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Chozhia Vellalar

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Caste from Southern India

Sozhia Vellalar
ReligionsSaivam,Vainavam,Saktham,Christianity
LanguagesTamil
RegionTanjore (Chola Nadu) in current-dayTamil Nadu,Puducherry andKerala
Feudal titlePillai,Chettiar
Related groupsVellalar,Tamil people

Chozhia Vellalar (also spelt asSozhia Vellalar) is a high-rankingsubcaste of theVellalar caste.[1] They are landlords and cultivators who formed the aristocracy of ancientTamil society from theIndian states ofTamil Nadu andKerala.[2][3]

Etymology

The earliest occurrence of the term Velaalar (வேளாளர்) in Sangam literature is found in Paripadal, where it is used in the sense of a landowner.[4] The word Vellalar (வெள்ளாளர்) may originate from the root Vellam for flood, denoting their ability to control and store water for irrigation purposes.[5] which led to the development of various land rights, ultimately giving the Vellalar their name.[6] The term Velaalar (வேளாளர்) is also derived from the word Vel (வேள்), a title used by Velir chieftains during the Sangam age.

The term Chozhia means "men of theChola country" and refers to the Vellalars of the Chola region.They usePillai as a surname.[7]

History

Their name,Sozhiya orChozhia, reflects this geographical particularity, as a population concentrated in the heart of the ancientChola kingdom orChola Nadu, which corresponds to the Tanjore region.[8] They are among the few communities to hold this title, along with notably the ChozhiaChettiars and ChozhiaIyers.[8] The title of these communities is more indicative of their very ancient ties with the Tanjore region, rather than proof of direct kinship with the Chola dynasty.[9] They have historically formed a large population in this area.[9][10]

In the work namedCastes and Tribes of Southern India, published in 1909, colonial anthropologistEdgar Thurston notes that the most eminentpandaram,thambiran andoduvar – who significantly make up the ecclesiastical body or administrative and managerial bodies ofShaivite monasteries (adheenam) and temples – are notably drawn from the Chozhia Vellalar community.[10] He also makes the paradoxical observation that in his times, the Chozhia Vellalars are also sometimes perceived as being of dubious ancestry or legitimacy, as it is also to their community that someparvenu individuals seeking to improve their social status try to affiliate themselves.[10]

In their studies of the social setting in rural southeastern India (especially Tanjore) in the second half of the twentieth century, anthropologistsKathleen Gough andAndré Béteille report that the general social perception of the Chozhia Vellalars was that of an upper caste.[9][11] Although, depending on the locality, they were not a dominant caste.[11] The socio-economic conditions of the community were diverse, although there was a predominance of people engaged in agriculture, with both landowners and tenant farmers.[9][11]

Present status

Before 1975 in the state of Tamil Nadu they were classified asForward class, but due to their economical situation, as well as caste-based regional politics, they were reclassified asOther Backward Class under India'sReservation system.[12][13] Till 2015, they were still classified as Forward caste in theUnion Territory of Pondicherry.[14][15]

Distribution

The Sozhiya Vellalars were present predominantly in theCauverydelta districts of Tamil Nadu —Thanjavur,Mayuram,Nagappattinam andThiruvarur — as well in the neighbouringTrichy,Karur andNamakkal

See also

References

  1. ^Gough, Kathleen (1981). Rural Society in Southeast India. Cambridge University Press. pp. 434, 440. ISBN 978-0521239125.
  2. ^André Wink (2002).Al-Hind: Early medieval India and the expansion of Islam, 7th-11th centuries.Brill Academic Publishers. p. 321.ISBN 9004092498.Not only were the Vellalas the landowning communities of South India,...
  3. ^Gough, Kathleen (2008).Rural Society in Southeast India.Cambridge University Press. p. 29.ISBN 9780521040198.
  4. ^Dev Nathan (1997). From Tribe to Caste. Indian Institute of Advanced Study. p. 233.
  5. ^Vijaya Ramaswamy (2007).Historical Dictionary of the Tamils. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 390.
  6. ^Venkatasubramanian, T. K. (1993).Societas to Civitas: Evolution of Political Society in South India: Pre-Pallavan Tamil̤akam. Kalinga Publications.ISBN 978-81-85163-42-0.
  7. ^Raghavan, M. D. (1971).Tamil Culture in Ceylon: A General Introduction (p. 316). Kalai Nilayam. Retrieved fromhttps://archive.org/details/Tamil_Culture_in_Ceylon/page/n76/mode/1up?view=theater
  8. ^abSingh, K. S.; Thirumalai, R.; Manoharan, S., eds. (1997).People of India: Tamil Nadu. People of India / Anthropological Survey India. K. S. Singh. Vol. XL (1. publ ed.). Madras: Affiliated East-West Press.ISBN 978-81-85938-88-2.
  9. ^abcdBéteille, André (1965).Caste, Class, and Power : Changing Patterns of Stratification in a Tanjore Village. Berkeley:University of California Press.ISBN 9780520020535.OCLC 411150.
  10. ^abc"Vellāla" .Castes and Tribes of Southern India – viaWikisource.
  11. ^abcGough, Kathleen (1989).Rural change in southeast India : 1950s to 1980s. New Delhi:Oxford University Press.ISBN 9780195622768.OCLC 20179784.
  12. ^"List of Backward Classes approved by Government of Tamil Nadu".
  13. ^Racine, Jean-Luc (2009). "(9) Caste and Beyond in Tamil Politics". In Jaffrelot, Christophe; Kumar, Sanjay (eds.).Rise of the plebeians? the changing face of Indian legislative assemblies. Exploring the political in South Asia. New Delhi:Routledge. pp. 445–450.ISBN 978-0-415-46092-7.OCLC 473822352.
  14. ^Singh, K. S.; Ramadass, M.; Naidu, Thalapaneni Subramanyam; Xaviour, D. (1994).People of India : Pondicherry. People of India / Anthropological Survey India. K. S. Singh. Vol. XXXVI. Madras: Affiliated East-West Press.ISBN 9788185938257.
  15. ^"Include 2 More Castes in OBC List".The New Indian Express. 13 February 2015. Retrieved27 September 2024.


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