Aguri (caste) explained

Caste Name:Aguri or Ugra Kshatriya
Populated States:West Bengal
Languages:Bengali
Religions:Hinduism

Aguri (Bengali: আগুরী), also known as Ugra Kshatriya (Bengali: উগ্র ক্ষত্রিয়), is a Bengali Hindu agricultural caste or community found in the districts of Bardhaman, Birbhum, Hooghly, and Bankura in the state of West Bengal in India.[1] Aguris are now considered as a middle-caste group and according to Gail Omvedt, constitute "more prosperous owner-peasants" among the peasant communities of Bengal.[2] [3]

History

After the fall of Gopbhum, Aguris emerged as a dominant caste in Rarh region, especially in the district of Burdwan.[1] William Benjamin Oldham, a British civil servant and ethnographer who wrote Some Historical and Ethnical Aspects of Burdwan District (1891), said that they originated from marriage alliances between the Sadgop rulers of Gopbhum and the Khatri rulers of Burdwan. He based this on the Aguri's own account but McLane believes that Oldham was misled by the Aguri. Citing a 1589 work by Mukundaram Chakrabarti, McLane says that the Aguri were present "almost certainly" before the arrival of the Khatris in Burdwan.[4]

Aguris were cultivators and jotedars, and were divided into two classes – Jana and Sutto. The Janas often demanded that they were Kulins.[5]

Manu, a Hindu religious text, says Ugra (meaning aggressive) was born to a Shudra girl by a Kshatriya father. This mixed origin meant that the community was considered to have an ambivalent position in the Hindu varna system, although by the 1960s they were claiming to be Kshatriya.[6]

Culture

Around the beginning of the 20th century, the Aguri were among the agricultural communities that still predominantly adhered to the custom of paying a bride price at the time of marriage, although some more prosperous members among them were already adopting the increasingly common alternative of paying a dowry. This minority believed that bride price was deprecated by higher castes.[7] [8]

Notable people

Notes and References

  1. Book: Kundu, Santosh Kumar . bn:বাঙালি হিন্দু জাতি পরিচয় . An Introduction of Bengali Hindu Castes . bn . 2008 . Presidency Library . Kolkata . 978-81-89466-13-8 . 65–67.
  2. Book: Omvedt, Gail . Gail Omvedt . Land, caste, and politics in Indian states . Authors Guild Publications . 1982 . lc82901477 . 92. 9780836410488 .
  3. Book: Chatterjee, Partha . The Present History of West Bengal: Essays in Political Criticism . Oxford University Press . 1997 . 978-0-19-563945-2. 78.
  4. Book: McLane, John R. . Land and Local Kingship in Eighteenth-Century Bengal . 25 July 2002 . Cambridge University Press . 978-0-521-52654-8 . 157 .
  5. Book: Bhaumik, Sudarshana . The Changing World of Caste and Hierarchy in Bengal: Depiction from the Mangalkavyas C. 1700-1931 . 2022 . Routledge, Taylor & Francis . 978-1-003-14618-6 . 48–49 . en.
  6. Book: Desai, A. R. . Society In India . Reprinted . Popular Prakashan . 1975 . 978-8-17154-013-6 . 453.
  7. Book: Sen, Samita . Women and Labour in Late Colonial India: The Bengal Jute Industry . Cambridge University Press . 1999 . 978-0-521-45363-9 . 85 .
  8. Book: Bandyopadhyay, Sekhar. Caste, Culture and Hegemony: Social Dominance in Colonial Bengal. 2004-08-19. SAGE Publications. 978-0-7619-9849-5. en.
  9. Book: Liyiyu . Alternatives in Development: Local Politics and NGOs in China and India . Dasgupta . Abhijit . 2021-10-22 . Springer Nature . 978-981-16-4698-0 . 156 . en.