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Rajputs in Bihar

Rajputs in Bihar are members of the Rajput community living in the eastern Indian state Bihar. They are popularly known as Babu Saheb,[1] a term that is mainly used in Bihar, the Purvanchal region of Uttar Pradesh,[2] and Jharkhand.[3] They traditionally formed part of the feudal elite in Bihari society.[4][5][6][7] Rajputs were pressed with the Zamindari abolition and Bhoodan movement in post-independence India; along with other Forward Castes, they lost their significant position in Bihar's agrarian society, leading to the rise of Other Backward Classes (OBCs).

History edit

From 1200 CE, many Rajput groups moved eastwards towards the Eastern Gangetic plains, forming their own chieftaincies.[8] These minor Rajput kingdoms were scattered across the Gangetic plains of modern-day Uttar Pradesh and Bihar.[9] During this process, petty clashes with local populations occurred and in some cases, alliances were formed.[8] Among these Rajput chieftaincies were the Bhojpur zamindars[10] and the taluks of Awadh.[11]

The immigration of Rajput clan chiefs into these parts of the Gangetic Plains also contributed to the agricultural appropriation of previously forested areas, especially in South Bihar.[12] Some historians have linked this eastwards expansion with the onset of Ghurid invasion in the West.[12]

These groups included the Ujjainiya clan of Parmar Rajputs.[13] Gajpati Ujjainia of the same clan was a chieftain and commander in the army of Sher Shah Suri.[14] In the early 18the century, Kunwar Dhir, a Rajput Zamindar of Bhojpur district rebelled and fought against the Mughal empire.[15]

In the Middle Ages, Rajput migrants to the region of Bihar founded the Gidhaur Raj, Deo Raj and Kharagpur Raj.[16] In the same period, the Rajput Gandhavariya clan controlled a significant portion of North Bihar.[17] The Sonbarsa Raj also belonged to this clan.[18] What brought success to these Hindu princelings was the strong clan organisation upon which they rested.[19]

From the 16th century, Rajput soldiers from the eastern regions of Bihar and Awadh were recruited as mercenaries for Rajputs in the west, particularly in the Malwa region.[20][21][22] During the Great Uprising of 1857, a section of Rajputs participated under the leadership of Kunwar Singh, who was the main leader of the revolution in Bihar.[23]

 
Veer Kunwar Singh and his attendants, Jagdishpur Raj

In the traditional agrarian society of Bihar in the pre-independence period, Rajputs were among the upper castes that controlled the agricultural production through Zamindari rights. Some of the upper-castes were also recruited to the lower level of administration under the British rulers. Rajputs, a less-literate relative of other upper castes, played a limited role in public administration and were primarily property holders.[24] Between 1900 and 1920, it was noted Rajputs formed a large portion of the population of some regions of southern Bihar.[clarification needed] In Shahabad region, where Rajputs were prominent, they took little or no interest in intellectual pursuits. The literacy rate of the region and of Bihar as a whole was also in precarious state.[25][clarification needed]

In post-independence India, pressed with the Zamindari abolition and Bhoodan movement, Rajputs and other upper castes lost their prominence in the agrarian society of Bihar.[26][27]

Oliver Mendelsohn and Marika Vicziany said the "untouchables" who formed the bottom of society in Bihar have clashed with communities, including Yadavs and Kurmis in the middle segment, and Bhumihars, Rajputs and Brahmins in the upper segment of society. The authors have identified land control as the major characteristic of the opponents and not the caste identity. According to Mendelsohn and Vicziany, the exploiters of the untouchables doesn't have the same caste identity in all the region, and the conflicts were not restricted to Bihar.[28] The Rajputs and Bhumihars and not the Brahmin and Kayastha being the major landowners among the upper castes is also supported by a study by sociologist Badri Narayan.[29] In Shahabad district, some Rajput and Bhumihar landowners frequently raped lower-caste women, and by 1930s, the Triveni Sangh gave the abused women a platform to express her frustration.[30]

In a survey conducted[when?] in a few villages in Bhojpur, rape of lower-caste women from Musahar and Chamar castes by Rajput and Bhumihar landlords was a major cause of anguish until the emergence of Naxalism.[31][32]

According to Fernando Franco, in parts of central Bihar, who describes the condition of women agricultural laborers; "Even as late as the 1970s , the rape of lower caste women by [some]Rajputs/Bhumihars[landlords] had almost become a tradition, an accepted social evil, a fate which many bore unquestioningly".[33]

Ranabir Samaddar cited an example of an Anwa village in which upper-caste Rajputs practiced Dola Pratha; newly wedded brides of Dalits and landless labourers had to spend one night with the landlord before having sex with her husband.[34] According to a report from Sonatola village in Bihar, in the neighbouring village Berath, some Dalit women said when lower-caste women rejected the landlord's proposal of sexual contact, it was common for the landlords to falsely implicate the male members of their families and their kin in criminal cases. Besides sexual assaults, the drawing of water from the village wells and walking on the pathways alongside the landlords in that village were forbidden for the lower castes.[35] By the 1960s, most of the prevalent feudal practices came to an end due to the activism of Kisan Sabhas, an organization led by middle-peasant castes who also campaigned for women rights and dignity, and allowed agricultural-labourer women to speak for themselves.[35]: 72–73 

Later, assertion of many left-wing organizations took place in Bihar, the most prominent among them being Maoist Communist Centre of India (MCC), which waged wars against the landlords for the cause of lower castes. In Bihar, the prime targets of this organisation were Rajputs, against whom most of the caste-inspired massacres were committed. The events at "Darmian" and Dalelchak-Bhagaura, among others, are considered caste-based violence perpetrated against Rajputs by MCC.[36]

In the 1990s, the accession of Lalu Prasad Yadav to the premiership of Bihar brought socio-economic changes in the state's feudal society. Under the leadership of Anand Mohan Singh, a campaign against the Mandal Commission was undertaken in the state. The movement was also opposed to the rule of Lalu Prasad Yadav. Pappu Yadav, an associate of Yadav and a Janta Dal leader, led a campaign of violence against the "Upper Castes".[37]

Politics edit

At the time of independence, Rajputs and other upper castes had a monopoly in the Indian National Congress (INC) and Bihar state politics. Over time, conflict within the upper-caste groups emerged in the INC, and Rajputs and Bhumihars became major challengers of the dominance of the Kayastha caste. This period saw the emergence of Bhumihars as the most-significant caste group within the INC; to counter the Bhumihars, Rajputs allied with Kayasthas, leading to intense inter-caste conflicts at all level of politics in Bihar and rise of caste-based political patronage, crippling the state's politics in later years.[38]

According to Sanjay Kumar, before 1990s, the dominance of the upper castes such as Rajputs, Brahmins, Bhumihars and Kayasthas in Bihari society, politics, the judiciary and bureaucracy prevented the implementation of land reforms in the state, which could have helped Scheduled Castes and Backwards castes. In the post-Mandal phase, Kurmi, Koeri and Yadav, the three backward castes who constitute the upper-OBC due to their advantageous position in the socio-economic sphere of agrarian society, became the new political elite of the state. One of the causes of this change was weakening of the INC in the state, which was long-dominated by upper castes. The rising Kulaks from the upper-OBC supported the Lok Dal political party for their emancipation and jostled with the erstwhile political elites, the upper castes. According to Sanjay Kumar, after a long, protracted struggle, the upper castes accepted the leadership of OBCs during this phase.[39]
In the recent decade, however, upper castes have returned to the power structure, holding prominent positions.[40]

Some of the leaders of the community also played important roles in the Rashtriya Janata Dal-led government, which includes Raghuvansh Prasad Singh, who conceptualised MNREGA, the biggest anti-poverty scheme in India.[41] Radha Mohan Singh has been credited for the growth of the BJP in the state while being state chief from 2006 to 2009.[42]

Present circumstances edit

Rajputs of Bihar have been a socially dominant community, as they are fairly represented in the legislative assembly and legislative council of Bihar, despite risen hostility towards upper-castes.[43] This community also has largest representation in Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha MPs from Bihar.[44] According to a report of Institute of Human Development Studies, Brahmins topped the average per-capita income with Rs 28,093; Rajputs have an average per-capita income of Rs 20,655, closely followed by middle-agrarian castes such as Kushwahas and Kurmis, who earned Rs 18,811 and Rs 17,835, respectively, as their average per-capita income. In contrast, Yadavs’ income is one of the lowest among OBCs at Rs 12,314, which is slightly less than the rest of the OBCs at Rs 12,617. Despite the political mobilisation of backward castes in the post-Mandal period, Rajputs are still among the high-income groups in Bihar. According to this report, the economic benefits of the Mandal politics could be seen[by whom?] as affecting few backward castes of agrarian background, leading to their upward mobility.[45]

Kingdoms and chieftaincies founded by Rajputs in Bihar edit

 
The Palace of Sonbarsa Raj

Notable people edit

References edit

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  4. ^ Hira Singh (4 March 2014). Recasting Caste: From the Sacred to the Profane. SAGE Publishing India. p. 4. ISBN 9789351504030. Retrieved 17 December 2018.
  5. ^ Henry C. Hart (4 March 2019). Indira Gandhi's India. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-429-72607-1.
  6. ^ Carolyn Brown Heinz (3 June 2013). Peter Berger; Frank Heidemann (eds.). The Modern Anthropology of India: Ethnography, Themes and Theory. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-06118-1. The four dominant high caste groups (the forward castes)-Brahman, Bhumihar, Rajput, Kayastha-together constitute about 12 percent of the population. These are the old elite, from whose numbers came the major zamindars and land owning castes. The so-called Backward castes consisting of about half the population of Bihar, were further classified soon after independence into Upper Backward and Lower Backwards(Blair 1980). The upper backwards - Bania , Yadav, Kurmi and Koiri - constitute about 19 percent of the population, and now include most of the rising Kulak class of successful peasants who have acquired land, adopted improved agricultural technology, and become a powerful force in Bihar politics. This is true, above all, of the Yadavas. The lower backwards are shudra castes such as Barhi, Dhanuk, Kahar, Kumhar, Lohar, Mallah, Teli etc, about 32 percent of the population. The largest components of the scheduled castes(14 percent) are the Dusadh, Chamar, and Musahar, the Dalit groups who are in many parts of the statelocked in struggles for land and living wages and living wages with the rich peasants and landlords of the forward and upper backward castes
  7. ^ Seyed Hossein Zarhani (3 September 2018). Governance and Development in India: A Comparative Study on Andhra Pradesh and Bihar after Liberalization. Routledge. pp. 183, 210. ISBN 978-1-351-25518-9.
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  22. ^ Jadunath Sarkar (1960). Military History of India. Orient Longmans(Original from the University of Virginia). pp. 56–61. ISBN 9780861251551. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
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  24. ^ Bindeshwar Ram (1997). Land and Society in India: Agrarian Relations in Colonial North Bihar. Orient Blackswan. pp. 12–13. ISBN 8125006435.
  25. ^ Shreedhar Narayan Pandey (1975). Education and Social Changes in Bihar, 1900-1921: A Survey of Social History of Bihar from Lord Curzon to Noncooperation Movement. Motilal Banarsidass. pp. 11–12. ISBN 0842609865. Retrieved 22 December 2020.
  26. ^ Nira Yuval-Davis; Kalpana Kannabiran; Ulrike Vieten (2006). The Situated Politics of Belonging. SAGE. p. 131. ISBN 1412921015. Retrieved 27 May 2022.
  27. ^ Ranabir Samaddar (3 March 2016). Government of Peace: Social Governance, Security and the Problematic of Peace. Routledge. pp. 168–. ISBN 978-1-317-12538-9.
  28. ^ Mendelsohn, Oliver; Vicziany, Marika (30 April 1998). The Untouchables: Subordination, Poverty and the State in Modern India. Cambridge University Press. p. 58. ISBN 978-0-521-55671-2. In the case of the castes which lie in the bottom stratum of Bihari society, particularly the Untouchables, they too are acting out of a class as well as a caste logic. So their enemies are far from constant in terms of caste identity: Untouchables have violently clashed with Kurmis and Yadavs from the middle stratum, and Bhumihars, Rajputs and Brahmins from the upper stratum. The key characteristic of their opponents has not been caste identity but rather land control: in the particular region where violent conflict has become endemic, Untouchables have tended to come into conflict with those castes which happen to control the land. Nor is this a merely Bihari phenomenon: throughout India there have been reports of Untouchables coming into conflict with newly rising peasant communities, rather than simply their traditional exploiters from upper castes.
  29. ^ Badri Narayan (30 May 2013). Subhadra Mitra Channa; Joan P. Mencher (eds.). Life as a Dalit: Views from the Bottom on Caste in India. SAGE Publishing India. p. 420. ISBN 9788132118022. The so-called forward castes predominantly consist of the Brahman, Bhumihar, Rajput, and Kayastha communities. Among these, the Bhumihars and Rajputs are the dominant landowning castes who once ruled various parts of the state.
  30. ^ Vinita Damodaran (1992). Broken Promises: Popular Protest, Indian Nationalism, and the Congress Party in Bihar, 1935-1946. Oxford University Press. p. 75. ISBN 978-0-19-562979-8. The rape of lower-caste women by Rajput and Bhumihar landowners was common in Shahabad where , by the 1930s , anger and resentment against the frequent violation of women were openly expressed on the platform of the Tribeni Sangh
  31. ^ Kaushal Kishore Sharma; Prabhakar Prasad Singh; Ranjan Kumar (1994). Peasant Struggles in Bihar, 1831-1992: Spontaneity to Organisation. Centre for Peasant Studies. p. 247. ISBN 9788185078885. According to them, before the emergence of Naxalism on the scene and consequent resistance on the part of these hapless fellows, "rape of lower caste women by Rajput and Bhumihar landlords used to cause so much anguish among the lower cates, who, owing to their hapless situation, could not dare oppose them. In their own words, "within the social constraints , the suppressed sexual hunger of the predominant castes often found unrestricted outlet among the poor, lower caste of Bhojpur-notably Chamars and Mushars.
  32. ^ E M Rammohun; Amritpal Singh; A K Agarwal (2012). Maoist Insurgency and India's Internal Security Architecture. Vij Books India Pvt Ltd. p. 18. ISBN 978-9381411636. Retrieved 12 June 2022. Consider the oppression of the lower castes in Bihar. In Bhojpur district of Bihar, the lower castes lived in utter poverty and were also subjected to social exploitation. Kalyan Mukherjee and Rajender Singh Yadav described that the oppression of the lower castes at the hands of the upper castes did not flow from numerical superiority, but rather from niches in the economic hierarchy apropos land ownership and the monopoly over labour. Further the culture of violence ensured that the Chamar or the Musahar never raise their heads in protest. Though begar was a thing of the past, the banihar worked often for nothing. Wearing a clean dhoti, remaining seated in the presence of the master, even on a cot outside his own hut, walking erect were taboo. When the evenings fell or in lonely stretches of field, the rape of his womenfolk by the landlord's lathieths and scions complete a picture of unbridled Bumihar, Rajput over lordship.
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rajputs, bihar, members, rajput, community, living, eastern, indian, state, bihar, they, popularly, known, babu, saheb, term, that, mainly, used, bihar, purvanchal, region, uttar, pradesh, jharkhand, they, traditionally, formed, part, feudal, elite, bihari, so. Rajputs in Bihar are members of the Rajput community living in the eastern Indian state Bihar They are popularly known as Babu Saheb 1 a term that is mainly used in Bihar the Purvanchal region of Uttar Pradesh 2 and Jharkhand 3 They traditionally formed part of the feudal elite in Bihari society 4 5 6 7 Rajputs were pressed with the Zamindari abolition and Bhoodan movement in post independence India along with other Forward Castes they lost their significant position in Bihar s agrarian society leading to the rise of Other Backward Classes OBCs Contents 1 History 2 Politics 3 Present circumstances 4 Kingdoms and chieftaincies founded by Rajputs in Bihar 5 Notable people 6 ReferencesHistory editFrom 1200 CE many Rajput groups moved eastwards towards the Eastern Gangetic plains forming their own chieftaincies 8 These minor Rajput kingdoms were scattered across the Gangetic plains of modern day Uttar Pradesh and Bihar 9 During this process petty clashes with local populations occurred and in some cases alliances were formed 8 Among these Rajput chieftaincies were the Bhojpur zamindars 10 and the taluks of Awadh 11 The immigration of Rajput clan chiefs into these parts of the Gangetic Plains also contributed to the agricultural appropriation of previously forested areas especially in South Bihar 12 Some historians have linked this eastwards expansion with the onset of Ghurid invasion in the West 12 These groups included the Ujjainiya clan of Parmar Rajputs 13 Gajpati Ujjainia of the same clan was a chieftain and commander in the army of Sher Shah Suri 14 In the early 18the century Kunwar Dhir a Rajput Zamindar of Bhojpur district rebelled and fought against the Mughal empire 15 In the Middle Ages Rajput migrants to the region of Bihar founded the Gidhaur Raj Deo Raj and Kharagpur Raj 16 In the same period the Rajput Gandhavariya clan controlled a significant portion of North Bihar 17 The Sonbarsa Raj also belonged to this clan 18 What brought success to these Hindu princelings was the strong clan organisation upon which they rested 19 From the 16th century Rajput soldiers from the eastern regions of Bihar and Awadh were recruited as mercenaries for Rajputs in the west particularly in the Malwa region 20 21 22 During the Great Uprising of 1857 a section of Rajputs participated under the leadership of Kunwar Singh who was the main leader of the revolution in Bihar 23 nbsp Veer Kunwar Singh and his attendants Jagdishpur RajIn the traditional agrarian society of Bihar in the pre independence period Rajputs were among the upper castes that controlled the agricultural production through Zamindari rights Some of the upper castes were also recruited to the lower level of administration under the British rulers Rajputs a less literate relative of other upper castes played a limited role in public administration and were primarily property holders 24 Between 1900 and 1920 it was noted Rajputs formed a large portion of the population of some regions of southern Bihar clarification needed In Shahabad region where Rajputs were prominent they took little or no interest in intellectual pursuits The literacy rate of the region and of Bihar as a whole was also in precarious state 25 clarification needed In post independence India pressed with the Zamindari abolition and Bhoodan movement Rajputs and other upper castes lost their prominence in the agrarian society of Bihar 26 27 This section may lend undue weight to certain ideas incidents or controversies Please help to create a more balanced presentation Discuss and resolve this issue before removing this message June 2022 Oliver Mendelsohn and Marika Vicziany said the untouchables who formed the bottom of society in Bihar have clashed with communities including Yadavs and Kurmis in the middle segment and Bhumihars Rajputs and Brahmins in the upper segment of society The authors have identified land control as the major characteristic of the opponents and not the caste identity According to Mendelsohn and Vicziany the exploiters of the untouchables doesn t have the same caste identity in all the region and the conflicts were not restricted to Bihar 28 The Rajputs and Bhumihars and not the Brahmin and Kayastha being the major landowners among the upper castes is also supported by a study by sociologist Badri Narayan 29 In Shahabad district some Rajput and Bhumihar landowners frequently raped lower caste women and by 1930s the Triveni Sangh gave the abused women a platform to express her frustration 30 In a survey conducted when in a few villages in Bhojpur rape of lower caste women from Musahar and Chamar castes by Rajput and Bhumihar landlords was a major cause of anguish until the emergence of Naxalism 31 32 According to Fernando Franco in parts of central Bihar who describes the condition of women agricultural laborers Even as late as the 1970s the rape of lower caste women by some Rajputs Bhumihars landlords had almost become a tradition an accepted social evil a fate which many bore unquestioningly 33 Ranabir Samaddar cited an example of an Anwa village in which upper caste Rajputs practiced Dola Pratha newly wedded brides of Dalits and landless labourers had to spend one night with the landlord before having sex with her husband 34 According to a report from Sonatola village in Bihar in the neighbouring village Berath some Dalit women said when lower caste women rejected the landlord s proposal of sexual contact it was common for the landlords to falsely implicate the male members of their families and their kin in criminal cases Besides sexual assaults the drawing of water from the village wells and walking on the pathways alongside the landlords in that village were forbidden for the lower castes 35 By the 1960s most of the prevalent feudal practices came to an end due to the activism of Kisan Sabhas an organization led by middle peasant castes who also campaigned for women rights and dignity and allowed agricultural labourer women to speak for themselves 35 72 73 Later assertion of many left wing organizations took place in Bihar the most prominent among them being Maoist Communist Centre of India MCC which waged wars against the landlords for the cause of lower castes In Bihar the prime targets of this organisation were Rajputs against whom most of the caste inspired massacres were committed The events at Darmian and Dalelchak Bhagaura among others are considered caste based violence perpetrated against Rajputs by MCC 36 In the 1990s the accession of Lalu Prasad Yadav to the premiership of Bihar brought socio economic changes in the state s feudal society Under the leadership of Anand Mohan Singh a campaign against the Mandal Commission was undertaken in the state The movement was also opposed to the rule of Lalu Prasad Yadav Pappu Yadav an associate of Yadav and a Janta Dal leader led a campaign of violence against the Upper Castes 37 Politics editAt the time of independence Rajputs and other upper castes had a monopoly in the Indian National Congress INC and Bihar state politics Over time conflict within the upper caste groups emerged in the INC and Rajputs and Bhumihars became major challengers of the dominance of the Kayastha caste This period saw the emergence of Bhumihars as the most significant caste group within the INC to counter the Bhumihars Rajputs allied with Kayasthas leading to intense inter caste conflicts at all level of politics in Bihar and rise of caste based political patronage crippling the state s politics in later years 38 According to Sanjay Kumar before 1990s the dominance of the upper castes such as Rajputs Brahmins Bhumihars and Kayasthas in Bihari society politics the judiciary and bureaucracy prevented the implementation of land reforms in the state which could have helped Scheduled Castes and Backwards castes In the post Mandal phase Kurmi Koeri and Yadav the three backward castes who constitute the upper OBC due to their advantageous position in the socio economic sphere of agrarian society became the new political elite of the state One of the causes of this change was weakening of the INC in the state which was long dominated by upper castes The rising Kulaks from the upper OBC supported the Lok Dal political party for their emancipation and jostled with the erstwhile political elites the upper castes According to Sanjay Kumar after a long protracted struggle the upper castes accepted the leadership of OBCs during this phase 39 In the recent decade however upper castes have returned to the power structure holding prominent positions 40 Some of the leaders of the community also played important roles in the Rashtriya Janata Dal led government which includes Raghuvansh Prasad Singh who conceptualised MNREGA the biggest anti poverty scheme in India 41 Radha Mohan Singh has been credited for the growth of the BJP in the state while being state chief from 2006 to 2009 42 Present circumstances editRajputs of Bihar have been a socially dominant community as they are fairly represented in the legislative assembly and legislative council of Bihar despite risen hostility towards upper castes 43 This community also has largest representation in Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha MPs from Bihar 44 According to a report of Institute of Human Development Studies Brahmins topped the average per capita income with Rs 28 093 Rajputs have an average per capita income of Rs 20 655 closely followed by middle agrarian castes such as Kushwahas and Kurmis who earned Rs 18 811 and Rs 17 835 respectively as their average per capita income In contrast Yadavs income is one of the lowest among OBCs at Rs 12 314 which is slightly less than the rest of the OBCs at Rs 12 617 Despite the political mobilisation of backward castes in the post Mandal period Rajputs are still among the high income groups in Bihar According to this report the economic benefits of the Mandal politics could be seen by whom as affecting few backward castes of agrarian background leading to their upward mobility 45 Kingdoms and chieftaincies founded by Rajputs in Bihar edit nbsp The Palace of Sonbarsa RajSonbarsa Raj founded by Gandhavariya Rajputs in medieval age 46 Kharagpur Raj founded in the 16th century by Kinwar Rajputs 47 Gidhaur chieftaincy founded in the 14th century by Chandel Rajputs 47 Jagdishpur Raj and Dumraon Raj founded by the Ujjainiya Rajputs 47 Deo Raj founded in the 15th century by Sisodia Rajputs in Bihar 12 Ramgarh Raj in the Chhota Nagpur Plateau region 48 Notable people editHarihar Singh 9th Chief Minister of Bihar 49 Kunwar Singh Zamindar and Military commander who participated in the Indian Rebellion of 1857 50 Anugrah Narayan Sinha Indian nationalist statesman known as Bihar 51 Raja Narain Singh Chieftain of the Seris and Kutumba estate in Aurangabad district and participant in the 1781 revolt in Bihar 52 Gajpati Ujjainia Commander in the army of the Sur Empire under Sher Shah Suri 53 K B N Singh Chief Justice of Patna and Madras High Court served as an acting Governor of Bihar From the illustrious Kulharia Raj family 54 Kamal Singh Last Maharaja of Dumraon Raj Ujjainiya Rajput and Member of Parliament 55 Digvijay Singh From the Gidhaur Royal family Union Minister for several times 56 Collectar Singh Kesari Poet and novelist from erstwhile Shahabad district 57 R K Singh Union minister of Power and Renewable energy from bhojpur 58 Malkhan Singh Several times MLA from Jamshedpur 59 References edit Lok Sabha Elections 2014 Lights fail in Nanaur village in the Ara Lok Sabha constituency dna 16 April 2014 Shahid Amin 1995 Event Metaphor Memory Chauri Chaura 1922 1992 Univ of California Press p 130 ISBN 9780520087804 Retrieved 17 December 2018 Dubey Priyanka Jitan Ram Manjhi and the politics of caste The Caravan Hira Singh 4 March 2014 Recasting Caste From the Sacred to the Profane SAGE Publishing India p 4 ISBN 9789351504030 Retrieved 17 December 2018 Henry C Hart 4 March 2019 Indira Gandhi s India Routledge ISBN 978 0 429 72607 1 Carolyn Brown Heinz 3 June 2013 Peter Berger Frank Heidemann eds The Modern Anthropology of India Ethnography Themes and Theory Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 06118 1 The four dominant high caste groups the forward castes Brahman Bhumihar Rajput Kayastha together constitute about 12 percent of the population These are the old elite from whose numbers came the major zamindars and land owning castes The so called Backward castes consisting of about half the population of Bihar were further classified soon after independence into Upper Backward and Lower Backwards Blair 1980 The upper backwards Bania Yadav Kurmi and Koiri constitute about 19 percent of the population and now include most of the rising Kulak class of successful peasants who have acquired land adopted improved agricultural technology and become a powerful force in Bihar politics This is true above all of the Yadavas The lower backwards are shudra castes such as Barhi Dhanuk Kahar Kumhar Lohar Mallah Teli etc about 32 percent of the population The largest components of the scheduled castes 14 percent are the Dusadh Chamar and Musahar the Dalit groups who are in many parts of the statelocked in struggles for land and living wages and living wages with the rich peasants and landlords of the forward and upper backward castes Seyed Hossein Zarhani 3 September 2018 Governance and Development in India A Comparative Study on Andhra Pradesh and Bihar after Liberalization Routledge pp 183 210 ISBN 978 1 351 25518 9 a b C A Bayly 19 May 1988 Rulers Townsmen and Bazaars North Indian Society in the Age of British Expansion 1770 1870 CUP Archive pp 18 19 ISBN 978 0 521 31054 3 Barbara N Ramusack 8 January 2004 The Indian Princes and their States Cambridge University Press pp 14 15 ISBN 978 1 139 44908 3 Kumkum Chatterjee 1996 Merchants Politics and Society in Early Modern India Bihar 1733 1820 BRILL pp 35 36 ISBN 90 04 10303 1 Richard Gabriel Fox 1971 Kin Clan Raja and Rule Statehinterland Relations in Preindustrial India University of California Press pp 68 69 ISBN 978 0 520 01807 5 a b c Gyan Prakash 30 October 2003 Bonded Histories Genealogies of Labor Servitude in Colonial India Cambridge University Press pp 64 66 ISBN 978 0 521 52658 6 Ahmad Imtiaz 2008 State Formation and Consolidation under the Ujjainiya Rajputs in Medieval Bihar Testimony of Oral Traditions as Recorded in the Tawarikh i Ujjainiya In Singh Surinder Gaur I D eds Popular Literature And Pre Modern Societies In South Asia Pearson Education India pp 76 77 ISBN 978 81 317 1358 7 Retrieved 2 January 2012 Singh Surinder Gaur I D 2008 Popular Literature and Pre modern Societies in South Asia Pearson Education India p 80 ISBN 978 81 317 1358 7 Rizavi Saiyada Najamula Raza 2004 Zamindars and Revenue Farmers of Eastern Uttar Pradesh From Mughal to Colonial Rule Anamika Pub amp Distributors p 76 ISBN 978 81 7975 053 7 Prakash Gyan 30 October 2003 Bonded Histories Genealogies of Labor Servitude in Colonial India Cambridge University Press p 64 ISBN 978 0 521 52658 6 Radhakrishna Choudhary Mithila In The Age Of Vidyapati Chaukhambha Orientalia pp 131 132 Retrieved 14 January 2019 Bhagwant Sahai 1984 The Journal Of The Bihar Puravid Parisad 1983 Vol Vii And Viii pp 414 418 Bayly C A 2012 Rulers Townsmen and Bazaars North Indian Society in the Age of British Expansion 1770 1870 p 18 Farooqui Amar 2007 The Subjugation of the Sindia State In Ernst Waltraud Pati Biswamoy eds India s Princely States People Princes and Colonialism Routledge p 57 ISBN 978 1 134 11988 2 Dirk H A Kolff 1990 Naukar Rajput and Sepoy Cambridge University Press p 87 ISBN 978 0 521 52305 9 Jadunath Sarkar 1960 Military History of India Orient Longmans Original from the University of Virginia pp 56 61 ISBN 9780861251551 Retrieved 18 August 2020 Thomas R Metcalf 2015 Aftermath of Revolt India 1857 1970 Princeton University Press p 299 ISBN 978 1400876648 Retrieved 28 May 2022 Bindeshwar Ram 1997 Land and Society in India Agrarian Relations in Colonial North Bihar Orient Blackswan pp 12 13 ISBN 8125006435 Shreedhar Narayan Pandey 1975 Education and Social Changes in Bihar 1900 1921 A Survey of Social History of Bihar from Lord Curzon to Noncooperation Movement Motilal Banarsidass pp 11 12 ISBN 0842609865 Retrieved 22 December 2020 Nira Yuval Davis Kalpana Kannabiran Ulrike Vieten 2006 The Situated Politics of Belonging SAGE p 131 ISBN 1412921015 Retrieved 27 May 2022 Ranabir Samaddar 3 March 2016 Government of Peace Social Governance Security and the Problematic of Peace Routledge pp 168 ISBN 978 1 317 12538 9 Mendelsohn Oliver Vicziany Marika 30 April 1998 The Untouchables Subordination Poverty and the State in Modern India Cambridge University Press p 58 ISBN 978 0 521 55671 2 In the case of the castes which lie in the bottom stratum of Bihari society particularly the Untouchables they too are acting out of a class as well as a caste logic So their enemies are far from constant in terms of caste identity Untouchables have violently clashed with Kurmis and Yadavs from the middle stratum and Bhumihars Rajputs and Brahmins from the upper stratum The key characteristic of their opponents has not been caste identity but rather land control in the particular region where violent conflict has become endemic Untouchables have tended to come into conflict with those castes which happen to control the land Nor is this a merely Bihari phenomenon throughout India there have been reports of Untouchables coming into conflict with newly rising peasant communities rather than simply their traditional exploiters from upper castes Badri Narayan 30 May 2013 Subhadra Mitra Channa Joan P Mencher eds Life as a Dalit Views from the Bottom on Caste in India SAGE Publishing India p 420 ISBN 9788132118022 The so called forward castes predominantly consist of the Brahman Bhumihar Rajput and Kayastha communities Among these the Bhumihars and Rajputs are the dominant landowning castes who once ruled various parts of the state Vinita Damodaran 1992 Broken Promises Popular Protest Indian Nationalism and the Congress Party in Bihar 1935 1946 Oxford University Press p 75 ISBN 978 0 19 562979 8 The rape of lower caste women by Rajput and Bhumihar landowners was common in Shahabad where by the 1930s anger and resentment against the frequent violation of women were openly expressed on the platform of the Tribeni Sangh Kaushal Kishore Sharma Prabhakar Prasad Singh Ranjan Kumar 1994 Peasant Struggles in Bihar 1831 1992 Spontaneity to Organisation Centre for Peasant Studies p 247 ISBN 9788185078885 According to them before the emergence of Naxalism on the scene and consequent resistance on the part of these hapless fellows rape of lower caste women by Rajput and Bhumihar landlords used to cause so much anguish among the lower cates who owing to their hapless situation could not dare oppose them In their own words within the social constraints the suppressed sexual hunger of the predominant castes often found unrestricted outlet among the poor lower caste of Bhojpur notably Chamars and Mushars E M Rammohun Amritpal Singh A K Agarwal 2012 Maoist Insurgency and India s Internal Security Architecture Vij Books India Pvt Ltd p 18 ISBN 978 9381411636 Retrieved 12 June 2022 Consider the oppression of the lower castes in Bihar In Bhojpur district of Bihar the lower castes lived in utter poverty and were also subjected to social exploitation Kalyan Mukherjee and Rajender Singh Yadav described that the oppression of the lower castes at the hands of the upper castes did not flow from numerical superiority but rather from niches in the economic hierarchy apropos land ownership and the monopoly over labour Further the culture of violence ensured that the Chamar or the Musahar never raise their heads in protest Though begar was a thing of the past the banihar worked often for nothing Wearing a clean dhoti remaining seated in the presence of the master even on a cot outside his own hut walking erect were taboo When the evenings fell or in lonely stretches of field the rape of his womenfolk by the landlord s lathieths and scions complete a picture of unbridled Bumihar Rajput over lordship Fernando Franco 2002 Pain and Awakening The Dynamics of Dalit Identity in Bihar Gujarat and Uttar Pradesh Indian Social Institute p 52 ISBN 9788187218463 Ranabir Samaddar 2009 State of Justice In India Issues of Social Justice SAGE Publications India pp 46 65 ISBN 978 8132104193 Retrieved 22 January 2021 a b Kelkar Govind 1989 Women and Land Rights Movements Case Studies on Strengthening Co ordination Between Non governmental Organizations and Government Agencies in Promoting Social Development United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific Sec Kisan Sabha and Kisan Samiti Peasant Movemnts and Women India pp 72 73 Bhawani Singh Vibhuti Singh Shekhawat 2007 Confessional Terror A Dateline to Death Anamika Pub amp Distributors p 235 ISBN 978 8179751756 Retrieved 28 May 2022 S K Ghosh Srikanta Ghosh 2000 Bihar in Flames APH Publishing pp 52 53 ISBN 8176481602 Retrieved 15 December 2020 Ashwani Kumar 2008 Community Warriors State Peasants and Caste Armies in Bihar Anthem Press India pp 60 61 ISBN 978 1843317098 Retrieved 23 June 2022 Sanjay Kumar 2018 Post Mandal Politics in Bihar Changing Electoral Patterns SAGE Publishing India pp 27 28 ISBN 978 9352805860 Retrieved 22 January 2021 Upper caste Polity Outlook 20 August 2021 Sumit Pande ed Brain Behind The Biggest Anti poverty Scheme How RJD Sidelined Raghuvansh Prasad News18 Retrieved 28 May 2022 Radha Mohan Singh East Champaran Economic Times 26 May 2014 Composition of Bihar assembly Scroll in Retrieved 11 September 2022 Members of Parliament from Bihar News18 Retrieved 11 September 2022 Christophe Jaffrelot Kalaiyarasan A eds Lower castes in Bihar have got political power not economic progress Indian Express Archived from the original on 22 January 2021 Retrieved 22 January 2021 Bhagwant Sahai 1984 The Journal Of The Bihar Puravid Parisad 1983 Vol Vii And Viii pp 414 418 a b c Tahir Hussain Ansari 20 June 2019 Mughal Administration and the Zamindars of Bihar Taylor amp Francis pp 22 28 ISBN 978 1 00 065152 2 JHARKHAND SAMAGRA Prabhat Prakashan in Hindi Prabhat Prakashan 21 March 2020 ISBN 978 93 90101 16 0 Narain Jai Prakash Narayan Jayaprakash 1980 A Revolutionary s Quest Selected Writings of Jayaprakash Narayan Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 561204 2 Hartwell Nicole 2021 Framing colonial war loot The captured spolia opima of Kunwar Singh Journal of the History of Collections doi 10 1093 jhc fhab042 F Tomasson Jannuzi 2014 Agrarian Crisis in India The Case of Bihar University of Texas Press ISBN 9781477300145 Retrieved 6 January 2019 Paramita Maharatna 2012 The Zamindars of Bihar Their Resistance to Colonial Rule Between 1765 1781 Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 73 1435 JSTOR 44156363 Ansari Tahir Hussain 2014 A Political Biography of an Ujjainia Chief of Bhojpur Raja Gajpati Karatoya 7 40 48 https timesofindia indiatimes com city patna b n collegiate school has to live with dirt articleshow 1952875399 cms Maharaja Kamal Singh last surviving member of first Lok Sabha passes away at 94 Free Press Journal Retrieved 14 July 2022 Vasundhara visits Gidhaur mourns Digvijay Patna News Times of India The Times of India TNN 3 July 2010 Retrieved 14 July 2022 कलक टर स ह क सर न ह द म प रक त र ग ग यन क क य सम द ध Dainik Bhaskar in Hindi 19 September 2018 Retrieved 14 July 2022 Who is Raj Kumar Singh The Indian Express 3 September 2017 Retrieved 14 July 2022 Heavyweight ticket aspirants put JMM in a fix in Jamshedpur Times of India The Times of India Retrieved 14 July 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rajputs in Bihar amp oldid 1216699003, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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