Gurjar

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Template:Infobox caste Gurjar or Gujjar (also translitterated as Gujar , Gurjara[1][2][3] and Gujjer ) is an ethnic nomadic,[4][5][6] agricultural and pastoral community, spread mainly in India, Pakistan, Kashmir and Afghanistan,[7] divided internally into various clan groups.[8] Although traditionally they have been involved in agriculture, pastoral and nomadic activities Gujjars are a large heterogeneous group that is internally differentiated in terms of religion, occupation, and socio-economic status.[1] The historical role of Gurjars has been quite diverse in society, at one end they have been founder of several kingdoms, dynasties, and at the other end, they are also nomads with no land of their own.[1]

The pivotal point in the history of Gurjar identity is often traced back to the emergence of a Gurjara kingdom in present-day Rajasthan during the Middle Ages (around 570 CE).Template:Citation required It is believed that the Gurjars migrated to different parts of the Indian Subcontinent from the Gurjaratra.[9] Previously, it was believed that the Gurjars had migrated earlier on from Central Asia as well, however, this view is generally considered to be speculative.[10] According to B.D. Chattopadhyaya, historical references speak of Gurjara warriors and commoners in North India in the 7th century CE, and mention several Gurjara kingdoms and dynasties.{{#invoke:Footnotes|sfn|template=sfn}}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=|preview=Page using Template:Sfn with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | ignore-err | loc | p | page | pages | postscript | pp | ps | ref | Ref }}However, according to Tanuja Kothiyal, the historical image of Gujar is of 'ignorant' herder though historical claim of Gurjar past also associate them with Gurjara-Pratiharas. She cites a myth that any Rajput claim Gurjars may claim comes through Rajput marrying a Brahmin woman, and not through older Kshatriya clan.[11] She, however, further states that historical process suggests opposite i.e.Rajputs emerged from other communities, such as Gujars, Jats, Raikas etc.[12] The Gurjaras started fading way from the forefront of history after 10th century CE. Thereafter, several Gurjar chieftains and upstart warriors are mentioned in history, who were rather petty rulers in contrast to their predecessors. "Gujar" and "Gujjar" were quite common during the Mughal era, and documents dating from the period mention Gujars as a "turbulent" people. The Indian states of Gujarat and Rajasthan were known as Gurjaradesa and Gurjaratra for centuries prior to the arrival of the British power. The Gujrat and Gujranwala districts of Pakistani Punjab have also been associated with Gujjars from as early as the 8th century CE, when there existed a Gurjara kingdom in the same area.[citation needed] The Saharanpur district of Uttar Pradesh was also known as Gurjargadh previously, due to the presence of many Gujar zamindars, or land holding farmer class, in the area.[13]

Gujjars are linguistically and religiously diverse. Although they are able to speak the language of the region and country where they live, Gujjars have their own language, known as Gujari. They variously follow Hinduism, Islam, and Sikhism.[14]{{#invoke:Footnotes|sfn|template=sfn}}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=|preview=Page using Template:Sfn with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | ignore-err | loc | p | page | pages | postscript | pp | ps | ref | Ref }} The Hindu Gujars are mostly found in Indian states of Rajasthan, Haryana, Madhya Pradesh, Punjab Plains and Maharashtra. Muslim Gujjars are mostly found in Punjab, Pakistan where they make up 20% of the population, mainly concentrated in Northern Punjabi cities of Gujranwala, Gujrat, Gujar Khan, Jehlum and Lahore,[15] Afghanistan and Indian Himalayan regions such as Jammu & Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh and Garhwal and Kumaon divisions of Uttarakhand.

Classification

Gurjars/Gujjars are classified as Other Backward Class (OBC) in 12 of India's States and UTs,[16][17] and have been given special status in Rajasthan along with other four communities under Most Backward class category, after a prolonged agitation;[18] while in Jammu & Kashmir and some parts of Himachal Pradesh, they have Scheduled Tribe status.[19][20]

Etymology

The word Gujjar represents a caste and a tribe and a group in India, Pakistan, and Afghanistan, locally referred to as jati, zaat, qaum or biradari[21][22][23] The history of the word Gurjar can be confidently traced back to an ancient ethnic and tribal identity called GurjaraTemplate:According to whom, which became prominent after the collapse of Gupta Empire. A literal or definitive meaning of the word Gurjara is not available in any of the historical references. The oldest reference to the word Gurjara is found in the book called Harshacharita (Harsha's Deeds), a biography of king Harshavardhana written around 630 CE.[24] Banabhatta, the author of Harshacharita, mentions that Harsha's father Prabhakravardhana (560-580 CE) was "a constant threat to the sleep of Gurjara"apparently a reference to the Gurjara king or kingdom. Inscriptions from a collateral branch of Gurjaras, known as Gurjaras of Lata, claim that their family was ruling Bharakucha (Bharuch) as early as 450 CE from their capital at Nandipuri. Based on these early dates, it has been proposed by some authors that Gurjara identity might have been present in India as early as the 3rd century CE, but it became prominent only after the fall of Guptas.

It has been suggested by several historians that Gurjara was initially the name of a tribe or clan which later evolved into a geographical and ethnic identity following the establishment of a janapada (tribal kingdom) called 'Gurjara'.{{#invoke:Footnotes|sfn|template=sfn}}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=|preview=Page using Template:Sfn with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | ignore-err | loc | p | page | pages | postscript | pp | ps | ref | Ref }} This understanding has introduced an element of ambiguity regarding ancient royal designations containing the word 'gurjara' such as gurjaraeshvara or gurjararaja, as now its debatable whether the kings bearing these epithets were tribal or ethnic Gurjaras.[25][26]

History

Origin

Historians and anthropologists differ on the issue of Gurjar origin. According to this view, circa 1 CE, the ancient ancestors of Gurjars came in multiple waves of migration and they were initially accorded status as high-caste warriors in the Hindu fold in the North-Western regions (modern Rajasthan and Gujarat).[27] Aydogdy Kurbanov states that some Gurjars, along with people from northwestern India, merged with the Hephthalites to become the Rajput clan.[28]

According to scholars such as Baij Nath Puri, the Mount Abu (ancient Arbuda Mountain) region of present-day Rajasthan had been an abode of the Gurjars during the medieval period.[29] The association of the Gurjars with the mountain is noticed in many inscriptions and epigraphs including Tilakamanjari of Dhanpala.[30]3000px These Gurjars migrated from the Arbuda mountain region and as early as in the 6th century A.D., they set up one or more principalities in Rajasthan and Gujarat. The whole or a larger part of Rajasthan and Gujarat had been long known as Gurjaratra (country ruled or protected by the Gurjars) or Gurjarabhumi (land of the Gurjars) for centuries prior to the Mughal period.[31]

In Sanskrit texts, the ethnonym has sometimes been interpreted as "destroyer of the enemy": gur meaning "enemy" and ujjar meaning "destroyer").[32][33]

In its survey of The People of India, the Anthropological Survey of India (AnSI) – a government-sponsored organisation – noted that Template:Blockquote

Irawati Karve, an indologist and historian, believed that the Gurjars position in society and the caste system generally varied from one linguistic area of India to another. In Maharashtra, Karve thought that they were probably absorbed by the Rajputs and Marathas but retained some of their distinct identity. She based her theories on analysis of clan names and tradition, noting that while most Rajputs claim their origins to lie in the mythological Chandravansh or Suryavansh dynasties, at least two of the communities in the region claimed instead to be descended from the Agnivansh.[34][note 1]

Medieval period

Babur, in context of revolt, wrote that Jats and Gurjars poured down from hills in vast numbers in order to carry off oxen and buffaloes and that they were guilty of severest oppression in the country.[35] Many Gurjars were converted to Islam at various times, dating back to Mahmud of Ghazni's raid in Gujarat in 1026. Gurjars of Awadh and Meerut date their conversion to Tamerlane, when he sacked Delhi and forcibly converted them. By 1525, when Babur invaded India, he saw that the Gurjars of northern Punjab were already Muslims. Until the 1700s, conversions continued under Aurangzeb, who converted the Gurjars of Himachal Pradesh by force. Pathans and Balochis drove Gujar converts out of their land, forcing them into vagrancy.[36][37][38]

British rule

In the 18th century, several Gurjar chieftains and small kings were in power. During the reign of Rohilla Nawab Najib-ul-Daula, Rao Dargahi Singh Bhati, the Gurjar chieftain of Dadri possessed 133 villages at a fixed revenue of Rs. 29,000.[39] A fort in Parikshitgarh in Meerut district, also known as Qila Parikishatgarh, is ascribed to a Gurjar king Nain Singh Nagar.[40] Morena, Samthar, Dholpur, Saharanpur and Roorkee were also some of the places ruled by Gurjar Kings.[41][42][43]

During the revolt of 1857, the Gurjars of Chundrowli rose against the British, under the leadership of Damar Ram. The Gurjars of Shunkuri village, numbering around three thousand, joined the rebel sepoys. According to British records, the Gurjars plundered gunpowder and ammunition from the British and their allies.[44] In Delhi, the Metcalfe House was sacked by Gurjar villagers from whom the land was taken to erect the building.[45] The British records claim that the Gurjars carried out several robberies. Twenty Gurjars were reported to have been beheaded by Rao Tula Ram for committing dacoities in July 1857.[46] In September 1857, the British were able to enlist the support of many Gurjars at Meerut.[47] The colonial authors always used the code word "turbulent" for the castes who were generally hostile to British rule. They cited proverbs that appear to evaluate the caste in an unfavorable light. A British administrator, William Crooke, described that Gurjars seriously impeded the operations of British forces before they captured Delhi.[48] Reporter Meena Radhakrishna believe that the colonial authorities classified the Gurjars along with others as "criminal tribes" because of their active participation in the revolt of 1857, and also because, they considered these tribes to be prone to criminality in the absence of legitimate means of livelihood.[49]

Culture

Afghanistan

File:Bakitar Gujar, 1984.jpg
Gujar children in Afghanistan, 1984

Small pockets of Gujars are found in Afghanistan's northeastern region, particularly in and around the Nuristan province.[14]

India

In India Gujars are one of the prominent castes besides Jats, Rajputs.

Today, the Gurjars are classified under the Other Backward Class category in some states in India.[20] However, in Jammu and Kashmir and parts of Himachal Pradesh, they are designated as a Scheduled Tribe under the Indian government's reservation program of positive discrimination. Hindu Gurjars were assimilated into several varnas.[50]

Delhi

Gujjar form an important component of Delhi. They have combined their traditional occupation of pastoralism and marginal cultivation over a large area in and around Delhi.[51] Currently there is One Member of Parliament Ramesh Bidhuri and Six MLAs Including Leader of Opposition in Delhi Legislative assembly[52] Ramvir Singh Bidhuri, Madan Lal, Sahi Ram, Kartar Singh Tanwar, Dhanwanti Chandila and 26 Councillors in MCD. A part of National Highway 24, is named after Gurjar Samrat Mihir Bhoja Marg by then Chief Minister Sahib Singh Verma

Haryana

The Gujjar community in Haryana has set elaborate guidelines for solemnizing marriages and holding other functions.[53] In a mahapanchayat ("the great panchayat"), the Gurjar community decided that those who sought dowry would be excommunicated from the society.[54]

Rajasthan

The Rajasthani Gujars worship Surya, Devnarayan (an avatar of Vishnu), Shiva and Bhavani.[55][56]

In Rajasthan, some members of the Gujjar community resorted to violent protests over the issue of reservation in 2006 and 2007. During the 2003 election to the Rajasthan assembly, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) promised them ST status.[57] However, the party failed to keep its promise after coming to the power, resulting in protests by the Gujjars in September 2006.[58]

In May 2007, during violent protests over the reservation issue, members of the Gujjar community clashed with the police.[59] Subsequently, the Gujjars protested violently, under various groups including the Gujjar Sangarsh Samiti,[60] Gurjar Mahasabha[61] and the Gurjar Action Committee.[62] The protestors blocked roads and set fire to two police stations and some vehicles.[63] Presently, the Gurjars in Rajasthan are classified as Other Backward Classes.[64]

On 5 June 2007, Gurjars rioted over their desire to be added to the central list of tribes who are given preference in India government job selection as well as placement in the schools sponsored by the states of India. This preference is given under a system designed to help India's poor and disadvantaged citizens. However, other tribes on the list oppose this request as it would make it harder to obtain the few positions already set aside.[65]

In December 2007, the Akhil Bhartiya Gurjar Mahasabha ("All-India Gurjar Council") stated that the community would boycott BJP, which is in power in Rajasthan.[66] But now in 2009 all Gurjars were supporting BJP so that they can be politically benefitted. Kirori Singh Bainsla fought and lost at BJP ticket. In early 2000s (decade), the Gurjar community in Dang region of Rajasthan was also in news for the falling sex ratio, unavailability of brides, and the resulting polyandry.[67][68]

Madhya Pradesh

As of 2007, the Gurjars in Madhya Pradesh are classified as Other Backward Classes.[69]

Maharashtra

In Maharashtra, Gurjar's are in very good numbers in Jalgaon District. Dode Gujars and Dore Gujars are listed as Other Backward Classes in Maharashtra.[70]

Gujarat

The State took its name from the Gujara, the land of the Gujjars, who ruled the area during the 700s and 800s.[71]

Gurjars are one of the 6 main carpenter (Suthar) castes of Gujarat, and are believed to be of Central Asian descent.[72] They are listed among the Other Backward Classes of Gujarat.[73]

The Kutch Gurjar Kshatriya (also known as Mistri) and Gurjar Kshatriya Kadia are minority communities of Gujarat which are listed among the Other Backward Classes of Gujarat.[73]

A few scholars believe that the Leva Kunbis (or Kambis) of Gujarat, a section of the Patidars, are possibly of Gurjar origin.[74][75] However, several others state that the Patidars are Kurmis or Kunbis (Kanbis);[76][77] Gurjars are included in the OBC list in Gujarat but Patidars are not.[73]

The Gurjars are a subtype of Kumhar and Prajapati community of Gujarat and are listed among the Other Backward Classes of Gujarat.[73]

Gurjars of North Gujarat, along with those of Western Rajasthan and Punjab, worship Sitala and Bhavani.[56]

Himachal Pradesh

As of 2001, the Gurjars in parts of Himachal Pradesh were classified as a Scheduled Tribe.[78]

Jammu and Kashmir

Gujjars, Bakerwals tribes of Jammu and Kashmir were declared Scheduled Tribe (ST) in 1991.[79] In the Indian Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir, the concentration of Gurjars is observed in all but largely found in Rajouri, Poonch, Reasi, Kishtwar district and, followed by, Anantnag, Udhampur and Doda districts.[80] It is believed that Gurjars migrated to Jammu and Kashmir from Gujarat (via Rajasthan) and Hazara district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.[81]

As of 2011, the Gurjars and the Bakarwals in Jammu and Kashmir were classified as Scheduled Tribes constitute 12% of the total population of Jammu and Kashmir but Gujjars / Bakerwal claim that they constitute more than 20%, as when the Census held in, 2001 and 2011, more than 50% of their population is in upper reaches of Himalaya in connection with by annual tribal migrations and accordingly seek special census of tribal.[78][82] According to 2011 Census of India, Gurjar is the most populous scheduled tribe in J&K, having a population of 1493299 . Around 99.3 percent population of Gurjar and Bakarwal in J&K follow Islam.[80][83]

The Gurjars of Jammu and Kashmir in 2007 demanded to treat this tribal community as a linguistic minority in the State and provide constitutional safeguards to their language Gojri. They also impressed upon the state government to take up the matter with Delhi for inclusion of Gojri in the list of official languages of India.[84][85]

In 2002, some Gurjars and Bakarwals in J&K demanded a separate state (Gujaristan) for Gurjar and Bakarwal communities, under the banner of All India Gurjar Parishad.[86]

Uttarakhand - Van Gurjars

The Van Gurjars ("forest Gurjars") are found in the Shivalik Hills area of Uttarakhand. The Van Gurjars follow Islam, and they have their own clans, similar to the Hindu gotras.[87] They are a pastoral semi-nomadic community, practising transhumance. In the winter season, the Van Gurjars migrate with herds of semi-wild water buffalo to the Shivalik Hills at the foot of the Himalayas, and in summer, they migrate to alpine pastures higher up the Himalayas. The Gurjar's sell milk to local peoples as their primary source of income.[88] They treat their animals with great care and do not eat them nor sell them for meat.[88]

The Van Gurjars have had conflicts with forest authorities, who prohibited human and livestock populations inside reserved parks.[87] However, India's Forest Rights Act of 2006 granted rights to "traditional forest dwellers" to the lands they've relied on for generations.[88] The conflict between local forest officials who claim rights over the newly created parks, and the thousand year nomadic traditions of the Van Gurjars has been ongoing.[89][88]

Pakistan

Gujjars are a major tribe in Pakistan and compromise as much as twenty percent of the country's population.[15] Several cities in Punjab, Pakistan are named after them including Gujranwala (district headquarters), Gujrat (district headquarters), Gujar Khan, (tehsil headquarters), and Gojra (tehsil headquarters) [citation needed]. Due to migrations, large Gujjar population can also be found in Islamabad, Sialkot, Lahore and Faisalabad. The majority of Gujjars in Pakistan speak Punjabi. Punjabi Gujjars typically use the prefix Chaudhry, Malik, Rana, Khan, Nawab, Mehar, Rajput and Nawabzada, as a courtesy title. .

See also

References

Notes

Citations

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Mayaram, Shail (2017). "The Story of the Gujars". In Vijaya Ramaswamy. Migrations in Medieval and Early Colonial India. Taylor & Francis. pp. 67. ISBN 978-1-351-55825-9. https://books.google.com/books?id=DzcrDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA67. "The heterogenous category that is variously called gujar/Gujjar/Gurjara." 
  2. Susan Visvanathan (31 December 2013). Readings in Indian_Sociology. SAGE Publications. ISBN 9788132118435. https://www.google.co.in/books/edition/Readings_in_Indian_Sociology/ZlYlDAAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=Gurjars&pg=PT196&printsec=frontcover. "Jats and Gurjars are internally divided into various clangroups..." 
  3. Dr. R. Parthasarathy, Sudarshan Iyengar (2006). New Development Paradigms and Challenges for Western and Central India Volume 2. pp. 504. ISBN 9788180693137. https://www.google.co.in/books/edition/New_Development_Paradigms_and_Challenges/jhhrRMoVHNYC?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=gurjar+caste&pg=PA505&printsec=frontcover. "Gurjars are .." 
  4. "As seen from the eyes of nomadic tribes". The Indian Express. 18 Feb 2022. https://indianexpress.com/article/india/political-pulse/jammu-kashmir-delimitation-gujjars-bakarwals-7779985/lite/. 
  5. "Welfare measures of nomadic Gujjar and Bakarwal tribes to be taken". The Tribune. 3 Mar 2022. https://m.tribuneindia.com/news/j-k/bjp-sets-its-eyes-on-gujjar-bakarwal-tribes-in-jammu-and-kashmir-374770. 
  6. "Finding identity: Nomadic Gujjar tribes". Independent. 29 Jul 2021. https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/photography/kashmir-s-nomadic-tribes-of-gujjar-and-bakarwal-finding-identity-among-the-unidentified-b1892822.html. 
  7. Rahi, Dr Javaid. The GUJJARS -Vol : 01 A Book on History and Culture of Gujjar Tribe : Ed Javaid Rahi. https://www.academia.edu/41978043. 
  8. Rahi, Dr Javaid. The GUJJARS -Vol : 01 A Book on History and Culture of Gujjar Tribe : Ed Javaid Rahi. https://www.academia.edu/41978043. 
  9. Chattopadhyaya 1994, p. 6 "we have noted that Gurjaratra or Gurjarabhumi was the base from whicu several lineages tracing descent from the Gurjaras emerged"
  10. Mayaram, Shail (2017). "The Story of the Gujars". In Vijaya Ramaswamy. Migrations in Medieval and Early Colonial India. Taylor & Francis. pp. 67. ISBN 978-1-351-55825-9. https://books.google.com/books?id=DzcrDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA67. 
  11. Kothiyal, Tanuja (14 March 2016) (in en). Nomadic Narratives: A History of Mobility and Identity in the Great Indian Desert. Cambridge University Press. pp. 249–250. ISBN 978-1-107-08031-7. https://books.google.com/books?id=be-7CwAAQBAJ&q=tanuja+kothiyal+book. "The cultural image of the Gujar is of an ignorant herder though the historical claims of Gujar past also associate them with Gurjara-Pratiharas, with long migrations through Thar. However, as the Devnarayan epic reveals, any Rajput link that the Gujars may claim, comes from multi-caste marriages that are contracted in the course of the epic rather than any other claim to descent from the older kshatriya clan. The original ancestor of the Gujars is a Rajput, who marries a Brahmin woman." 
  12. Kothiyal, Tanuja (14 March 2016) (in en). Nomadic Narratives: A History of Mobility and Identity in the Great Indian Desert. Cambridge University Press. pp. 265. ISBN 978-1-107-08031-7. https://books.google.com/books?id=be-7CwAAQBAJ&q=tanuja+kothiyal+book. "from gradual transformation of mobile patoral and tribal groups into landed sedentary ones. The process of settlement involved both control over mobile resources through raids, battles and trade as well as channelizing of these resources into agrarian expansion. Kinship structures as well as marital and martial alliances were instrumental in this transformation. ... In the colonial ethnographic accounts rather than referring to Rajputs as having emerged from other communities, Bhils, Mers, Minas, Gujars, Jats, Raikas, all lay a claim to a Rajput past from where they claim to have 'fallen'. Historical processes, however, suggest just the opposite." 
  13. Baij Nath Puri (1975). The History of the Gurjara-Pratihāras. Oriental Publishers & Distributors. pp. 14–17. https://books.google.com/books?id=orAJAQAAIAAJ. 
  14. 14.0 14.1 "Nuristan". Program for Culture & Conflict Studies. Naval Postgraduate School. October 2009. http://www.nps.edu/programs/ccs/Nuristan.html. 
  15. 15.0 15.1 "Who are the Gujjars?". 3 June 2007. https://www.hindustantimes.com/india/who-are-the-gujjars/story-cHGOp2jkDxjWspEpXZuBAM.html. 
  16. "Inclusion of Castes in OBC List". PIB, Govt of India. 23 April 2013. http://pib.nic.in/newsite/PrintRelease.aspx?relid=94979. 
  17. S. P. Agrawal; J. C. Aggarwal (1991). Educational and Social Uplift of Backward Classes: At what Cost and How? : Mandal Commission and After, Part 1. Concept Publishing Company. p. 175. ISBN 9788170223399. https://books.google.com/books?id=COcwoYRCYhcC. 
  18. "Govt. approves 1 percent Quota to Gujjars under MBC". Hindustan Times. 3 July 2018. https://www.hindustantimes.com/jaipur/govt-approves-1-quota-to-gujjars-4-other-communities-under-mbc/story-bMuxfVb3UJLZ7LFTlpCUiK.html. 
  19. Census India. "List of notified Scheduled Tribes". Census India, Govt. of India. http://censusindia.gov.in/Tables_Published/SCST/ST%20Lists.pdf. 
  20. 20.0 20.1 Page, Jeremy (30 May 2008). "India's Gujjar caste fight for a downgrade". The Times. http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/news/world/asia/article2608724.ece. 
  21. "Pastoralists of the Himalayas GUJJARS , BAKARWALS". Excel Org.. https://www.excellup.com/classnine/sstnine/pastoralist.aspx. 
  22. Gloria Goodwin Raheja (15 September 1988). The Poison in the Gift: Ritual, Prestation, and the Dominant Caste in a North Indian Village. University of Chicago Press. pp. 01–03. ISBN 978-0-226-70729-7. https://archive.org/details/poisoningiftritu0000rahe. "This regional dominance and the kingship (rajya) exercised by Gujar chiefs still figure prominently in oral traditions current among Saharanpur Gujars and in the depiction of their identity as Ksatriya "kings" in printed histories of the Gujar Jati." 
  23. Muhammad Asghar (2016). The Sacred and the Secular: Aesthetics in Domestic Spaces of Pakistan/Punjab. LIT Verlag Münster. p. 10. ISBN 978-3-643-90836-0. https://books.google.com/books?id=utd7DQAAQBAJ&pg=PA10. "The main grouping is the biradari, which is a very old established norm of people identifying themselves ... A larger and also ancient form of grouping is the caste (qaum). The three main ones are Jaats (farmers), Arains (who traditionally were gardeners) and Gujjars (people who tend livestock and sell milk)." 
  24. Puri, Baij Nath (1986). The History of the Gurjara-Pratiharas. Delhi: Munshiram Manoharlal. p. 9. 
  25. Sharma, Sanjay (2006). "Negotiating Identity and Status". Studies in History 22 (2): 181–220. doi:10.1177/025764300602200202. ISSN 0257-6430. 
  26. Sharma, Shanta Rani (2012). "Exploding the Myth of the Gūjara Identity of the Imperial Pratihāras". Indian Historical Review 39 (1): 1–10. doi:10.1177/0376983612449525. ISSN 0376-9836. 
  27. Singh 2012, pp. 44–
  28. Kurbanov, Aydogdy (2010). "The Hephthalites: Archaeological and Historical Analysis". p. 243. http://www.diss.fu-berlin.de/diss/servlets/MCRFileNodeServlet/FUDISS_derivate_000000007165/01_Text.pdf. "As a result of the merging of the Hephthalites and the Gujars with population from northwestern India, the Rajputs (from Sanskrit "rajputra" – "son of the rajah") formed." 
  29. Kulbhushan Warikoo; Sujit Som. Gurjars of Jammu and Kashmir. Indira Gandhi Rashtriya Manav Sangrahalaya. "Dr. B. N. Puri who wrote a thesis Gurjar Pratihar at oxford university states that the Gurjars were local people" 
  30. Sudarśana Śarmā (2002). Tilakamañjarī of Dhanapāla: a critical and cultural study. Parimal Publications. p. 214. 
  31. Ramesh Chandra Majumdar; Achut Dattatrya Pusalker; A. K. Majumdar; Dilip Kumar Ghose; Vishvanath Govind Dighe; Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan (1977). The History and Culture of the Indian People: The classical age. Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan. p. 153. 
  32. Warikoo, Kulbhushan; Som, Sujit (2000). Gurjars of Jammu and Kashmir. Indira Gandhi Rashtriya Manav Sangrahalaya. p. 4. https://books.google.com/books?id=zxtuAAAAMAAJ. ""Gurjar" is a sanskrit word which has been explained thus: Gur+Ujjar;'Gur' means 'enemy' and 'ujjar' means 'destroyer'. The word means "Destroyer of the enemy"." 
  33. Parishada, Bhāratīya Gurjara (1993). Gurjara aura Unakā Itihāsa meṃ Yogadāna Vishaya para Prathama …, Volume 2. Bharatiya Gurjar Parisha. p. 27. https://books.google.com/books?id=9kwIAAAAIAAJ. "Sanskrit Dictionary Compiled by Pandit Radha Kant (Shakabada 1181) explains: Gurjar=Gur (enemy)+Ujar(destroyer)" 
  34. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Kumar_Suresh_Singh_2004
  35. Shail Mayaram (2004). Against History, Against State: Counterperspectives from the Margins. Permanent Black. pp. 94. ISBN 978-81-7824-096-1. https://books.google.com/books?id=zL-7m2MDp2EC. 
  36. Sharma, J. C., (1984). "Gujars". In Muslim Peoples: A World Ethnographic Survey. 1. pp. 298–301.  edited by Richard V. Weekes. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press.
  37. Rose, H. A. (1911). "Gujar". in A Glossary of the Tribes and Castes of the Punjab and North-West Frontier Provinces.. 1. pp. 306–318.  Lahore: Superintendent, Government Printing. Reprint. 1970. Patiala: Languages Department, Punjab.
  38. Russell, R. V. and Hira Lal (1916). "Gūjar". in The Tribes and Castes of the Central Provinces of India. 3. Nagpur: Government Printing Press. pp. 166–174.  Reprint 1975. Oosterhaut: Anthropological Publications.
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Bibliography

Further reading

External links

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