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Charan

Charan (IAST: Cāraṇ; Sanskrit: चारण; Gujarati: ચારણ; Urdu: ارڈ; IPA: cɑːrəɳə) is a caste in South Asia natively residing in the Rajasthan and Gujarat states of India, as well as the Sindh and Balochistan provinces of Pakistan. Historically, Charans have been engaged in diverse occupations like bards, poets, historians, pastoralists, agriculturalists and also administrators, jagirdars and warriors and some even as traders.[6]

Charan
ReligionsHinduismIslam
LanguagesRajasthaniMarwariMewariGujaratiSindhiMarathi
CountryIndiaPakistan
RegionRajasthanHaryana[1]GujaratMadhya Pradesh[2]Maharashtra[3]Sindh[4]Balochistan[5]

Historical roles and occupations

Poets and historians

Rajasthani & Gujarati literature from the early and medieval period, upto the 19th century, has been mainly composed by Charans. The relationship between Charans and Rajputs is deeprooted in history. As Charans used to partake in battles alongside Rajputs, they were witnesses not only to battles but also to many other occasions and episodes forming part of the contemporary Rajput life. The poems composed about such wars and incidents had two qualities: basic historical truth and vivid, realistic and pictorial descriptions, particularly of heroes, heroic deeds and battles.[7]

The Chāran poetry is mostly descriptive in style and can be categorized in two forms: narrative and stray. The narrative form of Charan poetry goes by various names viz., Rās, Rāsau, Rūpak, Prakās, Chhand, Vilās, Prabandh, Āyan, Sanvād, etc. These poems are also named after metres such as, Kavitt, Kundaliyā, Jhūlaņā, Nīsāṇī, Jhamāl and Veli etc. Poems of stray form also use a variety of such metres.[7] Written in Dingal, the various sources, known as bata (vata), khyata, vigata, pidhiavali, and vamsavali, form the most important body of primary data for the study of the medieval period.[8]

Although, for Charans, poetic composition and recitation was only a hereditary 'pastime', subordinate to the primary income producing occupations of military service, agriculture, and horse and cattle trading. Ambitious and talented boys, however, pursued traditional education from other learned Charans for comprehensive guidance. When accepted by them as students, they would receive training in the basics of poetic composition and narration as well as the specialized languages by precept and example, with emphasis on memorization and oral recitation. Students would in turn recite the compositions, constantly improving their style. Knowledge of languages such as Dingal, Sanskrit, Urdu, and Persian was also acquired with the aid of specialized masters. Thus, subjects studied included not only history and literature, but also religion, music, and astrology.[8][9]

Renowned Charan poets of the time were part of the royal courts, attaining the rank of Kaviraja or "court-laureate" and assuming positions of great influence.[8][9] Such learned Charans were exceptionally honoured by the rulers. The rulers bestowed awards whose value amounted to lakh(a hundred thousand) or krore(in million), hence these were termed as Lakh Pasav or Krore Pasav. These awards consisted of sasan lands, horses, elephants, and ornaments.[10]

Administrators

As per their administrative and ritual positions, Charans were integral to numerous indigenous courts in the region including Rajputana, Saurashtra, Malwa, Kutch, Sindh, and Gujarat. They served various administrative and diplomatic functions, sometimes as leading state dignitaries.[11][12][13][14]

By nineteenth century, these formed major and minor bureaucratic lineages which played a significant role in the power struggle and the policy formation in the princely states. Recruitment to positions in the political bureaucracy in the nineteenth century states of Rajputana was based on the community and the recognized and established lineages. Charan as an indigenous community with traditions of literacy and service contributed significantly in the senior crown appointments. Persons belonging to such an administrative class, as a result of state service, were also granted jagirs and court honours.[15] During the medieval period, Charans along with Rajputs and Baniyas dominated the administration in princely states.[16] Charans enjoyed intimate relations with the rulers who placed high confidence in them; consequently, they came to play the role of mediators in most of the political matters in the medieval kingdoms prior to British rule.[17]

Some of the prominent Charan administrators holding positions such as of Diwan (Prime Minister) in 19th & 20th century were Kaviraja Shyamaldas of Mewar, Kaviraja Murardan of Marwar, and Ramnathji Ratnu of Kishengarh.[15][18] The Ratnu family of Sikar formed one such bureaucratic lineage whose members were Diwans of Sikar, Idar, Kishengarh, and Jhalawad.[15][19][18]

Arbitrators and diplomats

Charans fulfilled the crucial role of diplomats, guarantors, and arbitrators in political negotiations and financial transactions.[20] No treaties between kings after a war or contracts between patrons and clients were considered valid without a Chāran acting as a guarantor.[21] Since the Charans were deemed sacrosanct and causing them harm was considered a sin, they were chosen as sureties whenever a legal guarantee was required. Therefore, important pacts, engagements, transfers, recovery of debts, transactions, and even the signing of treaties were always presided by a Charan. Records indicate, they also served as sureties for the collection of land revenue from the sixteenth century down to 1816.[22][23]

In the cases when these contracts were not honoured or when the Charans themselves were subjected to an injustice, they would wound, even immolate, or mutilate themselves, thus casting curse of the death of a Charan on the offender. The mark of the dagger, signifying the threat of self-sacrifice, served as their signature.[24]

Morever, they were the traditional arbitrators of conflicts between the various Rajput clans or branches. Rajput clans would send their families and children to the homes of Charans for safeguarding during times of violence.[25] The role of messengers and mediators was taken over by Charans in negotiations between hostile or warring groups.[26][27] They acted as emissaries in times of war.[28] Even the British called upon the Charans to mediate the Saurashtra peace agreements of the early nineteenth century.[22][29]

The British colonial intervention in the administration of the princely states, in time, brought decline in these functions of the Charans.[11] However, well into the colonial period, Charans continued to perform this long-standing functions of theirs, to serve as witnesses or guarantors in commercial transactions and financial contracts.[30] Prior to the Charans revolting during the Indian Rebellion of 1857, they were part of the `loyal’ Central Gujrat British network, acting as mediators between princes and the people, or princes and the British.[31]

Traders and merchants

They took advantage of their sacred position by assuming the occupation of carriers and traders as they were exempted from the payment of customs duties in Rajputana and the adjacent regions of Malwa and Gujarat in the pre-colonial period.[32]

Exercising their privilege to transport goods between various states with impunity and utilising the large wealth of cattle as pack animals, Charans were able to establish a "virtual monopoly of trade in North-Western India". Many Charans are said to have become wealthy merchants and money-lenders. Their caravans were considered to be insured against bandits.[33][34] In Rajasthan, the Kachhela Charans excelled as merchants.[35][36]

Utilizing their favourable position since they had "exemption from perpetual and harassing imposts...they gradually became chief carriers and traders". In Mallani, Charans were described as "large traders" possessing great privileges as a sacred race being exempted from local dues throughout Marwar.[37]

Charan traders took large caravans of bullocks north to Marwar and Hindustan, and east to Malwa through Gujarat. They traded in various commodities including ivory, coconuts, alum, and dry dates which they take from Kutch while bringing back corn and tobacco from Marwar & Hindustan. Ivory, brought from Africa to Mandvi in Gujarat, was bought by Charan traders in return for grain and coarse cloth. From there, they transported ivory to be sold in Marwar.[38]

By late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, they emerged as major suppliers of goods and weaponry to the warring armies of Mughal, Rajput, and other factions. They sold their goods in the markets ranging from Punjab to Maharashtra.[39]

The Salt-Trade in Marwar involved thousands of people & pack animals like oxen & camels. Charans along with Pushkarna Brahmins and Bhils were engaged in salt-trade and exempted from the payment of custom duties. Kachhela Charans from Sindhari used to collect salt from Talwara & sell in other parts of Marwar. Charans were seen as, “great traders...who...paid no dues and in troubled times when plunder was rife...although trading with thousands of rupees worth of property were never molested”.[37]

The Charan traders made their encampments as fortified settlements whenever a long hault was required, either due to the long journey or as safeguard against lawless bandits and periodical rains. Sometimes, these fortified settlements evolved as forts such as those of Bhainsrorgarh. Some of the Charan merchants were the privileged carriers of the Rajawaras (kingdoms) and thus had direct communication with the royal household. Their caravans also consisted of armies to safeguard their goods and encampments. Documents of princely states like Kota records the names of several Charans as the affluent merchants of the region with their huge caravans trading with markets in western India.[40]

The establishment of British hegemony in northwestern India and subsequent colonial intervention on trade practices such as monopoly on salt and introduction of railways affected overall trading patterns leading to irreversabe decline of communities in transportation business including Charans, Lohanas, and Banjaras. As a result, some of them settled as traders and money-lenders while others took to agriculture.[37]

James Tod in the eighteenth century commented on the Kachhela Charans in Mewar who were traders by profession:

It was a novel and interesting scene: the manly persons of the Charans, clad in the flowing white robe, with the high loose folded turban inclined on one side, from which the mala, or chaplet, was gracefully suspended; the Naiks, or leaders, with their massive necklaces of gold, with the image of the pitresvaras (the ancestors) depending therefrom, gave the whole an air of opulence and dignity.[41][22]

Protectors of mercantile trade

The Charans held the reputation of defending the merchandise entrusted to their charge through sword and shield if necessary; or else, if outnumbered, by threatening to take, or even taking, their own life.[38]

Charans were described as "greatest carriers of goods" for delivery in important centres of Malpura, Pali, Sojat, Ajmer, and Bhilwara by acting as escorts(bailers).[42] Throughout Rajasthan, Gujarat, and Malwa (Madhya Pradesh), Charans acted as escorters and protectors of mercantile trade throughout the journey.[43][2] The route of the caravans was through Suigam(Gujarat), Sanchor, Bhinmal, Jalor to Pali.[44] The inviolability of a Charan along with their knowledge of the trade routes distinguished them as ideal caravan escorts.[34] Caravans of horses, camels and pack oxen carrying various commodities passed through desolate stretches of desert & forested hills which were always under threat of bandits & dacoits. Charans acted as the protectors & escorts. As caravan protectors, "sacred Charans" thwarted the attempts of bandits.[35][45]

If not strong enough to defend their convoy with sword and shield, they would threaten to kill themselves. Given the position of Charans in the socio-cultural system of the time, the wilful killing of a Charan was equivalent to equally abominable crime of killing a Brahmin. As such, if a Charan did commit suicide over any transgression of the caravans under his guardianship, the marauder-robbers responsible for the suicide were deemed to have "earned the sin of a Charan's death, with all its post-life connotations of hell-fire and damnation." Thus, under the safety of Charans, commodities were transported from one region to another.[46][47][37][38]

Horse trade

Horse trade was one of the prominent occupations of Charans.[48][49] Some Charan sub-groups like Kachhela Charans(from Kutch & Sindh) and Sorathia Charans(from Kathiawar) were historically engaged in horse breeding & trading.[50][51] The common connection of horses also led to bonds between Charans & the Kathi tribe. Some Kuchela Charans settled around Mallani(Barmer, Rajasthan) in western Rajasthan which was notable for its horse-breeding. Marwari horses from this area came to be known as Mallani horses. By the 18th century, most of the horse trade business in the Bikaner kingdom was controlled by Charans, besides Afghans. Charan horse dealers were considered to be very well networked. In another example of the clout of horse-trading Charans, a Charan from the Kachhela subgroup arrived at the court of Marwar ruler, Maharaja Takhat Singh, under the auspices of the sect leader of Nath Sampradaya, and marketed his horses, with 10 horses being directly purchased by the ruler himself.[52][35][53]

Social structure

Traditionally, the Charans worked as Bards and Genealogists.[54][55][56][57][58]

Members of the caste are considered to be divine by a large section of society. Women of the caste are adored as mother goddesses by other major communities of this region including, Khatris and Rajputs.[59] For centuries, Charans were known for their reputation of preferring to die rather than break a promise.[60] Charan society is based on written genealogy. A Charan will consider all the other Charans as equal even if they do not know each other and have radically different economic or geographic status.[61] Charan men are also known as the sacrosanct guides of camel and pack oxen and caravans through Thar desert and as traders in horses, wool and salts , suppliers of food and weaponry to armies.[52]

Anil Chandra Banerjee, a professor of history, has said that

In them we have a combination of the traditional characteristics of the Brahmin and the Kshatriyas. Like the Brahmins, they adopted literary pursuits and accepted gifts. Like the Rajput, they worshipped Shakti and engaged in military activities. They stood at the front gate of the fort to receive the first blow of the sword.[62]

Banerjee's opinion is shared by another historian, G. N. Sharma, who said that

Charans exercise great respectability and influence in Rajasthan. The speciality of the caste is that it combines in its character the characteristics of Rajputs and Brahmans in an adequate manner.[63]

Clans and divisions

Based on regions inhabited and associated culture, there are multiple endogamous sections among the Charans such as Maru (Rajasthan & Sindh), Kachhela (Kutch), Sorath (Saurashtra), Parajia, Malwa (Madhya Pradesh), etc. Clans among Maru-Charans are Roharia, Detha, Ratnu, Ashiya, Mehru, Kiniya, Sauda, Arha, etc. Kachhelas are divided into 7 main exogamous clans: Nara, Chorada, Chunva, Avsura, Maru, Bati, and Tumbel.[64][65][66]

Culture and ethos

Charans mainly worship various forms of Shakti and incarnations of Hinglaj. They greet one another with 'Jai Mataji Ki' (Victory to the Mother Goddess).[67] The women observed social customs such as purdah (women seclusion) and widow remarriage was forbidden.[68][69] Before Indian independence in 1947, a sacrifice of a male buffalo constituted a major part of the celebration of Navratri.[70] Such celebrations quite often used to be presided over by Charan women.[71]

Patronized groups

There are seven categories of people who are historically patronized by the Charans:[72]

  1. Kulguru Brahmins: The kulguru brahmins of the Charans come from Ujjain and travel from village to village and register the names of their hosts after receiving donations.[37]
  2. Purohits: Priests of Charans from Rajpurohit (Rajguru) community who also tie rakhi (rakshasutra) to the Charans.
  3. Rawals: The Rawal Brahmins record their genealogy and also present various swang (forms of dance).[73]
  4. Motisars: Motisars compose poems in honor of Charans.[74]
  5. Bhats (Ravaji): They are professional genealogists of the Charans. They also receive neg (gifts) on marriages. The genealogists of both the Charans and the Rathores of Marwar are from the 'Chandisa' sept of Bhats.
  6. 3 types of Dholis:
    1. Dhola
    2. Birampota
    3. Goyandpota
  7. Manganiyars: Hereditary professional folk-musicians.[75]

Opium usage

Charans used to enjoy consumption of opium (also known as Afeem or Amal in regional languages), practices which are also popular among the Rajputs of this region.[76] The usage of opium by Charans was considered necessary for important ceremonies & social gatherings. At weddings, the bride and the bridegroom would take opium together in the presence of their kinsmen. Other occasions where it was suitable to take opium were betrothals, weddings, the birth of a male child, parting of the beard, reconciliations, at visit of a son-in law, after a death, and on festivals such as 'Akhatij'.[77][78] In Saurashtra, during British rule, it was found that around a half of the total opium consumers were from Charan and Rajput communities.[79]

Contributions to Indian literature

A whole genre of literature is known as Charan literature.[80] The Dingal language and literature exist largely due to this caste.[81][82] Zaverchand Meghani divides Charani sahitya (literature) into thirteen subgenres:[80]

  • Songs in praise of gods and goddesses (stavan)
  • Songs in praise of heroes, saints and patrons (birdavalo)
  • Descriptions of war (varanno)
  • Rebukes of wavering great kings and men who use their power for evil (upalambho)
  • Mockery of a standing treachery of heroism (thekadi)
  • Love stories
  • Laments for dead warriors, patrons and friends (marasiya or vilap kavya)
  • Praise of natural beauty, seasonal beauty and festivals
  • Descriptions of weapons
  • Songs in praise of lions, horses, camels, and buffalo
  • Sayings about didactic and practical cleverness
  • Ancient epics
  • Songs describing the anguish of people in times of famine and adversity

Other classifications of Charani sahitya are Khyatas (chronicles), Vartas and Vatas (stories), Raso (martial epics), Veli - Veli Krishan Rukman ri, Doha-Chhand (verses).[81][82]

References

  1. ^ "List of Backward Classes | Welfare of Scheduled Caste & Backward Classes Department, Government of Haryana". haryanascbc.gov.in. Retrieved 29 April 2022.
  2. ^ a b Bhargava, Hem Bala (2000). Royalty, Feudalism, and Gender: As Portrayed by Foreign Travellers. Rawat Publications. p. 192. ISBN 978-81-7033-616-7. Heber writes that not only in Rajputana but in the wilder districts of South-west more war-like Charans were found. In Gujarat and Malwa the merchants and travellers hired Charans to protect them through their journey.
  3. ^ Hiramani, A. B. (1977). Social Change in Rural India. B. R. Publishing Corporation. p. 47.
  4. ^ Commissioner, Pakistan Office of the Census (1962). Population Census of Pakistan, 1961: West Pakistan: 1.Karachi. 2.Lahore. 3.Gujranwala. 4.Rawalpindi. 5.Lyallpur. 6.Multan. 7.Quetta. 8.Peshawar. 9.Hyderabad. 10.Sukkur. 11.Bahawalpur. 12.Hazara. 13.Sialkot. 14.Sargodha. 15.Mianwali. 16.Jhang. 17.Loralai. 18.Sibi. 19.Jacobabad. 20.Campbellpur. 21.Gujrat. 22.Bannu. 23.Jhelum. 24.Tharparker. 25.Larkana. 26.Thatta. 27.Mekran. There are other castes of Hindus i.e. , Brahmans , Lohanas , Khatries , Sutars , Charans , Sonaras , Kalals etc.
  5. ^ Kothiyal, Tanuja (14 March 2016). Nomadic Narratives: A History of Mobility and Identity in the Great Indian Desert. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-316-67389-8. Charan migratory history traces their movements between Baluchistan, Jaisalmer, Marwar, Gujarat and Kutch.
  6. ^ * Palriwala, Rajni (1993). "Economics and Patriliny: Consumption and Authority within the Household". Social Scientist. 21 (9/11): 47–73. doi:10.2307/3520426. ISSN 0970-0293. JSTOR 3520426. In Rajasthan, they were bards and 'literateurs', but also warriors and jagirdars, holders of land and power over men; the dependents of Rajputs, their equals and their teachers. On my initial visit and subsequently, I was assured of this fact vis-a-vis Panchwas and introduced to the thakurs, who in life-style, the practice of female seclusion, and various reference points they alluded to appeared as Rajputs. While other villagers insisted that Rajputs and Charans were all the same to them, the Charans, were not trying to pass themselves off as Rajputs, but indicating that they were as good as Rajputs if not ritually superior....most of the ex-landlord households, the Charans and one Pathan, remained in the middle and upper ranks of village society
    • Kapadia, Aparna (2022). "Imagining Region in Late Colonial India: Jhaverchand Meghani and the Construction of Saurashtra (1921–47)". The Journal of Asian Studies. 81 (3): 541–560. doi:10.1017/S0021911822000080. ISSN 0021-9118. S2CID 248169878. Movement was also integral to the work of the Charans, who emerged as the preservers of Rajput culture and served various administrative and diplomatic functions...Historically, violence was fundamental to Charans’ preservation of their sacred and ethical authority. From about the thirteenth century, Charans had served various bureaucratic functions for their patrons, including as security for private or government transactions.
    • Paul, Kim (1 January 1993). "Negotiating sacred space: The Mandirand the Oran as contested sites". South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies. 16 (sup001): 49–60. doi:10.1080/00856409308723191. ISSN 0085-6401. In the past some Charans were agriculturalists, engaged in farming lands which were divided equally between male descendants of the lineage. Others were cowherds and caravan escorts....
    • Marcus, George E. (1983). Elites, Ethnographic Issues. University of New Mexico Press. p. 219. ISBN 978-0-8263-0658-6. Charans were court poets and historians, "bards"...Prominent Charan (caste of bards) dewans or senior court servants included Kaviraj (court poet) Shyamaldas at Udaipur and Kaviraj Murardan at Jodhpur.
    • Shah, P. R. (1982). Raj Marwar During British Paramountcy: A Study in Problems and Policies Up to 1923. Sharda Publishing House. p. 194. ISBN 978-0-7855-1985-0. The Charans constituted a body of faithful companions of the Rajputs. They composed poems in praise of the heroic deeds of the Rajputs, and thus inspired them with courage and fortitude. They also guarded the mansions of their patrons, gave protection to their women and children during emergency and also acted as tutors for the young ones. In return land gifts and honours were conferred upon them. The Charans, who could not devote themselves to intellectual pursuits, took to trade. They also protected merchants and travellers passing through desolate regions and forests.
    • Gupta, Saurabh (1 October 2015). Politics of Water Conservation: Delivering Development in Rural Rajasthan, India. Springer. p. 42. ISBN 978-3-319-21392-7. "Sharma (ibid) argues that the ex-Zamindars (or landlords) who own big landholdings even today are influential but those who do not retain it are not only less influential but have also slid down the scale of status hierarchy. The families most affected by this belong to the Rajputs, Jats, Charans and Brahmins (all traditionally powerful caste groups)
    • Matheson, Sylvia A. (1984). Rajasthan, Land of Kings. Vendome Press. ISBN 978-0-86565-046-6.
    • Hastings, James M. (2002). Poets, Sants, and Warriors: The Dadu Panth, Religious Change and Identity Formation in Jaipur State Circa 1562-1860 Ce. University of Wisconsin--Madison. p. 23. In Rajasthan, the Charans are a highly esteemed caste seen as occupying a social position slightly lower than that of Brahmins but above that of Rajputs, with whom they maintain a symbiotic relationship...Like Rajputs, with whom they often shared company, Charans would eat meat, drink liquor and engage in martial activities...Although, in a way, poetic composition and recitation was for them a “pastime” subordinate to the primary income producing occupations of military service, agriculture, and horse and cattle trading...
    • Jain, Pratibha; Śarmā, Saṅgītā (2004). Honour, Status & Polity. Rawat Publications. ISBN 978-81-7033-859-8. The Charans have also received applause and appreciation for their contribution as historians of medieval Rajasthan.
    • Vinay, Srivastava (2004). Methodology and Fieldwork. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-566727-1. They were the Rajputs' geneologists, historians, and teachers; sometimes they were leading state servants, sometimes guides and protectors of trade. Killing a Charan, like killing a brahmin, was a mortal sin. It was the duty of powerful Rajput patrons to support and honour...
  7. ^ a b Maheshwari, Hiralal (1980). History of Rajasthani Literature. Sahitya Akademi.
  8. ^ a b c Ziegler, Norman P. (1976). "The Seventeenth Century Chronicles of Mārvāṛa: A Study in the Evolution and Use of Oral Traditions in Western India". History in Africa. 3: 127–153. doi:10.2307/3171564. ISSN 0361-5413. JSTOR 3171564. S2CID 156943079.
  9. ^ a b Rao, Velcheru Narayana; Nārāyaṇarāvu, Vēlcēru; Shulman, David Dean; Subrahmanyam, Sanjay (2003). Textures of Time: Writing History in South India 1600-1800. Other Press. ISBN 978-1-59051-044-5.
  10. ^ Paul, Kim (1 January 1993). "Negotiating sacred space: The Mandirand the Oran as contested sites". South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies. 16 (sup001): 49–60. doi:10.1080/00856409308723191. ISSN 0085-6401. In the past some Charans were agriculturalists, engaged in farming lands which were divided equally between male descendants of the lineage. Others were cowherds and caravan escorts....
  11. ^ a b Kapadia, Aparna (2022). "Imagining Region in Late Colonial India: Jhaverchand Meghani and the Construction of Saurashtra (1921–47)". The Journal of Asian Studies. 81 (3): 541–560. doi:10.1017/S0021911822000080. ISSN 0021-9118. S2CID 248169878. Movement was also integral to the work of the Charans, who emerged as the preservers of Rajput culture and served various administrative and diplomatic functions...Historically, violence was fundamental to Charans’ preservation of their sacred and ethical authority. From about the thirteenth century, Charans had served various bureaucratic functions for their patrons, including as security for private or government transactions.
  12. ^ "Development of social, religious and economic structure in medieval Rajasthan: A study with reference to conditions during 1201-1707 a.d | International Journal of Development Research (IJDR)". www.journalijdr.com. Retrieved 1 July 2022.
  13. ^ Vinay, Srivastava (2004). Methodology and Fieldwork. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-566727-1.
  14. ^ Mahārāṇā Pratāpa ke pramukha sahayogī (in Hindi). Rājasthānī Granthāgāra. 1997.
  15. ^ a b c Rudolph, Susanne Hoeber; Rudolph, Lloyd I. (1984). Essays on Rajputana: Reflections on History, Culture, and Administration. Concept Publishing Company. At the outer edge of qualification norms is standing in one of the respectable (usually twice-born) and traditionally literate castes or communities of Rajputana-such as Rajputs, Oswals, Maheshwaris, Kayasths, Charans, Brahmans, and Muslims....the bureaucratic lineages in and out of power, whether from within (mutsaddi, Rajput, Muslim, Charan etc.)...Prominent Charan Dewans or senior court servants included Kaviraj (court poet) Shyamaldas at Udaipur and Kaviraj Murardan at Jodhpur.
  16. ^ Bhasin, Veena (2005). Medical Anthropology, Tribals of Rajasthan. Kamala-Raj Enterprises. ISBN 978-81-85264-35-6. The states were divided into various categories of Jagirs. During medieval period, Rajputs, Charans and Baniyas dominated the princely states. The Rajputs had a dominant status either as central ruler or Jagirdar and Thikanedar though lower to the Brahmins in ritual hierarchy. Next to them in status were Baniyas, followed by clean artisans, peasants and service castes. Baniya , though in minority had skills to run the administration . The status of Brahmin was subordinate in administration; instead Charans were close to the Rajputs. Vidal ( 1997 ) portray a picture of society and kingship in Sirohi area of Rajasthan where bards appeared as the real ideologues
  17. ^ Bhati, N. S. (1979). Studies in Marwar History. Rajasthani Shodh Sansthan. The Charans acted as bards to the royal family but due to their intimate relations with the rulers they enjoyed their confidence and many times they acted as mediators in political affairs and enjoyed hereditry Jagir (Sasan) rights.
  18. ^ a b Marcus, George E. (1983). Elites, Ethnographic Issues. University of New Mexico Press. ISBN 978-0-8263-0658-6.
  19. ^ Śekhāvata, Raghunāthasiṃha (1998). Shekhawati Pradesh ka rajnitik itihas (in Hindi). Ṭhā. Mallūsiṃha Smr̥ti Granthāgāra. दीवानजी का बास तेजमालजी नामक रत्नू चारण को सीकर ठिकाने की ओर से 1500 बीघा भूमि चंदपुरा गांव की सीमा में दी । तेजमालजी के तीन पुत्र रामनाथ , बद्रीदान व स्योबक्सजी बताये जाते हैं । रामनाथ किशनगढ़ राज्य के दीवान बने , स्योबक्स जी झालावाड़ व बद्रीदान माधोसिंह सीकर के दीवान थे । बद्रीदान को माधोसिंह ने बोदलासी ( नेछवा के पास ) की छः हजार बीघा भूमि प्रदान की । इनके पुत्र कुमेरदानजी सीकर ठिकाने में दीवान थे । चंदपुरा आज दीवानजी का बास के नाम से जाना जाता है । बद्रीदान के वंशज दीवानजी का बास व बोदलासी दोनों जगह रहते हैं ।
  20. ^ Kapadia, Aparna (16 May 2018). Gujarat: The Long Fifteenth Century and the Making of a Region. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-15331-8. Charans accompanied these warriors in battles, sang of their glory in war, and, as late as the nineteenth century, served as guarantors and diplomats for their lieges on account of their sacred association with various forms of the mother goddess.
  21. ^ Basu, Helene (2005). "Practices of Praise and Social Constructions of Identity: The Bards of North-West India". Archives de sciences sociales des religions. 50 (130): 81–105. doi:10.4000/assr.2795. ISSN 0335-5985. JSTOR 30116669. S2CID 145362328. No contract between kings after a war, or between patrons and clients agreeing the terms whereby services be rendered, nor any other contract was considered valid without a Chāran guaranteeing on his own and/or the life of his family that the terms agreed upon would be fulfilled. They provided the same service for merchants and traders on their long treks through the desert up north, when they accompanied caravans for their protection against plundering bandits.
  22. ^ a b c Weinberger-Thomas, Catherine (1999). Ashes of Immortality: Widow-Burning in India. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-88568-1.
  23. ^ Schaflechner, Jürgen (2018). Hinglaj Devi: Identity, Change, and Solidification at a Hindu Temple in Pakistan. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-085052-4. Charans were also warrantors for contracts, guaranteeing adherence to certain agreements between two parties with their lives.
  24. ^ Rao, Aparna; Casimir, Michael J. (2008). Nomadism in South Asia. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-569890-9. One of their functions was the witnessing and guaranteeing of important transactions. Their power of enforcement lay in the threat to kill themselves, if necessary, to bring supernatural forces to bear against the violator.
  25. ^ Singh, Sabita (27 May 2019). The Politics of Marriage in India: Gender and Alliance in Rajasthan. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-909828-6. The Charans were also used by the rulers for political negotiations as is evident from the fact that in the case of enmity between Rathore Rao Rinmal of Sojat (son of Rao Chuda) and Bhattis, the Bhattis sent Charan Sandhayach to plead with Rinmal not to trouble them. He succeeded in his task, which led to the establishment of matrimonial alliance between the two sides....Also, the importance of the Charans in the social structure of Rajasthan can be assessed from the fact that the Ranis (queens), who had young children, but had resolved to commit sati, would hand over their children to the care of the Charans, indicating the kind of trust that they enjoyed. There are examples of handing over children to the Brahmins also, but these examples are far less than those of the Charans.
  26. ^ Chatterji, Anjali; Chatterjee, Anjali (2000). "Sectional President's Address: ASPECTS OF MEDIEVAL INDIAN SOCIETY: GLEANINGS FROM CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE". Proceedings of the Indian History Congress. 61: 196–241. ISSN 2249-1937. JSTOR 44148098. Due to their intimate relation with rulers charans enjoyed their confidence and often they acted as mediators in political affairs and also enjoy hereditary Jagirs i.e., Sasan rights.
  27. ^ Saran, Richard; Ziegler, Norman P. (2001). The Mertiyo Rathors of Merto, Rajasthan: Select Translations Bearing on the History of a Rajput Family, 1462-1660, Volumes 1-2. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 978-0-472-03821-3. Caran Jhuto appears in this passage as a go-between. Carans in Rajasthan, because of their sacred status, often assumed this role in negotiations between hostile or warring groups.
  28. ^ Allen, Charles; Dwivedi, Sharada (1984). Lives of the Indian Princes. BPI Publishing. ISBN 978-81-86982-05-1. They also acted as intermediaries in negotiating marriages, in guaranteeing the settlement of debts and disputes and as emissaries in times of war.
  29. ^ "The Desert Frontier: A History of Travel and Nomadism". Sahapedia. Retrieved 14 July 2022. The Charans acted as arbitrators and guarantors in dealings and agreements between Rajputs, once again resorting to taga if one party did not keep his end of the bargain. Such glorification of death worked in a society dominated by a Rajput community that set great store by dying in the battlefield for Rajput men and by self-immolation for their women.
  30. ^ Snodgrass, Jeffrey G. (2004). "The Centre Cannot Hold: Tales of Hierarchy and Poetic Composition from Modern Rajasthan". The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute. 10 (2): 261–285. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9655.2004.00189.x. ISSN 1359-0987. JSTOR 3804151. Well into the colonial period, however, Charans continued to perform one of their other long-standing functions, which was to serve as witnesses or guarantors to commercial transactions and financial contracts. Some also carried on as providers of a related service, which was to act as guarantors of the security of caravans conveying goods in transit....Not least among these was the fact that the British might have seen royal bards – as arbitrators of disputes, witnesses to contracts and agreements, protectors of hostages, educators of kings and their offspring, composers of history, and indeed establishers of truth – as competitors of a kind and thus sought to eliminate them (Vidal 1997).
  31. ^ "Gujarat in 1857 – When Hindus and Muslims fought together". Tribunehindi.com. 25 November 2017. Retrieved 14 July 2022.
  32. ^ Vashishtha, Professor V.K. (2016). "Transformation in the Position of Charan Community in Rajputana States during Colonial Period" (PDF). Rajasthan History Congress. 31: 155–166 – via RAJHISCO.
  33. ^ Matheson, Sylvia A. (1984). Rajasthan, Land of Kings. Vendome Press. ISBN 978-0-86565-046-6.
  34. ^ a b "Living goddesses, past and present in North-west India, German Scholars on India – Global InCH- International Journal of Intangible Cultural Heritage". Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  35. ^ a b c Chandra, Yashaswini (22 January 2021). The Tale of the Horse: A History of India on Horseback. Pan Macmillan. ISBN 978-93-89109-92-4.
  36. ^ Choudhry, P. S. (1968). Rajasthan Between the Two World Wars, 1919-1939. Sri Ram Mehra. The Kachela Charans were traders . They were shrewd merchants and lighter dues were levied on them than on others.
  37. ^ a b c d e Kothiyal, Tanuja (14 March 2016). Nomadic Narratives: A History of Mobility and Identity in the Great Indian Desert. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-316-67389-8. The genealogists for Charans were Brahmins from Ujjain who periodically inscribed their genealogies in their accounts.
  38. ^ a b c Hooja, Rima (2006). A History of Rajasthan. Rupa & Company. ISBN 978-81-291-0890-6.
  39. ^ Bagchi, Amiya Kumar (2002). Capital and Labour Redefined: India and the Third World. Anthem Press. ISBN 978-1-84331-068-6.
  40. ^ Upadhyaya, Rashmi (2010). "The Position of Charans in Medieval Rajasthan" (PDF). Rajasthan History Congress. 26: 31–38 – via rajhisco.
  41. ^ Niyogi, Chandreyee (5 April 2006). Reorienting Orientalism. SAGE Publishing India. p. 78. ISBN 978-93-5280-548-8.
  42. ^ "Rajasthan, District Gazetteers: Pali". INDIAN CULTURE. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  43. ^ Sato (Professor.), Masanori (1997). Economy and Polity of Rajasthan: Study of Kota and Marwar, 17th-19th Centuries. Publication Scheme. ISBN 978-81-86782-14-9.
  44. ^ "The Rajput States and the East India Company". INDIAN CULTURE. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  45. ^ Paul, Kim (1 January 1993). "Negotiating sacred space: The Mandirand the Oran as contested sites". South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies. 16 (sup001): 49–60. doi:10.1080/00856409308723191. ISSN 0085-6401.
  46. ^ Hunter, William Wilson (19 November 2020). The Imperial Gazetteer Of India (Volume Xxi) Pushkar To Salween. Alpha Editions. ISBN 978-93-5421-782-1.
  47. ^ Sahai, Nandita Prasad (2006). Politics of Patronage and Protest: The State, Society, and Artisans in Early Modern Rajasthan. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-567896-3.
  48. ^ Jansen, Jan; Maier, Hendrik M. J. (2004). Epic Adventures: Heroic Narrative in the Oral Performance Traditions of Four Continents. Lit. ISBN 978-3-8258-6758-4.
  49. ^ Deva, B. Chaitanya (1992). INTRODUCTION TO INDIAN MUSIC. Publications Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India. ISBN 978-81-230-2103-4.
  50. ^ Social Scientist. Indian School of Social Sciences. 2005.
  51. ^ Dutson, Judith (7 May 2012). Storey's Illustrated Guide to 96 Horse Breeds of North America. Storey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-60342-918-4.
  52. ^ a b Kamphorst, Janet (2008). In praise of death: history and poetry in medieval Marwar (South Asia). Leiden: Leiden University Press. ISBN 978-90-485-0603-3. OCLC 614596834.
  53. ^ Saxena, Rajendra Kumar (2002). Karkhanas of the Mughal Zamindars: A Study in the Economic Development of 18th Century Rajputana. Publication Scheme. ISBN 978-81-86782-75-0.
  54. ^ Romila Thapar (14 October 2013). The Past Before Us. Harvard University Press. pp. 81–. ISBN 978-0-674-72651-2.
  55. ^ Sumit Guha (1 November 2019). History and Collective Memory in South Asia, 1200–2000. University of Washington Press. pp. 56–. ISBN 978-0-295-74623-4.
  56. ^ Cynthia Talbot (2016). The Last Hindu Emperor: Prithviraj Cauhan and the Indian Past, 1200–2000. Cambridge University Press. pp. 163–. ISBN 978-1-107-11856-0.
  57. ^ Rosa Maria Perez (2004). Kings and Untouchables: A Study of the Caste System in Western India. Orient Blackswan. pp. 75–. ISBN 9788180280146.
  58. ^ Harald Tambs-Lyche (9 August 2017). Transaction and Hierarchy: Elements for a Theory of Caste. Routledge. p. 130. ISBN 978-1-351-39396-6. Charans are affiliated, by their past history as buffalo herders, to the pastoralist estate. Some Charans, indeed, still herd buffaloes." "Their vegetarian, non-violent and economically puritan ethos conflicts with the Charan tradition, marked by the aristocratic values...Some Charan bards received lands in jagir for their services, and in parts of Marwar, certain Charan families were effectively Darbars.
  59. ^ Shah, A. M.; Shroff, R. G. (1958). "The Vahivanca Barots of Gujarat: A Caste of Genealogists and Mythographers". Journal of American Folk-Lore. 71 (281): 246–276. doi:10.2307/538561. JSTOR 538561.
  60. ^ "Cāraṇ, Hindu caste". Britannica.com.
  61. ^ Thomson, G. R. (1991). "Charans of Gujarat: Caste Identity, Music and Cultural Change". Ethnomusicology. 35 (3): 381–391. doi:10.2307/851968. JSTOR 851968.
  62. ^ Banerjee, Anil Chandra. (1983). Aspects of Rajput State and Society. pp. 124–125. OCLC 12236372.
  63. ^ Sharma, G. N. (1968). Social Life in Medieval Rajasthan. Agra: Lakshmi Narayan Agarwal Educational Publisher. p. 111.
  64. ^ Westphal-Hellbusch, Sigrid; Westphal, Heinz. Hinduistische Viehzüchter im nord-westlichen Indien (in German). Duncker & Humblot. ISBN 978-3-428-43745-0.
  65. ^ Gahlot, Sukhvir Singh; Dhar, Banshi (1989). Castes and Tribes of Rajasthan. Jain Brothers. ISBN 978-81-85287-00-3.
  66. ^ Choudhry, P. S. (1968). Rajasthan Between the Two World Wars, 1919-1939. Sri Ram Mehra. Charans are mentioned even in the Ramayana and the Mahabharata. Though some of them are found even in Gujrat and Kathiawar, yet it is Rajputana with which they are mainly associated and thus require a special mention. Like the Rajputs they claim a divine origin and were always treated with the greatest respect by Rajputs.
  67. ^ "Rajasthan District Gazetteers: Nagaur". INDIAN CULTURE. Retrieved 28 June 2022.
  68. ^ Gaur, Meena (1989). Sati and Social Reforms in India. Publication Scheme. ISBN 978-81-85263-57-1.
  69. ^ Motilal, Shashi; Nanda, Bijayalaxmi (2010). Understanding Social Inequality: Concerns of Human Rights, Gender and Environment. Macmillan Publishers India. ISBN 978-0-230-32849-5. In Rajasthan, where the normal age of marriage of girls ranged between seven to sixteen years, most post-pubertal marriages were among the Charans and Brahmins whose daughters did not work outside the home and could be segregated and secluded.
  70. ^ Harlan L (2003). Goddesses' Henchmen - Gender in Hero Worship. USA: Oxford University Press. p. 258.
  71. ^ . Matanamadh Jagir, Kachchh, India. 2006. Archived from the original on 26 June 2007. Retrieved 23 December 2006.
  72. ^ Qanungo, Kalika Ranjan; Kānūnago, Kālikā Rañjana (1960). Studies in Rajput History. S. Chand. there are seven categories of persons and communities, who in their turn have a hereditary claim on the Charan's bounty, and are not allowed to beg of any other community. Besides their kula-guru family of Brahmans living in Ujjain till today, and the purohit (family priest), these are: the Rao Bhat of Chandisa sept of Marwar (who are the Bhats of the Charans as of the Rathors of Marwar); the Rawal Brahmans, the Goind-pota and the Viram-pota (Bhats singing with dhol?) and the Motisar community.
  73. ^ Vidyarthi, Lalita Prasad; Sahay, B. N. (1980). Applied Anthropology and Development in India. National. "The Rawals provide entertainment particularly for the people of Charan caste by arranging night long shows.
  74. ^ Prabhākara, Manohara (1976). A Critical Study of Rajasthani Literature, with Exclusive Reference to the Contribution of Cāraṇas. Panchsheel Prakashan. Motisar is a caste which keeps the genealogies of Carans, sings their praises and begs money of them. The Motisars themselves are often good composers.
  75. ^ Neuman, Daniel M.; Chaudhuri, Shubha; Kothari, Komal (2005). Bards, Ballads and Boundaries: An Ethnographic Atlas of Music Traditions in West Rajasthan. Seagull. ISBN 978-1-905422-07-4.
  76. ^ Singh, Khushwant (1982). We Indians. Delhi: Orient Paperbacks. OCLC 10710940.
  77. ^ Shah, P. R. (1982). Raj Marwar During British Paramountcy: A Study in Problems and Policies Up to 1923. Sharda Publishing House. ISBN 978-0-7855-1985-0. Among Rajputs and Charans the bride and the bridegroom took opium together in the presence of their kinsmen.
  78. ^ Mathur, U. B. (2002). Treasure-trove of Rajasthan. Folklorists. ISBN 978-81-85129-01-3.
  79. ^ Bulletin on Narcotics. United Nations, Department of Social Affairs. 1994.
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Bibliography

  • Kamphorst, Janet (2008). In Praise of Death: History and Poetry in Medieval Marwar. Leiden University Press. ISBN 978-90-8728-044-4.
  • Kothiyal, Tanuja (2016). Nomadic Narratives: A History of Mobility and Identity in the Great Indian Desert (illustrated, reprint ed.). Delhi, India: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1107080317. LCCN 2015014741. OCLC 1003137945.

charan, other, uses, disambiguation, iast, cāraṇ, sanskrit, रण, gujarati, રણ, urdu, ارڈ, cɑːrəɳə, caste, south, asia, natively, residing, rajasthan, gujarat, states, india, well, sindh, balochistan, provinces, pakistan, historically, have, been, engaged, diver. For other uses see Charan disambiguation Charan IAST Caraṇ Sanskrit च रण Gujarati ચ રણ Urdu ارڈ IPA cɑːreɳe is a caste in South Asia natively residing in the Rajasthan and Gujarat states of India as well as the Sindh and Balochistan provinces of Pakistan Historically Charans have been engaged in diverse occupations like bards poets historians pastoralists agriculturalists and also administrators jagirdars and warriors and some even as traders 6 CharanA Charan in Bikaner kingdom 1725 CE Metropolitan Museum of Art ReligionsHinduism IslamLanguagesRajasthani Marwari Mewari Gujarati Sindhi MarathiCountryIndia PakistanRegionRajasthan Haryana 1 Gujarat Madhya Pradesh 2 Maharashtra 3 Sindh 4 Balochistan 5 Contents 1 Historical roles and occupations 1 1 Poets and historians 1 2 Administrators 1 3 Arbitrators and diplomats 1 4 Traders and merchants 1 5 Protectors of mercantile trade 1 6 Horse trade 2 Social structure 2 1 Clans and divisions 3 Culture and ethos 3 1 Patronized groups 3 1 1 Opium usage 4 Contributions to Indian literature 5 References 6 BibliographyHistorical roles and occupationsPoets and historians Rajasthani amp Gujarati literature from the early and medieval period upto the 19th century has been mainly composed by Charans The relationship between Charans and Rajputs is deeprooted in history As Charans used to partake in battles alongside Rajputs they were witnesses not only to battles but also to many other occasions and episodes forming part of the contemporary Rajput life The poems composed about such wars and incidents had two qualities basic historical truth and vivid realistic and pictorial descriptions particularly of heroes heroic deeds and battles 7 The Charan poetry is mostly descriptive in style and can be categorized in two forms narrative and stray The narrative form of Charan poetry goes by various names viz Ras Rasau Rupak Prakas Chhand Vilas Prabandh Ayan Sanvad etc These poems are also named after metres such as Kavitt Kundaliya Jhulana Nisaṇi Jhamal and Veli etc Poems of stray form also use a variety of such metres 7 Written in Dingal the various sources known as bata vata khyata vigata pidhiavali and vamsavali form the most important body of primary data for the study of the medieval period 8 Although for Charans poetic composition and recitation was only a hereditary pastime subordinate to the primary income producing occupations of military service agriculture and horse and cattle trading Ambitious and talented boys however pursued traditional education from other learned Charans for comprehensive guidance When accepted by them as students they would receive training in the basics of poetic composition and narration as well as the specialized languages by precept and example with emphasis on memorization and oral recitation Students would in turn recite the compositions constantly improving their style Knowledge of languages such as Dingal Sanskrit Urdu and Persian was also acquired with the aid of specialized masters Thus subjects studied included not only history and literature but also religion music and astrology 8 9 Renowned Charan poets of the time were part of the royal courts attaining the rank of Kaviraja or court laureate and assuming positions of great influence 8 9 Such learned Charans were exceptionally honoured by the rulers The rulers bestowed awards whose value amounted to lakh a hundred thousand or krore in million hence these were termed as Lakh Pasav or Krore Pasav These awards consisted of sasan lands horses elephants and ornaments 10 Administrators As per their administrative and ritual positions Charans were integral to numerous indigenous courts in the region including Rajputana Saurashtra Malwa Kutch Sindh and Gujarat They served various administrative and diplomatic functions sometimes as leading state dignitaries 11 12 13 14 By nineteenth century these formed major and minor bureaucratic lineages which played a significant role in the power struggle and the policy formation in the princely states Recruitment to positions in the political bureaucracy in the nineteenth century states of Rajputana was based on the community and the recognized and established lineages Charan as an indigenous community with traditions of literacy and service contributed significantly in the senior crown appointments Persons belonging to such an administrative class as a result of state service were also granted jagirs and court honours 15 During the medieval period Charans along with Rajputs and Baniyas dominated the administration in princely states 16 Charans enjoyed intimate relations with the rulers who placed high confidence in them consequently they came to play the role of mediators in most of the political matters in the medieval kingdoms prior to British rule 17 Some of the prominent Charan administrators holding positions such as of Diwan Prime Minister in 19th amp 20th century were Kaviraja Shyamaldas of Mewar Kaviraja Murardan of Marwar and Ramnathji Ratnu of Kishengarh 15 18 The Ratnu family of Sikar formed one such bureaucratic lineage whose members were Diwans of Sikar Idar Kishengarh and Jhalawad 15 19 18 Arbitrators and diplomats Charans fulfilled the crucial role of diplomats guarantors and arbitrators in political negotiations and financial transactions 20 No treaties between kings after a war or contracts between patrons and clients were considered valid without a Charan acting as a guarantor 21 Since the Charans were deemed sacrosanct and causing them harm was considered a sin they were chosen as sureties whenever a legal guarantee was required Therefore important pacts engagements transfers recovery of debts transactions and even the signing of treaties were always presided by a Charan Records indicate they also served as sureties for the collection of land revenue from the sixteenth century down to 1816 22 23 In the cases when these contracts were not honoured or when the Charans themselves were subjected to an injustice they would wound even immolate or mutilate themselves thus casting curse of the death of a Charan on the offender The mark of the dagger signifying the threat of self sacrifice served as their signature 24 Morever they were the traditional arbitrators of conflicts between the various Rajput clans or branches Rajput clans would send their families and children to the homes of Charans for safeguarding during times of violence 25 The role of messengers and mediators was taken over by Charans in negotiations between hostile or warring groups 26 27 They acted as emissaries in times of war 28 Even the British called upon the Charans to mediate the Saurashtra peace agreements of the early nineteenth century 22 29 The British colonial intervention in the administration of the princely states in time brought decline in these functions of the Charans 11 However well into the colonial period Charans continued to perform this long standing functions of theirs to serve as witnesses or guarantors in commercial transactions and financial contracts 30 Prior to the Charans revolting during the Indian Rebellion of 1857 they were part of the loyal Central Gujrat British network acting as mediators between princes and the people or princes and the British 31 Traders and merchants They took advantage of their sacred position by assuming the occupation of carriers and traders as they were exempted from the payment of customs duties in Rajputana and the adjacent regions of Malwa and Gujarat in the pre colonial period 32 Exercising their privilege to transport goods between various states with impunity and utilising the large wealth of cattle as pack animals Charans were able to establish a virtual monopoly of trade in North Western India Many Charans are said to have become wealthy merchants and money lenders Their caravans were considered to be insured against bandits 33 34 In Rajasthan the Kachhela Charans excelled as merchants 35 36 Utilizing their favourable position since they had exemption from perpetual and harassing imposts they gradually became chief carriers and traders In Mallani Charans were described as large traders possessing great privileges as a sacred race being exempted from local dues throughout Marwar 37 Charan traders took large caravans of bullocks north to Marwar and Hindustan and east to Malwa through Gujarat They traded in various commodities including ivory coconuts alum and dry dates which they take from Kutch while bringing back corn and tobacco from Marwar amp Hindustan Ivory brought from Africa to Mandvi in Gujarat was bought by Charan traders in return for grain and coarse cloth From there they transported ivory to be sold in Marwar 38 By late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries they emerged as major suppliers of goods and weaponry to the warring armies of Mughal Rajput and other factions They sold their goods in the markets ranging from Punjab to Maharashtra 39 The Salt Trade in Marwar involved thousands of people amp pack animals like oxen amp camels Charans along with Pushkarna Brahmins and Bhils were engaged in salt trade and exempted from the payment of custom duties Kachhela Charans from Sindhari used to collect salt from Talwara amp sell in other parts of Marwar Charans were seen as great traders who paid no dues and in troubled times when plunder was rife although trading with thousands of rupees worth of property were never molested 37 The Charan traders made their encampments as fortified settlements whenever a long hault was required either due to the long journey or as safeguard against lawless bandits and periodical rains Sometimes these fortified settlements evolved as forts such as those of Bhainsrorgarh Some of the Charan merchants were the privileged carriers of the Rajawaras kingdoms and thus had direct communication with the royal household Their caravans also consisted of armies to safeguard their goods and encampments Documents of princely states like Kota records the names of several Charans as the affluent merchants of the region with their huge caravans trading with markets in western India 40 The establishment of British hegemony in northwestern India and subsequent colonial intervention on trade practices such as monopoly on salt and introduction of railways affected overall trading patterns leading to irreversabe decline of communities in transportation business including Charans Lohanas and Banjaras As a result some of them settled as traders and money lenders while others took to agriculture 37 James Tod in the eighteenth century commented on the Kachhela Charans in Mewar who were traders by profession It was a novel and interesting scene the manly persons of the Charans clad in the flowing white robe with the high loose folded turban inclined on one side from which the mala or chaplet was gracefully suspended the Naiks or leaders with their massive necklaces of gold with the image of the pitresvaras the ancestors depending therefrom gave the whole an air of opulence and dignity 41 22 Protectors of mercantile trade The Charans held the reputation of defending the merchandise entrusted to their charge through sword and shield if necessary or else if outnumbered by threatening to take or even taking their own life 38 Charans were described as greatest carriers of goods for delivery in important centres of Malpura Pali Sojat Ajmer and Bhilwara by acting as escorts bailers 42 Throughout Rajasthan Gujarat and Malwa Madhya Pradesh Charans acted as escorters and protectors of mercantile trade throughout the journey 43 2 The route of the caravans was through Suigam Gujarat Sanchor Bhinmal Jalor to Pali 44 The inviolability of a Charan along with their knowledge of the trade routes distinguished them as ideal caravan escorts 34 Caravans of horses camels and pack oxen carrying various commodities passed through desolate stretches of desert amp forested hills which were always under threat of bandits amp dacoits Charans acted as the protectors amp escorts As caravan protectors sacred Charans thwarted the attempts of bandits 35 45 If not strong enough to defend their convoy with sword and shield they would threaten to kill themselves Given the position of Charans in the socio cultural system of the time the wilful killing of a Charan was equivalent to equally abominable crime of killing a Brahmin As such if a Charan did commit suicide over any transgression of the caravans under his guardianship the marauder robbers responsible for the suicide were deemed to have earned the sin of a Charan s death with all its post life connotations of hell fire and damnation Thus under the safety of Charans commodities were transported from one region to another 46 47 37 38 Horse trade Horse trade was one of the prominent occupations of Charans 48 49 Some Charan sub groups like Kachhela Charans from Kutch amp Sindh and Sorathia Charans from Kathiawar were historically engaged in horse breeding amp trading 50 51 The common connection of horses also led to bonds between Charans amp the Kathi tribe Some Kuchela Charans settled around Mallani Barmer Rajasthan in western Rajasthan which was notable for its horse breeding Marwari horses from this area came to be known as Mallani horses By the 18th century most of the horse trade business in the Bikaner kingdom was controlled by Charans besides Afghans Charan horse dealers were considered to be very well networked In another example of the clout of horse trading Charans a Charan from the Kachhela subgroup arrived at the court of Marwar ruler Maharaja Takhat Singh under the auspices of the sect leader of Nath Sampradaya and marketed his horses with 10 horses being directly purchased by the ruler himself 52 35 53 Social structureTraditionally the Charans worked as Bards and Genealogists 54 55 56 57 58 Members of the caste are considered to be divine by a large section of society Women of the caste are adored as mother goddesses by other major communities of this region including Khatris and Rajputs 59 For centuries Charans were known for their reputation of preferring to die rather than break a promise 60 Charan society is based on written genealogy A Charan will consider all the other Charans as equal even if they do not know each other and have radically different economic or geographic status 61 Charan men are also known as the sacrosanct guides of camel and pack oxen and caravans through Thar desert and as traders in horses wool and salts suppliers of food and weaponry to armies 52 Anil Chandra Banerjee a professor of history has said thatIn them we have a combination of the traditional characteristics of the Brahmin and the Kshatriyas Like the Brahmins they adopted literary pursuits and accepted gifts Like the Rajput they worshipped Shakti and engaged in military activities They stood at the front gate of the fort to receive the first blow of the sword 62 Banerjee s opinion is shared by another historian G N Sharma who said thatCharans exercise great respectability and influence in Rajasthan The speciality of the caste is that it combines in its character the characteristics of Rajputs and Brahmans in an adequate manner 63 Clans and divisions Based on regions inhabited and associated culture there are multiple endogamous sections among the Charans such as Maru Rajasthan amp Sindh Kachhela Kutch Sorath Saurashtra Parajia Malwa Madhya Pradesh etc Clans among Maru Charans are Roharia Detha Ratnu Ashiya Mehru Kiniya Sauda Arha etc Kachhelas are divided into 7 main exogamous clans Nara Chorada Chunva Avsura Maru Bati and Tumbel 64 65 66 Culture and ethosCharans mainly worship various forms of Shakti and incarnations of Hinglaj They greet one another with Jai Mataji Ki Victory to the Mother Goddess 67 The women observed social customs such as purdah women seclusion and widow remarriage was forbidden 68 69 Before Indian independence in 1947 a sacrifice of a male buffalo constituted a major part of the celebration of Navratri 70 Such celebrations quite often used to be presided over by Charan women 71 Patronized groups There are seven categories of people who are historically patronized by the Charans 72 Kulguru Brahmins The kulguru brahmins of the Charans come from Ujjain and travel from village to village and register the names of their hosts after receiving donations 37 Purohits Priests of Charans from Rajpurohit Rajguru community who also tie rakhi rakshasutra to the Charans Rawals The Rawal Brahmins record their genealogy and also present various swang forms of dance 73 Motisars Motisars compose poems in honor of Charans 74 Bhats Ravaji They are professional genealogists of the Charans They also receive neg gifts on marriages The genealogists of both the Charans and the Rathores of Marwar are from the Chandisa sept of Bhats 3 types of Dholis Dhola Birampota Goyandpota Manganiyars Hereditary professional folk musicians 75 Opium usage Charans used to enjoy consumption of opium also known as Afeem or Amal in regional languages practices which are also popular among the Rajputs of this region 76 The usage of opium by Charans was considered necessary for important ceremonies amp social gatherings At weddings the bride and the bridegroom would take opium together in the presence of their kinsmen Other occasions where it was suitable to take opium were betrothals weddings the birth of a male child parting of the beard reconciliations at visit of a son in law after a death and on festivals such as Akhatij 77 78 In Saurashtra during British rule it was found that around a half of the total opium consumers were from Charan and Rajput communities 79 Contributions to Indian literatureA whole genre of literature is known as Charan literature 80 The Dingal language and literature exist largely due to this caste 81 82 Zaverchand Meghani divides Charani sahitya literature into thirteen subgenres 80 Songs in praise of gods and goddesses stavan Songs in praise of heroes saints and patrons birdavalo Descriptions of war varanno Rebukes of wavering great kings and men who use their power for evil upalambho Mockery of a standing treachery of heroism thekadi Love stories Laments for dead warriors patrons and friends marasiya or vilap kavya Praise of natural beauty seasonal beauty and festivals Descriptions of weapons Songs in praise of lions horses camels and buffalo Sayings about didactic and practical cleverness Ancient epics Songs describing the anguish of people in times of famine and adversityOther classifications of Charani sahitya are Khyatas chronicles Vartas and Vatas stories Raso martial epics Veli Veli Krishan Rukman ri Doha Chhand verses 81 82 References List of Backward Classes Welfare of Scheduled Caste amp Backward Classes Department Government of Haryana haryanascbc gov in Retrieved 29 April 2022 a b Bhargava Hem Bala 2000 Royalty Feudalism and Gender As Portrayed by Foreign Travellers Rawat Publications p 192 ISBN 978 81 7033 616 7 Heber writes that not only in Rajputana but in the wilder districts of South west more war like Charans were found In Gujarat and Malwa the merchants and travellers hired Charans to protect them through their journey Hiramani A B 1977 Social Change in Rural India B R Publishing Corporation p 47 Commissioner Pakistan Office of the Census 1962 Population Census of Pakistan 1961 West Pakistan 1 Karachi 2 Lahore 3 Gujranwala 4 Rawalpindi 5 Lyallpur 6 Multan 7 Quetta 8 Peshawar 9 Hyderabad 10 Sukkur 11 Bahawalpur 12 Hazara 13 Sialkot 14 Sargodha 15 Mianwali 16 Jhang 17 Loralai 18 Sibi 19 Jacobabad 20 Campbellpur 21 Gujrat 22 Bannu 23 Jhelum 24 Tharparker 25 Larkana 26 Thatta 27 Mekran There are other castes of Hindus i e Brahmans Lohanas Khatries Sutars Charans Sonaras Kalals etc Kothiyal Tanuja 14 March 2016 Nomadic Narratives A History of Mobility and Identity in the Great Indian Desert Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 316 67389 8 Charan migratory history traces their movements between Baluchistan Jaisalmer Marwar Gujarat and Kutch Palriwala Rajni 1993 Economics and Patriliny Consumption and Authority within the Household Social Scientist 21 9 11 47 73 doi 10 2307 3520426 ISSN 0970 0293 JSTOR 3520426 In Rajasthan they were bards and literateurs but also warriors and jagirdars holders of land and power over men the dependents of Rajputs their equals and their teachers On my initial visit and subsequently I was assured of this fact vis a vis Panchwas and introduced to the thakurs who in life style the practice of female seclusion and various reference points they alluded to appeared as Rajputs While other villagers insisted that Rajputs and Charans were all the same to them the Charans were not trying to pass themselves off as Rajputs but indicating that they were as good as Rajputs if not ritually superior most of the ex landlord households the Charans and one Pathan remained in the middle and upper ranks of village society Kapadia Aparna 2022 Imagining Region in Late Colonial India Jhaverchand Meghani and the Construction of Saurashtra 1921 47 The Journal of Asian Studies 81 3 541 560 doi 10 1017 S0021911822000080 ISSN 0021 9118 S2CID 248169878 Movement was also integral to the work of the Charans who emerged as the preservers of Rajput culture and served various administrative and diplomatic functions Historically violence was fundamental to Charans preservation of their sacred and ethical authority From about the thirteenth century Charans had served various bureaucratic functions for their patrons including as security for private or government transactions Paul Kim 1 January 1993 Negotiating sacred space The Mandirand the Oran as contested sites South Asia Journal of South Asian Studies 16 sup001 49 60 doi 10 1080 00856409308723191 ISSN 0085 6401 In the past some Charans were agriculturalists engaged in farming lands which were divided equally between male descendants of the lineage Others were cowherds and caravan escorts Marcus George E 1983 Elites Ethnographic Issues University of New Mexico Press p 219 ISBN 978 0 8263 0658 6 Charans were court poets and historians bards Prominent Charan caste of bards dewans or senior court servants included Kaviraj court poet Shyamaldas at Udaipur and Kaviraj Murardan at Jodhpur Shah P R 1982 Raj Marwar During British Paramountcy A Study in Problems and Policies Up to 1923 Sharda Publishing House p 194 ISBN 978 0 7855 1985 0 The Charans constituted a body of faithful companions of the Rajputs They composed poems in praise of the heroic deeds of the Rajputs and thus inspired them with courage and fortitude They also guarded the mansions of their patrons gave protection to their women and children during emergency and also acted as tutors for the young ones In return land gifts and honours were conferred upon them The Charans who could not devote themselves to intellectual pursuits took to trade They also protected merchants and travellers passing through desolate regions and forests Gupta Saurabh 1 October 2015 Politics of Water Conservation Delivering Development in Rural Rajasthan India Springer p 42 ISBN 978 3 319 21392 7 Sharma ibid argues that the ex Zamindars or landlords who own big landholdings even today are influential but those who do not retain it are not only less influential but have also slid down the scale of status hierarchy The families most affected by this belong to the Rajputs Jats Charans and Brahmins all traditionally powerful caste groups Matheson Sylvia A 1984 Rajasthan Land of Kings Vendome Press ISBN 978 0 86565 046 6 Hastings James M 2002 Poets Sants and Warriors The Dadu Panth Religious Change and Identity Formation in Jaipur State Circa 1562 1860 Ce University of Wisconsin Madison p 23 In Rajasthan the Charans are a highly esteemed caste seen as occupying a social position slightly lower than that of Brahmins but above that of Rajputs with whom they maintain a symbiotic relationship Like Rajputs with whom they often shared company Charans would eat meat drink liquor and engage in martial activities Although in a way poetic composition and recitation was for them a pastime subordinate to the primary income producing occupations of military service agriculture and horse and cattle trading Jain Pratibha Sarma Saṅgita 2004 Honour Status amp Polity Rawat Publications ISBN 978 81 7033 859 8 The Charans have also received applause and appreciation for their contribution as historians of medieval Rajasthan Vinay Srivastava 2004 Methodology and Fieldwork Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 566727 1 They were the Rajputs geneologists historians and teachers sometimes they were leading state servants sometimes guides and protectors of trade Killing a Charan like killing a brahmin was a mortal sin It was the duty of powerful Rajput patrons to support and honour a b Maheshwari Hiralal 1980 History of Rajasthani Literature Sahitya Akademi a b c Ziegler Norman P 1976 The Seventeenth Century Chronicles of Marvaṛa A Study in the Evolution and Use of Oral Traditions in Western India History in Africa 3 127 153 doi 10 2307 3171564 ISSN 0361 5413 JSTOR 3171564 S2CID 156943079 a b Rao Velcheru Narayana Narayaṇaravu Velceru Shulman David Dean Subrahmanyam Sanjay 2003 Textures of Time Writing History in South India 1600 1800 Other Press ISBN 978 1 59051 044 5 Paul Kim 1 January 1993 Negotiating sacred space The Mandirand the Oran as contested sites South Asia Journal of South Asian Studies 16 sup001 49 60 doi 10 1080 00856409308723191 ISSN 0085 6401 In the past some Charans were agriculturalists engaged in farming lands which were divided equally between male descendants of the lineage Others were cowherds and caravan escorts a b Kapadia Aparna 2022 Imagining Region in Late Colonial India Jhaverchand Meghani and the Construction of Saurashtra 1921 47 The Journal of Asian Studies 81 3 541 560 doi 10 1017 S0021911822000080 ISSN 0021 9118 S2CID 248169878 Movement was also integral to the work of the Charans who emerged as the preservers of Rajput culture and served various administrative and diplomatic functions Historically violence was fundamental to Charans preservation of their sacred and ethical authority From about the thirteenth century Charans had served various bureaucratic functions for their patrons including as security for private or government transactions Development of social religious and economic structure in medieval Rajasthan A study with reference to conditions during 1201 1707 a d International Journal of Development Research IJDR www journalijdr com Retrieved 1 July 2022 Vinay Srivastava 2004 Methodology and Fieldwork Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 566727 1 Maharaṇa Pratapa ke pramukha sahayogi in Hindi Rajasthani Granthagara 1997 a b c Rudolph Susanne Hoeber Rudolph Lloyd I 1984 Essays on Rajputana Reflections on History Culture and Administration Concept Publishing Company At the outer edge of qualification norms is standing in one of the respectable usually twice born and traditionally literate castes or communities of Rajputana such as Rajputs Oswals Maheshwaris Kayasths Charans Brahmans and Muslims the bureaucratic lineages in and out of power whether from within mutsaddi Rajput Muslim Charan etc Prominent Charan Dewans or senior court servants included Kaviraj court poet Shyamaldas at Udaipur and Kaviraj Murardan at Jodhpur Bhasin Veena 2005 Medical Anthropology Tribals of Rajasthan Kamala Raj Enterprises ISBN 978 81 85264 35 6 The states were divided into various categories of Jagirs During medieval period Rajputs Charans and Baniyas dominated the princely states The Rajputs had a dominant status either as central ruler or Jagirdar and Thikanedar though lower to the Brahmins in ritual hierarchy Next to them in status were Baniyas followed by clean artisans peasants and service castes Baniya though in minority had skills to run the administration The status of Brahmin was subordinate in administration instead Charans were close to the Rajputs Vidal 1997 portray a picture of society and kingship in Sirohi area of Rajasthan where bards appeared as the real ideologues Bhati N S 1979 Studies in Marwar History Rajasthani Shodh Sansthan The Charans acted as bards to the royal family but due to their intimate relations with the rulers they enjoyed their confidence and many times they acted as mediators in political affairs and enjoyed hereditry Jagir Sasan rights a b Marcus George E 1983 Elites Ethnographic Issues University of New Mexico Press ISBN 978 0 8263 0658 6 Sekhavata Raghunathasiṃha 1998 Shekhawati Pradesh ka rajnitik itihas in Hindi Ṭha Mallusiṃha Smr ti Granthagara द व नज क ब स त जम लज न मक रत न च रण क स कर ठ क न क ओर स 1500 ब घ भ म च दप र ग व क स म म द त जम लज क त न प त र र मन थ बद र द न व स य बक सज बत य ज त ह र मन थ क शनगढ र ज य क द व न बन स य बक स ज झ ल व ड व बद र द न म ध स ह स कर क द व न थ बद र द न क म ध स ह न ब दल स न छव क प स क छ हज र ब घ भ म प रद न क इनक प त र क म रद नज स कर ठ क न म द व न थ च दप र आज द व नज क ब स क न म स ज न ज त ह बद र द न क व शज द व नज क ब स व ब दल स द न जगह रहत ह Kapadia Aparna 16 May 2018 Gujarat The Long Fifteenth Century and the Making of a Region Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 15331 8 Charans accompanied these warriors in battles sang of their glory in war and as late as the nineteenth century served as guarantors and diplomats for their lieges on account of their sacred association with various forms of the mother goddess Basu Helene 2005 Practices of Praise and Social Constructions of Identity The Bards of North West India Archives de sciences sociales des religions 50 130 81 105 doi 10 4000 assr 2795 ISSN 0335 5985 JSTOR 30116669 S2CID 145362328 No contract between kings after a war or between patrons and clients agreeing the terms whereby services be rendered nor any other contract was considered valid without a Charan guaranteeing on his own and or the life of his family that the terms agreed upon would be fulfilled They provided the same service for merchants and traders on their long treks through the desert up north when they accompanied caravans for their protection against plundering bandits a b c Weinberger Thomas Catherine 1999 Ashes of Immortality Widow Burning in India University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 88568 1 Schaflechner Jurgen 2018 Hinglaj Devi Identity Change and Solidification at a Hindu Temple in Pakistan Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 085052 4 Charans were also warrantors for contracts guaranteeing adherence to certain agreements between two parties with their lives Rao Aparna Casimir Michael J 2008 Nomadism in South Asia Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 569890 9 One of their functions was the witnessing and guaranteeing of important transactions Their power of enforcement lay in the threat to kill themselves if necessary to bring supernatural forces to bear against the violator Singh Sabita 27 May 2019 The Politics of Marriage in India Gender and Alliance in Rajasthan Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 909828 6 The Charans were also used by the rulers for political negotiations as is evident from the fact that in the case of enmity between Rathore Rao Rinmal of Sojat son of Rao Chuda and Bhattis the Bhattis sent Charan Sandhayach to plead with Rinmal not to trouble them He succeeded in his task which led to the establishment of matrimonial alliance between the two sides Also the importance of the Charans in the social structure of Rajasthan can be assessed from the fact that the Ranis queens who had young children but had resolved to commit sati would hand over their children to the care of the Charans indicating the kind of trust that they enjoyed There are examples of handing over children to the Brahmins also but these examples are far less than those of the Charans Chatterji Anjali Chatterjee Anjali 2000 Sectional President s Address ASPECTS OF MEDIEVAL INDIAN SOCIETY GLEANINGS FROM CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 61 196 241 ISSN 2249 1937 JSTOR 44148098 Due to their intimate relation with rulers charans enjoyed their confidence and often they acted as mediators in political affairs and also enjoy hereditary Jagirs i e Sasan rights Saran Richard Ziegler Norman P 2001 The Mertiyo Rathors of Merto Rajasthan Select Translations Bearing on the History of a Rajput Family 1462 1660 Volumes 1 2 University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 03821 3 Caran Jhuto appears in this passage as a go between Carans in Rajasthan because of their sacred status often assumed this role in negotiations between hostile or warring groups Allen Charles Dwivedi Sharada 1984 Lives of the Indian Princes BPI Publishing ISBN 978 81 86982 05 1 They also acted as intermediaries in negotiating marriages in guaranteeing the settlement of debts and disputes and as emissaries in times of war The Desert Frontier A History of Travel and Nomadism Sahapedia Retrieved 14 July 2022 The Charans acted as arbitrators and guarantors in dealings and agreements between Rajputs once again resorting to taga if one party did not keep his end of the bargain Such glorification of death worked in a society dominated by a Rajput community that set great store by dying in the battlefield for Rajput men and by self immolation for their women Snodgrass Jeffrey G 2004 The Centre Cannot Hold Tales of Hierarchy and Poetic Composition from Modern Rajasthan The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 10 2 261 285 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9655 2004 00189 x ISSN 1359 0987 JSTOR 3804151 Well into the colonial period however Charans continued to perform one of their other long standing functions which was to serve as witnesses or guarantors to commercial transactions and financial contracts Some also carried on as providers of a related service which was to act as guarantors of the security of caravans conveying goods in transit Not least among these was the fact that the British might have seen royal bards as arbitrators of disputes witnesses to contracts and agreements protectors of hostages educators of kings and their offspring composers of history and indeed establishers of truth as competitors of a kind and thus sought to eliminate them Vidal 1997 Gujarat in 1857 When Hindus and Muslims fought together Tribunehindi com 25 November 2017 Retrieved 14 July 2022 Vashishtha Professor V K 2016 Transformation in the Position of Charan Community in Rajputana States during Colonial Period PDF Rajasthan History Congress 31 155 166 via RAJHISCO Matheson Sylvia A 1984 Rajasthan Land of Kings Vendome Press ISBN 978 0 86565 046 6 a b Living goddesses past and present in North west India German Scholars on India Global InCH International Journal of Intangible Cultural Heritage Retrieved 14 January 2022 a b c Chandra Yashaswini 22 January 2021 The Tale of the Horse A History of India on Horseback Pan Macmillan ISBN 978 93 89109 92 4 Choudhry P S 1968 Rajasthan Between the Two World Wars 1919 1939 Sri Ram Mehra The Kachela Charans were traders They were shrewd merchants and lighter dues were levied on them than on others a b c d e Kothiyal Tanuja 14 March 2016 Nomadic Narratives A History of Mobility and Identity in the Great Indian Desert Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 316 67389 8 The genealogists for Charans were Brahmins from Ujjain who periodically inscribed their genealogies in their accounts a b c Hooja Rima 2006 A History of Rajasthan Rupa amp Company ISBN 978 81 291 0890 6 Bagchi Amiya Kumar 2002 Capital and Labour Redefined India and the Third World Anthem Press ISBN 978 1 84331 068 6 Upadhyaya Rashmi 2010 The Position of Charans in Medieval Rajasthan PDF Rajasthan History Congress 26 31 38 via rajhisco Niyogi Chandreyee 5 April 2006 Reorienting Orientalism SAGE Publishing India p 78 ISBN 978 93 5280 548 8 Rajasthan District Gazetteers Pali INDIAN CULTURE Retrieved 14 January 2022 Sato Professor Masanori 1997 Economy and Polity of Rajasthan Study of Kota and Marwar 17th 19th Centuries Publication Scheme ISBN 978 81 86782 14 9 The Rajput States and the East India Company INDIAN CULTURE Retrieved 14 January 2022 Paul Kim 1 January 1993 Negotiating sacred space The Mandirand the Oran as contested sites South Asia Journal of South Asian Studies 16 sup001 49 60 doi 10 1080 00856409308723191 ISSN 0085 6401 Hunter William Wilson 19 November 2020 The Imperial Gazetteer Of India Volume Xxi Pushkar To Salween Alpha Editions ISBN 978 93 5421 782 1 Sahai Nandita Prasad 2006 Politics of Patronage and Protest The State Society and Artisans in Early Modern Rajasthan Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 567896 3 Jansen Jan Maier Hendrik M J 2004 Epic Adventures Heroic Narrative in the Oral Performance Traditions of Four Continents Lit ISBN 978 3 8258 6758 4 Deva B Chaitanya 1992 INTRODUCTION TO INDIAN MUSIC Publications Division Ministry of Information and Broadcasting Government of India ISBN 978 81 230 2103 4 Social Scientist Indian School of Social Sciences 2005 Dutson Judith 7 May 2012 Storey s Illustrated Guide to 96 Horse Breeds of North America Storey Publishing ISBN 978 1 60342 918 4 a b Kamphorst Janet 2008 In praise of death history and poetry in medieval Marwar South Asia Leiden Leiden University Press ISBN 978 90 485 0603 3 OCLC 614596834 Saxena Rajendra Kumar 2002 Karkhanas of the Mughal Zamindars A Study in the Economic Development of 18th Century Rajputana Publication Scheme ISBN 978 81 86782 75 0 Romila Thapar 14 October 2013 The Past Before Us Harvard University Press pp 81 ISBN 978 0 674 72651 2 Sumit Guha 1 November 2019 History and Collective Memory in South Asia 1200 2000 University of Washington Press pp 56 ISBN 978 0 295 74623 4 Cynthia Talbot 2016 The Last Hindu Emperor Prithviraj Cauhan and the Indian Past 1200 2000 Cambridge University Press pp 163 ISBN 978 1 107 11856 0 Rosa Maria Perez 2004 Kings and Untouchables A Study of the Caste System in Western India Orient Blackswan pp 75 ISBN 9788180280146 Harald Tambs Lyche 9 August 2017 Transaction and Hierarchy Elements for a Theory of Caste Routledge p 130 ISBN 978 1 351 39396 6 Charans are affiliated by their past history as buffalo herders to the pastoralist estate Some Charans indeed still herd buffaloes Their vegetarian non violent and economically puritan ethos conflicts with the Charan tradition marked by the aristocratic values Some Charan bards received lands in jagir for their services and in parts of Marwar certain Charan families were effectively Darbars Shah A M Shroff R G 1958 The Vahivanca Barots of Gujarat A Caste of Genealogists and Mythographers Journal of American Folk Lore 71 281 246 276 doi 10 2307 538561 JSTOR 538561 Caraṇ Hindu caste Britannica com Thomson G R 1991 Charans of Gujarat Caste Identity Music and Cultural Change Ethnomusicology 35 3 381 391 doi 10 2307 851968 JSTOR 851968 Banerjee Anil Chandra 1983 Aspects of Rajput State and Society pp 124 125 OCLC 12236372 Sharma G N 1968 Social Life in Medieval Rajasthan Agra Lakshmi Narayan Agarwal Educational Publisher p 111 Westphal Hellbusch Sigrid Westphal Heinz Hinduistische Viehzuchter im nord westlichen Indien in German Duncker amp Humblot ISBN 978 3 428 43745 0 Gahlot Sukhvir Singh Dhar Banshi 1989 Castes and Tribes of Rajasthan Jain Brothers ISBN 978 81 85287 00 3 Choudhry P S 1968 Rajasthan Between the Two World Wars 1919 1939 Sri Ram Mehra Charans are mentioned even in the Ramayana and the Mahabharata Though some of them are found even in Gujrat and Kathiawar yet it is Rajputana with which they are mainly associated and thus require a special mention Like the Rajputs they claim a divine origin and were always treated with the greatest respect by Rajputs Rajasthan District Gazetteers Nagaur INDIAN CULTURE Retrieved 28 June 2022 Gaur Meena 1989 Sati and Social Reforms in India Publication Scheme ISBN 978 81 85263 57 1 Motilal Shashi Nanda Bijayalaxmi 2010 Understanding Social Inequality Concerns of Human Rights Gender and Environment Macmillan Publishers India ISBN 978 0 230 32849 5 In Rajasthan where the normal age of marriage of girls ranged between seven to sixteen years most post pubertal marriages were among the Charans and Brahmins whose daughters did not work outside the home and could be segregated and secluded Harlan L 2003 Goddesses Henchmen Gender in Hero Worship USA Oxford University Press p 258 Matanamadh Desh Devi Ashapura Matanamadh Jagir Kachchh India 2006 Archived from the original on 26 June 2007 Retrieved 23 December 2006 Qanungo Kalika Ranjan Kanunago Kalika Ranjana 1960 Studies in Rajput History S Chand there are seven categories of persons and communities who in their turn have a hereditary claim on the Charan s bounty and are not allowed to beg of any other community Besides their kula guru family of Brahmans living in Ujjain till today and the purohit family priest these are the Rao Bhat of Chandisa sept of Marwar who are the Bhats of the Charans as of the Rathors of Marwar the Rawal Brahmans the Goind pota and the Viram pota Bhats singing with dhol and the Motisar community Vidyarthi Lalita Prasad Sahay B N 1980 Applied Anthropology and Development in India National The Rawals provide entertainment particularly for the people of Charan caste by arranging night long shows Prabhakara Manohara 1976 A Critical Study of Rajasthani Literature with Exclusive Reference to the Contribution of Caraṇas Panchsheel Prakashan Motisar is a caste which keeps the genealogies of Carans sings their praises and begs money of them The Motisars themselves are often good composers Neuman Daniel M Chaudhuri Shubha Kothari Komal 2005 Bards Ballads and Boundaries An Ethnographic Atlas of Music Traditions in West Rajasthan Seagull ISBN 978 1 905422 07 4 Singh Khushwant 1982 We Indians Delhi Orient Paperbacks OCLC 10710940 Shah P R 1982 Raj Marwar During British Paramountcy A Study in Problems and Policies Up to 1923 Sharda Publishing House ISBN 978 0 7855 1985 0 Among Rajputs and Charans the bride and the bridegroom took opium together in the presence of their kinsmen Mathur U B 2002 Treasure trove of Rajasthan Folklorists ISBN 978 81 85129 01 3 Bulletin on Narcotics United Nations Department of Social Affairs 1994 a b Meghani Z 1943 Charano and Charani Sahitya Ahmedabad a b Sharma G N 1968 Social Life in Medieval Rajasthan Agra Lakshmi Narayan Agarwal Educational Publisher pp 94 96 a b Smith J D 1974 An introduction to language of the historical documents from Rajasthan Modern Asian Studies 9 4 433 464 doi 10 1017 S0026749X00012841 S2CID 145590691 BibliographyKamphorst Janet 2008 In Praise of Death History and Poetry in Medieval Marwar Leiden University Press ISBN 978 90 8728 044 4 Kothiyal Tanuja 2016 Nomadic Narratives A History of Mobility and Identity in the Great Indian Desert illustrated reprint ed Delhi India Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1107080317 LCCN 2015014741 OCLC 1003137945 Wikimedia Commons has media related to Charan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charan amp 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