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{{Short description|Indigenous people in Sri Lanka}} | |||
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{{About||the language|Vedda language|articles with similar titles|Veda (disambiguation)}} | |||
The '''Wanniyala-Aetto''', or "forest people", perhaps more commonly known as "'''Veddas'''" or "'''Veddahs'''" (transliteration of '''"වැද්දා"''' in ], ] /væddaː/) are an indigenous people of ], an island nation in the ]. | |||
{{Distinguish|Vedic people|Venda people}} | |||
{{cleanup reorganize|date=March 2017}} | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2022}} | |||
{{Infobox ethnic group | |||
| group = Vedda | |||
| image = ] | |||
| image_caption = Vedda man and child. | |||
| population = Between '''2,500 - 6,600'''<ref name="encyclopedia.com">{{Cite web|url=https://www.encyclopedia.com/places/asia/sri-lankan-political-geography/vedda|title=Vedda | Encyclopedia.com|website=www.encyclopedia.com|accessdate=26 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=ved|title = Veddah}}</ref><br /> (less than 0.20% of the population) (2001)<ref>{{Cite book |title=The Portuguese Cultural Imprint on Sri Lanka |last=Jayasuriya |first=S. de Silva |publisher=Lusotopie 2000 |year=2000 |pages=255}}</ref> | |||
| regions = Sri Lanka {{nbsp|6}} 2,500 (2002) | |||
| region1 = ] | |||
| pop1 = | |||
| ref1 = | |||
| region2 = ] | |||
| languages = ], ], ] | |||
| religions = Traditional animistic beliefs with ], ]<ref name="encyclopedia.com"/> | |||
| related = ], ] | |||
| footnotes = | |||
| native_name = | |||
| native_name_lang = | |||
}} | |||
The '''Vedda''' ({{langx|si|වැද්දා}} {{IPA-si|ˈvædːaː|}}; {{langx|ta|வேடர்}} (''Vēḍar'')), or '''Wanniyalaeto''',<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.shh.mpg.de/906627/forest-reliance-sri-lanka|title=Evidence for persistent forest reliance by Indigenous peoples in historical Sri Lanka|website=www.shh.mpg.de|language=en|access-date=2020-02-08}}</ref> are a minority ] group of people in ] who, among other sub-communities such as ], ] and Bintenne Veddas,<ref name=":0"/> are accorded indigenous status. The Vedda minority in Sri Lanka may become completely assimilated.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://chandlersfordtoday.co.uk/sri-lanka-ancient-vedda-tribe-becoming-extinct/ |title = Vedda tribe becoming extinct, Chandler's Ford Today|date = 2014-09-06}}</ref> Most speak ] instead of their indigenous languages, which are nearing extinction. It has been hypothesized that the Vedda were probably the earliest inhabitants of ] and have lived on the island since before the arrival of other groups from the Indian mainland.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.sundaytimes.lk/140126/plus/race-in-sri-lanka-what-genetic-evidence-tells-us-80911.html |title = Race in Sri Lanka: What genetic evidence tells us | the Sundaytimes Sri Lanka}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |doi = 10.1038/jhg.2013.112|pmid = 24196378|title = Mitochondrial DNA history of Sri Lankan ethnic people: Their relations within the island and with the Indian subcontinental populations|journal = Journal of Human Genetics|volume = 59|issue = 1|pages = 28–36|year = 2014|last1 = Ranaweera|first1 = Lanka|last2 = Kaewsutthi|first2 = Supannee|last3 = Win Tun|first3 = Aung|last4 = Boonyarit|first4 = Hathaichanoke|last5 = Poolsuwan|first5 = Samerchai|last6 = Lertrit|first6 = Patcharee|s2cid = 41185629|doi-access = free}}</ref> | |||
Sri Lanka's indigenous inhabitants, the Veddas -- or Wanniya-laeto ('forest-dwellers') as they call themselves -- preserve a direct line of descent from the island's original Neolithic community dating from at least 18,000 BC and probably far earlier according to current scientific opinion. Even today, the surviving Wanniya-laeto community retains much of its own distinctive cyclic worldview, prehistoric cultural memory, and time-tested knowledge of their semi-evergreen dry monsoon forest habitat that has enabled their ancestor-revering culture to meet the diverse challenges to their collective identity and survival. With the impending extinction of Wanniya-laeto culture, however, Sri Lanka and the world stand to lose a rich body of indigenous lore and living ecological wisdom. | |||
A 2024 genetics study using high-resolution ] and ] found that the Veddas were genetically closer to the ], ], ] and ] tribes (as well as the ] caste) of India, than to the ] and ].<ref name="WeliVedda">{{cite journal |last1=Welikala |first1=Anjana |last2=Desai |first2=Shailesh |last3=Pratap Singh |first3=Prajjval |last4=Fernando |first4=Amali |last5=Thangaraj |first5=Kumarasamy |last6=van Driem |first6=George |last7=Adikari |first7=Gamini |last8=Tennekoon |first8=Kamani |last9=Chaubey |first9=Gyaneshwer |last10=Ranasinghe |first10=Ruwandi |title=The genetic identity of the Vedda: A language isolate of South Asia |journal=Mitochondrion |date=May 2024 |volume=76 |pages=101884 |doi=10.1016/j.mito.2024.101884 |pmid=38626841 }}</ref> The study concluded that the Veddas were "a genetically drifted group with limited gene flow from neighbouring Sinhalese and Sri Lankan Tamil populations" and that the maternal ] mediated their initial settlement of the island.<ref name="WeliVedda"/> Other studies have shown the Vedda share genetic components with the Sinhalese and Sri Lankan Tamils as well as genetic affinity with the Irula, Kota and Mulla Kuruma of India, the ] and ] of Malaysia and tribal groups of ].<ref name="WeliVedda"/> | |||
==Roots== | |||
Human remains in Sri Lanka dating from as early as 18,000 BC show a genetic continuum with present-day Veddas.<ref></ref> | |||
The Ratnapura District, which is part of the ], is known to have been inhabited by the Veddas in the distant past. This has been shown by scholars like Nandadeva Wijesekera. The very name ''Sabaragamuwa'' is believed to have meant the village of the ''Sabaras'' or "forest barbarians". Place-names such as ''Vedda-gala'' (Vedda Rock), ''Vedda-ela'' (Vedda Canal) and ''Vedi-Kanda'' (Vedda Mountain) in the Ratnapura District also bear testimony to this. As Wijesekera observes, a strong Vedda element is discernible in the population of ''Vedda-gala'' and its environs. | |||
According to the ancient chronicle of Sinhalese royalty, the ] , the Pulindas (Veddhas) are descended from Prince Vijaya (6th-5th century BC) the founding father of the Sinhalese nation, through ], a woman of the "Yakkha" clan whom he had espoused. The Mahavansa relates that following the repudiation of Kuveni by Vijaya, in favour of a "Kshatriya" princess from the "Pandya" country, their two children, a boy and a girl, departed to the region of "Sumanakuta" (] in the ] District) where they multiplied giving rise to the Veddhas. Anthropologists such as the ''Seligmanns'' (The Veddhas 1911) believe the Veddhas to be identical with the "Yakkhas" of yore. | |||
== Etymology == | |||
Veddas are also mentioned in ]'s history of his captivity by the King of ] in the 17th century. Knox described them as "wild men," but also said there was a "tamer sort," and that the latter sometimes served in the king's army.<ref>Knox, Robert (1981). An Historical Relation of Ceylon. Tisara Prakasakayo Ltd (page 195).</ref> | |||
Ethnonyms of Vedda include ''Vadda'', ''Veddah'', ''Veddha'' and ''Vaddo''.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=http://www.encyclopedia.com/places/asia/sri-lankan-political-geography/vedda|title=Vedda facts, information, pictures {{!}} Encyclopedia.com articles about Vedda|website=www.encyclopedia.com|language=en|access-date=2017-09-18}}</ref> "Vedda" is a word that stems from the ] word ''Vēdan'' meaning "hunter",<ref name=":0" /><ref>{{Cite book|url={{GBurl|id=AtdjAAAAMAAJ|q=vedda+etymology+hunter+tamil}}|title=Knox's Words: A Study of the Words of Sri Lankan Origin Or Association First Used in English Literature by Robert Knox and Recorded in the Oxford English Dictionary|last=Boyle|first=Richard|date=2004|publisher=Visidunu Prakashakayo|location=Boralesgamuwa, Sri Lanka|isbn=955-9170-67-8}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://agarathi.com/word/%E0%AE%B5%E0%AF%87%E0%AE%9F%E0%AE%A9%E0%AF%8D|title=வேடன் {{!}} அகராதி {{!}} Tamil Dictionary|website=agarathi.com|publisher=University of Madras Lexicon|access-date=2017-09-18}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|first1=T|last1=Burrow|first2=M. B.|last2=Emenau|website=A Dravidian Etymological Dictionary|edition=2|title=Search for headword: vēṭṭam, vēṭṭai|year=1984 |url=https://dsal.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/app/burrow_query.py?qs=vēṭṭam,%20vēṭṭai&searchhws=yes}}</ref> or from ] ''vyādha'' ("hunter") or ''veddhṛ'' ("the one who pierces").<ref>{{cite book|first=Wilhelm|last=Geiger|title=An Etymological Glossary of the Sinhalese Language|location=Colombo|year=1941}}</ref> | |||
== Population affinities == | |||
The ] District, which is part of the ] Province is known to have been inhabited by the Veddhas in the distant past. This has been shown by scholars like ''Nandadeva Wijesekera (Veddhas in transition 1964).'' Indeed, the very name ''Sabaragamuva'' is believed to have meant the village of the ''Sabaras'' or "forest barbarians". Such place-names as ''Veddha-gala'' (Veddha Rock), ''Veddha-ela'' (Veddha Canal) and ''Vedi-kanda'' (Veddha Mountain) in the Ratnapura District also bear testimony to this. As ''Wijesekera'' observes, a strong Veddha element is discernible in the population of ''Veddha-gala'' and its environs. As for the traditional Veddha lifestyle, a number of authorities have delved on this and we can easily describe their life-style as it existed in the past, and as it exists today. | |||
== |
=== Anthropology === | ||
The Vedda are often seen as the native population of ]. A 2011 study on dental characteristics suggested a close relation between Vedda and other South Asians as well as to western Eurasian populations.<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Schug|first1=Gwen Robbins|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VAb9CgAAQBAJ&q=vedda+west+eurasian&pg=PA433|title=A Companion to South Asia in the Past|last2=Walimbe|first2=Subhash R.|date=2016-05-16|publisher=John Wiley & Sons|isbn=978-1-119-05548-8|language=en}}</ref> A 2012 study on crania showed the Vedda to have close affinities with other South Asian populations such as other ], ], and ] and to differ significantly from ].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Kulatilake|first=Samanti|title=Cranial Morphology of the Vedda people - the indigenes of Sri Lanka |website=Academia |url=https://www.academia.edu/9637404|language=en}}</ref> | |||
DNA studies {{Fact|date=February 2007}} suggest that Wanniyala-Aetto may have been the ancestors of most Sri Lankans before the ] arrived from North India. Both Sinhala and Vedda lore says that the two races shared a few common ancestors. | |||
A 2013 craniometric study by Raghavan et al. showed that the Vedda are closely related to other groups in Sri Lanka and ], especially to ] and ], and also indicated deep relations between South Asian populations and the modern populations of ], the ] and ]. According to Raghavan et al. the cranial characteristics of the Vedda are closest to other South Asians and distinct from "Australo-Melanesians". However, Raghavan et al. also, while also noting the distinctiveness of between South Asian (including Vedda) and Andamanese crania, explain that this is not in conflict with genetic evidence showing a partial common ancestry (a non-West Eurasian component known as "Ancestral South Indian" or "ASI") and genetic affinity between South Asians and the native ] (who are sometimes classified as ]), stating that "The distinctiveness of Andamanese and southern Indian crania need not challenge the finding by ] et al. for an "Ancestral South Indian" ancestry shared by southern Indians and Andamanese", and that the differences may be in part due to the greater craniometric specialization of South Asians compared to Andamanese.<ref>{{Cite journal|title=Indian Craniometric Variability and Affinities|volume=2013|pages=836738|last1=Rathee|first1=Suresh Kanta|last2=Pathmanathan|first2=Gayathiri|date=2013|journal=International Journal of Evolutionary Biology|language=en|pmid=24455409|pmc=3886603|last3=Bulbeck|first3=David|last4=Raghavan|first4=Pathmanathan|doi=10.1155/2013/836738|doi-access=free}}</ref> | |||
==Subdivisions== | |||
]-speaking Veddas are found primarily in the southeastern part of the country, | |||
especially in the vicinity of Bintenne in Uva District. There are also Sinhala-speaking Veddas who live in Anuradhapura District in the North Central Province.<ref name="Brow">Brow, James (1978). Vedda Villages of Anuradhapura. University of Washington Press.</ref> | |||
=== Genetics === | |||
Another, largely distinct group, often termed Coast Veddas, is found in coastal areas of the Eastern | |||
Groups ancestral to the modern ] were probably the earliest inhabitants of Sri Lanka. Their arrival is dated tentatively to about 40,000–35,000 years ago. They show a relationship with other South Asian and Sri Lankan populations, but are genetically distinguishable from the other peoples of Sri Lanka, and show a high degree of intra-group diversity. This is consistent with a long history of existing as small subgroups undergoing significant ].<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Deraniyagala SU | title = Pre-and protohistoric settlement in Sri Lanka. | journal = XIII UISPP Congress Proceedings | date = September 1996 | volume = 5 | pages = 277–285 | url = http://www.lankalibrary.com/geo/dera1.html }}</ref><ref name="Ranaweera_2014">{{cite journal | vauthors = Ranaweera L, Kaewsutthi S, Win Tun A, Boonyarit H, Poolsuwan S, Lertrit P | title = Mitochondrial DNA history of Sri Lankan ethnic people: their relations within the island and with the Indian subcontinental populations | journal = Journal of Human Genetics | volume = 59 | issue = 1 | pages = 28–36 | date = January 2014 | pmid = 24196378 | doi = 10.1038/jhg.2013.112 | s2cid = 41185629 | doi-access = free }}</ref> | |||
Province, mostly between ] and ]. These Veddas speak ] as their primary language<ref>http://vedda.org/coastal-veddas.htm</ref>. | |||
In one study on maternal (mitochondrial DNA) haplogroups in Sri Lankan populations (the Vedda, ], ], and ]), the Vedda were found to carry predominantly haplogroups ] and ] and to carry maternal haplogroup M at about 17%, unlike the ] and many mainland Indian tribal groups, among which ] is predominant. The Vedda people and Low-country Sinhalese showed frequencies of haplogroup R at 45.33 and 25%, respectively. The Vedda were found to be distinct but closer to Sinhalese than to other South Asian groups. It was determined in the study to be likely that the branches of haplogroups R and U "found to be particularly prevalent in the Vedda, were derived from ancestors on the Indian subcontinent."<ref name="Ranaweera_2014"/> | |||
==Cultural aspects== | |||
===Religion=== | |||
Another study on maternal haplogroups in Sri Lankan groups (also the Vedda, Sri Lankan Tamil, and Sinhalese) found similar results, with the Vedda belonging predominantly to the mitochondrial ] (which "exists in almost all European, ]n, and many Asian and Amerindian populations.") and its subgroups U and R (with those comprising about two thirds of their maternal lineages), differing from other South Asian groups (such as the Sri Lankan Tamil, Sinhalese, and several Indian Tribal groups) among whom haplogroup M is predominant. The study also found that "South Asian (Indian) haplogroups were predominant" in the three Sri Lankan groups (including the Vedda) but that the Sinhalese, Sri Lankan Tamil, and Vedda populations also "had a considerable presence of West Eurasian haplogroups." One phylogenetic study on mitochondrial DNA hypervariable segments HVI and part of HVII showed the Vedda to be "genetically distinct from other major ethnic groups (Sinhalese, Sri Lankan Tamils and Indian Tamils) in Sri Lanka." Another study on alpha-2-HS-glycoprotein allele frequency showed the Veddas and Sinhalese to be more biologically related to each other than to most other ethnic groups in Asia.<ref>{{Cite journal |title=A study of genetic polymorphisms in mitochondrial DNA hypervariable regions I and II of the five major ethnic groups and Vedda population in Sri Lanka|last=Ranasinghe|first=Ruwandi|journal=Legal Medicine |date=2015|volume=17|issue=6|pages=539–46|doi=10.1016/j.legalmed.2015.05.007|pmid=26065620}}</ref> | |||
The interior Veddahs follow a mix of ] and nominal ] where as the east coast Veddahs follow a mix of animism and nominal ] known as folk Hinduism amongst anthropologists. | |||
==Language== | |||
One of the most distinctive features of Vedda religion is the worship of dead ancestors: these are termed nae "yaku" among the Sinhala-speaking Veddas.<ref>Seligmann, Charles and Brenda (1911). The Veddas. Cambridge University Press (pages 123-135).</ref> There are also peculiar deities that are unique to Veddas. One of them is "Kande Yakka".<ref>"Seligmann", Charles and Brenda (1911). The Veddas. Cambridge University Press (pages 30-31).</ref> | |||
{{Main|Vedda language}} | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] was the historical center of the ], a ]-based creole.]] | |||
The original language of the Veddas is the ], which today is used primarily by the interior Veddas of ]. Communities such as ] and ], who do not identify themselves strictly as Veddas, also use Vedda language for communication during hunting and or for religious chants.{{citation needed|date=March 2017}} When a systematic field study was conducted in 1959, it was determined that the language was confined to the older generation of Veddas from Dambana. In the 1990s, self-identifying Veddas knew few words and phrases in the Vedda language, but there were individuals who knew the language comprehensively. Initially, there was considerable debate among ] as to whether Vedda is a dialect of ] or an independent language. Later studies indicate that it diverged from its parent stock in the 10th century and became a ] and a stable independent language by the 13th century, under the influence of ]. | |||
The parent Vedda language(s) is of unknown ], while Sinhala is of the ] branch of ]. ] it is distinguished from Sinhala by the higher frequency of ] sounds C and J. The effect is also heightened by the addition of ] ]. Vedda language word class is ] divided into ], ] and variables with unique ] in animate nouns. Per its Creole tradition, it has reduced and simplified many forms of Sinhala such as second person ] and denotations of negative meanings. Instead of borrowing new words from Sinhala, Vedda created combinations of words from a limited lexical stock. Vedda also maintains many ] Sinhala terms prior to the 10th to 12th centuries, as a ] of its close contact with Sinhala. Vedda also retains a number of unique words that cannot be derived from Sinhala. Likewise, Sinhala has also borrowed from the original Vedda language, words, and grammatical structures, differentiating it from its related Indo-Aryan languages. Vedda has exerted a ] influence in the formation of Sinhala. | |||
Both the sub divisions of the Veddas along with the Island's ], ] and ] communities venerate the temple complex situated at ], showing the ] that has evolved over 2,000 years of coexistence and assimilation. Kataragama is supposed to be the site at which the Hindu god ] or ] in ] met and married a local tribal girl, ], who in Sri Lanka is believed to have been a Vedda.<ref name="Kataragama"></ref> | |||
Veddas that have adopted ] are found primarily in the southeastern part of the country, especially in the vicinity of Bintenne in ]. There are also Veddas that have adopted Sinhala who live in Anuradhapura District in the North Central Province.{{sfn|Brow|1978}}<ref name=Nira>{{cite web|url=http://www.srilankaguardian.org/2010/07/sri-lankas-conflict-culture-and.html|title=Sri Lanka's conflict: culture and lineages of the past|author-link=Nira Wickramasinghe|first=Nira|last=Wickramasinghe| publisher=Sri Lanka Guardian|access-date=February 20, 2016}}</ref> | |||
There are a number of other ]s across the island, not as famous as Kataragama that are as sacred to the Veddas as well as to other communities.<ref name="Kataragama" /> | |||
Another group, often termed ], is found in coastal areas of the Eastern Province, between ] and ]. These Veddas have adopted ] as their mother tongue.<ref name="vedda.org">{{Cite web|url=http://vedda.org/coastal-veddas.htm|title=Sri Lanka's east coastal Vedda indigenous communities|website=vedda.org|accessdate=26 May 2023}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://vedda.org/seligmann-coastal-veddas.htm|title=East Coast Veddas|website=vedda.org|accessdate=26 May 2023}}</ref> | |||
Veddha religion centred round a cult of ancestral spirits known as Ne yaku , whom the Veddhas invoked for game and yams. | |||
==Cultural aspects== | |||
===Society=== | |||
===Language=== | |||
*Marriage | |||
{{main|Vedda language}} | |||
The Veddha marriage ceremony is a very simple affair. The ritual consists of the bride tying a bark rope (''diya lanuva'') of her own twisting, around the waist of the bridegroom. This is the essence of the Veddha marriage and is symbolic of the bride's acceptance of the man as her mate and life partner. Although marriage between cross-cousins was the norm until recently, this has changed significantly, with Veddha women even contracting marriages with their Sinhalese and Moor neighbours. | |||
The parent of Vedda language is of unknown ] and is considered a ]. Early linguists and observers of the language considered it to be either a separate language or a dialect of Sinhala. The chief proponent of the dialect theory was ], but he also contradicted himself by claiming that Vedda was a ] aboriginal language.<ref name=V227>{{Harvnb|Van Driem|2002|page=227}}</ref> | |||
Veddas consider the Vedda language to be distinct from Sinhala and use it as an ethnic marker to differentiate them from Sinhalese people.<ref name=D81>{{Harvnb|Dharmadasa|1974|page=81}}</ref> | |||
*Women | |||
In Veddha society, woman is in many respects man's equal. She is entitled to similar inheritance. Descent is also reckoned through the female line (a ] culture). Monogamy is the general rule, though a widow would be frequently married by her husband's brother as a means of support and consolation (]). The women are said to make faithful wives and affectionate mothers. | |||
===Religion=== | |||
*Death | |||
The original religion of Veddas is ]. The Sinhalized interior Veddahs follow a mix of animism and nominal ]; whereas the Tamilized east coast Veddahs follow a mix of animism and nominal ] with ] influences among anthropologists.{{clarify|date=March 2020}} | |||
Death too is a simple affair without any ostentatious funeral ceremonies and the corpse of the deceased is promptly buried without much ado. | |||
One of the most distinctive features of Vedda religion is the worship of dead ancestors, who are called ''nae yaku'' among the Sinhala-speaking Veddas and are invoked for the game and ]s.{{sfn|Seligmann|Seligmann|1911|pp=123-135}} There are also peculiar deities unique to Veddas, such as ''Kande Yakka''.{{sfn|Seligmann|Seligmann|1911|pp=30-31}} | |||
*Healthcare | |||
Although the medical knowledge of the Veddha is limited, it nevertheless appears to be sufficient. For example, python oil (''pimburu tel''), a local remedy used for healing wounds, has proven to be very successful in the treatment of fractures, deep cuts and so on. | |||
Veddas, along with the Island's ], ] and ] communities, venerate the temple complex situated at ], showing the ] that has evolved over 2,000 years of coexistence and assimilation. Kataragama is supposed to be the site where the Hindu god Skanda or ] in ] met and married a local tribal girl, ], who in Sri Lanka is believed to have been a Vedda.<ref name="Kataragama">{{Cite web|url=http://kataragama.org/|title=Ruhuṇu Kataragama Dēvālaya | Katirkāmam Murugan Kōvil | dedicated to Kataragama deviyo|website=kataragama.org|accessdate=26 May 2023}}</ref> | |||
*Burials | |||
See ''Main article ]'' | |||
There are a number of less famous ]s across the island which are sacred to the Veddas as well as to other communities.<ref name="Kataragama" /> | |||
Since the opening of colonisation schemes Veddha burials changed when they dug graves of about 4-5 feet in depth and left the body wrapped in some cloth and covered with leaves and earth. The Veddas also scooped the trunks of the ''Gadumba'' tree and laid the body between the scopped out wood planks held together and then buried. At the head of the grave were kept three open coconuts and a small bundle of wood, while at its foot were kept an opened coconut and an untouched coconut. Certain plants of the cactus species ''(pathok)'' were planted at the head of the grave, the middle and the foot their personal possessions like the bow and arrow, betel pouch, were also buried. This practice varied according to the different communities of the aboriginal settlements. The contents of the betel pouch of the deceased were eaten after his death, Never was a burial custom inherited to them. | |||
===Rituals=== | |||
In Vedda burial rituals the dead body was scented or smeared with some juice obtained from the leaves of jungle trees or a lime tree. The foot or the head of the grave was never lit either with fire or wax and water was not kept in a vessel by the grave side. | |||
] | |||
Vedda marriage is a simple ceremony. It consists of the bride tying a bark rope (''Diya lanuva'') that she has twisted, around the waist of the groom. This symbolizes the bride's acceptance of the man as her mate and life partner. Although ] marriage between cross-cousins was the norm until recently, this has changed significantly, with Vedda women even contracting marriages with their Sinhalese and Moor neighbors. | |||
In Vedda society, women are in many respects men's equals. They are entitled to similar inheritance. Monogamy is the general rule, though a widow would frequently marry her husband's brother as a means of support and consolation (]). They also do not practice a ] system.<ref></ref> | |||
*Cult of the Dead | |||
The Veddas believe in the cult of the dead. They worshipped and made incantations to their ''Nae Yakka'' (Relative Spirit) followed by other customary ritual (called the ''Kiri Koraha'') which is still in vogue among the surviving gam veddas of Rathugala, Pollebedda Dambana and the Henanigala Vedda re-settlement (in Mahaweli systems off Mahiyangane). | |||
Death, too, is a simple affair without ostentatious funeral ceremonies where the corpse of the deceased is promptly buried. | |||
They believed that the spirit of their dead would haunt them bringing forth diseases and calamity. To appease the dead spirit they invoke the blessings of the Nae Yakka and other spirits, like ''Bilinda Yakka, Kande Yakka'' followed by the dance ritual of ''Kirikorah''a. | |||
===Burial=== | |||
''According to Sarasin Cousins (in 1886) and Seligmann's book - 'The Veddas' (1910).'' | |||
Since the opening of colonization schemes, Vedda burials changed when they dug graves of {{convert|4|-|5|ft|m|abbr=in|order=flip}} deep and wrapped the body wrapped cloth and covered it with leaves and earth. The Veddas also laid the body between the scooped out trunks of the ''gadumba'' tree ('']'') before they buried it. At the head of the grave were kept three open coconuts and a small bundle of wood, while at its foot were kept an opened ] and an untouched coconut. Certain cactus species (''pathok'', '']'' or '']'') were planted at the head, the middle and the foot. Personal possessions like the bow and arrow, betel pouch, were also buried. This practice varied by community. The contents of the ] pouch of the deceased were eaten after his death. | |||
===Cult of the dead=== | |||
"When man or woman dies from sickness, the body is left in the cave or rock shelter where the death took place, the body is not washed or dressed or ornamented in any way, but is generally allowed to be in the natural supine position and is covered with leaves and branches. This was formerly the universal custom and still persists among the less sophisticated Veddas who sometimes in addition place a large stone upon the chest for which no reason could be given, this is observed at Sitala Wanniya (off Polle-bedda close to Maha Oya), where the body is still covered with branches and left where the death occurred. | |||
The Veddas practice what is referred to by Western ethnologists as "a cult of the dead".<ref name=":1">{{Cite book |last1=Seligman |first1=C. G. (Charles Gabriel) |url=https://archive.org/details/veddas__00seliuoft |title=The Veddas |last2=Seligman |first2=Brenda Z. |date=1911 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |others=Robarts - University of Toronto}}</ref> The Vedda perception of the world when originally studied in the mid 19th and early 20th centuries was not divided into polarities as life and afterlife or living and dead. At that time when asked whether the dead lived on as spirits they found that "they did not consider whether the departed were living or dead, they were just spirits...all spirits were alike neither good nor bad".<ref name=":1" /> | |||
In the words of John Bailey studying this population in 1853: "the Veddahs have a vague belief in a host of undefined spirits, whose influence is rather for good than evil...they believe the air is peopled by spirits, that every rock and every tree, every forest and every hill, in short every feature of nature, has its genus loci;but these seem little else than nameless phantoms whom they regard with mysterious awe than actual dread".<ref name=":2">{{Cite journal |last=Bailey |first=John |date=1863 |title=An Account of the Wild Tribes of the Veddahs of Ceylon: Their Habits, Customs, and Superstitions |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/3014327 |journal=Transactions of the Ethnological Society of London |volume=2 |pages=278–320 |doi=10.2307/3014327 |jstor=3014327 |issn=1368-0366}}</ref> | |||
*Clothing | |||
Until fairly recent times, the raiment of the Veddhas was remarkably scanty. In the case of men, it consisted only of a ] suspended with a string at the waist, while in the case of women, it comprised of a piece of cloth that extended from the navel to the knees. Today, however, Veddha attire is more covering, men wear a short ] extending from the waist to the knees, while the womenfolk clad themselves in a garment similar to the ] ''diya-redda'' which extends from the breastline to the knees. | |||
In addition to this experience of the world often referred to as "animism" they have a belief that after death every relative is a spirit "of those who watches over the welfare of those left behind. These, which include their ancestors and their children, the term their 'nehya yakoon', kindred spirits. They describe them as ever watchful, coming to them in sickness, visiting them in dreams, giving them flesh when hunting".<ref name=":2" /> | |||
===Music=== | |||
The Vedda behavior at the time of these original ethnological studies regarding the recently dead is quite different from our behavior toward the dead. | |||
''Bori Bori Sellam-Sellam Bedo Wanniya,'' | |||
"When a person dies it is the hetha that killed him; and the hetha of the dead one remains by the corpse and haunts the vicinity for years."<ref>{{Cite book |last=Spittel |first=Richard |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2tM-AAAAIAAJ |title=Wild Ceylon: Describing in Particular the Lives of the Present Day Veddas |date=1924 |publisher=Colombo Apothecaries Company, Limited |language=en}}</ref> | |||
The majority of the Vedda tribes studied at that time held what is referred to as a "kirikohraha ceremony". This was often held "to present an offering to the newly dead within a week or two of their decease...The yaku of the recently dead....are supposed to stand towards the surviving members of the group in the light of friends and relatives, who if well treated will continue to show loving kindness to their survivors, and only if neglected will show disgust and anger by withdrawing their assistance, or becoming actively hostile."<ref name=":1" /> | |||
''Palletalawa Navinna-Pita Gosin Vetenne,'' | |||
===Clothing=== | |||
''Malpivili genagene-Hele Kado Navinne,'' | |||
] | |||
Until fairly recent times, the clothing of the Veddas was limited. In the case of men, it consisted only of a ] suspended with a string at the waist, while in the case of women, it was a piece of cloth that extended from the navel to the knees. Today, however, Vedda attire is more covering, men wear a short ] extending from the waist to the knees, while the women clad themselves in a garment similar to the ] ''diya-redda'' which extends from the breast line to the knees. | |||
===Music=== | |||
''Diyapivili Genagene-Thige Bo Haliskote Peni,'' | |||
{{organize section|date=March 2017}} | |||
''Ka tho ipal denne''\ | |||
"palayando palayando palayando Uthooo....." | |||
{{blockquote|''Bori Bori Sellam-Sellam Bedo Wannita,'' | |||
(A Vedda honeycomb cutter's folk song) | |||
''Palletalawa Navinna-Pita Gosin Vetenne,'' | |||
Meaning of this song - The bees from yonder hills of Palle Talawa and Kade suck nectar from the flowers and made the honeycomb. So why should you give them undue pain when there is no honey by cutting the honeycomb. | |||
''Malpivili genagene-Hele Kado Navinne,'' | |||
===Art=== | |||
''Diyapivili Genagene-Thige Bo Haliskote Peni,'' | |||
Vedda cave drawings such as those found at ''Hamangala'' provide graphic evidence of the sublime spiritual and artistic vision achieved by the ancestors of today's ''Wanniyala-Aetto'' people. Most researchers today agree that the artistes most likely were the ''Wanniyala-Aetto'' women who spent long hours in these caves waiting for their menfolk's return from the hunt. | |||
''Ka tho ipal denne'' | |||
Understood from this perspective, these cave drawings depict brilliant feats of ''Wanniyala-Aetto'' culture as seen through the eyes of its womenfolk. The simple yet graceful abstract figures are portrayed engaging in feats of vision and daring that place them firmly above even the greatest beasts of their jungle habitat. | |||
|A Vedda honeycomb cutter's folk song<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://vedda.org/keerthisinghe.htm|title = The Veddas of Sri Lanka}}</ref>}} | |||
The nimbus or halo about the human figures' heads represents the sun's disc and, equally, the sacred power bordering upon divinity that accrues not only to great hunters but to all those endowed with the vision to behold and apprehend the marvel of divinity in humble guise. Even up to modern times, the Wanniyala-Aetto used to swear oaths of truth by the divinity of the sun, saying 'upon Maha Suriyo Deviyo'. | |||
Meaning of this song: The bees from yonder hills of Palle Talawa and Kade suck nectar from the flowers and made the honeycomb. So why should you give them undue pain when there is no honey by cutting the honeycomb. | |||
Such cave drawings have long served as visual memory aids and as teaching tools for the transmission of ancestral wisdom traditions to succeeding generations. To this day, they provide silent testimony to the profound heights attained by Lanka's indigenous culture expressed with elegant simplicity that people of all communities may appreciate. | |||
==Livelihood== | ==Livelihood== | ||
] | |||
Veddas were originally ]s. They used bows and arrows to hunt game, harpoons and toxic plants for fishing and gathered wild plants, yams, honey, fruit and nuts.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.survivalinternational.org/tribes/wanniyala|title=Wanniyala-Aetto|first=Survival|last=International|website=www.survivalinternational.org|accessdate=26 May 2023}}</ref> Many Veddas also farm, frequently using ] or swidden cultivation, which is called ''Hena'' in Sri Lanka. East Coast Veddas also practice sea fishing. Veddas are famously known for their rich meat diet. Venison and the flesh of rabbit, turtle, tortoise, monitor lizard, wild boar and the common brown monkey are consumed with much relish. The Veddas kill only for food and do not harm young or pregnant animals. Game is commonly shared amongst the family and clan. Fish are caught by employing fish poisons such as the juice of the ''pus-vel'' (Entada scandens) and ''daluk-kiri'' (Cactus milk). | |||
] | |||
Vedda culinary fare is also deserving of mention. Amongst the best known are ''gona perume'', which is a sort of sausage containing alternate layers of meat and fat, and ''goya-tel-perume'', which is the tail of the monitor lizard (talagoya), stuffed with fat obtained from its sides and roasted in embers. Another Vedda delicacy is dried meat preserve soaked in honey. The Veddas used to preserve such meat in the hollow of a tree, enclosing it with clay. | |||
] | |||
Such succulent meat served as a ready food supply in times of scarcity. The early part of the year (January–February) is considered to be the season of yams and mid-year (June–July) that of fruit and honey, while hunting is availed of throughout the year. ''Kurakkan'' ('']'') is cultivated very often. Maize, yams, gourds and melons are also cultivated. The Veddas used to live in caves and rock shelters. Today, they live in huts of wattle, daub and thatch. | |||
Veddas were originally ]s. They used bows and arrows to hunt game, and also gathered wild plants and honey. Many Veddas also farm, frequently using ] or swidden cultivation, which is called "chena" in Sri Lanka. East Coast Veddas also practice fishing. Veddhas are famously known for their rich meat diet. Venison and the flesh of rabbit, turtle, tortoise, monitor lizard, wild boar and the common brown monkey are consumed with much relish. The Veddhas kill only for food and do not harm young or pregnant animals. Game is commonly shared amongst the family and clan. Fish are caught by employing fish poisons such as the juice of the ''pus-vel'' (Entada scandens) and ''daluk-kiri'' (Cactus milk). Veddha culinary fare is also deserving of mention. Amongst the best known are ''gona perume'', which is a sort of sausage containing alternate layers of meat and fat, and ''goya-tel-perume'', which is the tail of the monitor lizard (talagoya), stuffed with fat obtained from its sides and roasted in embers. Another Veddha delicacy is dried meat preserve soaked in honey. In the olden days, the Veddhas used to preserve such meat in the hollow of a tree, enclosing it with clay. | |||
In the reign of Datusena (6th century CE) the Mahaweli ganga was diverted at Minipe in the Minipe canal nearly {{convert|47|mi|km|-1|abbr=in|order=flip}} long said to be constructed with help from the Yakkas. The Mahawamsa refers to the canal as Yaka-bendi-ela. When the Ruwanweli Seya was built in King Dutugemunu's time (2nd century BCE) the Veddas procured the necessary minerals from the jungles. | |||
Such succulent meat served as a ready food supply in times of scarcity. The early part of the year (January-February) is considered to be the season of yams and mid-year (June-July) that of fruit and honey, while hunting is availed of throughout the year. Nowadays, more and more Veddha folk have taken to ''Chena'' (slash and burn) cultivation. ''Kurakkan'' (Eleusine coracana) is cultivated very often. Maize, yams, gourds and melons are also cultivated. In the olden days, the dwellings of the Veddhas consisted of caves and rock shelters. Today, they live in unpretentious huts of wattle, daub and thatch. | |||
Parakrama Bahu the Great (12th century), in his war against the rebels, employed Veddas as scouts. | |||
==Place in History== | |||
Rajasinghe II (17th century), in his battle with the Dutch, had a Vedda regiment. In the abortive Uva-Welessa revolt of 1817–1818 of the British times, led by Keppetipola Disawe, the Veddas too fought with the rebels against the British forces. | |||
In the reign of King Datusena (6th century A.D.) the Mahaweli ganga was diverted at Minipe in the Minipe canal nearly 47 miles long said to be constructed with help from the Yakkas. The Mahawamsa refers to the canal as Yaka-bendi-ela. When the Ruwanweli Seya was built in King Dutugemunu's time (2nd century B.C.) the Veddas procured the necessary minerals from the jungles. | |||
==Current status== | |||
King Parakrama Bahu the great of (12 century) in his war against the rebels employed these Veddas as scouts. | |||
{{Historical populations | |||
|type = | |||
|footnote = Source:]<ref>{{cite web|title=Population by ethnic group, census years|url=http://www.statistics.gov.lk/abstract2010/chapters/Chap2/AB2-10.pdf|publisher=Department of Census & Statistics, Sri Lanka|access-date=23 October 2012|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111113175023/http://www.statistics.gov.lk/abstract2010/chapters/Chap2/AB2-10.pdf|archive-date=13 November 2011}}</ref><br />Data is based on <br />] Census. | |||
|1881 | 2200 | |||
|1891 | 1200 | |||
|1901 | 4000 | |||
|1911 | 5300 | |||
|1921 | 4500 | |||
|1931 | 5200 | |||
|1946 | 2400 | |||
|1953 | 800 | |||
|1963 | 400 | |||
|1971 | | |||
|1981 | | |||
|1989 (est.) | | |||
|2001 | | |||
|2011 | | |||
}} | |||
Some observers have said Veddas are disappearing and have lamented the decline of their distinct culture.<ref name=Nira/><ref name=UN>, vedda.org Retrieved 4-12-2015</ref><ref>Spittel, R. L. (1950). ''Vanished Trails: The Last of the Veddas''. Oxford University Press.</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://vimeo.com/45950118|title=Stuck Between Two Worlds|accessdate=26 May 2023|via=vimeo.com}}</ref> Land acquisition for mass irrigation projects, government forest reserve restrictions, and the civil war have disrupted traditional Vedda ways of life.<ref name=Nira/><ref name=UN/><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QbO0id6g0NQ|title=Season of the Spirit Bear - Part 5|accessdate=26 May 2023|via=www.youtube.com}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ae4JoWqWkU|title=Sri Lanka Debrief News - 21. 07. 2010|accessdate=26 May 2023|via=www.youtube.com}}</ref> Between 1977 and 1983 under the Accelerated ] and colonization schemes, approximately 51468 hectares were turned into a gigantic hydroelectric dam irrigation project.<ref name=UN/><ref name=passports>, vedda.org Retrieved 4-12-2015</ref> Subsequently, the creation of the ] deprived the Veddhas their last hunting grounds.<ref name=passports/> In 1985, the Veddha Chief Thissahamy and his delegation were obstructed from attending the United Nations ].<ref name=passports/> Dr. Wiveca Stegeborn, an ], has been studying the Vedda since 1977 and alleges that their young women are being tricked into accepting contracts to the ] as ]s when in fact they will be ] into ] or sold as ].<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://gender-policy.tripod.com/backissues/March01.html#Article%20Two |title=Endangered Wanniyala-Aetto Women sent as Sex Slaves to the Middle East |access-date=2006-11-17 |archive-date=2012-02-20 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120220031338/http://gender-policy.tripod.com/backissues/March01.html#Article%20Two |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
In the reign of King Rajasinghe II (17 century A.D.) in his battle with the Dutch he had a Vedda regiment. In the abortive Uva-Welessa revolt of 1817-1818 of the British times, led by Keppetipola Dissawe, the Veddas too fought with the rebels against the British forces. | |||
However, ] of Veddas with other local populations has been going on for a long time. "Vedda" has been used in Sri Lanka to mean not only hunter-gatherers but also to refer to any people who adopt an unsettled and rural way of life and thus can be a ] term not based on ethnic group. Thus, over time, it is possible for non-Vedda groups to become Veddas, in this broad cultural sense.{{sfn|Brow|1978|p=34}}<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.artsrilanka.org/essays/vaddaprimitivism/index.html |title=Obeyesekere, Gananath. Colonial Histories and Vadda Primitivism |access-date=June 11, 2006 |archive-date=February 17, 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130217140154/http://www.artsrilanka.org/essays/vaddaprimitivism/index.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> Vedda populations of this kind are increasing in some districts.{{sfn|Brow|1978|p=3}} | |||
==Linguistics== | |||
''Main article ]'' | |||
==In zoology== | |||
Their language, usually referred to as ], is closely related to ], although much of its vocabulary (especially terms associated with the forest and their lifestyle) can not be traced to Sinhala and may be from a language(s) spoken before the adoption of the Sinhalese language. | |||
A spider genus endemic to Sri Lanka was named '']'' as a dedication to Sri Lanka's oldest civilized people.<ref>{{cite journal|url=http://www.pholcidae.de/PDFs/sri_lanka_2005.pdf |author=] |author2=Benjamin, Suresh P.|year=2005|title=The pholcid spiders from Sri Lanka: redescription of ''Pholcus ceylonicus'' and description of a new genus (Araneae: Pholcidae)|journal=Journal of Natural History|volume=39|issue=37|pages=3305–3319|doi=10.1080/00222930500145123|bibcode=2005JNatH..39.3305H |s2cid=53418516|access-date=6 May 2016}}</ref> | |||
A species of Sri Lankan snake, '']'', was named in honor of the Vedda.<ref>Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2011). ''The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles''. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. {{ISBN|978-1-4214-0135-5}}. ("Vedda/Veddha", p. 273).</ref> | |||
Examples include the Wanniyala-Aetto word ''ruhang'' for friend, while the Sinhala word is ''yaluva'' (] /jaːluaː/). There are also communities of Wanniyala-Aetto who speak ] in the east coast (Vetas)<ref>http://vedda.org/coastal-veddas.htm</ref>. | |||
== |
==See also== | ||
*] | |||
Some observers have said Veddas are disappearing and have lamented the decline of their distinct culture.<ref>Spittel, R.L. (1950). Vanished Trails: The Last of the Veddas. Oxford University Press.</ref> Development, government forest reserve restrictions, and the civil war have disrupted traditional Vedda ways of life. Dr. Wiveca Stegeborn, an ], has been studying the Vedda since 1977 and alleges that their young women are being tricked into accepting contracts to the ] as ] when in fact they will be ] into ] or sold as ]. | |||
*] | |||
*The United Nations ] | |||
==References== | |||
However, ] of Veddas with other local populations has been going on for a long time. "Vedda" has been used in Sri Lanka to mean not only hunter-gatherers or people who have an aboriginal ancestry, but also to refer to any people who adopt an unsettled and rural way of life and thus can be a ] term not based on ethnic group. Thus, over time, it is possible for non-Vedda groups to become Veddas, in this broad cultural sense.<ref>Brow, James (1978). Vedda Villages of Anuradhapura. University of Washington Press (page 34).</ref><ref></ref> Vedda populations of this kind are increasing in some districts.<ref>Brow, James (1978). Vedda Villages of Anuradhapura. University of Washington Press (page 3).</ref> | |||
{{Commons category|Veddas|Vedda people}}{{Reflist}} | |||
==Bibliography== | |||
Today many Sinhalese people and some east coast Tamils claim that they have some trace of Veddah blood. Intermarriage between Veddas and Sinhalese is very frequent. They are not considered outcasts in Sri Lankan society, unlike the untouchable ] called ] (see ]). | |||
*{{cite book|last=Brow|first=James|year=1978|title=Vedda Villages of Anuradhapura|publisher=University of Washington Press}} | |||
*{{cite journal|last=Dharmadasa|first=K. N. O.|date=February 1974|title=The Creolization of an Aboriginal language:The case of Vedda in Sri Lanka (Ceylon)|journal=Anthropological Linguistics|publisher=]|volume=16|issue=2|pages=79–106|jstor=30029514}} | |||
*{{cite book|last=Van Driem|first=George|author-link=George van Driem|title=Languages of the Himalayas: An Ethnolinguistic Handbook of the Greater Himalayan Region |publisher=Brill Academic Publishers|date=January 15, 2002|isbn=90-04-10390-2 }} | |||
*{{cite book|last1=Seligmann|first1=Charles|last2=Seligmann|first2=Brenda|year=1911|title=The Veddas|publisher=Cambridge University Press}} | |||
==Further reading== | |||
The current leader of the Wanniyala-Aetto community is Uru Warige Wanniya. | |||
*{{cite book|editor-first1=Richard B.|editor-last1=Lee|editor-first2=Richard|editor-last2=Daly|date=March 2005|title=The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Hunters and Gatherers|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=0-521-60919-4}} | |||
* {{cite journal |last1=Kulatilake |first1=Samanti |title=The Sarasins' Collection of Historical Sri Lankan Crania |journal=Anthropological Science |date=2020 |volume=128 |issue=3 |pages=119–128 |doi=10.1537/ase.200428 |doi-access=free }} | |||
==References== | |||
<div class="references-small"> | |||
<references/> | |||
</div> | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
A great deal of information on them can be found at | |||
* | * | ||
* | * | ||
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* | * | ||
{{Ethnic groups in Sri Lanka}} | |||
==See also== | |||
{{Indigenous peoples by continent}} | |||
{{Authority control}} | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Vedda People}} | |||
*] | |||
] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
''The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Hunters and Gatherers'', editor Richard B. Lee. | |||
(ISBN-13: 9780521609197 | ISBN-10: 0521609194) | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
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Latest revision as of 21:28, 22 December 2024
Indigenous people in Sri Lanka For the language, see Vedda language. For articles with similar titles, see Veda (disambiguation). Not to be confused with Vedic people or Venda people.This article may be in need of reorganization to comply with Misplaced Pages's layout guidelines. Please help by editing the article to make improvements to the overall structure. (March 2017) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
Ethnic group
Vedda man and child. | |
Total population | |
---|---|
Between 2,500 - 6,600 (less than 0.20% of the population) (2001) | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Sri Lanka 2,500 (2002) | |
Languages | |
Vedda, Sinhala, Sri Lankan Tamil | |
Religion | |
Traditional animistic beliefs with Buddhism, Hinduism | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Sinhalese, Tamils |
The Vedda (Sinhala: වැද්දා [ˈvædːaː]; Tamil: வேடர் (Vēḍar)), or Wanniyalaeto, are a minority indigenous group of people in Sri Lanka who, among other sub-communities such as Coast Veddas, Anuradhapura Veddas and Bintenne Veddas, are accorded indigenous status. The Vedda minority in Sri Lanka may become completely assimilated. Most speak Sinhala instead of their indigenous languages, which are nearing extinction. It has been hypothesized that the Vedda were probably the earliest inhabitants of Sri Lanka and have lived on the island since before the arrival of other groups from the Indian mainland.
A 2024 genetics study using high-resolution autosomal and Mitochondrial DNA found that the Veddas were genetically closer to the Santhal, Juang, Irula and Paniya tribes (as well as the Pallar caste) of India, than to the Sinhalese and Sri Lankan Tamils. The study concluded that the Veddas were "a genetically drifted group with limited gene flow from neighbouring Sinhalese and Sri Lankan Tamil populations" and that the maternal Haplogroup M mediated their initial settlement of the island. Other studies have shown the Vedda share genetic components with the Sinhalese and Sri Lankan Tamils as well as genetic affinity with the Irula, Kota and Mulla Kuruma of India, the Semai and Senoi of Malaysia and tribal groups of Upper Myanmar.
The Ratnapura District, which is part of the Sabaragamuwa Province, is known to have been inhabited by the Veddas in the distant past. This has been shown by scholars like Nandadeva Wijesekera. The very name Sabaragamuwa is believed to have meant the village of the Sabaras or "forest barbarians". Place-names such as Vedda-gala (Vedda Rock), Vedda-ela (Vedda Canal) and Vedi-Kanda (Vedda Mountain) in the Ratnapura District also bear testimony to this. As Wijesekera observes, a strong Vedda element is discernible in the population of Vedda-gala and its environs.
Etymology
Ethnonyms of Vedda include Vadda, Veddah, Veddha and Vaddo. "Vedda" is a word that stems from the Tamil word Vēdan meaning "hunter", or from Sanskrit vyādha ("hunter") or veddhṛ ("the one who pierces").
Population affinities
Anthropology
The Vedda are often seen as the native population of Sri Lanka. A 2011 study on dental characteristics suggested a close relation between Vedda and other South Asians as well as to western Eurasian populations. A 2012 study on crania showed the Vedda to have close affinities with other South Asian populations such as other Sri Lankans, South Indians, and Punjabis and to differ significantly from Andaman islanders.
A 2013 craniometric study by Raghavan et al. showed that the Vedda are closely related to other groups in Sri Lanka and India, especially to Sinhalese and Tamils, and also indicated deep relations between South Asian populations and the modern populations of Europe, the Middle East and North Africa. According to Raghavan et al. the cranial characteristics of the Vedda are closest to other South Asians and distinct from "Australo-Melanesians". However, Raghavan et al. also, while also noting the distinctiveness of between South Asian (including Vedda) and Andamanese crania, explain that this is not in conflict with genetic evidence showing a partial common ancestry (a non-West Eurasian component known as "Ancestral South Indian" or "ASI") and genetic affinity between South Asians and the native Andamanese (who are sometimes classified as Australo-Melanesians), stating that "The distinctiveness of Andamanese and southern Indian crania need not challenge the finding by Reich et al. for an "Ancestral South Indian" ancestry shared by southern Indians and Andamanese", and that the differences may be in part due to the greater craniometric specialization of South Asians compared to Andamanese.
Genetics
Groups ancestral to the modern Veddas were probably the earliest inhabitants of Sri Lanka. Their arrival is dated tentatively to about 40,000–35,000 years ago. They show a relationship with other South Asian and Sri Lankan populations, but are genetically distinguishable from the other peoples of Sri Lanka, and show a high degree of intra-group diversity. This is consistent with a long history of existing as small subgroups undergoing significant genetic drift.
In one study on maternal (mitochondrial DNA) haplogroups in Sri Lankan populations (the Vedda, Sri Lankan Tamils, Indian Tamils of Sri Lanka, and Sinhalese), the Vedda were found to carry predominantly haplogroups U and R and to carry maternal haplogroup M at about 17%, unlike the Indian Tamils of Sri Lanka and many mainland Indian tribal groups, among which haplogroup M is predominant. The Vedda people and Low-country Sinhalese showed frequencies of haplogroup R at 45.33 and 25%, respectively. The Vedda were found to be distinct but closer to Sinhalese than to other South Asian groups. It was determined in the study to be likely that the branches of haplogroups R and U "found to be particularly prevalent in the Vedda, were derived from ancestors on the Indian subcontinent."
Another study on maternal haplogroups in Sri Lankan groups (also the Vedda, Sri Lankan Tamil, and Sinhalese) found similar results, with the Vedda belonging predominantly to the mitochondrial haplogroup N (which "exists in almost all European, Oceanian, and many Asian and Amerindian populations.") and its subgroups U and R (with those comprising about two thirds of their maternal lineages), differing from other South Asian groups (such as the Sri Lankan Tamil, Sinhalese, and several Indian Tribal groups) among whom haplogroup M is predominant. The study also found that "South Asian (Indian) haplogroups were predominant" in the three Sri Lankan groups (including the Vedda) but that the Sinhalese, Sri Lankan Tamil, and Vedda populations also "had a considerable presence of West Eurasian haplogroups." One phylogenetic study on mitochondrial DNA hypervariable segments HVI and part of HVII showed the Vedda to be "genetically distinct from other major ethnic groups (Sinhalese, Sri Lankan Tamils and Indian Tamils) in Sri Lanka." Another study on alpha-2-HS-glycoprotein allele frequency showed the Veddas and Sinhalese to be more biologically related to each other than to most other ethnic groups in Asia.
Language
Main article: Vedda languageThe original language of the Veddas is the Vedda language, which today is used primarily by the interior Veddas of Dambana. Communities such as Coast Veddas and Anuradhapura Veddas, who do not identify themselves strictly as Veddas, also use Vedda language for communication during hunting and or for religious chants. When a systematic field study was conducted in 1959, it was determined that the language was confined to the older generation of Veddas from Dambana. In the 1990s, self-identifying Veddas knew few words and phrases in the Vedda language, but there were individuals who knew the language comprehensively. Initially, there was considerable debate among linguists as to whether Vedda is a dialect of Sinhala or an independent language. Later studies indicate that it diverged from its parent stock in the 10th century and became a Creole and a stable independent language by the 13th century, under the influence of Sinhala.
The parent Vedda language(s) is of unknown genetic origins, while Sinhala is of the Indo-Aryan branch of Indo-European languages. Phonologically it is distinguished from Sinhala by the higher frequency of palatal sounds C and J. The effect is also heightened by the addition of inanimate suffixes. Vedda language word class is morphologically divided into nouns, verbs and variables with unique gender distinctions in animate nouns. Per its Creole tradition, it has reduced and simplified many forms of Sinhala such as second person pronouns and denotations of negative meanings. Instead of borrowing new words from Sinhala, Vedda created combinations of words from a limited lexical stock. Vedda also maintains many archaic Sinhala terms prior to the 10th to 12th centuries, as a relict of its close contact with Sinhala. Vedda also retains a number of unique words that cannot be derived from Sinhala. Likewise, Sinhala has also borrowed from the original Vedda language, words, and grammatical structures, differentiating it from its related Indo-Aryan languages. Vedda has exerted a substratum influence in the formation of Sinhala.
Veddas that have adopted Sinhala are found primarily in the southeastern part of the country, especially in the vicinity of Bintenne in Uva Province. There are also Veddas that have adopted Sinhala who live in Anuradhapura District in the North Central Province.
Another group, often termed East Coast Veddas, is found in coastal areas of the Eastern Province, between Batticaloa and Trincomalee. These Veddas have adopted Tamil as their mother tongue.
Cultural aspects
Language
Main article: Vedda languageThe parent of Vedda language is of unknown linguistic origin and is considered a language isolate. Early linguists and observers of the language considered it to be either a separate language or a dialect of Sinhala. The chief proponent of the dialect theory was Wilhelm Geiger, but he also contradicted himself by claiming that Vedda was a relexified aboriginal language.
Veddas consider the Vedda language to be distinct from Sinhala and use it as an ethnic marker to differentiate them from Sinhalese people.
Religion
The original religion of Veddas is animism. The Sinhalized interior Veddahs follow a mix of animism and nominal Buddhism; whereas the Tamilized east coast Veddahs follow a mix of animism and nominal Hinduism with folk influences among anthropologists.
One of the most distinctive features of Vedda religion is the worship of dead ancestors, who are called nae yaku among the Sinhala-speaking Veddas and are invoked for the game and yams. There are also peculiar deities unique to Veddas, such as Kande Yakka.
Veddas, along with the Island's Buddhist, Hindu and Muslim communities, venerate the temple complex situated at Kataragama, showing the syncretism that has evolved over 2,000 years of coexistence and assimilation. Kataragama is supposed to be the site where the Hindu god Skanda or Murugan in Tamil met and married a local tribal girl, Valli, who in Sri Lanka is believed to have been a Vedda.
There are a number of less famous shrines across the island which are sacred to the Veddas as well as to other communities.
Rituals
Vedda marriage is a simple ceremony. It consists of the bride tying a bark rope (Diya lanuva) that she has twisted, around the waist of the groom. This symbolizes the bride's acceptance of the man as her mate and life partner. Although endogamous marriage between cross-cousins was the norm until recently, this has changed significantly, with Vedda women even contracting marriages with their Sinhalese and Moor neighbors.
In Vedda society, women are in many respects men's equals. They are entitled to similar inheritance. Monogamy is the general rule, though a widow would frequently marry her husband's brother as a means of support and consolation (levirate marriage). They also do not practice a caste system.
Death, too, is a simple affair without ostentatious funeral ceremonies where the corpse of the deceased is promptly buried.
Burial
Since the opening of colonization schemes, Vedda burials changed when they dug graves of 1.2–1.5 m (4–5 feet) deep and wrapped the body wrapped cloth and covered it with leaves and earth. The Veddas also laid the body between the scooped out trunks of the gadumba tree (Trema orientalis) before they buried it. At the head of the grave were kept three open coconuts and a small bundle of wood, while at its foot were kept an opened coconut and an untouched coconut. Certain cactus species (pathok, Opuntia dillenii or O. stricta) were planted at the head, the middle and the foot. Personal possessions like the bow and arrow, betel pouch, were also buried. This practice varied by community. The contents of the betel pouch of the deceased were eaten after his death.
Cult of the dead
The Veddas practice what is referred to by Western ethnologists as "a cult of the dead". The Vedda perception of the world when originally studied in the mid 19th and early 20th centuries was not divided into polarities as life and afterlife or living and dead. At that time when asked whether the dead lived on as spirits they found that "they did not consider whether the departed were living or dead, they were just spirits...all spirits were alike neither good nor bad".
In the words of John Bailey studying this population in 1853: "the Veddahs have a vague belief in a host of undefined spirits, whose influence is rather for good than evil...they believe the air is peopled by spirits, that every rock and every tree, every forest and every hill, in short every feature of nature, has its genus loci;but these seem little else than nameless phantoms whom they regard with mysterious awe than actual dread".
In addition to this experience of the world often referred to as "animism" they have a belief that after death every relative is a spirit "of those who watches over the welfare of those left behind. These, which include their ancestors and their children, the term their 'nehya yakoon', kindred spirits. They describe them as ever watchful, coming to them in sickness, visiting them in dreams, giving them flesh when hunting".
The Vedda behavior at the time of these original ethnological studies regarding the recently dead is quite different from our behavior toward the dead. "When a person dies it is the hetha that killed him; and the hetha of the dead one remains by the corpse and haunts the vicinity for years."
The majority of the Vedda tribes studied at that time held what is referred to as a "kirikohraha ceremony". This was often held "to present an offering to the newly dead within a week or two of their decease...The yaku of the recently dead....are supposed to stand towards the surviving members of the group in the light of friends and relatives, who if well treated will continue to show loving kindness to their survivors, and only if neglected will show disgust and anger by withdrawing their assistance, or becoming actively hostile."
Clothing
Until fairly recent times, the clothing of the Veddas was limited. In the case of men, it consisted only of a loincloth suspended with a string at the waist, while in the case of women, it was a piece of cloth that extended from the navel to the knees. Today, however, Vedda attire is more covering, men wear a short sarong extending from the waist to the knees, while the women clad themselves in a garment similar to the Sinhala diya-redda which extends from the breast line to the knees.
Music
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Bori Bori Sellam-Sellam Bedo Wannita,
Palletalawa Navinna-Pita Gosin Vetenne,
Malpivili genagene-Hele Kado Navinne,
Diyapivili Genagene-Thige Bo Haliskote Peni,
Ka tho ipal denne
— A Vedda honeycomb cutter's folk song
Meaning of this song: The bees from yonder hills of Palle Talawa and Kade suck nectar from the flowers and made the honeycomb. So why should you give them undue pain when there is no honey by cutting the honeycomb.
Livelihood
Veddas were originally hunter-gatherers. They used bows and arrows to hunt game, harpoons and toxic plants for fishing and gathered wild plants, yams, honey, fruit and nuts. Many Veddas also farm, frequently using slash and burn or swidden cultivation, which is called Hena in Sri Lanka. East Coast Veddas also practice sea fishing. Veddas are famously known for their rich meat diet. Venison and the flesh of rabbit, turtle, tortoise, monitor lizard, wild boar and the common brown monkey are consumed with much relish. The Veddas kill only for food and do not harm young or pregnant animals. Game is commonly shared amongst the family and clan. Fish are caught by employing fish poisons such as the juice of the pus-vel (Entada scandens) and daluk-kiri (Cactus milk).
Vedda culinary fare is also deserving of mention. Amongst the best known are gona perume, which is a sort of sausage containing alternate layers of meat and fat, and goya-tel-perume, which is the tail of the monitor lizard (talagoya), stuffed with fat obtained from its sides and roasted in embers. Another Vedda delicacy is dried meat preserve soaked in honey. The Veddas used to preserve such meat in the hollow of a tree, enclosing it with clay.
Such succulent meat served as a ready food supply in times of scarcity. The early part of the year (January–February) is considered to be the season of yams and mid-year (June–July) that of fruit and honey, while hunting is availed of throughout the year. Kurakkan (Eleusine coracana) is cultivated very often. Maize, yams, gourds and melons are also cultivated. The Veddas used to live in caves and rock shelters. Today, they live in huts of wattle, daub and thatch.
In the reign of Datusena (6th century CE) the Mahaweli ganga was diverted at Minipe in the Minipe canal nearly 80 km (47 miles) long said to be constructed with help from the Yakkas. The Mahawamsa refers to the canal as Yaka-bendi-ela. When the Ruwanweli Seya was built in King Dutugemunu's time (2nd century BCE) the Veddas procured the necessary minerals from the jungles.
Parakrama Bahu the Great (12th century), in his war against the rebels, employed Veddas as scouts.
Rajasinghe II (17th century), in his battle with the Dutch, had a Vedda regiment. In the abortive Uva-Welessa revolt of 1817–1818 of the British times, led by Keppetipola Disawe, the Veddas too fought with the rebels against the British forces.
Current status
Year | Pop. | ±% |
---|---|---|
1881 | 2,200 | — |
1891 | 1,200 | −45.5% |
1901 | 4,000 | +233.3% |
1911 | 5,300 | +32.5% |
1921 | 4,500 | −15.1% |
1931 | 5,200 | +15.6% |
1946 | 2,400 | −53.8% |
1953 | 800 | −66.7% |
1963 | 400 | −50.0% |
1971 | — | |
1981 | — | |
1989 (est.) | — | |
2001 | — | |
2011 | — | |
Source:Department of Census & Statistics Data is based on Sri Lankan Government Census. |
Some observers have said Veddas are disappearing and have lamented the decline of their distinct culture. Land acquisition for mass irrigation projects, government forest reserve restrictions, and the civil war have disrupted traditional Vedda ways of life. Between 1977 and 1983 under the Accelerated Mahaweli Development Project and colonization schemes, approximately 51468 hectares were turned into a gigantic hydroelectric dam irrigation project. Subsequently, the creation of the Maduru Oya National Park deprived the Veddhas their last hunting grounds. In 1985, the Veddha Chief Thissahamy and his delegation were obstructed from attending the United Nations Working Group on Indigenous Populations. Dr. Wiveca Stegeborn, an anthropologist, has been studying the Vedda since 1977 and alleges that their young women are being tricked into accepting contracts to the Middle East as domestic workers when in fact they will be trafficked into prostitution or sold as sex slaves.
However, cultural assimilation of Veddas with other local populations has been going on for a long time. "Vedda" has been used in Sri Lanka to mean not only hunter-gatherers but also to refer to any people who adopt an unsettled and rural way of life and thus can be a derogatory term not based on ethnic group. Thus, over time, it is possible for non-Vedda groups to become Veddas, in this broad cultural sense. Vedda populations of this kind are increasing in some districts.
In zoology
A spider genus endemic to Sri Lanka was named Wanniyala as a dedication to Sri Lanka's oldest civilized people.
A species of Sri Lankan snake, Indotyphlops veddae, was named in honor of the Vedda.
See also
- South Asian ethnic groups
- Charles Gabriel Seligman
- The United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
References
- ^ "Vedda | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 26 May 2023.
- "Veddah".
- Jayasuriya, S. de Silva (2000). The Portuguese Cultural Imprint on Sri Lanka. Lusotopie 2000. p. 255.
- "Evidence for persistent forest reliance by Indigenous peoples in historical Sri Lanka". www.shh.mpg.de. Retrieved 8 February 2020.
- ^ "Vedda facts, information, pictures | Encyclopedia.com articles about Vedda". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 18 September 2017.
- "Vedda tribe becoming extinct, Chandler's Ford Today". 6 September 2014.
- "Race in Sri Lanka: What genetic evidence tells us | the Sundaytimes Sri Lanka".
- Ranaweera, Lanka; Kaewsutthi, Supannee; Win Tun, Aung; Boonyarit, Hathaichanoke; Poolsuwan, Samerchai; Lertrit, Patcharee (2014). "Mitochondrial DNA history of Sri Lankan ethnic people: Their relations within the island and with the Indian subcontinental populations". Journal of Human Genetics. 59 (1): 28–36. doi:10.1038/jhg.2013.112. PMID 24196378. S2CID 41185629.
- ^ Welikala, Anjana; Desai, Shailesh; Pratap Singh, Prajjval; Fernando, Amali; Thangaraj, Kumarasamy; van Driem, George; Adikari, Gamini; Tennekoon, Kamani; Chaubey, Gyaneshwer; Ranasinghe, Ruwandi (May 2024). "The genetic identity of the Vedda: A language isolate of South Asia". Mitochondrion. 76: 101884. doi:10.1016/j.mito.2024.101884. PMID 38626841.
- Boyle, Richard (2004). Knox's Words: A Study of the Words of Sri Lankan Origin Or Association First Used in English Literature by Robert Knox and Recorded in the Oxford English Dictionary. Boralesgamuwa, Sri Lanka: Visidunu Prakashakayo. ISBN 955-9170-67-8.
- "வேடன் | அகராதி | Tamil Dictionary". agarathi.com. University of Madras Lexicon. Retrieved 18 September 2017.
- Burrow, T; Emenau, M. B. (1984). "Search for headword: vēṭṭam, vēṭṭai". A Dravidian Etymological Dictionary (2 ed.).
- Geiger, Wilhelm (1941). An Etymological Glossary of the Sinhalese Language. Colombo.
{{cite book}}
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- Kulatilake, Samanti. "Cranial Morphology of the Vedda people - the indigenes of Sri Lanka". Academia.
- Rathee, Suresh Kanta; Pathmanathan, Gayathiri; Bulbeck, David; Raghavan, Pathmanathan (2013). "Indian Craniometric Variability and Affinities". International Journal of Evolutionary Biology. 2013: 836738. doi:10.1155/2013/836738. PMC 3886603. PMID 24455409.
- Deraniyagala SU (September 1996). "Pre-and protohistoric settlement in Sri Lanka". XIII UISPP Congress Proceedings. 5: 277–285.
- ^ Ranaweera L, Kaewsutthi S, Win Tun A, Boonyarit H, Poolsuwan S, Lertrit P (January 2014). "Mitochondrial DNA history of Sri Lankan ethnic people: their relations within the island and with the Indian subcontinental populations". Journal of Human Genetics. 59 (1): 28–36. doi:10.1038/jhg.2013.112. PMID 24196378. S2CID 41185629.
- Ranasinghe, Ruwandi (2015). "A study of genetic polymorphisms in mitochondrial DNA hypervariable regions I and II of the five major ethnic groups and Vedda population in Sri Lanka". Legal Medicine. 17 (6): 539–46. doi:10.1016/j.legalmed.2015.05.007. PMID 26065620.
- Brow 1978.
- ^ Wickramasinghe, Nira. "Sri Lanka's conflict: culture and lineages of the past". Sri Lanka Guardian. Retrieved 20 February 2016.
- "Sri Lanka's east coastal Vedda indigenous communities". vedda.org. Retrieved 26 May 2023.
- "East Coast Veddas". vedda.org. Retrieved 26 May 2023.
- Van Driem 2002, p. 227
- Dharmadasa 1974, p. 81
- Seligmann & Seligmann 1911, pp. 123–135.
- Seligmann & Seligmann 1911, pp. 30–31.
- ^ "Ruhuṇu Kataragama Dēvālaya | Katirkāmam Murugan Kōvil | dedicated to Kataragama deviyo". kataragama.org. Retrieved 26 May 2023.
- Vadda of Sri Lanka
- ^ Seligman, C. G. (Charles Gabriel); Seligman, Brenda Z. (1911). The Veddas. Robarts - University of Toronto. Cambridge University Press.
- ^ Bailey, John (1863). "An Account of the Wild Tribes of the Veddahs of Ceylon: Their Habits, Customs, and Superstitions". Transactions of the Ethnological Society of London. 2: 278–320. doi:10.2307/3014327. ISSN 1368-0366. JSTOR 3014327.
- Spittel, Richard (1924). Wild Ceylon: Describing in Particular the Lives of the Present Day Veddas. Colombo Apothecaries Company, Limited.
- "The Veddas of Sri Lanka".
- International, Survival. "Wanniyala-Aetto". www.survivalinternational.org. Retrieved 26 May 2023.
- "Population by ethnic group, census years" (PDF). Department of Census & Statistics, Sri Lanka. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 November 2011. Retrieved 23 October 2012.
- ^ Address of Warige Wanniya to the UN, vedda.org Retrieved 4-12-2015
- Spittel, R. L. (1950). Vanished Trails: The Last of the Veddas. Oxford University Press.
- "Stuck Between Two Worlds". Retrieved 26 May 2023 – via vimeo.com.
- "Season of the Spirit Bear - Part 5". Retrieved 26 May 2023 – via www.youtube.com.
- "Sri Lanka Debrief News - 21. 07. 2010". Retrieved 26 May 2023 – via www.youtube.com.
- ^ Sri Lanka's Indigenous Wanniya-laeto: A Case History, vedda.org Retrieved 4-12-2015
- "Endangered Wanniyala-Aetto Women sent as Sex Slaves to the Middle East". Archived from the original on 20 February 2012. Retrieved 17 November 2006.
- Brow 1978, p. 34.
- "Obeyesekere, Gananath. Colonial Histories and Vadda Primitivism". Archived from the original on 17 February 2013. Retrieved 11 June 2006.
- Brow 1978, p. 3.
- Huber, Bernhard A. ; Benjamin, Suresh P. (2005). "The pholcid spiders from Sri Lanka: redescription of Pholcus ceylonicus and description of a new genus (Araneae: Pholcidae)" (PDF). Journal of Natural History. 39 (37): 3305–3319. Bibcode:2005JNatH..39.3305H. doi:10.1080/00222930500145123. S2CID 53418516. Retrieved 6 May 2016.
- Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. ISBN 978-1-4214-0135-5. ("Vedda/Veddha", p. 273).
Bibliography
- Brow, James (1978). Vedda Villages of Anuradhapura. University of Washington Press.
- Dharmadasa, K. N. O. (February 1974). "The Creolization of an Aboriginal language:The case of Vedda in Sri Lanka (Ceylon)". Anthropological Linguistics. 16 (2). Indiana University: 79–106. JSTOR 30029514.
- Van Driem, George (15 January 2002). Languages of the Himalayas: An Ethnolinguistic Handbook of the Greater Himalayan Region. Brill Academic Publishers. ISBN 90-04-10390-2.
- Seligmann, Charles; Seligmann, Brenda (1911). The Veddas. Cambridge University Press.
Further reading
- Lee, Richard B.; Daly, Richard, eds. (March 2005). The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Hunters and Gatherers. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-60919-4.
- Kulatilake, Samanti (2020). "The Sarasins' Collection of Historical Sri Lankan Crania". Anthropological Science. 128 (3): 119–128. doi:10.1537/ase.200428.
External links
A great deal of information on them can be found at Vedda.org
- Survival International profile on the Wanniyala-Aetto
- Sri Lankan history
- Veddas - now only a household name
- Veddas of Sri Lanka
- Last of the Devil Dancers
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