Koya (Malabar) Explained

Koya is a Muslim community, predominantly found in the city of Calicut in southern India. Scholars speculate Omani origin to the community and assume that the name is a corruption of the title "Khawaja". The powerful Koyas held administrative positions in the medieval Calicut court (Zamorin).[1]

The Koyas are mostly concentrated in and around the Kuttichira region in Calicut. The Koya family was invited by Raja Keshavadas to Alleppey from Malabar during its formation. They were given permission to construct houses and conduct trade to various parts of Travancore Kingdom. The Koya family in Alleppey still have their Major undivided property and Tharavads like Pyngamadom, Puthen nalakam, Pulikkalakath, Puthenveedu, Vyranveedu. These Tharavads stand as historic monuments near Stone Bridge Alleppey. Koyas are also found on the Laccadive Islands as well as in other parts of the former South Malabar Taluk.

The Koyas followed maternal kinship system ("marumakathayam").[2] [3]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Kunhali. V.. Muslim Communities in Kerala to 1798. PhD. Aligarh Muslim University. Semantic Scholar. 20 June 1986. 15 November 2024. .
  2. Koya, P. M. Shiyaali (Professor of Sociology, retd, Zamorin's Guruvayurappan College). Koyas of Calicut: A Distinctive Matrilineal Social Group. Paper presented at Seminar On Matriliny Among Malabar Muslims—Continuity and Change, sponsored by the Indian Council of Social Science Research, in Calicut, 10–11 February 2007 (unpublished).
  3. Book: Rege , Sharmila . Sociology of Gender: The Challenge of Feminist Sociological Thought. SAGE Publications. 2003. 978-0-76199-704-7.