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Vedda

The Vedda (Sinhala: වැද්දා [ˈvædːaː]; Tamil: வேடர் (Vēḍar)), or Wanniyalaeto,[4] are a minority indigenous group of people in Sri Lanka who, among other sub-communities such as Coast Veddas, Anuradhapura Veddas and Bintenne Veddas,[5] are accorded indigenous status. The Vedda minority in Sri Lanka may become completely assimilated.[6] Most speak Sinhala instead of their indigenous languages, which are nearing extinction. It has been hypothesized that the Vedda were probably the earliest inhabitants of Sri Lanka and have lived on the island since before the arrival of other ethnic groups in India.[7][8]

Vedda
Vedda man and child.
Total population
Between 2,500 - 6,600[1][2]
(less than 0.20% of the population) (2001)[3]
Regions with significant populations
Sri Lanka        2,500 (2002)
Languages
Vedda, Sinhala, Sri Lankan Tamil
Religion
Hinduism
Related ethnic groups
Sinhalese, Tamils

The Ratnapura District, which is part of the Sabaragamuwa Province, is known to have been inhabited by the Veddas in the distant past. This has been shown by scholars like Nandadeva Wijesekera. The very name Sabaragamuwa is believed to have meant the village of the Sabaras or "forest barbarians". Place-names such as Vedda-gala (Vedda Rock), Vedda-ela (Vedda Canal) and Vedi-Kanda (Vedda Mountain) in the Ratnapura District also bear testimony to this. As Wijesekera observes, a strong Vedda element is discernible in the population of Vedda-gala and its environs.

Etymology edit

Ethnonyms of Vedda include Vadda, Veddah, Veddha and Vaddo.[5] "Vedda" is either a Dravidian word that stems from the Tamil word Vēdan meaning "hunter",[5][9][10][11] or from Sanskrit vyādha ("hunter") or veddhṛ ("the one who pierces").[12]

Population affinities edit

Anthropology edit

The Vedda are often seen as the native population of Sri Lanka. A 2011 study on dental characteristics suggested a close relation between Vedda and other South Asians as well as to western Eurasian populations.[13] A 2012 study on crania showed the Vedda to have close affinities with other South Asian populations such as other Sri Lankans, South Indians, and Punjabis and to differ significantly from Andaman islanders.[14]

A 2013 craniometric study by Raghavan et al. showed that the Vedda are closely related to other groups in Sri Lanka and India, especially to Sinhalese and Tamils, and also indicated deep relations between South Asian populations and the modern populations of Europe, the Middle East and North Africa. According to Raghavan et al. the cranial characteristics of the Vedda are closest to other South Asians and distinct from "Australo-Melanesians". However, Raghavan et al. also, while also noting the distinctiveness of between South Asian (including Vedda) and Andamanese crania, explain that this is not in conflict with genetic evidence showing a partial common ancestry (a non-West Eurasian component known as "Ancestral South Indian" or "ASI") and genetic affinity between South Asians and the native Andamanese (who are sometimes classified as Australo-Melanesians), stating that "The distinctiveness of Andamanese and southern Indian crania need not challenge the finding by Reich et al. for an "Ancestral South Indian" ancestry shared by southern Indians and Andamanese", and that the differences may be in part due to the greater craniometric specialization of South Asians compared to Andamanese.[15]

Genetics edit

Groups ancestral to the modern Veddas were probably the earliest inhabitants of Sri Lanka. Their arrival is dated tentatively to about 40,000–35,000 years ago. They show a relationship with other South Asian and Sri Lankan populations, but are genetically distinguishable from the other peoples of Sri Lanka, and show a high degree of intra-group diversity. This is consistent with a long history of existing as small subgroups undergoing significant genetic drift.[16][17]

In one study on maternal (mitochondrial DNA) haplogroups in Sri Lankan populations (the Vedda, Sri Lankan Tamils, Indian Tamils of Sri Lanka, and Sinhalese), the Vedda were found to carry predominantly haplogroups U and R and to carry maternal haplogroup M at about 17%, unlike the Indian Tamils of Sri Lanka and many mainland Indian tribal groups, among which haplogroup M is predominant. The Vedda people and Low-country Sinhalese showed frequencies of haplogroup R at 45.33 and 25%, respectively. The Vedda were found to be distinct but closer to Sinhalese than to other South Asian groups. It was determined in the study to be likely that the branches of haplogroups R and U "found to be particularly prevalent in the Vedda, were derived from ancestors on the Indian subcontinent."[17]

Another study on maternal haplogroups in Sri Lankan groups (also the Vedda, Sri Lankan Tamil, and Sinhalese) found similar results, with the Vedda belonging predominantly to the mitochondrial haplogroup N (which "exists in almost all European, Oceanian, and many Asian and Amerindian populations.") and its subgroups U and R (with those comprising about two thirds of their maternal lineages), differing from other South Asian groups (such as the Sri Lankan Tamil, Sinhalese, and several Indian Tribal groups) among whom haplogroup M is predominant. The study also found that "South Asian (Indian) haplogroups were predominant" in the three Sri Lankan groups (including the Vedda) but that the Sinhalese, Sri Lankan Tamil, and Vedda populations also "had a considerable presence of West Eurasian haplogroups." One phylogenetic study on mitochondrial DNA hypervariable segments HVI and part of HVII showed the Vedda to be "genetically distinct from other major ethnic groups (Sinhalese, Sri Lankan Tamils and Indian Tamils) in Sri Lanka." Another study on alpha-2-HS-glycoprotein allele frequency showed the Veddas and Sinhalese to be more biologically related to each other than to most other ethnic groups in Asia.[18]

Language edit

 
Most prominent Vedda chief late Tisahamy Aththo
 
Tisahamy Aththo with some Vedda women
 
Malaya Rata was the historical center of the Vedda language, a Sinhala-based creole.

The original language of the Veddas is the Vedda language, which today is used primarily by the interior Veddas of Dambana. Communities such as Coast Veddas and Anuradhapura Veddas, who do not identify themselves strictly as Veddas, also use Vedda language for communication during hunting and or for religious chants.[citation needed] When a systematic field study was conducted in 1959, it was determined that the language was confined to the older generation of Veddas from Dambana. In the 1990s, self-identifying Veddas knew few words and phrases in the Vedda language, but there were individuals who knew the language comprehensively. Initially, there was considerable debate among linguists as to whether Vedda is a dialect of Sinhala or an independent language. Later studies indicate that it diverged from its parent stock in the 10th century and became a Creole and a stable independent language by the 13th century, under the influence of Sinhala.

The parent Vedda language(s) is of unknown genetic origins, while Sinhala is of the Indo-Aryan branch of Indo-European languages. Phonologically it is distinguished from Sinhala by the higher frequency of palatal sounds C and J. The effect is also heightened by the addition of inanimate suffixes. Vedda language word class is morphologically divided into nouns, verbs and variables with unique gender distinctions in animate nouns. Per its Creole tradition, it has reduced and simplified many forms of Sinhala such as second person pronouns and denotations of negative meanings. Instead of borrowing new words from Sinhala, Vedda created combinations of words from a limited lexical stock. Vedda also maintains many archaic Sinhala terms prior to the 10th to 12th centuries, as a relict of its close contact with Sinhala. Vedda also retains a number of unique words that cannot be derived from Sinhala. Likewise, Sinhala has also borrowed from the original Vedda language, words, and grammatical structures, differentiating it from its related Indo-Aryan languages. Vedda has exerted a substratum influence in the formation of Sinhala.

Veddas that have adopted Sinhala are found primarily in the southeastern part of the country, especially in the vicinity of Bintenne in Uva Province. There are also Veddas that have adopted Sinhala who live in Anuradhapura District in the North Central Province.[19][20]

Another group, often termed East Coast Veddas, is found in coastal areas of the Eastern Province, between Batticaloa and Trincomalee. These Veddas have adopted Tamil as their mother tongue.[21][22]

Cultural aspects edit

Language edit

The parent of Vedda language is of unknown linguistic origin and is considered a language isolate. Early linguists and observers of the language considered it to be either a separate language or a dialect of Sinhala. The chief proponent of the dialect theory was Wilhelm Geiger, but he also contradicted himself by claiming that Vedda was a relexified aboriginal language.[23]

Veddas consider the Vedda language to be distinct from Sinhala and use it as an ethnic marker to differentiate them from Sinhalese people.[24]

Religion edit

The original religion of Veddas is animism. The Sinhalized interior Veddahs follow a mix of animism and nominal Buddhism; whereas the Tamilized east coast Veddahs follow a mix of animism and nominal Hinduism with folk influences among anthropologists.[clarification needed]

One of the most distinctive features of Vedda religion is the worship of dead ancestors, who are called nae yaku among the Sinhala-speaking Veddas and are invoked for the game and yams.[25] There are also peculiar deities unique to Veddas, such as Kande Yakka.[26]

Veddas, along with the Island's Buddhist, Hindu and Muslim communities, venerate the temple complex situated at Kataragama, showing the syncretism that has evolved over 2,000 years of coexistence and assimilation. Kataragama is supposed to be the site where the Hindu god Skanda or Murugan in Tamil met and married a local tribal girl, Valli, who in Sri Lanka is believed to have been a Vedda.[27]

There are a number of less famous shrines across the island which are sacred to the Veddas as well as to other communities.[27]

Rituals edit

 
A Veddah ritual about to be performed

Vedda marriage is a simple ceremony. It consists of the bride tying a bark rope (Diya lanuva) that she has twisted, around the waist of the groom. This symbolizes the bride's acceptance of the man as her mate and life partner. Although endogamous marriage between cross-cousins was the norm until recently, this has changed significantly, with Vedda women even contracting marriages with their Sinhalese and Moor neighbors.

In Vedda society, women are in many respects men's equals. They are entitled to similar inheritance. Monogamy is the general rule, though a widow would frequently marry her husband's brother as a means of support and consolation (levirate marriage). They also do not practice a caste system.[28]

Death, too, is a simple affair without ostentatious funeral ceremonies where the corpse of the deceased is promptly buried.

Burial edit

Since the opening of colonization schemes, Vedda burials changed when they dug graves of 1.2–1.5 m (4–5 feet) deep and wrapped the body wrapped cloth and covered it with leaves and earth. The Veddas also laid the body between the scooped out trunks of the gadumba tree (Trema orientalis) before they buried it. At the head of the grave were kept three open coconuts and a small bundle of wood, while at its foot were kept an opened coconut and an untouched coconut. Certain cactus species (pathok, Opuntia dillenii or O. stricta) were planted at the head, the middle and the foot. Personal possessions like the bow and arrow, betel pouch, were also buried. This practice varied by community. The contents of the betel pouch of the deceased were eaten after his death.

Cult of the dead edit

The Veddas practice what is referred to by Western ethnologists as "a cult of the dead".(Seligman and Seligman,1911) The Vedda perception of the world when originally studied in the mid 19th and early 20th centuries was not divided into polarities as life and afterlife or living and dead. At that time when asked whether the dead lived on as spirits they found that "they did not consider whether the departed were living or dead, they were just spirits...all spirits were alike neither good nor bad". (Seligmann and Seligmann,1911)

In the words of John Bailey studying this population in 1853 "the Veddahs have a vague belief in a host of undefined spirits, whose influence is rather for good than evil...they believe the air is peopled by spirits, that every rock and every tree, every forest and every hill, in short every feature of nature, has its genus loci;but these seem little else than nameless phantoms whom they regard with mysterious awe than actual dread". (Bailey, 1863).

In addition to this experience of the world often referred to as "animism" they have a belief that after death every relative is a spirit "of those who watches over the welfare of those left behind. These, which include their ancestors and their children, the term their 'nehya yakoon', kindred spirits. They describe them as ever watchful, coming to them in sickness, visiting them in dreams, giving them flesh when hunting". (Bailey, 1863)

The Vedda behavior at the time of these original ethnological studies regarding the recently dead is quite different from our behavior toward the dead. "When a person dies it is the hetha that killed him; and the hetha of the dead one remains by the corpse and haunts the vicinity for years." (Spittel, 1945)

The majority of the Vedda tribes studied at that time held what is referred to as a "kirikohraha ceremony". This was often held "to present an offering to the newly dead within a week or two of their decease...The yaku of the recently dead....are supposed to stand towards the surviving members of the group in the light of friends and relatives, who if well treated will continue to show loving kindness to their survivors, and only if neglected will show disgust and anger by withdrawing their assistance, or becoming actively hostile." (Seligmann and Seligmann,1911)

Sources of verified research:

Bailey,John, An Account of the Wild Tribes of the Veddahs of Ceylon: their Habits,Customs and Superstitions. (Transactions of the Ethno-logical Society of London, Vol 2 London 1863) found inHuman Relations Files, Microfiche ed.AX5/771

Seligmann, C.G. & Brenda Z. Seligmann The Veddas ( Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1911) found in Human Relations Area Files, Microfiche ed., AX5/769 (New Haven, Ct. : Human Relations Area Files

Spittel,Richard Lionel, Wild Ceylon: Describing in Particular the Ljves of the Present Day Veddas. Third Edition. (Colombo: Printed by the Ceylon Daily News for General Publishers Ltd., 1945 in Human Relations Area Files, Microfiche ed. AX/771 (New Haven, CT.: Human Relations Area Files)

Clothing edit

 
Group portrait of Veddah men in the forests, between 1870 and 1904.

Until fairly recent times, the clothing of the Veddas was limited. In the case of men, it consisted only of a loincloth suspended with a string at the waist, while in the case of women, it was a piece of cloth that extended from the navel to the knees. Today, however, Vedda attire is more covering, men wear a short sarong extending from the waist to the knees, while the women clad themselves in a garment similar to the Sinhala diya-redda which extends from the breast line to the knees.

Music edit

Bori Bori Sellam-Sellam Bedo Wannita,

Palletalawa Navinna-Pita Gosin Vetenne,

Malpivili genagene-Hele Kado Navinne,

Diyapivili Genagene-Thige Bo Haliskote Peni,

Ka tho ipal denne

— A Vedda honeycomb cutter's folk song[29]

Meaning of this song: The bees from yonder hills of Palle Talawa and Kade suck nectar from the flowers and made the honeycomb. So why should you give them undue pain when there is no honey by cutting the honeycomb.

Livelihood edit

 
A Veddah hunter with bow and arrow

Veddas were originally hunter-gatherers. They used bows and arrows to hunt game, harpoons and toxic plants for fishing and gathered wild plants, yams, honey, fruit and nuts.[30] Many Veddas also farm, frequently using slash and burn or swidden cultivation, which is called Hena in Sri Lanka. East Coast Veddas also practice sea fishing. Veddas are famously known for their rich meat diet. Venison and the flesh of rabbit, turtle, tortoise, monitor lizard, wild boar and the common brown monkey are consumed with much relish. The Veddas kill only for food and do not harm young or pregnant animals. Game is commonly shared amongst the family and clan. Fish are caught by employing fish poisons such as the juice of the pus-vel (Entada scandens) and daluk-kiri (Cactus milk).

 
Traditional Vedda bow and fishing harpoon

Vedda culinary fare is also deserving of mention. Amongst the best known are gona perume, which is a sort of sausage containing alternate layers of meat and fat, and goya-tel-perume, which is the tail of the monitor lizard (talagoya), stuffed with fat obtained from its sides and roasted in embers. Another Vedda delicacy is dried meat preserve soaked in honey. The Veddas used to preserve such meat in the hollow of a tree, enclosing it with clay.

 
Some of the bows used by the Veddahs

Such succulent meat served as a ready food supply in times of scarcity. The early part of the year (January–February) is considered to be the season of yams and mid-year (June–July) that of fruit and honey, while hunting is availed of throughout the year. Kurakkan (Eleusine coracana) is cultivated very often. Maize, yams, gourds and melons are also cultivated. The Veddas used to live in caves and rock shelters. Today, they live in huts of wattle, daub and thatch.

In the reign of Datusena (6th century CE) the Mahaweli ganga was diverted at Minipe in the Minipe canal nearly 80 km (47 miles) long said to be constructed with help from the Yakkas. The Mahawamsa refers to the canal as Yaka-bendi-ela. When the Ruwanweli Seya was built in King Dutugemunu's time (2nd century BCE) the Veddas procured the necessary minerals from the jungles.

Parakrama Bahu the Great (12th century), in his war against the rebels, employed Veddas as scouts.

Rajasinghe II (17th century), in his battle with the Dutch, had a Vedda regiment. In the abortive Uva-Welessa revolt of 1817–1818 of the British times, led by Keppetipola Disawe, the Veddas too fought with the rebels against the British forces.

Current status edit

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1881 2,200—    
1891 1,200−45.5%
1901 4,000+233.3%
1911 5,300+32.5%
1921 4,500−15.1%
1931 5,200+15.6%
1946 2,400−53.8%
1953 800−66.7%
1963 400−50.0%
1971 —    
1981 —    
1989 (est.) —    
2001 —    
2011 —    
Source:Department of Census
& Statistics[31]
Data is based on
Sri Lankan Government Census.

Some observers have said Veddas are disappearing and have lamented the decline of their distinct culture.[20][32][33][34] Land acquisition for mass irrigation projects, government forest reserve restrictions, and the civil war have disrupted traditional Vedda ways of life.[20][32][35][36] Between 1977 and 1983 under the Accelerated Mahaweli Development Project and colonization schemes, approximately 51468 hectares were turned into a gigantic hydroelectric dam irrigation project.[32][37] Subsequently, the creation of the Maduru Oya National Park deprived the Veddhas their last hunting grounds.[37] In 1985, the Veddha Chief Thissahamy and his delegation were obstructed from attending the United Nations Working Group on Indigenous Populations.[37] Dr. Wiveca Stegeborn, an anthropologist, has been studying the Vedda since 1977 and alleges that their young women are being tricked into accepting contracts to the Middle East as domestic workers when in fact they will be trafficked into prostitution or sold as sex slaves.[38]

However, cultural assimilation of Veddas with other local populations has been going on for a long time. "Vedda" has been used in Sri Lanka to mean not only hunter-gatherers but also to refer to any people who adopt an unsettled and rural way of life and thus can be a derogatory term not based on ethnic group. Thus, over time, it is possible for non-Vedda groups to become Veddas, in this broad cultural sense.[39][40] Vedda populations of this kind are increasing in some districts.[41]

In zoology edit

A spider genus endemic to Sri Lanka was named Wanniyala as a dedication to Sri Lanka's oldest civilized people.[42]

A species of Sri Lankan snake, Indotyphlops veddae, was named in honor of the Vedda.[43]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Vedda | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 26 May 2023.
  2. ^ "Veddah".
  3. ^ Jayasuriya, S. de Silva (2000). The Portuguese Cultural Imprint on Sri Lanka. Lusotopie 2000. p. 255.
  4. ^ "Evidence for persistent forest reliance by Indigenous peoples in historical Sri Lanka". www.shh.mpg.de. Retrieved 8 February 2020.
  5. ^ a b c "Vedda facts, information, pictures | Encyclopedia.com articles about Vedda". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 18 September 2017.
  6. ^ "Vedda tribe becoming extinct, Chandler's Ford Today". 6 September 2014.
  7. ^ "Race in Sri Lanka: What genetic evidence tells us | the Sundaytimes Sri Lanka".
  8. ^ Ranaweera, Lanka; Kaewsutthi, Supannee; Win Tun, Aung; Boonyarit, Hathaichanoke; Poolsuwan, Samerchai; Lertrit, Patcharee (2014). "Mitochondrial DNA history of Sri Lankan ethnic people: Their relations within the island and with the Indian subcontinental populations". Journal of Human Genetics. 59 (1): 28–36. doi:10.1038/jhg.2013.112. PMID 24196378. S2CID 41185629.
  9. ^ Boyle, Richard (2004). Knox's Words: A Study of the Words of Sri Lankan Origin Or Association First Used in English Literature by Robert Knox and Recorded in the Oxford English Dictionary. Boralesgamuwa, Sri Lanka: Visidunu Prakashakayo. ISBN 955-9170-67-8.
  10. ^ "வேடன் | அகராதி | Tamil Dictionary". agarathi.com. University of Madras Lexicon. Retrieved 18 September 2017.
  11. ^ Burrow, T; Emenau, M. B. (1984). "Search for headword: vēṭṭam, vēṭṭai". A Dravidian Etymological Dictionary (2 ed.).
  12. ^ Geiger, Wilhelm (1941). An Etymological Glossary of the Sinhalese Language. Colombo.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  13. ^ Schug, Gwen Robbins; Walimbe, Subhash R. (16 May 2016). A Companion to South Asia in the Past. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-119-05548-8.
  14. ^ Kulatilake, Samanti. "Cranial Morphology of the Vedda people - the indigenes of Sri Lanka". Academia.
  15. ^ Rathee, Suresh Kanta; Pathmanathan, Gayathiri; Bulbeck, David; Raghavan, Pathmanathan (2013). "Indian Craniometric Variability and Affinities". International Journal of Evolutionary Biology. 2013: 836738. doi:10.1155/2013/836738. PMC 3886603. PMID 24455409.
  16. ^ Deraniyagala SU (September 1996). "Pre-and protohistoric settlement in Sri Lanka". XIII UISPP Congress Proceedings. 5: 277–285.
  17. ^ a b Ranaweera L, Kaewsutthi S, Win Tun A, Boonyarit H, Poolsuwan S, Lertrit P (January 2014). "Mitochondrial DNA history of Sri Lankan ethnic people: their relations within the island and with the Indian subcontinental populations". Journal of Human Genetics. 59 (1): 28–36. doi:10.1038/jhg.2013.112. PMID 24196378. S2CID 41185629.
  18. ^ Ranasinghe, Ruwandi (2015). "A study of genetic polymorphisms in mitochondrial DNA hypervariable regions I and II of the five major ethnic groups and Vedda population in Sri Lanka". Legal Medicine. 17 (6): 539–46. doi:10.1016/j.legalmed.2015.05.007. PMID 26065620.
  19. ^ Brow 1978.
  20. ^ a b c Wickramasinghe, Nira. "Sri Lanka's conflict: culture and lineages of the past". Sri Lanka Guardian. Retrieved 20 February 2016.
  21. ^ "Sri Lanka's east coastal Vedda indigenous communities". vedda.org. Retrieved 26 May 2023.
  22. ^ "East Coast Veddas". vedda.org. Retrieved 26 May 2023.
  23. ^ Van Driem 2002, p. 227
  24. ^ Dharmadasa 1974, p. 81
  25. ^ Seligmann & Seligmann 1911, pp. 123–135.
  26. ^ Seligmann & Seligmann 1911, pp. 30–31.
  27. ^ a b "Ruhuṇu Kataragama Dēvālaya | Katirkāmam Murugan Kōvil | dedicated to Kataragama deviyo". kataragama.org. Retrieved 26 May 2023.
  28. ^ Vadda of Sri Lanka
  29. ^ "The Veddas of Sri Lanka".
  30. ^ International, Survival. "Wanniyala-Aetto". www.survivalinternational.org. Retrieved 26 May 2023.
  31. ^ (PDF). Department of Census & Statistics, Sri Lanka. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 November 2011. Retrieved 23 October 2012.
  32. ^ a b c Address of Warige Wanniya to the UN, vedda.org Retrieved 4-12-2015
  33. ^ Spittel, R. L. (1950). Vanished Trails: The Last of the Veddas. Oxford University Press.
  34. ^ "Stuck Between Two Worlds". Retrieved 26 May 2023 – via vimeo.com.
  35. ^ "Season of the Spirit Bear - Part 5". Retrieved 26 May 2023 – via www.youtube.com.
  36. ^ "Sri Lanka Debrief News - 21. 07. 2010". Retrieved 26 May 2023 – via www.youtube.com.
  37. ^ a b c Sri Lanka's Indigenous Wanniya-laeto: A Case History, vedda.org Retrieved 4-12-2015
  38. ^ . Archived from the original on 20 February 2012. Retrieved 17 November 2006.
  39. ^ Brow 1978, p. 34.
  40. ^ . Archived from the original on 17 February 2013. Retrieved 11 June 2006.
  41. ^ Brow 1978, p. 3.
  42. ^ Huber, Bernhard A. [in French]; Benjamin, Suresh P. (2005). "The pholcid spiders from Sri Lanka: redescription of Pholcus ceylonicus and description of a new genus (Araneae: Pholcidae)" (PDF). Journal of Natural History. 39 (37): 3305–3319. doi:10.1080/00222930500145123. S2CID 53418516. Retrieved 6 May 2016.
  43. ^ Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. ISBN 978-1-4214-0135-5. ("Vedda/Veddha", p. 273).

Bibliography edit

  • Brow, James (1978). Vedda Villages of Anuradhapura. University of Washington Press.
  • Dharmadasa, K. N. O. (February 1974). "The Creolization of an Aboriginal language:The case of Vedda in Sri Lanka (Ceylon)". Anthropological Linguistics. 16 (2). Indiana University: 79–106. JSTOR 30029514.
  • Van Driem, George (15 January 2002). Languages of the Himalayas: An Ethnolinguistic Handbook of the Greater Himalayan Region. Brill Academic Publishers. ISBN 90-04-10390-2.
  • Seligmann, Charles; Seligmann, Brenda (1911). The Veddas. Cambridge University Press.

Further reading edit

  • Lee, Richard B.; Daly, Richard, eds. (March 2005). The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Hunters and Gatherers. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-60919-4.

External links edit

A great deal of information on them can be found at Vedda.org

  • Survival International profile on the Wanniyala-Aetto
  • Sri Lankan history
  • Veddas - now only a household name
  • Veddas of Sri Lanka
  • Last of the Devil Dancers

vedda, language, language, articles, with, similar, titles, veda, disambiguation, confused, with, vedic, people, venda, people, this, article, need, reorganization, comply, with, wikipedia, layout, guidelines, please, help, editing, article, make, improvements. For the language see Vedda language For articles with similar titles see Veda disambiguation Not to be confused with Vedic people or Venda people This article may be in need of reorganization to comply with Wikipedia s layout guidelines Please help by editing the article to make improvements to the overall structure March 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Vedda Sinhala ව ද ද ˈvaedːaː Tamil வ டர Veḍar or Wanniyalaeto 4 are a minority indigenous group of people in Sri Lanka who among other sub communities such as Coast Veddas Anuradhapura Veddas and Bintenne Veddas 5 are accorded indigenous status The Vedda minority in Sri Lanka may become completely assimilated 6 Most speak Sinhala instead of their indigenous languages which are nearing extinction It has been hypothesized that the Vedda were probably the earliest inhabitants of Sri Lanka and have lived on the island since before the arrival of other ethnic groups in India 7 8 VeddaVedda man and child Total populationBetween 2 500 6 600 1 2 less than 0 20 of the population 2001 3 Regions with significant populationsSri Lanka 2 500 2002 LanguagesVedda Sinhala Sri Lankan TamilReligionHinduismRelated ethnic groupsSinhalese TamilsThe Ratnapura District which is part of the Sabaragamuwa Province is known to have been inhabited by the Veddas in the distant past This has been shown by scholars like Nandadeva Wijesekera The very name Sabaragamuwa is believed to have meant the village of the Sabaras or forest barbarians Place names such as Vedda gala Vedda Rock Vedda ela Vedda Canal and Vedi Kanda Vedda Mountain in the Ratnapura District also bear testimony to this As Wijesekera observes a strong Vedda element is discernible in the population of Vedda gala and its environs Contents 1 Etymology 2 Population affinities 2 1 Anthropology 2 2 Genetics 3 Language 4 Cultural aspects 4 1 Language 4 2 Religion 4 3 Rituals 4 4 Burial 4 5 Cult of the dead 4 6 Clothing 4 7 Music 5 Livelihood 6 Current status 7 In zoology 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 Further reading 12 External linksEtymology editEthnonyms of Vedda include Vadda Veddah Veddha and Vaddo 5 Vedda is either a Dravidian word that stems from the Tamil word Vedan meaning hunter 5 9 10 11 or from Sanskrit vyadha hunter or veddhṛ the one who pierces 12 Population affinities editAnthropology edit The Vedda are often seen as the native population of Sri Lanka A 2011 study on dental characteristics suggested a close relation between Vedda and other South Asians as well as to western Eurasian populations 13 A 2012 study on crania showed the Vedda to have close affinities with other South Asian populations such as other Sri Lankans South Indians and Punjabis and to differ significantly from Andaman islanders 14 A 2013 craniometric study by Raghavan et al showed that the Vedda are closely related to other groups in Sri Lanka and India especially to Sinhalese and Tamils and also indicated deep relations between South Asian populations and the modern populations of Europe the Middle East and North Africa According to Raghavan et al the cranial characteristics of the Vedda are closest to other South Asians and distinct from Australo Melanesians However Raghavan et al also while also noting the distinctiveness of between South Asian including Vedda and Andamanese crania explain that this is not in conflict with genetic evidence showing a partial common ancestry a non West Eurasian component known as Ancestral South Indian or ASI and genetic affinity between South Asians and the native Andamanese who are sometimes classified as Australo Melanesians stating that The distinctiveness of Andamanese and southern Indian crania need not challenge the finding by Reich et al for an Ancestral South Indian ancestry shared by southern Indians and Andamanese and that the differences may be in part due to the greater craniometric specialization of South Asians compared to Andamanese 15 Genetics edit Groups ancestral to the modern Veddas were probably the earliest inhabitants of Sri Lanka Their arrival is dated tentatively to about 40 000 35 000 years ago They show a relationship with other South Asian and Sri Lankan populations but are genetically distinguishable from the other peoples of Sri Lanka and show a high degree of intra group diversity This is consistent with a long history of existing as small subgroups undergoing significant genetic drift 16 17 In one study on maternal mitochondrial DNA haplogroups in Sri Lankan populations the Vedda Sri Lankan Tamils Indian Tamils of Sri Lanka and Sinhalese the Vedda were found to carry predominantly haplogroups U and R and to carry maternal haplogroup M at about 17 unlike the Indian Tamils of Sri Lanka and many mainland Indian tribal groups among which haplogroup M is predominant The Vedda people and Low country Sinhalese showed frequencies of haplogroup R at 45 33 and 25 respectively The Vedda were found to be distinct but closer to Sinhalese than to other South Asian groups It was determined in the study to be likely that the branches of haplogroups R and U found to be particularly prevalent in the Vedda were derived from ancestors on the Indian subcontinent 17 Another study on maternal haplogroups in Sri Lankan groups also the Vedda Sri Lankan Tamil and Sinhalese found similar results with the Vedda belonging predominantly to the mitochondrial haplogroup N which exists in almost all European Oceanian and many Asian and Amerindian populations and its subgroups U and R with those comprising about two thirds of their maternal lineages differing from other South Asian groups such as the Sri Lankan Tamil Sinhalese and several Indian Tribal groups among whom haplogroup M is predominant The study also found that South Asian Indian haplogroups were predominant in the three Sri Lankan groups including the Vedda but that the Sinhalese Sri Lankan Tamil and Vedda populations also had a considerable presence of West Eurasian haplogroups One phylogenetic study on mitochondrial DNA hypervariable segments HVI and part of HVII showed the Vedda to be genetically distinct from other major ethnic groups Sinhalese Sri Lankan Tamils and Indian Tamils in Sri Lanka Another study on alpha 2 HS glycoprotein allele frequency showed the Veddas and Sinhalese to be more biologically related to each other than to most other ethnic groups in Asia 18 Language editMain article Vedda language nbsp Most prominent Vedda chief late Tisahamy Aththo nbsp Tisahamy Aththo with some Vedda women nbsp Malaya Rata was the historical center of the Vedda language a Sinhala based creole The original language of the Veddas is the Vedda language which today is used primarily by the interior Veddas of Dambana Communities such as Coast Veddas and Anuradhapura Veddas who do not identify themselves strictly as Veddas also use Vedda language for communication during hunting and or for religious chants citation needed When a systematic field study was conducted in 1959 it was determined that the language was confined to the older generation of Veddas from Dambana In the 1990s self identifying Veddas knew few words and phrases in the Vedda language but there were individuals who knew the language comprehensively Initially there was considerable debate among linguists as to whether Vedda is a dialect of Sinhala or an independent language Later studies indicate that it diverged from its parent stock in the 10th century and became a Creole and a stable independent language by the 13th century under the influence of Sinhala The parent Vedda language s is of unknown genetic origins while Sinhala is of the Indo Aryan branch of Indo European languages Phonologically it is distinguished from Sinhala by the higher frequency of palatal sounds C and J The effect is also heightened by the addition of inanimate suffixes Vedda language word class is morphologically divided into nouns verbs and variables with unique gender distinctions in animate nouns Per its Creole tradition it has reduced and simplified many forms of Sinhala such as second person pronouns and denotations of negative meanings Instead of borrowing new words from Sinhala Vedda created combinations of words from a limited lexical stock Vedda also maintains many archaic Sinhala terms prior to the 10th to 12th centuries as a relict of its close contact with Sinhala Vedda also retains a number of unique words that cannot be derived from Sinhala Likewise Sinhala has also borrowed from the original Vedda language words and grammatical structures differentiating it from its related Indo Aryan languages Vedda has exerted a substratum influence in the formation of Sinhala Veddas that have adopted Sinhala are found primarily in the southeastern part of the country especially in the vicinity of Bintenne in Uva Province There are also Veddas that have adopted Sinhala who live in Anuradhapura District in the North Central Province 19 20 Another group often termed East Coast Veddas is found in coastal areas of the Eastern Province between Batticaloa and Trincomalee These Veddas have adopted Tamil as their mother tongue 21 22 Cultural aspects editLanguage edit Main article Vedda language The parent of Vedda language is of unknown linguistic origin and is considered a language isolate Early linguists and observers of the language considered it to be either a separate language or a dialect of Sinhala The chief proponent of the dialect theory was Wilhelm Geiger but he also contradicted himself by claiming that Vedda was a relexified aboriginal language 23 Veddas consider the Vedda language to be distinct from Sinhala and use it as an ethnic marker to differentiate them from Sinhalese people 24 Religion edit The original religion of Veddas is animism The Sinhalized interior Veddahs follow a mix of animism and nominal Buddhism whereas the Tamilized east coast Veddahs follow a mix of animism and nominal Hinduism with folk influences among anthropologists clarification needed One of the most distinctive features of Vedda religion is the worship of dead ancestors who are called nae yaku among the Sinhala speaking Veddas and are invoked for the game and yams 25 There are also peculiar deities unique to Veddas such as Kande Yakka 26 Veddas along with the Island s Buddhist Hindu and Muslim communities venerate the temple complex situated at Kataragama showing the syncretism that has evolved over 2 000 years of coexistence and assimilation Kataragama is supposed to be the site where the Hindu god Skanda or Murugan in Tamil met and married a local tribal girl Valli who in Sri Lanka is believed to have been a Vedda 27 There are a number of less famous shrines across the island which are sacred to the Veddas as well as to other communities 27 Rituals edit nbsp A Veddah ritual about to be performedVedda marriage is a simple ceremony It consists of the bride tying a bark rope Diya lanuva that she has twisted around the waist of the groom This symbolizes the bride s acceptance of the man as her mate and life partner Although endogamous marriage between cross cousins was the norm until recently this has changed significantly with Vedda women even contracting marriages with their Sinhalese and Moor neighbors In Vedda society women are in many respects men s equals They are entitled to similar inheritance Monogamy is the general rule though a widow would frequently marry her husband s brother as a means of support and consolation levirate marriage They also do not practice a caste system 28 Death too is a simple affair without ostentatious funeral ceremonies where the corpse of the deceased is promptly buried Burial edit Since the opening of colonization schemes Vedda burials changed when they dug graves of 1 2 1 5 m 4 5 feet deep and wrapped the body wrapped cloth and covered it with leaves and earth The Veddas also laid the body between the scooped out trunks of the gadumba tree Trema orientalis before they buried it At the head of the grave were kept three open coconuts and a small bundle of wood while at its foot were kept an opened coconut and an untouched coconut Certain cactus species pathok Opuntia dillenii or O stricta were planted at the head the middle and the foot Personal possessions like the bow and arrow betel pouch were also buried This practice varied by community The contents of the betel pouch of the deceased were eaten after his death Cult of the dead edit The Veddas practice what is referred to by Western ethnologists as a cult of the dead Seligman and Seligman 1911 The Vedda perception of the world when originally studied in the mid 19th and early 20th centuries was not divided into polarities as life and afterlife or living and dead At that time when asked whether the dead lived on as spirits they found that they did not consider whether the departed were living or dead they were just spirits all spirits were alike neither good nor bad Seligmann and Seligmann 1911 In the words of John Bailey studying this population in 1853 the Veddahs have a vague belief in a host of undefined spirits whose influence is rather for good than evil they believe the air is peopled by spirits that every rock and every tree every forest and every hill in short every feature of nature has its genus loci but these seem little else than nameless phantoms whom they regard with mysterious awe than actual dread Bailey 1863 In addition to this experience of the world often referred to as animism they have a belief that after death every relative is a spirit of those who watches over the welfare of those left behind These which include their ancestors and their children the term their nehya yakoon kindred spirits They describe them as ever watchful coming to them in sickness visiting them in dreams giving them flesh when hunting Bailey 1863 The Vedda behavior at the time of these original ethnological studies regarding the recently dead is quite different from our behavior toward the dead When a person dies it is the hetha that killed him and the hetha of the dead one remains by the corpse and haunts the vicinity for years Spittel 1945 The majority of the Vedda tribes studied at that time held what is referred to as a kirikohraha ceremony This was often held to present an offering to the newly dead within a week or two of their decease The yaku of the recently dead are supposed to stand towards the surviving members of the group in the light of friends and relatives who if well treated will continue to show loving kindness to their survivors and only if neglected will show disgust and anger by withdrawing their assistance or becoming actively hostile Seligmann and Seligmann 1911 Sources of verified research Bailey John An Account of the Wild Tribes of the Veddahs of Ceylon their Habits Customs and Superstitions Transactions of the Ethno logical Society of London Vol 2 London 1863 found inHuman Relations Files Microfiche ed AX5 771Seligmann C G amp Brenda Z Seligmann The Veddas Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1911 found in Human Relations Area Files Microfiche ed AX5 769 New Haven Ct Human Relations Area FilesSpittel Richard Lionel Wild Ceylon Describing in Particular the Ljves of the Present Day Veddas Third Edition Colombo Printed by the Ceylon Daily News for General Publishers Ltd 1945 in Human Relations Area Files Microfiche ed AX 771 New Haven CT Human Relations Area Files Clothing edit nbsp Group portrait of Veddah men in the forests between 1870 and 1904 Until fairly recent times the clothing of the Veddas was limited In the case of men it consisted only of a loincloth suspended with a string at the waist while in the case of women it was a piece of cloth that extended from the navel to the knees Today however Vedda attire is more covering men wear a short sarong extending from the waist to the knees while the women clad themselves in a garment similar to the Sinhala diya redda which extends from the breast line to the knees Music edit This section may be in need of reorganization to comply with Wikipedia s layout guidelines Please help by editing the article to make improvements to the overall structure March 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Bori Bori Sellam Sellam Bedo Wannita Palletalawa Navinna Pita Gosin Vetenne Malpivili genagene Hele Kado Navinne Diyapivili Genagene Thige Bo Haliskote Peni Ka tho ipal denne A Vedda honeycomb cutter s folk song 29 Meaning of this song The bees from yonder hills of Palle Talawa and Kade suck nectar from the flowers and made the honeycomb So why should you give them undue pain when there is no honey by cutting the honeycomb Livelihood edit nbsp A Veddah hunter with bow and arrowVeddas were originally hunter gatherers They used bows and arrows to hunt game harpoons and toxic plants for fishing and gathered wild plants yams honey fruit and nuts 30 Many Veddas also farm frequently using slash and burn or swidden cultivation which is called Hena in Sri Lanka East Coast Veddas also practice sea fishing Veddas are famously known for their rich meat diet Venison and the flesh of rabbit turtle tortoise monitor lizard wild boar and the common brown monkey are consumed with much relish The Veddas kill only for food and do not harm young or pregnant animals Game is commonly shared amongst the family and clan Fish are caught by employing fish poisons such as the juice of the pus vel Entada scandens and daluk kiri Cactus milk nbsp Traditional Vedda bow and fishing harpoonVedda culinary fare is also deserving of mention Amongst the best known are gona perume which is a sort of sausage containing alternate layers of meat and fat and goya tel perume which is the tail of the monitor lizard talagoya stuffed with fat obtained from its sides and roasted in embers Another Vedda delicacy is dried meat preserve soaked in honey The Veddas used to preserve such meat in the hollow of a tree enclosing it with clay nbsp Some of the bows used by the VeddahsSuch succulent meat served as a ready food supply in times of scarcity The early part of the year January February is considered to be the season of yams and mid year June July that of fruit and honey while hunting is availed of throughout the year Kurakkan Eleusine coracana is cultivated very often Maize yams gourds and melons are also cultivated The Veddas used to live in caves and rock shelters Today they live in huts of wattle daub and thatch In the reign of Datusena 6th century CE the Mahaweli ganga was diverted at Minipe in the Minipe canal nearly 80 km 47 miles long said to be constructed with help from the Yakkas The Mahawamsa refers to the canal as Yaka bendi ela When the Ruwanweli Seya was built in King Dutugemunu s time 2nd century BCE the Veddas procured the necessary minerals from the jungles Parakrama Bahu the Great 12th century in his war against the rebels employed Veddas as scouts Rajasinghe II 17th century in his battle with the Dutch had a Vedda regiment In the abortive Uva Welessa revolt of 1817 1818 of the British times led by Keppetipola Disawe the Veddas too fought with the rebels against the British forces Current status editHistorical populationYearPop 18812 200 18911 200 45 5 19014 000 233 3 19115 300 32 5 19214 500 15 1 19315 200 15 6 19462 400 53 8 1953800 66 7 1963400 50 0 1971 1981 1989 est 2001 2011 Source Department of Census amp Statistics 31 Data is based on Sri Lankan Government Census Some observers have said Veddas are disappearing and have lamented the decline of their distinct culture 20 32 33 34 Land acquisition for mass irrigation projects government forest reserve restrictions and the civil war have disrupted traditional Vedda ways of life 20 32 35 36 Between 1977 and 1983 under the Accelerated Mahaweli Development Project and colonization schemes approximately 51468 hectares were turned into a gigantic hydroelectric dam irrigation project 32 37 Subsequently the creation of the Maduru Oya National Park deprived the Veddhas their last hunting grounds 37 In 1985 the Veddha Chief Thissahamy and his delegation were obstructed from attending the United Nations Working Group on Indigenous Populations 37 Dr Wiveca Stegeborn an anthropologist has been studying the Vedda since 1977 and alleges that their young women are being tricked into accepting contracts to the Middle East as domestic workers when in fact they will be trafficked into prostitution or sold as sex slaves 38 However cultural assimilation of Veddas with other local populations has been going on for a long time Vedda has been used in Sri Lanka to mean not only hunter gatherers but also to refer to any people who adopt an unsettled and rural way of life and thus can be a derogatory term not based on ethnic group Thus over time it is possible for non Vedda groups to become Veddas in this broad cultural sense 39 40 Vedda populations of this kind are increasing in some districts 41 In zoology editA spider genus endemic to Sri Lanka was named Wanniyala as a dedication to Sri Lanka s oldest civilized people 42 A species of Sri Lankan snake Indotyphlops veddae was named in honor of the Vedda 43 See also editSouth Asian ethnic groups Charles Gabriel Seligman The United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous PeoplesReferences edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Vedda people Vedda Encyclopedia com www encyclopedia com Retrieved 26 May 2023 Veddah Jayasuriya S de Silva 2000 The Portuguese Cultural Imprint on Sri Lanka Lusotopie 2000 p 255 Evidence for persistent forest reliance by Indigenous peoples in historical Sri Lanka www shh mpg de Retrieved 8 February 2020 a b c Vedda facts information pictures Encyclopedia com articles about Vedda www encyclopedia com Retrieved 18 September 2017 Vedda tribe becoming extinct Chandler s Ford Today 6 September 2014 Race in Sri Lanka What genetic evidence tells us the Sundaytimes Sri Lanka Ranaweera Lanka Kaewsutthi Supannee Win Tun Aung Boonyarit Hathaichanoke Poolsuwan Samerchai Lertrit Patcharee 2014 Mitochondrial DNA history of Sri Lankan ethnic people Their relations within the island and with the Indian subcontinental populations Journal of Human Genetics 59 1 28 36 doi 10 1038 jhg 2013 112 PMID 24196378 S2CID 41185629 Boyle Richard 2004 Knox s Words A Study of the Words of Sri Lankan Origin Or Association First Used in English Literature by Robert Knox and Recorded in the Oxford English Dictionary Boralesgamuwa Sri Lanka Visidunu Prakashakayo ISBN 955 9170 67 8 வ டன அகர த Tamil Dictionary agarathi com University of Madras Lexicon Retrieved 18 September 2017 Burrow T Emenau M B 1984 Search for headword veṭṭam veṭṭai A Dravidian Etymological Dictionary 2 ed Geiger Wilhelm 1941 An Etymological Glossary of the Sinhalese Language Colombo a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Schug Gwen Robbins Walimbe Subhash R 16 May 2016 A Companion to South Asia in the Past John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 119 05548 8 Kulatilake Samanti Cranial Morphology of the Vedda people the indigenes of Sri Lanka Academia Rathee Suresh Kanta Pathmanathan Gayathiri Bulbeck David Raghavan Pathmanathan 2013 Indian Craniometric Variability and Affinities International Journal of Evolutionary Biology 2013 836738 doi 10 1155 2013 836738 PMC 3886603 PMID 24455409 Deraniyagala SU September 1996 Pre and protohistoric settlement in Sri Lanka XIII UISPP Congress Proceedings 5 277 285 a b Ranaweera L Kaewsutthi S Win Tun A Boonyarit H Poolsuwan S Lertrit P January 2014 Mitochondrial DNA history of Sri Lankan ethnic people their relations within the island and with the Indian subcontinental populations Journal of Human Genetics 59 1 28 36 doi 10 1038 jhg 2013 112 PMID 24196378 S2CID 41185629 Ranasinghe Ruwandi 2015 A study of genetic polymorphisms in mitochondrial DNA hypervariable regions I and II of the five major ethnic groups and Vedda population in Sri Lanka Legal Medicine 17 6 539 46 doi 10 1016 j legalmed 2015 05 007 PMID 26065620 Brow 1978 a b c Wickramasinghe Nira Sri Lanka s conflict culture and lineages of the past Sri Lanka Guardian Retrieved 20 February 2016 Sri Lanka s east coastal Vedda indigenous communities vedda org Retrieved 26 May 2023 East Coast Veddas vedda org Retrieved 26 May 2023 Van Driem 2002 p 227 Dharmadasa 1974 p 81 Seligmann amp Seligmann 1911 pp 123 135 Seligmann amp Seligmann 1911 pp 30 31 a b Ruhuṇu Kataragama Devalaya Katirkamam Murugan Kōvil dedicated to Kataragama deviyo kataragama org Retrieved 26 May 2023 Vadda of Sri Lanka The Veddas of Sri Lanka International Survival Wanniyala Aetto www survivalinternational org Retrieved 26 May 2023 Population by ethnic group census years PDF Department of Census amp Statistics Sri Lanka Archived from the original PDF on 13 November 2011 Retrieved 23 October 2012 a b c Address of Warige Wanniya to the UN vedda org Retrieved 4 12 2015 Spittel R L 1950 Vanished Trails The Last of the Veddas Oxford University Press Stuck Between Two Worlds Retrieved 26 May 2023 via vimeo com Season of the Spirit Bear Part 5 Retrieved 26 May 2023 via www youtube com Sri Lanka Debrief News 21 07 2010 Retrieved 26 May 2023 via www youtube com a b c Sri Lanka s Indigenous Wanniya laeto A Case History vedda org Retrieved 4 12 2015 Endangered Wanniyala Aetto Women sent as Sex Slaves to the Middle East Archived from the original on 20 February 2012 Retrieved 17 November 2006 Brow 1978 p 34 Obeyesekere Gananath Colonial Histories and Vadda Primitivism Archived from the original on 17 February 2013 Retrieved 11 June 2006 Brow 1978 p 3 Huber Bernhard A in French Benjamin Suresh P 2005 The pholcid spiders from Sri Lanka redescription of Pholcus ceylonicus and description of a new genus Araneae Pholcidae PDF Journal of Natural History 39 37 3305 3319 doi 10 1080 00222930500145123 S2CID 53418516 Retrieved 6 May 2016 Beolens Bo Watkins Michael Grayson Michael 2011 The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press xiii 296 pp ISBN 978 1 4214 0135 5 Vedda Veddha p 273 Bibliography editBrow James 1978 Vedda Villages of Anuradhapura University of Washington Press Dharmadasa K N O February 1974 The Creolization of an Aboriginal language The case of Vedda in Sri Lanka Ceylon Anthropological Linguistics 16 2 Indiana University 79 106 JSTOR 30029514 Van Driem George 15 January 2002 Languages of the Himalayas An Ethnolinguistic Handbook of the Greater Himalayan Region Brill Academic Publishers ISBN 90 04 10390 2 Seligmann Charles Seligmann Brenda 1911 The Veddas Cambridge University Press Further reading editLee Richard B Daly Richard eds March 2005 The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Hunters and Gatherers Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 60919 4 External links editA great deal of information on them can be found at Vedda org Survival International profile on the Wanniyala Aetto Sri Lankan history Veddas now only a household name Veddas of Sri Lanka Last of the Devil Dancers Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vedda amp oldid 1212419674, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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