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{{pp-semi-indef|small=yes}}
{{Short description|Tax imposed on the lower caste and untouchable Hindu women by the Kingdom of Tranvancore}}
{{Short description|Tax imposed on women by the Kingdom of Tranvancore}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2018}} {{Use dmy dates|date=August 2018}}
{{Use Indian English|date=August 2018}} {{Use Indian English|date=August 2018}}


'''''Mulakkaram''''', literally translated as '''breast tax''', was a ] imposed on women belonging to ], ] and other ] communities by the erstwhile ] (in present-day ] state of ]), and was not applicable to upper caste women of Travancore.{{sfnp|Krishna Iyer|1937}}{{sfn|Nair|1986|p=45}}<ref group=web name="Pillai_2019"/><ref group=web name="Iqbal_2020"/>{{refn|group=note|name=Headtax}} The term "breast tax" was used to denote the gender of the person and not ] per se.<ref group=web name="Gautam_2021"/><ref group=web name="BBC_20160802"/>
The '''breast tax''' (''mulakkaram'' or ''mula-karam'' in ]) was a tax imposed until 1924 on the ] and ] Hindu women by the ] (in present-day ] state of ]) if they wanted to cover their breasts in public.<ref name=":1">{{Cite web|url=https://thewire.in/education/cbse-removed-history-womens-caste-struggle|title=The CBSE Just Removed an Entire History of Women's Caste Struggle|website=The Wire|access-date=2019-11-13}}</ref><ref name=":2">{{Cite news|work=BBC News|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-36891356|title=The woman who cut off her breasts to protest a tax|date=2016-07-28|access-date=2019-11-13|language=en-GB}}</ref><ref name=":3">{{Cite web|url=https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/nation-world/nine-weird-taxes-from-around-the-world/window-tax/slideshow/56516226.cms|title=Nine weird taxes from around the world – Really absurd|website=The Economic Times|access-date=2019-11-13}}</ref> The lower caste and untouchable women were expected to pay the government the breast tax when they started developing breasts.<ref>{{Cite journal |author=K.S. Manilal |date=15 November 2012 |title=Sikhism in Kerala: Forgotten Chapter in the Social History of the State |url= https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&pid=sites&srcid=ZGVmYXVsdGRvbWFpbnxjcmlrc2NzYW1hZ3JhfGd4OjE5OTc0YzhhNWRlN2Y2MDM |journal= Samagra |issn=0973-3906 |volume=8 |pages=3–4 |quote= One such infamous law that was in force in Travancore until as late as the first quarter of the 20th century was known as Mulakkaram, i.e., the law of breast tax. According to this law the avarna women, were to pay tax to the government for their breasts from the very time of their girlhood, when they start developing breasts }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |author=R. N. Yesudas |title=The History of the London Missionary Society in Travancore, 1806–1908 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0oscAAAAMAAJ |year=1980 |publisher=Kerala Historical Society |page=19 |quote=The lower classes were to pay tax for the hair they grew, and for the breasts of ladies called breast-tax. }}</ref> The lower caste men had to pay a similar tax, called ''tala-karam'', on their heads.<ref name="Jacob_1990">{{cite book |author=Jacob Kattackal |title=Comparative Religion |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=O_MnAAAAYAAJ |year=1990 |publisher=Oriental Institute of Religious Studies |page=144 |quote=In South India, until the 19th century, the 'low caste' men had to pay the 'head tax', and the 'low caste' women had to pay a 'breast tax' ('tala-karam' and 'mula-karam') to the government treasury. The still more shameful truth is that these women were not allowed to wear upper garments in public.}}</ref> Travancore tax collectors would visit every house to collect the breast tax from any lower caste women who passed the age of ].<ref name=":4">{{Cite web|url=https://www.ststworld.com/breast-tax/|title=Breast Tax and the Revolt of Lower Cast Women in 19th Century Travancore|date=2019-05-17|language=en-GB|access-date=2019-11-14}}</ref> The tax was evaluated by the tax collectors depending on the size of the woman's breasts.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Pathak-Shelat|first=Manisha|url=https://books.google.co.in/books?id=X6ohEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA38&dq=mulakkaram+breast+size&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwj63vHJr4HyAhWVxGEKHcNQDpc4HhDoATAEegQIBBAD#v=onepage&q=mulakkaram%20breast%20size&f=false|title=Raising a Humanist: Conscious Parenting in an Increasingly Fragmented World|last2=Bhatia|first2=Kiran|date=2021|publisher=SAGE Publishing India|year=2021|isbn=978-93-5388-777-3|language=en}}</ref><ref name=":0">{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qutzDQAAQBAJ|title=Coromandel : A personal history of South India|last=Allen|first=Charles|publisher=Little, Brown|year=2017|isbn=9781408705391|location=London|page=285|oclc=1012741451}}</ref><ref name="Gupta2019">{{cite book|author=Archana Garodia Gupta|title=The Women Who Ruled India: Leaders. Warriors. Icons.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4XuLDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT155|access-date=13 May 2020|date=20 April 2019|publisher=Hachette India|isbn=978-93-5195-153-7|pages=155–}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | url=http://ourheritagejournals.com/images/short_pdf/1580374996_926.pdf | title=Dress as a tool of Empowerment: The Channar Revolt | author=Keerthana Santhosh | journal=Our Heritage Journal | year=2020 | volume=22 | pages=533 | access-date=15 May 2020 | archive-date=3 July 2020 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200703144357/http://ourheritagejournals.com/images/short_pdf/1580374996_926.pdf | url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | url=http://www.homesciencejournal.com/archives/2017/vol3issue3/PartF/3-3-84-673.pdf | title=Rani Gowry Lakshmi Bai: Abolition of slavery in Travancore | author=Renjini P and Dr. C Natarajan | journal=International Journal of Home Science | year=2017 | pages=337}}</ref><ref></ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.sundayguardianlive.com/culture/nangeli-first-documented-pati-sahagamanam | title=Nangeli and the first documented 'Pati Sahagamanam' | publisher=Sunday Guardian | work=Souhardya De | date=31 October 2020 | accessdate=27 July 2021}}</ref>


According to ] beliefs,<ref group=web name="BBC"/><ref group=web name="Palit2016"/><ref group=web name="Gautam_2021"/> the breast tax was imposed on lower class women if they covered their breasts.<ref group=web name="BBC"/>{{sfn|Allen|2017|p=285}}{{sfn|Allen|2018}}{{sfn|Jain|2021}}{{refn|group=note|name=cover_breasts_tax}} This belief has been questioned,<ref group=web name="Pillai_2017"/><ref group=web name="Pillai_2019"/><ref group=web name="Iqbal_2020"/><ref group=web name="Gautam_2021"/> as lower class women "were not allowed to wear upper garments in public"{{sfn|Kattackal|1990|p=144}} at all until 1859.{{refn|group=note|name=upper-cloth}}{{refn|group=note|name=ChannarRevolt}}
The baring of breasts by the lower caste and untouchable Hindu women was a longtime Travancore tradition and a sign of respect to an upper caste person. It was considered part of the Indian caste system, and came to be challenged, when a woman cut off her both breasts instead of paying tax.


==Background== ==Head tax==
The "breast tax" ({{transl|ml|mulakkaram}} or {{transl|ml|mula-karam}} in Malayalam) was a ] imposed on the ], ] and ] communities by the ] (in present-day ] state of ]).{{sfn|Nair|1986|p=45}}<ref group=web name="Pillai_2019"/><ref group=web name="Iqbal_2020"/>{{refn|group=note|name=Headtax}} In ], all persons from lower castes were expected to pay poll tax when they start to work around the age of fourteen.{{sfn|Manilal|2012|p=3-4}}{{refn|group=note|name=Age14}} Poll tax paid by men were called ] ({{Literal translation|head tax}}) or ''meeshakkaram'' ({{Literal translation|moustache tax}}); and the tax paid by women were called ''mulakkaram'' ({{Literal translation|breast tax}}).{{sfn|Nair|1986}}{{pn|date=August 2023}}{{sfn|Kattackal|1990|p=144}}
The ] was known for its rigid and oppressive caste system and hence ] called Travancore a "lunatic asylum".<ref>{{cite web | url=https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/kerala-secularism-hindus-christians-5506515/ | title=God’s own challenge | publisher=The Indian Express | date=24 December 2018 | accessdate=27 July 2021}}</ref><ref name="VanamamalaiVān̲amāmalai1981">{{cite book|author1=N. Vanamamalai|author2=Nā Vān̲amāmalai|title=Interpretation of Tamil Folk Creations |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sDnaAAAAMAAJ|year=1981|publisher=Dravidian Linguistics Association}}</ref><ref name="Radhakrishnan2002">{{cite book|author=P. Radhakrishnan|title=India, the Perfidies of Power: A Social Critique |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RQpuAAAAMAAJ|accessdate=27 July 2021|year=2002|publisher=Vedam ebooks|isbn=978-81-7936-003-3|page=245}}</ref> The breast tax was levied by Travancore on lower caste Hindu women, which was to be paid if they wanted to cover their breasts and was further assessed in proportion to the size of their breasts.<ref name=":1"/><ref name=":2"/><ref name=":0"/> This was seen as a sign of respect towards the upper caste and the lower castes including ] and ] women had to pay the tax.<ref name=":1"/> Dr. Sheeba KM, professor of gender ecology and Dalit studies, says the purpose of the tax was to maintain the ].<ref name=":2"/>


=='Breast-cover tax'==
The law resulted from Travancore's tradition, in which the breast was bared as a sign of respect to a higher-status person.<ref name="Jacob_1990" /> Attingal Rani once had a lower caste woman's breast cut off as a punishment for wearing upper cloth.<ref name="Pre">{{cite journal | url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180422185251id_/http://ijrcs.rcsjournals.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/201708019.pdf | title=CONDITION OF WOMEN IN PRE-MODERN TRAVANCORE | author=Keerthana Santhosh}}</ref> For example, the ] women were not allowed to cover their breasts while in front of the ] Brahmins or entering the temples, while the Brahmins bared their breasts only to the images of the deities. The women of the even lower castes, such as Nadars, Ezhavars and ] castes, were not allowed to cover their breasts at all.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Judge |first1=Paramjit |last2=Bal |first2=Gurpreet |title=Strategies of Social Change in India |date=1996 |publisher=MD Publications |isbn=9788175330061 |page=167 |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/A_Social_History_of_India/Be3PCvzf-BYC?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=Nadars,+Ezhavas+,+were+not+allowed+to+cover+their+breasts&pg=PA375&printsec=frontcover |access-date=11 July 2021}}</ref> With the spread of ] in the 19th century, the Christian converts among the Nadar women started covering their upper body, and gradually even the Hindu Nadar women adopted this practice.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/nadarsoftamilnad0000hard|url-access=registration|title=The Nadars of Tamilnad|author=Robert L. Hardgrave|publisher=University of California Press|year=1969|pages=–62|oclc=12064}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Robert L. Hardgrave, Jr.|year=1968|title=The Breast-Cloth Controversy: Caste Consciousness and Social Change in Southern Travancore|journal=The Indian Economic & Social History Review|volume=5|issue=2|pages=171–187|doi=10.1177/001946466800500205|s2cid=143287605}}</ref> After a series of protests, known as the ], Nadar women were granted the right to cover their breasts in 1859.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Women at the Intersection of Caste and Sex: History of Breast Tax|url=https://in.makers.yahoo.com/women-at-the-intersection-of-caste-and-sex-history-of-breast-tax-030006956.html|access-date=2021-07-10|website=in.makers.yahoo.com|language=en-IN}}</ref>
The "breast tax" caught wider attention in 2016, when ] reporter Divya Arya reported on a series of paintings by artist Murali T on the legend of ].<ref group=web name="BBC"/> The village legend of Nangeli is about a woman who lived in the early 19th century in ] in the state of Travancore, and supposedly cut off her breasts in an effort to protest against the caste-based "breast tax."<ref group=web name="BBC"/>{{sfn|Allen|2017|p=285}}{{sfn|Pillai|2019}} According to the legend, she cut off her breasts and presented them to the tax collector in a ], then died of blood loss.{{sfn|Pillai|2019}}<ref group=web name="TH"/>


According to local beliefs,<ref group=web name="BBC"/><ref group=web name="Palit2016"/><ref group=web name="Gautam_2021"/> the "breast tax" was imposed on lower class women if they covered their breasts in public, to disencourage them from doing so.<ref group=web name="BBC"/>{{sfn|Allen|2017|p=285}}{{sfn|Allen|2018}}<ref group=web name="Palit2016"/>{{refn|group=note|name=cover_breasts_tax}}
Multiple historians have documented that uncovering one's breasts was revered as a symbolic token of homage from the lower castes towards the ] in the state of Travancore and a state-law prevented this covering which served to demarcate the caste hierarchy in a prominent manner and often served as the core locus of spontaneous rebellions by lower castes.{{sfn|Cohn|1996|p=140}}<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/nadarsoftamilnad0000hard|url-access=registration|title=The Nadars of Tamilnad|year=1969|last=Hardgrave|first=Robert L.|publisher=University of California Press|pages=-70|language=en}}</ref>


These beliefs have been questioned,<ref group=web name="Pillai_2017"/><ref group=web name="Pillai_2019"/><ref group=web name="Iqbal_2020"/><ref group=web name="Gautam_2021"/> as lower class women "were not allowed to wear upper garments in public"{{sfn|Kattackal|1990|p=144}} at all until 1859, after the ].{{refn|group=note|name=ChannarRevolt}} Historian ] treats the concept of "breast tax" to be a ] which "had nothing to do with breasts"<ref group=web name="Gautam_2021"/> and notes that covering the breasts was not the norm in Kerala's matrilineal society during Nangeli's life-span. Victorian standards of morality penetrated into the society decades later under British colonial influence, which led to subsequent class-struggles for the right to wear upper-body clothing.<ref group=web name="Pillai_2017"/> He believes Nangeli to have protested against an oppressive tax regime that was imposed upon all lower castes, which got appropriated with the passage of time, in pursuit of a different patriarchal fight for the preservation of female dignity.<ref group=web name="Pillai_2017"/><ref group=web name="Pillai_2019"/> In Jain's account, the "breast tax" is presented as a fine imposed by "Travancore's State's council of "upper" caste Nair's" to maintain caste boundaries.{{sfn|Jain|2021}}{{refn|group=note|name="Kent"}}
== Channar Revolt ==
{{Main|Channar revolt}}
During the time of Travancore, lower-caste women, including Nadar and Ezhava women, were not allowed to wear clothes that covered their breasts to indicate their low status,<ref name=":52" /> although higher-class women covered both breasts and shoulders.<ref name=":52">{{Cite web |url=https://www.newsclick.in/saffronisation-education-ncert-syllabus-drops-chapters |title=Re-writing History, Saffronising Education: Remembering Nangeli Lest Government Makes Us Forget|date=2019-03-19|website=NewsClick|language=en|access-date=2019-11-13}}</ref><ref name=":62">{{Cite web|url=https://indianexpress.com/article/explained/sabarimala-row-travancore-parallel-the-fight-to-wear-an-upper-garment-5406642/|title=Travancore parallel: the fight to wear an upper garment|date=2018-10-18|website=The Indian Express|language=en-IN|access-date=2019-11-13}}</ref> They had to pay the breast tax if they wanted to cover themselves.<ref name=":2"/><ref name=":1"/> Uneasy with their social status, a large number of Nadars embraced Christianity, and started to wear long cloths. When many more Nadar women turned to Christianity, many Hindu Nadar women also started to wear the ] breast cloth,<ref name=":62" /> which led to violence between the upper caste and lower castes.<ref name=":5">{{Cite web |url=https://www.newindianexpress.com/states/kerala/2009/jul/27/a-struggle-for-decent-dress-71376.html|title=A struggle for decent dress|website=The New Indian Express |access-date=2019-11-15}}</ref>


==Notes==
From 1813 to 1859, several laws were enacted and removed by Travancore regarding the upper cloth issue.{{sfn|Cohn|1996|p=140}}{{sfn|Ponnumuthan|1996|p=109}} On one such occasion, the members of the king's council argued that this right would remove the ] and pollute the kingdom.{{sfn|Cohn|1996|p=140}}{{sfn|Ponnumuthan|1996|p=109}} Agitations and violence continued against the lower caste Christian and Hindu women on the right to cover their breasts and several schools and churches were burned.{{sfn|Cohn|1996|p=141}} Several waves of violence continued for four decades.<ref name=":5" /><ref name=":4"/>
<!-- C -->
<!-- ChannarRevolt -->
{{refn|group=note|name=ChannarRevolt|During the time of Travancore, uncovering one's breasts was revered as a symbolic token of homage from the lower castes towards the ]. A state-law prevented this covering, which served to demarcate the caste hierarchy in a prominent manner, and often served as the core locus of spontaneous rebellions by lower castes.{{sfn|Cohn|1996|p=140}}{{sfn|Hardgrave|1969|p=-70}} Lower-caste women who covered their chest broke the caste-regulations, and could be fined by a Nair-council.{{sfn|Jain|2021}} Higher-class women, including Nair women, covered both shoulders and parts of the chesy with a shawl.<ref group=web name="NewsClick_2019_Re-writing"/><ref group=web name="AmrithLal2018"/> With the spread of ] in the 19th century, the Christian converts among the Nadar women started covering their upper body with long cloths, and gradually the Hindu Nadar women also started to wear the ] breast cloth.{{sfn|Hardgrave|1969|p=–62}}{{sfn|Hardgrave|1968}}<ref group=web name="AmrithLal2018"/> which led to violence between the upper caste and lower castes.<ref group=web name="NIE2009" /> From 1813 to 1859, several laws were enacted and removed by Travancore regarding the upper cloth issue.{{sfn|Cohn|1996|p=140}}{{sfn|Ponnumuthan|1996|p=109}} Several waves of violence continued for four decades.<ref group=web name="NIE2009"/> In 1859, under pressure from the ] governor, the king issued a decree giving all Nadar women the right to cover their breasts,{{sfn|Cohn|1996|p=141}}{{sfn|Ross|2008|p=78}}{{sfn|Jones|1989|p=159}} though they were still not allowed to follow the style of the higher-class women.{{sfn|Ponnumuthan|1996|p=110}}{{sfn|Cohn|1996|p=141-142}}{{sfn|Kertzer|1988|p=113}}}}
<!-- cover_breasts_tax -->
{{refn|group=note|name=cover_breasts_tax|Tax to cover the breasts:
* Divya Arya, BBC (2016): "Women from lower castes were not allowed to cover their breasts, and were taxed heavily if they did so."<ref group=web name="BBC"/>
* {{harvnb|Allen|2018}}: "By the start of the 19th century the ordinary people of Travancore were being required to pay as many as 100 petty taxes, ranging from head tax, hut tax, marriage tax and taxes on the tools of one's trade to taxes on the family cow, goat or dog, wearing jewellery, staging festivals, growing moustaches, and above all what became known as the breast tax, mulakkaram, by which the women of lower social groups had to expose their breasts or pay a tax. The Brahmins, naturally, paid no tax at all."
* {{harvnb|Jain|2021}}: "In the early nineteenth century, Travancore's State's council of "upper" caste Nair's imposed a "breast tax," or mulakkaram, that fined Nadar (formerly Shanar) men and women who covered their upper bodies like the "higher" castes.." }}
<!-- H -->
<!-- Headtax -->
{{refn|group=note|name=Headtax|Headtax:


{{harvnb|Krishna Iyer|1937}}: "The petty Raja used to give a silver-headed cane to the principal headman, who was then called ‘Perumban or 'caneman'. The head money was popularly known as 'thalakaram' in the case of males and 'mulakaram' in the case of females."
In 1859, the violence reached a peak when two Nadar women were stripped of their upper clothes by Travancore officials and hung on a tree in public for covering their breasts.<ref name=":5" /><ref name=":62"/> The Nadars revolted in ferocity and started to terrorize the upper caste neighborhoods and ] their shops. Thus the kingdom was forced to take action on the upper cloth law to bring peace in the kingdom.<ref name=":5" /><ref name=":4" /><ref name=":62"/> In the same year, under pressure from the ] governor, the king issued a decree giving all Nadar women the right to cover their breasts.{{sfn|Cohn|1996|p=141}}{{sfn|Ross|2008|p=78}}{{sfn|Jones|1989|p=159}} Yet they were still not allowed in the style of the higher-class women which the Nadar women did not follow.{{sfn|Ponnumuthan|1996|p=110}}{{sfn|Cohn|1996|p=141-142}}{{sfn|Kertzer|1988|p=113}}
* {{harvnb|Nair|1986|p=45}}: "The Pooja Raja in Travancore made the Malarayans pay money at the rate of one anna, two pies (8 pies) a head monthly as soon as they were able to work, and a similar sum of presence money besides certain quotas of fruits and vegetables and feudal service The ] was called Thalakaram in the case of males and Mulakaram (breast money) in the case of females.
* {{harvnb|Pillai|2019}}: "Nangeli too was recast. When Nangeli offered her breasts on a plantain leaf to the rajah's men, she demanded not the right to cover her breasts, for she would not have cared about this 'right' that meant nothing in her day. Indeed, the mulakkaram had little to do with breasts other than the tenuous connection of nomenclature. It was a poll tax charged from low-caste communities, as well as other minorities. Capitation due from men was the talakkaram—head tax—and to distinguish female payees in a household, their tax was the mulakkaram—breast tax. The tax was not based on the size of the breast or its attractiveness, as Nangeli's storytellers will claim, but was one standard rate charged from women as a certainly oppressive but very general tax."<ref group=web name="Pillai_2019"/>
* Pillai, as quoted by Sabin Iqbal (13 aug. 2020): ""The Nangeli story, as it is related popularly today, is somewhat misunderstood. There was a poll-tax chargeable on avarnas by the state or the feudal lord, depending on where in Kerala we are speaking of, and this, for men, was called talakkaram, and for women, mulakkaram. Sometimes, it was simply called talappanam for everyone. But beyond nomenclature, it had no connection to the breasts, or to covering the breasts," says Pillai.<br />"She was not fighting for the right to cover herself, 'protect her modesty', or anything like that. She was resisting an oppressive, caste-based tax. The battle is about caste, not about virtue or the 'right' to cover up. That was not a 'right' in local eyes at all till the late 19th and early 20th centuries," he adds."<ref group=web name="Iqbal_2020"/>}}
<!-- U -->
<!-- upper-cloth -->
{{refn|group=note|name=upper-cloth|Not allowed to wear upper cloth:
* {{harvnb|Kattackal|1990|p=144}}: "In South India, until the 19th century, the 'low caste' men had to pay the 'head tax', and the 'low caste' women had to pay a 'breast tax' ('tala-karam' and 'mula-karam') to the government treasury. The still more shameful truth is that these women were not allowed to wear upper garments in public."
* Pillai, as quoted by Gautam (2021): "...even royal women, including queens, did not cover their breasts in those days. "Not until the 1860s," says Manu Pillai, historian and author. What the upper castes carried instead was a shoulder cloth denoting their exalted stature.<ref group=web name="Gautam_2021"/>}}


{{reflist|group=note|2|refs=
==Legend of Nangeli==
<!-- A -->
{{Main|Nangeli}}
<!-- Age14 -->
The village-legend of Nangeli is about a woman who lived in the early 19th century at ] in the erstwhile princely state of Travancore in India and supposedly cut off her breasts in an effort to protest against the caste-based breast tax.<ref name=":2"/><ref name=":0"/><ref name="manu">{{Cite book |title=The Courtesan, the Mahatma and the Italian Brahmin: Tales from Indian History |last=Pillai |first=Manu S. |publisher=Westland Publications |year=2019 |isbn=9789388689786 |location=Chennai |chapter=The woman with no breasts |via=The Hindu |author-link=Manu S. Pillai |chapter-url=http://www.thehindu.com/society/history-and-culture/the-woman-who-cut-off-her-breasts/article17324549.ece}}</ref> According to the legend, she cut off her breasts and presented them to the tax collector in a ],<ref name="TH">{{cite news|url=http://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/Kochi/200-years-on-nangelis-sacrifice-only-a-fading-memory/article5255026.ece|title=200 years on, Nangeli's sacrifice only a fading memory|last=Surendranath|first=Nidhi|date=21 October 2013|newspaper=The Hindu|access-date=15 April 2017}}</ref><ref name=":122">{{Cite web|url=http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/chennai/She-died-fighting-breast-tax-her-name-lives-on/articleshow/51283819.cms|title=She died fighting 'breast tax', her name lives on|last=Singh|first=Vijay|date=7 March 2016|website=Times of India|access-date=15 April 2017}}</ref><ref name="manu" /> then died of blood loss.<ref name="manu" /> Following the death of Nangeli, a series of people's movements were set off. Soon the place where she lived had come to be called ''Mulachiparambu'' (meaning ''place of the breasted woman'').<ref name=":2"/>
{{refn|group=note|name=Age14|Age fourteen:

* {{harvnb|Manilal|2012|p=3-4}}: "One such infamous law that was in force in Travancore until as late as the first quarter of the 20th century was known as Mulakkaram, i.e., the law of breast tax. According to this law the avarna women, were to pay tax to the government for their breasts from the very time of their girlhood, when they start developing breasts.}}
However, the story is not officially recognized in any of India's historical accounts and its authenticity is debatable.<ref name=":2"/><ref name="manu" /> Historian ] argues that covering breasts was not the norm in Kerala's matrilineal society during Nangeli's life-span. Victorian standards of morality penetrated into the society decades later under British colonial influence, which led to subsequent class-struggles for the right to wear upper cloth.<ref name=":6">{{Cite news|last=Pillai|first=Manu S.|date=2017-02-18|title=The woman who cut off her breasts |language=en-IN|work=The Hindu|url=https://www.thehindu.com/society/history-and-culture/the-woman-who-cut-off-her-breasts/article17324549.ece|access-date=2021-01-15|issn=0971-751X}}</ref> He believes Nangeli to have protested against an oppressive tax regime that was imposed upon all lower castes, which got appropriated with the passage of time, in pursuit of a different patriarchal fight for the preservation of female dignity.<ref name=":6" /><ref name=":7">{{Cite web|date=2019-11-03|title=Revisiting Nangeli, the Woman with No Breasts|url=https://www.newsclick.in/Nangeli-Basava-Manu-Pillai-Indian-History-Travancore-breast-tax|access-date=2021-01-15|website=NewsClick|language=en}}</ref>
<!-- K -->
<!-- "Kent" -->
{{refn|group=note|name="Kent"|{{harvnb|Jain|2021}}: "In the early nineteenth century, Travancore's State's council of "upper" caste Nair's imposed a "breast tax," or mulakkaram, that fined Nadar (formerly Shanar) men and women who covered their upper bodies like the "higher" castes.."<br />Compare {{harvnb|Kent|2004|p=207-211}}: "Rulers in Travancore had, in fact, previously bestowed on select members of the elite class of Shanars (the Nadars proper) the privilege of wearing the breast cloth n Travancore, a council of "Sudra" (probably Nayar) leaders called the Pidagaikarars was responsible for enforcing , as well as for adjudicating disputes that arose over the transgression of caste rules. Each year villages would send two or three delegates to an annual meeting of the body in Sucindram. This council would discuss whether individuals of their own and other castes "had adopted the costume, food, speech (provincialism or brogue) and general habits of the other class," and would mete out sanctions to transgressors."}}
}}


==References== ==References==
{{Reflist}} {{reflist|25em}}


==Sources== ==Sources==
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* {{cite journal | last1 =Allen | first1 =Charles | title =Who Owns India's History? A Critique of Shashi Tharoor's Inglorious Empire | date =7 August 2018 | journal =Asian Affairs | volume =49 | issue =3 | pages =355–369 | doi =10.1080/03068374.2018.1487685| s2cid =158949586 }}
* {{Citation|last=Cohn|first=Bernard S.|title=Colonialism and Its Forms of Knowledge|url=http://press.princeton.edu/titles/5870.html|year=1996|publisher=Princeton University Press|isbn=9780691000435}}
* {{Citation | last =Cohn | first =Bernard S. | year =1996 | title =Colonialism and Its Forms of Knowledge | publisher =Princeton University Press | isbn =9780691000435 | url =http://press.princeton.edu/titles/5870.html }}
* {{cite journal| last=Hardgrave | first=Robert L. Jr. | year =1968 | title =The Breast-Cloth Controversy: Caste Consciousness and Social Change in Southern Travancore|journal=The Indian Economic & Social History Review|volume=5|issue=2|pages=171–187|doi=10.1177/001946466800500205|s2cid=143287605}}
* {{cite book|last=Hardgrave|first=Robert L.|year=1969|title=The Nadars of Tamilnad|publisher=University of California Press|url=https://archive.org/details/nadarsoftamilnad0000hard|url-access=registration|oclc=12064}}
* {{cite book |last =Jain |first =Kajri |date=March 2021 |title=Gods in the Time of Democracy |publisher=]}}
* {{Citation|last=Jones|first=Kenneth W.|title=Socio-Religious Reform Movements in British India|url=http://www.cambridge.org/nl/academic/subjects/history/south-asian-history/socio-religious-reform-movements-british-india|year=1989|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=0-521-24986-4}} * {{Citation|last=Jones|first=Kenneth W.|title=Socio-Religious Reform Movements in British India|url=http://www.cambridge.org/nl/academic/subjects/history/south-asian-history/socio-religious-reform-movements-british-india|year=1989|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=0-521-24986-4}}
<!-- K -->
* {{cite book | last =Kattackal | first =Jacob | year =1990 | title =Comparative Religion | publisher =Oriental Institute of Religious Studies | url =https://books.google.com/books?id=O_MnAAAAYAAJ }}
* {{Citation | last =Kent |first =Eliza F. | year =2004 | title =Converting Women: Gender and Protestant Christianity in Colonial South India | publisher =Oxford University Press}}
* {{Citation|last=Kertzer|first=David I.|title=Ritual, Politics, and Power|url=http://www.davidkertzer.com/books/ritual-politics-and-power|year=1988|publisher=Yale University Press}} * {{Citation|last=Kertzer|first=David I.|title=Ritual, Politics, and Power|url=http://www.davidkertzer.com/books/ritual-politics-and-power|year=1988|publisher=Yale University Press}}
* {{Cite book | last =Krishna Iyer | first =L.A. | year =1937 | title =Travancore Tribes And Castes Vol. 1 | publisher =Superintendent, Government Pres | location =Thiruvananthapuram | url=https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.42706/page/n281/mode/2up}}
* {{Citation|last=Ponnumuthan|first=Selvister|title=The Spirituality of Basic Ecclesial Communities in the Socio-religious Context of Trivandrum/Kerala, India|year=1996|publisher=Universita Gregoriana}}
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* {{Citation|last=Ross|first=Robert|title=Clothing: A Global History|year=2008|publisher=Polity}}
* {{Cite journal | last =Manilal | first =K.S. | date =15 November 2012 | title =Sikhism in Kerala: Forgotten Chapter in the Social History of the State | journal =Samagra | issn =0973-3906 | volume =8 | url =https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&pid=sites&srcid=ZGVmYXVsdGRvbWFpbnxjcmlrc2NzYW1hZ3JhfGd4OjE5OTc0YzhhNWRlN2Y2MDM }}
* {{cite book | last1 =Nair | first1 =Adoor K. K. Ramachandran | year =1986 | title =Slavery in Kerala | publisher =Mittal Publications | url =https://books.google.com/books?id=03R1JWXcVYIC | language =en }}
* {{Cite book | last =Pillai |first=Manu S. | year =2019 | author-link =Manu S. Pillai | title =The Courtesan, the Mahatma and the Italian Brahmin: Tales from Indian History | chapter =The woman with no breasts | publisher =Westland Publications | isbn =9789388689786 | location =Chennai}}
* {{Citation | last =Ponnumuthan | first =Selvister | year =1996| title =The Spirituality of Basic Ecclesial Communities in the Socio-religious Context of Trivandrum/Kerala, India|publisher=Universita Gregoriana}}
* {{Citation |last=Ross |first=Robert |title=Clothing: A Global History |year=2008 |publisher=Polity}}
* {{cite journal |last=Santhosh |first=Keerthana |date=August 2017 |title=Condition of Women in Pre-Modern Travancore |journal=International Journal of Research Culture Society |volume=1 |issue=6 |url=http://ijrcs.rcsjournals.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/201708019.pdf |access-date=27 July 2021 |archive-date=22 April 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180422185251/http://ijrcs.rcsjournals.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/201708019.pdf}}
* {{cite book | last =Yesudas | first =R. N. | year =1980 | title =The History of the London Missionary Society in Travancore, 1806–1908 | publisher =Kerala Historical Society | url =https://books.google.com/books?id=0oscAAAAMAAJ }}
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] ]
] ]
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]

Latest revision as of 02:52, 29 December 2024

Tax imposed on women by the Kingdom of Tranvancore

Mulakkaram, literally translated as breast tax, was a poll tax imposed on women belonging to Nadar, Ezhava and other lower caste communities by the erstwhile Kingdom of Tranvancore (in present-day Kerala state of India), and was not applicable to upper caste women of Travancore. The term "breast tax" was used to denote the gender of the person and not breasts per se.

According to subaltern beliefs, the breast tax was imposed on lower class women if they covered their breasts. This belief has been questioned, as lower class women "were not allowed to wear upper garments in public" at all until 1859.

Head tax

The "breast tax" (mulakkaram or mula-karam in Malayalam) was a head tax imposed on the Nadars, Ezhavars and lower caste communities by the Kingdom of Tranvancore (in present-day Kerala state of India). In 19th century Kingdom of Travancore, all persons from lower castes were expected to pay poll tax when they start to work around the age of fourteen. Poll tax paid by men were called talakkaram (lit. 'head tax') or meeshakkaram (lit. 'moustache tax'); and the tax paid by women were called mulakkaram (lit. 'breast tax').

'Breast-cover tax'

The "breast tax" caught wider attention in 2016, when BBC reporter Divya Arya reported on a series of paintings by artist Murali T on the legend of Nangeli. The village legend of Nangeli is about a woman who lived in the early 19th century in Cherthala in the state of Travancore, and supposedly cut off her breasts in an effort to protest against the caste-based "breast tax." According to the legend, she cut off her breasts and presented them to the tax collector in a plantain leaf, then died of blood loss.

According to local beliefs, the "breast tax" was imposed on lower class women if they covered their breasts in public, to disencourage them from doing so.

These beliefs have been questioned, as lower class women "were not allowed to wear upper garments in public" at all until 1859, after the Channar revolt. Historian Manu Pillai treats the concept of "breast tax" to be a misnomer which "had nothing to do with breasts" and notes that covering the breasts was not the norm in Kerala's matrilineal society during Nangeli's life-span. Victorian standards of morality penetrated into the society decades later under British colonial influence, which led to subsequent class-struggles for the right to wear upper-body clothing. He believes Nangeli to have protested against an oppressive tax regime that was imposed upon all lower castes, which got appropriated with the passage of time, in pursuit of a different patriarchal fight for the preservation of female dignity. In Jain's account, the "breast tax" is presented as a fine imposed by "Travancore's State's council of "upper" caste Nair's" to maintain caste boundaries.

Notes

  1. ^ Headtax: Krishna Iyer 1937: "The petty Raja used to give a silver-headed cane to the principal headman, who was then called ‘Perumban or 'caneman'. The head money was popularly known as 'thalakaram' in the case of males and 'mulakaram' in the case of females."
    • Nair 1986, p. 45: "The Pooja Raja in Travancore made the Malarayans pay money at the rate of one anna, two pies (8 pies) a head monthly as soon as they were able to work, and a similar sum of presence money besides certain quotas of fruits and vegetables and feudal service The head money was called Thalakaram in the case of males and Mulakaram (breast money) in the case of females.
    • Pillai 2019: "Nangeli too was recast. When Nangeli offered her breasts on a plantain leaf to the rajah's men, she demanded not the right to cover her breasts, for she would not have cared about this 'right' that meant nothing in her day. Indeed, the mulakkaram had little to do with breasts other than the tenuous connection of nomenclature. It was a poll tax charged from low-caste communities, as well as other minorities. Capitation due from men was the talakkaram—head tax—and to distinguish female payees in a household, their tax was the mulakkaram—breast tax. The tax was not based on the size of the breast or its attractiveness, as Nangeli's storytellers will claim, but was one standard rate charged from women as a certainly oppressive but very general tax."
    • Pillai, as quoted by Sabin Iqbal (13 aug. 2020): ""The Nangeli story, as it is related popularly today, is somewhat misunderstood. There was a poll-tax chargeable on avarnas by the state or the feudal lord, depending on where in Kerala we are speaking of, and this, for men, was called talakkaram, and for women, mulakkaram. Sometimes, it was simply called talappanam for everyone. But beyond nomenclature, it had no connection to the breasts, or to covering the breasts," says Pillai.
      "She was not fighting for the right to cover herself, 'protect her modesty', or anything like that. She was resisting an oppressive, caste-based tax. The battle is about caste, not about virtue or the 'right' to cover up. That was not a 'right' in local eyes at all till the late 19th and early 20th centuries," he adds."
  2. ^ Tax to cover the breasts:
    • Divya Arya, BBC (2016): "Women from lower castes were not allowed to cover their breasts, and were taxed heavily if they did so."
    • Allen 2018: "By the start of the 19th century the ordinary people of Travancore were being required to pay as many as 100 petty taxes, ranging from head tax, hut tax, marriage tax and taxes on the tools of one's trade to taxes on the family cow, goat or dog, wearing jewellery, staging festivals, growing moustaches, and above all what became known as the breast tax, mulakkaram, by which the women of lower social groups had to expose their breasts or pay a tax. The Brahmins, naturally, paid no tax at all."
    • Jain 2021: "In the early nineteenth century, Travancore's State's council of "upper" caste Nair's imposed a "breast tax," or mulakkaram, that fined Nadar (formerly Shanar) men and women who covered their upper bodies like the "higher" castes.."
  3. ^ Not allowed to wear upper cloth:
    • Kattackal 1990, p. 144: "In South India, until the 19th century, the 'low caste' men had to pay the 'head tax', and the 'low caste' women had to pay a 'breast tax' ('tala-karam' and 'mula-karam') to the government treasury. The still more shameful truth is that these women were not allowed to wear upper garments in public."
    • Pillai, as quoted by Gautam (2021): "...even royal women, including queens, did not cover their breasts in those days. "Not until the 1860s," says Manu Pillai, historian and author. What the upper castes carried instead was a shoulder cloth denoting their exalted stature.
  4. ^ During the time of Travancore, uncovering one's breasts was revered as a symbolic token of homage from the lower castes towards the upper castes. A state-law prevented this covering, which served to demarcate the caste hierarchy in a prominent manner, and often served as the core locus of spontaneous rebellions by lower castes. Lower-caste women who covered their chest broke the caste-regulations, and could be fined by a Nair-council. Higher-class women, including Nair women, covered both shoulders and parts of the chesy with a shawl. With the spread of Christianity in the 19th century, the Christian converts among the Nadar women started covering their upper body with long cloths, and gradually the Hindu Nadar women also started to wear the Nair breast cloth. which led to violence between the upper caste and lower castes. From 1813 to 1859, several laws were enacted and removed by Travancore regarding the upper cloth issue. Several waves of violence continued for four decades. In 1859, under pressure from the Madras governor, the king issued a decree giving all Nadar women the right to cover their breasts, though they were still not allowed to follow the style of the higher-class women.
  5. Age fourteen:
    • Manilal 2012, p. 3-4: "One such infamous law that was in force in Travancore until as late as the first quarter of the 20th century was known as Mulakkaram, i.e., the law of breast tax. According to this law the avarna women, were to pay tax to the government for their breasts from the very time of their girlhood, when they start developing breasts.
  6. Jain 2021: "In the early nineteenth century, Travancore's State's council of "upper" caste Nair's imposed a "breast tax," or mulakkaram, that fined Nadar (formerly Shanar) men and women who covered their upper bodies like the "higher" castes.."
    Compare Kent 2004, p. 207-211: "Rulers in Travancore had, in fact, previously bestowed on select members of the elite class of Shanars (the Nadars proper) the privilege of wearing the breast cloth n Travancore, a council of "Sudra" (probably Nayar) leaders called the Pidagaikarars was responsible for enforcing , as well as for adjudicating disputes that arose over the transgression of caste rules. Each year villages would send two or three delegates to an annual meeting of the body in Sucindram. This council would discuss whether individuals of their own and other castes "had adopted the costume, food, speech (provincialism or brogue) and general habits of the other class," and would mete out sanctions to transgressors."

References

  1. Krishna Iyer (1937).
  2. ^ Nair 1986, p. 45.
  3. ^ Allen 2017, p. 285.
  4. ^ Allen 2018.
  5. ^ Jain 2021.
  6. ^ Kattackal 1990, p. 144.
  7. Manilal 2012, p. 3-4.
  8. Nair 1986.
  9. ^ Pillai 2019.
  10. ^ Cohn 1996, p. 140.
  11. Hardgrave 1969, p. 55-70.
  12. Hardgrave 1969, p. 59–62.
  13. Hardgrave 1968.
  14. Ponnumuthan 1996, p. 109.
  15. Cohn 1996, p. 141.
  16. Ross 2008, p. 78.
  17. Jones 1989, p. 159.
  18. Ponnumuthan 1996, p. 110.
  19. Cohn 1996, p. 141-142.
  20. Kertzer 1988, p. 113.

Sources

Printed sources

Web sources

  1. ^ "Revisiting Nangeli, the Woman with No Breasts". NewsClick. 3 November 2019. Retrieved 15 January 2021.
  2. ^ Sabin Iqbal (13 Aug, 2020), The Legend of Nangeli, Open
  3. ^ Swati Gautam (14.01.21), The breast tax that wasn't, The Telegraph Online
  4. "BBC makes news of a forgotten woman army from Murali's paintings". English Archives. 2 August 2016. Retrieved 10 April 2022.
  5. ^ "The woman who cut off her breasts to protest a tax". BBC News. 28 July 2016. Retrieved 13 November 2019.
  6. ^ "The CBSE Just Removed an Entire History of Women's Caste Struggle". The Wire. Retrieved 13 November 2019.
  7. ^ Manu Pillai (February 18, 2017), The woman who cut off her breasts, The Hindu
  8. Surendranath, Nidhi (21 October 2013). "200 years on, Nangeli's sacrifice only a fading memory". The Hindu. Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  9. ICF-team (19 March 2019). "Re-writing History, Saffronising Education: Remembering Nangeli Lest Government Makes Us Forget". NewsClick. Retrieved 13 November 2019.
  10. ^ Amrith Lal (18 October 2018). "Travancore parallel: the fight to wear an upper garment". The Indian Express. Retrieved 13 November 2019.
  11. ^ unknown. "A struggle for decent dress". The New Indian Express. Retrieved 15 November 2019.
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