sitush (talk) 12:00, 20 January 2019 (UTC)
@Sitush: Sir, this line : 'Maratha', a major people of India, famed in history as yeoman warriors and champions of Hinduism is sourced from Encyclopedia Britannica and copy pasted as it is in the lede. My concern is, are the words "famed" and "champions of Hinduism" puffery? - Fylindfotberserk (talk) 17:22, 5 March 2019 (UTC)

Dear historians, Edit warring by Srnec has ruined the lead with incorrect historical info. Maratha caste which is 40 % of marathis was not all warriors. See sources across page. Common sense, would the British or mughals have survived with 3 crore warriors? The sources say peasants and soldiers. The peshwas who the British defeated in 1818 were Brahmins not marathas. Maratha empire was built by all castes. what a Garbage page. That is why most of us outsiders do not want accounts bcos there is no attempt to verify veracity. This page is full of puffery and false praise especially in the lead and someone needs to fix it. Lead is 1000000% historically w.r.o.n.g. yes, the lead section. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2600:1010:B01A:16B:2B83:4C82:77DA:9DAE (talk) 03:20, 7 March 2019 (UTC)

Required status column for Telaga caste. Mark as Forward caste

amit kumar - Telaga caste history and correct current status (Forward or Other Caste) needs to be added to the page. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2601:45:480:DF62:5B4:C169:CE56:2B6F (talk) 10:33, 7 December 2018 (UTC) Follow the URL (very reliable source recently published) - http://shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/127160/16/16_chapter%208.pdf — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2601:45:480:DF62:5B4:C169:CE56:2B6F (talk) 11:39, 7 December 2018 (UTC) Excellent reliable source - https://www.ripublication.com/ijhss18/ijhssv8n1_03.pdf — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2601:45:480:DF62:5B4:C169:CE56:2B6F (talk) 11:41, 7 December 2018 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2601:45:480:DF62:98EF:6C8B:D6A3:616B (talk)

Please discuss this on the Talk:Telaga page. Thanks, Acharya63 (talk) 15:57, 5 September 2019 (UTC)

Kshatriya puffery and need for a more honest examination

I'm not terribly familiar with caste issues, but have been trying to help remove some of the extreme bias found in many of the South Asian articles, both Muslim and Hindu. An extremely brief perusal of reputable academic sources on GoogleBooks shows a number of associations between Marathas and peasant/agriculturalist caste groups, and the main mention of Kshatriya status involves how some Marathas had later been designated as Kshatriya during their political ascendancy, and/or of wealthier Marathas assuming Kshatriya customs. The article as it stands now does not even include a whisper of terms such as "shudra" or "kunbi", and instead portrays a massive social group as being uniformly "kings, warriors, and landlords" when academic sources indicate the Marathas have often been farmers. I will attempt to drum up a few good academic sources on the subject to correct this. The intent is not to disparage the Marathas, and their history of entering and exiting Kshatriya status is quite interesting, but this kind of communitarian self-appreciation is really not encyclopedic. MatthewVanitas (talk) 17:00, 22 November 2010 (UTC)

True,let us discuss about academic sources about origin of marathas.Further let us study how it evolved, keeping in mind- Maratha term is used in three sense- as a caste, as a country and a as a language.We have to go in unbiased way. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Dbkasar (talkcontribs) 13:02, 17 December 2010 (UTC)

This is a great record of showcasing rampant vandalism and conspiring to divorce the Maratha caste from their Martial tradition based on biased Sociological vapid bilge. The entire page has been repeatedly vandalized due to this attempt written down in this sub-section. Calling well-justified historical background of any caste as Puffery is sheer bigotry and raises a storm of decades old obscure and biased Colonial Dark Age content as reliable academic sources to drown out any mention of actual practical aspects of Maratha as an entity. 115.96.147.106 (talk) 08:06, 6 November 2019 (UTC)

Maratha caste and the Maratha empire

The article begins with the following sentences: The Maratha are an Indian caste, originally of Marathi-speaking peasant-warriors. They established the Maratha Empire under Shivaji Maharaj in 1674 and were the dominant power on the subcontinent for much of the following century before their downfall in 1818. They were champions of Hinduism in the face of the Mughal Empire. The second sentence needs editing because the Maratha caste alone did not build the Maratha empire. Soldiers, generals and administrators from many different castes including Deshastha Brahmin, Chitpavan Brahmin, CKP, Dhangar, Koli, and others played significant roles in the enterprise. Also there were numerous Maratha clans that actually worked for the Mughals during Aurangzeb's campaign in Maharashtra. Also the "Maratha empire" was the dominant power in the 1700s, and not the Maratha caste. The last sentence in the paragraph says "champions of Hinduism" but this is not discussed at all in the body of the article. I look forward to your comments on the above.Thanks.Jonathansammy (talk) 17:29, 5 September 2019 (UTC)

Also the article name should be changed to Maratha (caste) so that some of the ambiguity is removed. Thanks.Jonathansammy (talk) 17:33, 5 September 2019 (UTC)
Your suggestion seems OK for me, Jonathansammy. - Fylindfotberserk (talk) 17:37, 5 September 2019 (UTC)
Yes I agree Fylindfotberserk. In fact, the https://www.britannica.com/topic/Maratha that is referred to in the article talks about Maratha People (Maharashtrians) as a whole. On the right of the article it gives two examples of "Maratha people" - Shivaji and M.G.Ranade. Ranade was a Brahmin. So it is clear that the champions of hinduism etc. is not applied to the maratha caste but to maharashtrians a whole. For example, in the Maharashtrian Brahmin page , it says Maharashtrian Brahmins played a significant role in the Hindu Nationalist Movement. Christophe Jaffrelot states that even in Indore (a city in Madhya Pradesh), from 1950 to 1965, Maharashtrian Brahmins and CKP together accounted for two-third or three-fourth of the Hindu Nationalist representation in the municipal councils.[1] There is already a disambiguation page Marathas_(disambiguation). We should probably rename this to Maratha(caste). ThanksAcharya63 (talk) 17:04, 6 September 2019 (UTC)

This is mere sub-altern fanaticism in the approach towards editing the Maratha caste page. Primarily because Maharashtian or Marathi pages are not utilized to identify with Maratha Empire due to the very term used to identify with Maratha Empire is *Maratha*. This is unopposed application of unfounded logic to vandalize a well-sourced praise clearly directed to the Marathas. Along with this, Maratha term is not used for Maratha caste that is now known as a political recognized entity but Maharastrians as a whole. The diplomatic solution for this is replicating the praise on whichever other Maharashtrian entity you need to, rather than vandalizing this one. 115.96.147.106 (talk) 08:18, 6 November 2019 (UTC)

Several editors have edited this page. Please do not remove sourced content without consensus on talk page - it is the hard work of other editors. I think your edits to marital tradition section are OK but other sections are POV. If you want to discuss any deletions, you need to show that the source is not WP:RS or WP:FRINGE

Thanks -Acharya

I had no problems with any data on Peasantry, but over-saturation of the page with it then deletion of martial traditions is too extreme. Also, the readers need to understand culture of any caste as a lead as per the norms of Wikipedia therefore this was important to maintain Wikipedia standards. I went through most of the sources on the sub-altern outlook of Maratha peasantry and other sociological aspects, though out-dated are very much valid. That's why I have restored them. My problem was only with over-saturation of peasantry, social ills and vapid topics that slow the flow of the page rather than the historically relevant ones like the performance of the community in warfare, their reputation historically which can be shared rather than singled out between all Maharashtrian topics here. I think we can come to an agreement that we can keep this matter along with the martial traditions and maintain a rich page rather than delete material.

P.S. There is no PoV by me however, because I have added no source of my own, no exaggerated synonyms or arm-twisting or misinterpretation of words was done to glorify the Marathas. Every statement has been reproduced clearly as it is or if it cannot be quoted directly was rightfully put in a formal sentence. Thank you for the civil discussion and your contributions. 115.96.147.106 (talk) 08:33, 7 November 2019 (UTC)

References

  1. ^ Christophe Jaffrelot (October 15, 1998). Hindu Nationalist Movement and Indian Politics, 1925 to the 1990's. Columbia University Press. p. 147,148. (pg 147)Members of the Maharashtrian high castes were particularly numerous, whether Brahmins or - like Thakre[Kushabhau, pg 133] - CKPs.(pg 148) In Indore, the Maharashtrian upper castes were particularly over-represented within the RSS and the Jana Sangh. In the municipal councils, from 1950-65, the Maharashtrian Brahmins and CKP accounted for two-thirds or three-fourth of the Hindu Nationalist representation.

Maratha Caste page content tone

User https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Acharya63 Please respond:-

As we can see from the three message threads present in this page, that it was in clear, conscious and open motives of the users such as MatthewVanitias, to delete and vandalize the military tradition aspects of the Maratha (Caste). Along with this, was the injection of needless sociological sections of outdated content (read as sub-altern fanatical approach) and associating it with the caste. The overwhelming material on peasantry aspects and the deliberate misreading of the sources to imply the composition of Maratha caste as sole Peasants into Warriors as a single trajectory rather than the four actually brought forward ones of Peasants, Warriors, Peasants turned Warriors, and Peasant-Warriors.

There is absolutely no need to justify the upper-caste communities as the only ones having "significant higher education" compared to the general sub-castes, because apart from the edge of Vedic schooling and literacy there is no content mentioned for those castes that is separate from the other castes. As mentioned in the edits, Puranas are proper encyclopedic texts covering nearly ever subject of Human academia wrapped around a legendary framework. Kirtans on the other hand are purely religious orally transmitted affairs. Therefore apart from a mention of literacy nothing else is needed, except of course to sally the Maratha caste based on some obscure difference between higher, and "lower" education. This is from the source itself.

The mention of Ghorpades having literate Brahmins in their service is a needless information, because it singles them out among the 96+ other Maratha clans and has no significance because it is already mentioned that literacy was restricted to particular castes.

The section on Dowry is needless, and purely malicious and no justification is necessary to delete that content because it is an affair of sociological ill, and offers no insight into Maratha Caste, especially on a wikipedia page.

The whole section of Military service deletes the praise of East India Company generals, and commanders on the basis that this praise is may not be restricted to the Marathas but other Maharashtrian folks who are included in this term generally at that time. This is sheer folly, because instead of deleting the praise on this excuse, the acclamation can be reproduced on all page sections of Maharashtrians where *Military Service* is brought up. Lastly, if the excuse is brought up that such content should be in the other page of Marathi people, it is simply not acceptable because Google searches bring up *this* Maratha Caste page as a look into the Maratha Culture.

NOTE All of this data is examined from the sources provided here already, and none of it is my own personal opionion, agenda, or motive, beyond a rectification of an organized, orchestrated and deliberate attempt (As seen from the records of Talk discussions present on this very page) to destroy the martial tradition, divorce the historically proven, sourced and justified accounts from the Maratha Caste. Kindly do not revert the edits, till the discussion is over or the counter-view holding editors have solid sources that not only put forward their content but also debunk the ones put forward by me.


115.96.147.106 (talk) 05:38, 7 November 2019 (UTC)

NEW ACCOUNT:- The Storm Nimbus (talk) 06:14, 7 November 2019 (UTC)

Hi The Storm Nimbus,
Thank you for creating your account. I do not know who Matthewvanitas is. But editors generally do not have an agenda against any community. :Secondly many editors have studied communities at an academic level and their involvement is generally dispassionate. They will praise and criticize :the same community. The start section has to match main body of the article - please see WP:MOSLEAD. I will try my best to address all your :points.
The sources are on the page - hence I will not mention them here unless you need them. Also just because something is unpleasant to read (like dowry) does not mean it is malicious.
Origin:
Based on most modern and academic sources, the maratha caste and Kunbi are separate castes today. But almost all academicians are in consensus that that Kunbis and some other castes who embraced martial tradition disassociated with their parent castes and coalesced into the Maratha caste. That is why the Maratha caste came into existence  only a few centuries ago - and all Maharashtrians were referred to as Marathas. This formation of the Maratha caste was specifically due to marital tradition. The second formation is given by Karve and Attwood - Shahu invited Kunbis in early 20th century to start start identifying as Maratha. Please review the origin section. It clearly points to the peasant origin. This is no attempt to denigrate anyone - rather it is a praise. Because it shows that these families separated themselves from their original castes as they were superior.
The webpage did not say that they were peasants. They were peasants who fought in the war ..i.e peasants turned warriors.
Another point of interest is that the Indian courts have also agreed that Maratha and Kunbi were once the same! And maratha organizations literally submitted proofs for this.
Champions of Hinduism:
Jonathansammy has clearly explained this in the previous section. Also, if you look at the Britannica page carefully it talks about all maratha people not about maratha caste until the third paragraph giving the example of Ranade who was a Koknastha Brahmin. More importantly, many sources show Maratha were actually also working for Muslim rulers (Sambhaji himself). There were attacks on Hindu Mahasabha by the marathas too (in addition to brahmins) that is ot mentioned on this page. Also see the part about Shiv Dharma. Moreover, Britannica is a tertiary source and on wikipedia we generally use secondary sources. Please see WP:NOR if you are not familiar with these terms.
Dowry:
This is mentioned by several sources. Secondly, this is a study by Maratha organizations. Historically it relates to hypergamy between marathas and kunbis pointed to by Dr.Donald Attwood.
Literacy:
I partially agree with you.
Kantak is a very old source and some of his views have been shown to be incorrect. For example all literate communities at that time studied sanskrit
Upper castes(Marathi Brahmins, Saraswast Brahmins and CKPs) - all studied sanskrit and vedas - given that they had munjas(thread ceremonies) and competed with each other - and I have academic sources that quote this. Also marathas were not uneducated - they were not literate. No caste can be uneducated - not even lohars or sutars - otherwise how would they do their work? The low education, high education is purely subjective. Is an accountant(Kulkarni) considered low educated?
Marital race By British:
This I partially agree with you. The Maratha empire was headed by a Maratha (Shivaji) but had contribution of all castes.
I have not gone through your edits in details for this section.
Based on the above points, I think the original page was very accurate - before you edited it. It does not take Marathas away from the marital tradition. It simply shows the origin of the warriors.
Wikipedia is not censored and the editors do not put their own opinions. Editors simply rephrase the sources. Thanks Acharya63 (talk) 08:39, 7 November 2019 (UTC)

Yes I have gone through the points written down by you. I have no qualms with any of these.

Regarding the separation between Kunbi and Maratha, I have no issues or claims of them being separate clans, rather even I support them being not just the same origin but also interchangeable up-till the past few decades as the caste lines solidified. This is evident by a direct correspondence of any Kunbi surname in the Maratha 96 Kuli where all the details are written down without any difference between Kunbis and Marathas. Rather there is not a single surname of any Kunbi Maratha which is not present in any 96 Kuli register of Marathas. Also note that Sociological and Historical sources are very different. Certain Sociological sources are directly drawn from the "hypothesis" based methodology of the scholars and have no primary texts as evidences. In case there is a conflict on this matter, Historic works are what are superior to the primarily Sociological sources.

The vested motives of user MatthewVaniatas is directly declared here, who was responsible for mass vandalism of the content on Marathas between 2010 to 2016, which you can read as follows:-

I'm not terribly familiar with caste issues, but have been trying to help remove some of the extreme bias found in many of the South Asian articles, both Muslim and Hindu. An extremely brief perusal of reputable academic sources on GoogleBooks shows a number of associations between Marathas and peasant/agriculturalist caste groups, and the main mention of Kshatriya status involves how some Marathas had later been designated as Kshatriya during their political ascendancy, and/or of wealthier Marathas assuming Kshatriya customs. The article as it stands now does not even include a whisper of terms such as "shudra" or "kunbi", and instead portrays a massive social group as being uniformly "kings, warriors, and landlords" when academic sources indicate the Marathas have often been farmers. I will attempt to drum up a few good academic sources on the subject to correct this. The intent is not to disparage the Marathas, and their history of entering and exiting Kshatriya status is quite interesting, but this kind of communitarian self-appreciation is really not encyclopedic.

Basically this user was using excuse of Sociological theories rather than historical studies for deleting the primarily Martial tradition content of the page and adding in over-saturated sub-altern perspective on Maratha (Sub-Altern is basically viewing history through a prism of assuming lower classes to higher ones). Sociology and History are two separate Academic sources. Theories like Sanskritization, Imitation, etc. are all Sociological and only as valid as their popularity among the academic circles while History is basically set in stone as long as it is accepted by consensus.

The language tone also matters, because the mention of Marathas being praised before my edits, but without any reference or quotation makes it seem as obscure as passing remark of the British accounts made in general (which was obviously not the case as you can see Maratha military institutions were praised to the paramount level compared to any other antagonist of the British) and on the other hand the "lack of masculinity", "not considered a martial race" aspects are high-lighted, when it is clear that they were added as a martial race only after the British could tame the rebellious Marathas after the third Maratha Anglo war as noted by the acclaimed scholar Norman Gash and this masculinity refers to the practice of being a "man at arms" and chivalry being a critical constituent (the christian notion mentioned) of this "manliness" that was alien to the ruthless and harsh Maratha warriors.

What is significant is all this was drawn out from the sources already present and from where the original edits (before me) had written down their material. Clearly the elaborated parts that actually reveal a postive image of Maratha combatants (though negative in those times such as ruthlessness and harshness) were hidden while such nitpicked aspects were written in a vested manner by the Editors prior to me. This is my accusation, but since there is no opposition to my edits anyways in this matter I have no interest in pursuing any long-drawn retribution or any such corrections beyond what I have done before.

Regarding Literacy also I agree with what you have written and my edits actually supported your point, I shall rectify the page further to resemble your original point.

And Britannica is actually considered a reputed source despite it's tertiary nature, and has been cited validly on over 280 articles on Wikipedia. I am actually an experienced though technically amateur editor on Wikipedia and have been editing over the years here so I am aware of these terms. A teritary source is valid for serving as an introduction or a lead in material for introducing any entity on a wikipedia page. If Marathas being praised includes all Maharashtrians, then you are free to reproduce this citation on all of those pages, but there is no need to delete it at all. Also, the champions of hinduism aspects is clarified as a intiative response to iconoclasm of Aurangzeb who was a Mughal Emperor with a anti-Hindu administration policy, hence this is valid as long as "champions of hinduism" is explained in the context of "in face of the Mughal Empire" and the Deccan and Delhi Sultanates are clearly divorced from this aspect.

Thank you 115.96.147.106 (talk) 13:30, 7 November 2019 (UTC)

You may know that there were many Marathas working for Aurangzeb and the caste itself was formed by service to Mughals. It is obvious from Britannica that it is referring to Maratha people and not to Maratha caste given that they are using Ranade as a key Maratha person. Many RSS leaders were Maharashtrian and there were many pro-Hindu Maharashtrians: examples are Golwalkar, Savarkar and even some modern politicians
like Bal Thackarey who calls himself a mad hindu see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bt9c3fWCEio
Also, see this comment: "Members of the Maharashtrian high castes were particularly numerous, whether Brahmins or - like Thakre[Kushabhau, pg 133] - CKPs.(pg 148) In Indore, the Maharashtrian upper castes were particularly over-represented within the RSS and the Jana Sangh. In the municipal councils, from 1950-65, the Maharashtrian Brahmins and CKP accounted for two-thirds or three-fourth of the Hindu Nationalist representation" [1]
Point is that secondary sources clearly show that Maratha were not champions of Hinduism. In fact, many of Ch. Shivaji's enemies were Marathas.  ::Godse's murder also resulted in Hindu Mahasabha offices getting attacked.
Jonathansammy correctly pointed out the issues with the article in alk:Maratha_(caste)#Maratha_caste_and_the_Maratha_empire. About MathewVanitas and his statement, I do not think he had any bad intention. We rely on academic sources and all are at a consensus on how the caste was created. That is history. The Sankritization or varna issue is not even mentioned in the lead section. Personally, I do not think varna should be given much importance on any caste page given that degradation was politically motivated in many cases and varna is based on superstition. It means nothing to a non-Hindu. But the lead section as it stands now is not accurate. We need to clean this article lead section to reflect modern secondary sources. Thanks Acharya63 (talk) 06:17, 12 November 2019 (UTC)

These viewpoints of yours are based on a modern understanding of actions of modern Maharashtrians.

The usage of term Maratha predates Mughal service by centuries. The term Maratha is used to directly refer to Yadavas by Karan Baghela in his interactions with the Yadava Sevunas over the negotiations of marrying off his daughter to the prince of Sevuna Empire during the Khilji rule of Delhi Sultanate. This is one of countless other examples. I suggest you expand your readership to primary ones as well as well as understand that sociological and historical sources are different.

Britannica using Maratha term as an umberalla ter, has already been addressed by me:- "If Marathas being praised includes all Maharashtrians, then you are free to reproduce this citation on all of those pages, but there is no need to delete it at all. Also, the champions of hinduism aspects is clarified as a intiative response to iconoclasm of Aurangzeb who was a Mughal Emperor with a anti-Hindu administration policy, hence this is valid as long as "champions of hinduism" is explained in the context of "in face of the Mughal Empire" and the Deccan and Delhi Sultanates are clearly divorced from this aspect."

The 1900s period is irrelevant to the whole point and your entire arguement is irrelevant since the context is clarified that Maratha championship of Hinduism was in the face of Mughal Empire alone. Having political feuds with other Hindus is irrelevant to this context and nothing more than obfuscation by an inexperienced political analyst.

I request you to restore the page to this undisputed edition prior to the vandalism by inexperienced editors here:-

https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Maratha_(caste)&oldid=925768254

115.96.147.106 (talk) 06:35, 17 November 2019 (UTC)

Please use your account to edit. Ch. Shivaji had many Muslim generals and many marathas were working for Aurangzeb(Shirke is one prominent example). The maratha empire - not the maratha caste- was against Aurangzeb. Have you read Jonathansammy's original comment? Moreover, please see this discussion about tertiary sources in lead. I had made the same mistake.Talk:Rajput/Archive_25#sorry_,_what_is_vam? Acharya63 (talk) 09:33, 17 November 2019 (UTC)

This arguement of utilizing Muslim generals in Maratha Empire is irrelevant again, since the Administration headed by the King and the Ashtamandala arrangement of Ministers was wholly Hindu from the start till the end of Chattrapati Shivaji Maharaja's career.

The statement by Britannica states Maratha *people* (regardless of how many multitudes of people they refer to) were famed as yeo-man warriors and champions of Hinduism. If you google Maratha people, The Maratha Caste page is propped up by Google Algorithm at the top over the Maharastrian people page of Wikipedia. As such it is a moral and more importantly a logical decision to include it as a lead unless you are willing to go through the procedure (if any) and contact Google and have them alter this fault on their behalf.

The discussion is also valid however if you note, the lead of your's was not altered in the slightest and the Britannica statement was also added within the paragraph and not as a separate sentence. As such the complete Lead includes both your and my content with sources for each. Hence the reversal of my edits was pointless after all.

115.96.147.106 (talk) 16:26, 17 November 2019 (UTC)

I have been chided by superior editors for using Britannica in the lead section before. They were right in criticizing me - if you look at the history of that page(Britannica/Maratha) it has been editor by a English graduate as well as a pop singer! That by itself does not make it unreliable but there is no point including an ambiguous statement that is clearly contradicted by secondary sources. For some non·contentious material it would be OK. Otherwise, we would be setting a bad precedent and every Maharashtrian caste (even Maharashtrian Brahmins used to refer themselves as "Maratha Brahman" - here maratha means marathi speaking) - would be right in adding that they were "champions of hinduism". Many modern authors use the phrase "maratha brahmin" where maratha is used as an adjective to mean marathi-speaking. If you have some secondary sources that talk about maratha caste organizations promoting hinduism then it would be OK to add somewhere in the body. In fact, great Maratha kings like Ch.Shivaji were insulted because of misinterpretation of "varna" (which is not supposed to be by birth but by deeds - as per scriptures) in Hinduism.

Anyway, here is an extract from my conversation with admin from a link given above:

Also, we don't need verbatim quotes from a tertiary source like Britannica, when more reliable secondary sources are present in the article. Britannica has allowed public contributions since quite a few years, and people who vet these contributions are not necessarily experts in their fields, unlike the authors of the original Britannica articles (see "Article History" on the Britannica page). utcursch | talk 15:56, 18 October 2017 (UTC)
Utcursch is correct and I have just reverted Acharya63 again. - Sitush (talk) 16:36, 18 October 2017 (UTC)
okAcharya63 (talk) 02:35, 19 October 2017 (UTC)

References

  1. ^ Christophe Jaffrelot (October 15, 1998). Hindu Nationalist Movement and Indian Politics, 1925 to the 1990's. Columbia University Press. p. 147,148. (pg 147)Members of the Maharashtrian high castes were particularly numerous, whether Brahmins or - like Thakre[Kushabhau, pg 133] - CKPs.(pg 148) In Indore, the Maharashtrian upper castes were particularly over-represented within the RSS and the Jana Sangh. In the municipal councils, from 1950-65, the Maharashtrian Brahmins and CKP accounted for two-thirds or three-fourth of the Hindu Nationalist representation.

Removing inter-caster issues section as it is clearly riddled with dodgy sourcing

I simply have to conclude that it was added to reflect someones caste animus rather than to inform. Much of the sourcing for anti-Brahmin violence for instance was not notable. It uses a throwaway line from Ullekh NP's book on Vajpayee (it itself doesnt source the claim), intersperses statistics of violence to link it with Marathas.

No other caste page, has much of its content dedicated to cherry picked political happenings from present day India. Happy to add it back in if rationale is discussed here first and more properly sourced rather than drive by Google books snippet hunting.

AMbroodEY Reloaded

Please do not delete well sourced content. Anti-Brahmin violence sourcing is non notable? All the sources cited are WP:RS. Most are very high quality. Inter caste disputes are part of every caste page. Please see Deshastha Brahmin. There is no cherry picking. Maureen Patterson (a scholar) has given very negative opinions about the community but these points have been intentionally left out - please read her paper mentioned in the sources. So there is no "caste animus". Also the events are supported by multiple sources. If you have any sources with rebuttal, please add them. The caste dispute on a wiki page for any caste has will be proportional to how many disputes the caste members create. It is part of history. Acharya63 (talk) 06:57, 17 January 2020 (UTC)

My intent isn't to get into an edit war, there are enough things about the section that make it troubling. Take this line for instance: One scholar has observed, "It will be too much to believe that the riots took place because of the intense love of Gandhiji on the part of the Marathas. This doesn't even name the supposed scholar (Sirsikar) or what their expertise even is (political science not anthropology). The inter-caste issues section is reads like a collage of randomly sourced statements that dont even string together. Tell tale cherry picking. Would come back to this if i have time.

24.5.83.50 (talk) 18:12, 17 January 2020 (UTC)

Mhasoba

I believe the section on Mhasoba is misleading. O'Hanlon when describing worship of this God is actually quoting Jyotiba Phule. The content does not mention that Mhasoba is considered another name /form for Khandoba. The latter is the Kuldaiwat (family deity) for most Marathi Hindu communities. Let us discuss this and modify the content.Thanks.Jonathansammy (talk) 23:05, 31 January 2020 (UTC)

Shivaji Maharaj's clan also worshipped Mhasoba. Deshastha Brahmins for example have worshiped Khandoba but not Mhasoba directly. Although I admit this is just a personal opinion. O'Hanlon uses the word Maharashtrian quite extensively in her text hence I think she is using Maratha for caste. Do you have access to Phule's book? That might clarify the context. Thanks Acharya63 (talk) 01:00, 6 February 2020 (UTC)
Check the source.[1]. O'Hanlon, as I said before, is directly quoting Phule. Also Phule is primarily referring to Maratha kunbi, the tiller of the soil, rather than the upper caste Marathas. Since these castes are considered separate now, then we have to be careful about attributing something to the Marathas when it should not be. Phule mainly talks about worship of Khandoba and also says that Mhasoba is another name for Khandoba.The source also gives etymology of the name which is quite different from that on the Wikipedia article on the deity.In the book, Phule says Mhasoba is corruption of Maha-suba (large province) rather than association with water buffalo. In my personal experience of Maharashtra, I have not seen Mhasoba shrines but a lot of Khandoba worshippers including Deshastha. I suggest you have look at the source and edit it as necessary. Thanks.Jonathansammy (talk) 16:31, 6 February 2020 (UTC)
I agree about your Khandoba comment - many Deshasthas worship him. My guess is Phule is referring to all marathi farming communities (Mali, Kunbi and Maratha). Based on Karve's opinion, it looks like the non-Kunbi Maratha also did farming at the time and many Kunbi's started identifying as maratha hence the maratha population doubled. I don't trust Karve too much but I have read something similar in Attwood - I think. Anyway, I do not have a very strong opinion either way. Please edit as you see fit. Perhaps we should add a note "it is not clear if this is about the Maratha caste or any farming community in Maharashtra. Since Phule was a Mali, it is possible he wanted to include his community too and referred to all marathi farmers as maratha farmers(irrespective of caste). The reason I thought it was specifically for the Maratha caste was because I assume O'Hanlon would have commented there otherwise - since she uses "marathi" and "maharashtrian" all over her book. thanks Acharya63 (talk) 07:06, 12 February 2020 (UTC)[2]
Thanks, Acharya63. I will make the edits.Best regards.Jonathansammy (talk) 15:56, 12 February 2020 (UTC)

References

  1. ^ Rosalind O'Hanlon (22 August 2002). Caste, Conflict and Ideology: Mahatma Jotirao Phule and Low Caste Protest in Nineteenth-Century Western India. Cambridge University Press. pp. 152–156. ISBN 978-0-521-52308-0.
  2. ^ Irawati Karmarkar Karve (1948). Anthropometric measurements of the Marathas. Deccan College Postgraduate Research Institute. pp. 13, 14. These figures as they stand are obviously wrong. The Marathas had not doubled their numbers between 1901 and 1911 nor were the Kunbis reduced by almost three-fourths. Either the recorders had made wrong entries or what is more probable, "Kunbi" as a caste-category was no longer acceptable to cultivators who must have given up their old appellation, Kunbi, and taken up the caste name, Maratha. ... The agricultural community of the Maratha country is made up of Kunbis, Marathas and Malis. The first two are dry farmers depending solely on the monsoon rains for their crop, while the Malis work on irrigated lands working their fields all the year round on well-water or canals and growing fruit, vegetables, sugarcane and some varieties of cereals

Protected edit request on 14 May 2020

In the lede, please change

<ref name="Gordon1993">{{cite book|author=Stewart Gordon|title=The Marathas 1600-1818|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iHK-BhVXOU4C&pg=PA15|date=16 September 1993|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-26883-7|pages=15–|quote=Looking backward from ample material on the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, we know that Maratha as a category of caste represents the amalgamation of families from several castes - Kunbi, Lohar, Sutar, Bhandari, Thakar, and even Dhangars (shepherds) – which existed in the seventeenth century and, indeed, exist as castes in Maharashtra today. What differentiated, for example, "Maratha" from "Kunbi"? It was precisely the martial tradition, of which they were proud, and the rights (watans and inams) they gained from military service. It was these rights which differentiated them from the ordinary cultivator, ironworkers and tailors, especially at the local level}}</ref>.

to

.<ref name="Gordon1993">{{cite book|author=Stewart Gordon|title=The Marathas 1600-1818|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iHK-BhVXOU4C&pg=PA15|date=16 September 1993|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-26883-7|pages=15–|quote=Looking backward from ample material on the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, we know that Maratha as a category of caste represents the amalgamation of families from several castes - Kunbi, Lohar, Sutar, Bhandari, Thakar, and even Dhangars (shepherds) – which existed in the seventeenth century and, indeed, exist as castes in Maharashtra today. What differentiated, for example, "Maratha" from "Kunbi"? It was precisely the martial tradition, of which they were proud, and the rights (watans and inams) they gained from military service. It was these rights which differentiated them from the ordinary cultivator, ironworkers and tailors, especially at the local level}}</ref>

(move the period from after the ref to before it). Thanks, --DannyS712 (talk) 01:03, 14 May 2020 (UTC)

  Done Good catch Danny CaptainEek Edits Ho Cap'n! 09:38, 15 May 2020 (UTC)