Jump to content

History of Konkan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 61.246.204.115 (talk) at 06:31, 31 August 2006. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

You must add a |reason= parameter to this Cleanup template – replace it with {{Cleanup|January 2006|reason=<Fill reason here>}}, or remove the Cleanup template.


The Konkan is an ancient historical country in South Asia and the East Indies. The people and its language is Konkani of which several dialects exist.

The Konkan is presently included in the territories of Gujarat (part), Damaõ, Dadra & Nagar-Aveli, Maharashtra (part), Goa and Karnataka (part). Historical Konkani communities exist outside the Konkan, principally in Tuluva or Tulunad, Kerala and Maharashtra (Desh & Marathwada).

The city of Bombay is the largest city in the Konkan.

Name variants

The country has historically been called Concan in old Portuguese, Goan Konkani and English sources, before a shift to the present form. The Marathi usually call it the "Kokan".

Political Konkan

Politically, the Konkan vibhag (division) is one of six divisions of the state of Maharashtra on the western coast of South Asia or the Indian subcontinent. Maharashtra Konkan is divided into the districts of Sindhudurg, Ratnagiri, Raigad, Thane, Bombay Urban and Bombay Suburban.

The actual Konkan, however, is much larger than the Maharashtra Konkan, with its far north included in Gujarat, Daman, Dadra & Nagar-Haveli, and its far south forming the entirety of Goa and part of Uttara Kanara district of Karnataka state of India.

Geography

The Sahyadri Mountain range ("Western Ghats") forms the eastern boundary of the Konkan, and the Arabian Sea marks the western boundary. The southern boundary is the Gangavali River. The Mayura River forms the northern boundary.

The Gangavali flows in the district of North Canara ("Uttara Kannada") in present-day "Karnataka State"; the cis-Gangavali portion (seen from Bombay) of this district is the southern-most part of the Konkan. The towns of Gokarn, Honavar, Karwar and the cities of Hubli & Dharwar fall within the Konkan.

The exact identity of the Mayura River, the northern limits of the historic Konkan, is indeterminate.

Ethnology

It is claimed by some that the name originated in a supposed aborigine tribe called the Konkas. However, the name Konka is actually a variant corruption of the name Konkna, a variant form of the name Konkani or a native of the Konkan.

The version that traces the name to the word "kon" or corner, seems to be more reliable.

The Gramit or Gamit tribals of the Maharashtra Konkan (districts of Sindhudurg, Ratnagiri, Raigad or Alibag or Colaba, Bombay Urban, Bombay Suburban and Thane in "Maharashtra State") are the original Konkani prolectariat of the Maharashtra Konkan, who have been driven into forest lands and reduced to tribal and "low caste" status by Marathi and Gujarati colonists in the Konkan.

Gamit is the Prakritic form of the Sanskrit Gramit, which means a legal constitutent of a Grama or a village-commune. By definition of the Hindu social order, a forest-dweller, Adivasi or "low-caste" person cannot be a Gramit. Therefore, that the Gamits are today of a low status is proof that they have suffered social, political and economic degradation as a result of dispossession or displacement.

It is also certain that the "Konknni", "Konkna", "Konknni", "Koknni" and "Kunkna" tribals native to the territories of Maharashtra Konkan, Dadra & Nagar-Haveli, Daman and Cis-Narmada Gujarat, are also descended from displaced Konkani prolectariat driven into forest lands and reduced in status by Marathi and Gujarati colonists.

The "Greater Konkan" or "Sapta-Konkan" (literally, "Seven Konkans") of ancient Hindu records is the Konkan plus the further ethnic homelands of Haiva (trans-Gangavali part of "Uttara Kannada"), Tuluva (largely "Dakshina Kannada" or the Districts of Udipi and South Canara, and lastly the "Keralapatti", which is Kerala or Malabar District.

It is probable that the northern-most boundary of the Konkan, the "Mayura" River, is identical to the Narmada River, but there is no concrete evidence. However, the Dangs prove that the historic Konkan extends at least close to the Narmada.

According to claims made based on the ancient Hindu records, the Konkan originally extended uptil the Gulf of Cambay. The matter is uncertain, and will remain so until the present identity of the Mayura River is determined.

The Dangs

The Dangs, meaning "rugged or difficult country", is a country in the Konkan populated by natives speaking the Dangi dialect of Konkani. It was ruled by several petty kings, but after 1947, it was integrated into the Bombay Presidency province, and later into the state of Gujarat, to which it belongs administratively at present.

Anomaly of the Bene Israelis and Chitpavans

Four communities stand out as anomalies in the Konkan: The Bene Israelis, the Samvedis the Navaiyats and the Chitpavans.

The Bene Israelites were originally Teli by caste, Vaishyas or Shudras specializing in the extraction of vegetable oil and its commerce. It is claimed that they are descended from Jewish refugees in the Konkan. However, their mother tongue is Marathi, not Konkani. (Their language is described as Judæo-Marathi, but it is admitted that this is not a truly distinct dialect).

The Samvedi are descended from a Brahmin sub-caste that settled around Bombay, or more exactly around the then entrepots of Thane, Kalyan and Sopara, for Bombay did not exist then. They adopted Christianity as a result of missionaries sent by the Portuguese who had conquered the area from the Arab controlled Sultanate of Cambay in present-day Gujarat State. They have existed in the Konkan from at least 500 B.C., so they predated any Jewish refugees-settlers. Yet they have retained their dialect of Konkani as their mother tongue, unlike the other "Norteiro people" (natives of the former Portuguese "Court of the North", centered around Baçaim) who were forced to adopt Marathi by the Maratha conquerors under Baji Rao Peshwa, and who renamed themselves "East Indian" about the 1870s.

The third community is that of the Navaiyats or "Newcomers", Muslim Arab refugees from a civil war in Arabia, the Karmali rebellion, who also settled in the Konkan about 800-900 A.D., and whose mother-tongue is the Navaiyat dialect of Konkani.

The existence of the Samvedi and the Navaiyats militate against the claim of a Jewish ancestry of the Bene Israelites, for, if they were descended from Jewish refugees settled in the Konkan, their mother tongue would have been Konkani, not Marathi. That their mother tongue is Marathi proves that they are immigrants from the Maharashtra Desh - the original Marathi homeland, into the Konkan.

The fourth anomalous community, the Chitpavans are hypothetized to be of East European, Scytho-Iranian or Ashkenazi origin as per the DNA analysis[citation needed]. One can easily make out a prototype Chitpavan by his distinct European looks, fair skin, and light eyes.

The Bene Israelis claim that Chitpavans are descended from their fellow-Jewish survivors who converted to Hinduism for social reasons[citation needed].

The Chitpavans appear to be the last of the immigrants to the Konkan. While the exact dates and events pertaining to their arrival in the Konkan and subsequent conversion to Brahmanism are not recorded in history, their presence in Konkan region does not appear to be older than 500-600 years[citation needed].

Regardless of when they immigrated, they indisputably assimilated and spoke a dialect of Konkani called Chitpavani. Later on in the 17th and 18th century, they emigrated to the Desh (the original Maharashtra) and adopted Marathi as their language, although some of them still use Chitpavani at home.

The Chitpavan immigration into Maharashtra proper began when Balaji Vishvanath Bhat was made the Peshwa of the Maratha kingdom, replacing the earlier Pingle dynasty of Peshwas.

Today, a small number of Chitpavans remain in their original homeland in the Konkan and continue to speak their Chitpavani dialect of the Konkani language.

The Chitpavans are also called Konkanastha Brahmins, as distinguished from the Maharashtrian Brahmins, who are called Deshastha Brahmins. The epithet Konkanastha is also applied to Kshatriyas belonging to the Konkan.