Gaddis
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The Gaddis are a rajput tribe living mainly in the Indian states of Himachal Pradesh and Jammu and Kashmir.
Frequently associated with the ancient Bharmour kingdom at Chamba, although they played no major role in its governance, the origins of the Gaddi people are lost in time. There are at least four theories for their arrival in that place, often relying on the intertwining of oral history and myth, and in one case on the dubious ethnohistories of the British Raj era. They are primarily the worshippers of Lord Shiva. A locally made beverage is used for devotion to the Lord. Omacanda Hāṇḍā discusses the dubiety of these and concludes that "Nevertheless, it may be said with due certainty that the present-day Gaddis are the descendants of one of those casteless nomadic shepherds of the Indian plains who once lived around the Barmer area of Rajasthan" and infers this from the similarities of various costumes and accessories.[1]
According to the 2011 Census of India, the Gaddi population was 1,78,130 in Himachal Pradesh and 46,489 in Jammu Kashmir. The Gaddis of Himachal Pradesh had an adult sex ratio of 1014 and literacy rate of 73.3, whereas those of Jammu and Kashmir had a sex ratio of 953 and literacy of 53.5. They are classified as a Scheduled Tribe in both areas under India's reservation system.[2]
Gallery
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Gaddi people. Dharamsala, HP.jpg
Gaddi people Naddi Village, Dharamsala
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Gaddi woman in traditional dress with children and dog.jpg
Gaddi woman in traditional dress with children and dog
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Gaddi woman cutting grass. Painting by Alfred Hallett c. 1980]]
References
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Further reading
- Verma, V. 1996. Gaddis of Dhauladhar: A Transhumant Tribe of the Himalayas. Indus Publishing Company, New Delhi.
External links
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- Scheduled Tribes of Jammu and Kashmir
- Scheduled Tribes of Himachal Pradesh
- Transhumant ethnic groups