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Holeya

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Scheduled caste of India

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(November 2017) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Holeyas,Coorg

Holeya are ascheduled caste of India, mainly belonging to present dayKarnataka State,[1]Kerala,Maharashtra,Tamil Nadu and alsoMadhya Pradesh.[2]

The Mysore Gazetteer claimed the Holeyas were the first to settle the villages.[3] In Medieval period of India History, they were the warrior classes of fallen Kingdoms, hence were made & treated as,out-caste, commonly an agricultural labor. The termHola means an agricultural field and the termHoleya is derived fromHola.[1][4] Other colonial-era authors claimed it derived also fromHole, meaning "pollution."

InBritish India, Holeyas lived inCanara,Coorg Province andMysore. They were one of the lowest class, a partial slave, who could be sold by the owner of the estate in which they were located.[1]

Holeya community is one of the oldest communities in the subcontinent, which has been showing its presence through the mentions of the community name, in Ashoka's Gavi Mut Inscription of Koppal, and Halmidi Inscription in Halmidi, Hassan. They are said to be the oldest agricultural community of the state and are said to be the source of numerous kingdoms in the Deccan.In medieval history, Holeya was considered to be a sub-division ofDher. Among Dhers there were three principal class of slaves[verification needed] called Holiyas, Yemaru and Paleru.[1]

Holeya is also known by the name ofParaiyar in some areas.[1] The oldTamil poems and early Christian writing do not mention the wordPariah orParaiyan but mention the name of a tribe called Eyninas, who were quite distinct from the rest of people and did not live in villages, but in forts of their own. Mr Francis, a historian, regards them as ancestors of present-day Holeyas.[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefIndian Encyclopaedia, Volume 1 By Subodh Kapoor, Page 5504.
  2. ^Census of India, 1991: Madhya Pradesh, Issue 2
  3. ^Ananthakrishna Iyer, L. Krishna (1928–1935).The Mysore tribes and castes. Mysore University.OCLC 39859761.
  4. ^Omvedt, Gail (1994).Dalits and the Democratic Revolution: Dr Ambedkar and the Dalit Movement in Colonial India. SAGE Publications India.ISBN 9788132119838. Retrieved25 December 2017.


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