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Showing posts with the label casteism

Tipu Sultan's victims, or perpetrators of worst human slavery? Nayars of Kerala in 18 and 19 centuries CE

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Research and author: Ameen Ahmed Critics of Tipu Sultan (and Haidar Ali) give examples of four major communities as proof of brutalities and religious bigotry of these father-son rulers- Christians of Coastal Karnataka, Nayars of Malabar (Kerala), Coorgis and Brahmins, particularly the Mandyam Iyengars of Melukote. The later three are often clubbed together as Hindus. And then there is a counter against these arguments by authors who believe Haidar-Tipu were just like other rulers of that day and age- neither heroes nor villains but a product of their times. A closer look at the social structure and caste hierarchy of Kerala in the 18th and 19th centuries and the place of one of the castes- the Nairs during the period, suggests the conflicts may not have been religious. It is well known fact that Haidar Ali rose to power from the position as an ordinary soldier in the army of the Mysore Hindu Wodeyars in early 1750s. But what is not known much is that when he joined service of W...

Sexual violence and misdeeds of the Peshwa Maratha soldiers in Karnataka

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Introduction There is a belief in today's mainstream political discourse in India that the Maratha Empire favoured ' Hindu nationalism '. This essay highlights how  during their repeated invasions of Karnataka (Mysore Kingdom) in 17th and 18th centuries CE, Maratha soldiers committed sexual violence against Hindu Kannadiga women, after  having deliberately destroyed dozens of towns and temples . There was also an instance when the Peshwa Maratha camp purified its entire camp after a member of Maratha Army's Brahmin advisor near had a sexual intercourse with a married Dalit woman near Shivamogga (Shimoga), around  Jan. 3, 1792 when  the town was captured from Tipu Sultan's army.  'Sketch of the advanced guard of the Mahratta army, coming to join Earl Cornwallis, near Seringapatam 26th May 1791' (1).  Source : James Rennell, 1792, Downloaded from the website of Royal Collection Trust on Aug. 25, 2020    Witnessing the Maratha Emp...