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{{pp-semi-indef}}
The '''Vishwakarma''' (or '''Viśvákarma''') caste, known within the group as the '''Viswabrahmin,''' is an ] which includes five sub-castes: ]s, ]s, bell metalworkers, ]s and ] who describe themselves as descendants of the Hindu god ], They worship various forms of this deity and follow five ]: ], ], ], ], and ].<ref>"The Panchals are the followers of the five Vedas, the fifth being Pranava Veda."{{cite book|last=Karnataka (India)|title=Karnataka State Gazetteer: Belgaum|year=1987|publisher=Printed by the Director of Print, Stationery and Publications at the Govt. Press|url=http://books.google.co.in/books?id=8Lm1AAAAIAAJ}}</ref>
{{short description|Hindu artisan caste}}
The '''Vishwakarma''' community are a social group of India, sometimes described as a ]. They claim themselves to be ] or of high-status in the caste hierarchy, although these claims are not generally accepted outside the community. The community comprises five subgroups{{mdash}}]s, ]s, ] smiths, ]s and ]{{mdash}} claim to be descendants of ], the builder and architect of heavenly realm, a Hindu deity.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Streefkerk|first=Hein|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_L3edKpCmm4C&pg=PA103|title=Industrial Transition in Rural India: Artisans, Traders, and Tribals in South Gujarat|publisher=Ramdas Bhatkal, Popular prakasham Pvt Ltd|year=1985|isbn=0861320670|location=Bombay|page=103}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last1=R.De|first1=Ridder|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bQcVAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA161|title=The Leiden Tradition in Structural Anthropology.|last2=J.A.J|first2=Karremans|publisher=E.J Brill|year=1987|isbn=9004085173|location=Netherlands}}</ref>


==Origin and subdivisions== == Origin myths ==
In India, the Viskwakarma comprises five artisan subgroups. being bell metalworkers, blacksmiths, carpenters, goldsmiths and stonemasons. They have claimed a status as ]s for many years and believe that the trades which they traditionally follow are superior to the work of a manual labourer because they require artistic and scientific skills as well as those of the hand.<ref name="Jstor">{{cite journal |journal=Economic and Political Weekly |volume=38 |issue=45 |date=8-14 November 2003 |pages=4794-4802 |first=George |last=Varghese K. |title=Globalisation Traumas and New Social Imaginary: Visvakarma Community of Kerala |jstor=4414253}}</ref>


The community claims to be descended from the god ], who is considered by Hindus to be the divine architect or engineer of the universe. He had five children — ], ], ], Shilpi and Visvajna&nbsp;— and these are believed by the Vishwakarma community to have been the forebears of their five subgroups, being respectively the ]s (clans) of blacksmiths, carpenters, bell metalworkers (metal casters), stonemasons and goldsmiths.<ref name="Varghese" /> It is not known whether these five subgroups historically practised ], which is a frequently-found feature of the Indian caste system.<ref name="Ramaswamy">{{cite journal |title=Vishwakarma Craftsmen in Early Medieval Peninsular India |first=Vijaya |last=Ramaswamy |journal=Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient |volume=47 |issue=4 |year=2004 |pages=548–582 |jstor=25165073 |doi=10.1163/1568520042467154 |issn=0022-4995}} {{subscription required}}</ref>
The Vishwakarma or ] people of India say that five sons (], ], ], ] and ]) were born from the five faces of the god Vishwakarma, and these five had five sons Sanaga, Sanātana, Ahabūna, Pratna and Suparņa<ref>name="Sathyan">{{cite book|last=B. N.|first=Sri Sathyan|title=Karnataka State Gazetteer: Bangalore District Gazetteer of India|year=1990|publisher=Director of Print., Stationery and Publications at the Government Press|location=Karnataka (India)|url=http://books.google.co.in/books?id=bo8BAAAAMAAJ&q=Manu,+Maya+Vishwajnya&dq=Manu,+Maya+Vishwajnya&hl=en&sa=X&ei=HLvHUaqAAsuCrgfZ34HgBQ&redir_esc=y}}</ref> who are the '']'' or ''gotrakara'' (founders of ], lineage) of the community's five divisions. These five rishis are mentioned in ] (4.3.3).{{cn|date=September 2013}}


The ]s of the Vishwakarma community were first consolidated in the early 18th century, during the ]. These myths were compiled in the ''Vishwakarma Puranam'', whose original manuscript is undated but was most probably created in the mid-17th or 18th century.{{sfn|Vijaya Ramaswamy|2008|p=277}} According to a popular myth recorded in the ''Vishwakarma Puranam'', the five children of the god Vishwakarma served the gods as artisans, and possessed the ability to create things by simply visualising them. They had conserved their '']'' by being celibates, and lived in a fort on the coast of Ilangapuri (]).{{sfn|Vijaya Ramaswamy|2008|pp=287-288}} The fort was made of ], and the enemy weapons thrown at it were stuck to its walls, rendering it invincible. Their chief enemy was Karunakaran, a vassal of the ] emperor. In order to defeat the Vishwakarmas, Karunakaran planted many beautiful women (Brahmin women according to some versions of the legend) in the fort. These women married the Vishwakarmas, thus destroying their spiritual power, and learned the secret that a certain type of poisonous grass could be used to burn up the fort. Using this secret, the enemy blew up the fort, and the Vishwakarmas were scattered in various areas, where they were forced to work as artisans and craftsmen for mortal humans.{{sfn|Vijaya Ramaswamy|2008|p=288}}
==Distribution==
The Vishwakarma are largely found in the South of India: Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Goa and Konkan. In Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, and Gujarat.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Singh|first=Kumar Suresh|coauthors=B. K. Lavanta|others=Dipak Kumar Samanta, Sushil Kumar Mandal, N. N. Vyas,|title=Rajasthan, |publisher=Anthropological Survey of India|volume=Volume 2 |pages=201}}</ref> Other Indian Vishwakarma populations are in: Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Bengal, Delhi, Haryana, Bihar, and Orissa.{{citation needed|date=June 2013}} They are also found in Sri Lanka.<ref name="AlfredEdwardRoberts"> {{cite book|authors=Alfred Edward Roberts (Proctor of the Supreme Court of the Island of Ceylon, Member of the Ceylon Branch of the Royal Asatic Society.) |title=Visvakarma, and His Descendants |publisher=Ceylon Visvakarma Union, Colombo, Ceylon, 1909}} </ref>


===Kerala=== == History ==
While many sources refer to the five subgroups of the Vishwakarma as artisans, historian Vijaya Ramaswamy<ref>{{cite web |title=Vijaya Ramaswamy {{!}} Jawaharlal Nehru University - Academia.edu |url=https://jnu.academia.edu/VijayaRamaswamy |website=jnu.academia.edu |access-date=14 October 2020}}</ref> believes that the Vishwakarma of the medieval period should be distinguished as craftsmen, arguing that "...&nbsp;while every craftsman was an artisan, every artisan was not a craftsman". Ramaswamy notes that the socio-economic and geographic stability of a medieval village-based maker of ]s differed considerably from that of the various people who banded together as Vishwakarma and lived a relatively itinerant lifestyle that was dependent on the "temple economy" that waxed and waned as dynasties such as the ] were formed and disintegrated. The latter group, who did work in proximity to each other while constructing and embellishing temples, had opportunities for socio-economic advancement but also bore the risks of withdrawal of patronage and changes in religious focus.<ref name="Ramaswamy" />
Vishwakarmas of Kerala are also known as Achary or Viswa Brahmanar.<ref name="ker">{{Cite book|last=Thurston|first=Edgar|coauthors=K. Rangachari|title=Castes and tribes of Southern India, |volume=Volume 3|pages=126–129}}</ref> They exist in Kerala in two communities: one Tamil, one Malayali.<ref name="Iyer1968">{{cite book|last=Iyer|first=L. A. Krishna|title=Social history of Kerala|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=UU5DAAAAYAAJ|accessdate=16 January 2012|year=1968|publisher=Book Centre|page=6|quote=The Kammalars are divided into two classes, the Tamil Kammalar and the Malayali Kammalar.}}</ref>


== Position in society ==
===Tamil Nadu===
In ], ] and ] they come under ].<ref>{{Cite web|title=CENTRAL LIST OF OBCs FOR THE STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH|url=https://bcmbcmw.tn.gov.in/bclist.htm}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=Central Government list of OBC - Telangana|url=http://www.ncbc.nic.in/user_panel/GazetteResolution.aspx?Value=mPICjsL1aLvZW9%2FwXcIbxcNal%2FTghxZUuV7adcx5Bs1cEGdzKqq0GufcXEZAUTq0}}</ref><ref></ref>
In ], Tamil Achari or Asari are known as ''Tamil Kammalars''. They are goldsmiths and landlords.<ref name="Ramaswamy2007">{{cite book|last=Ramaswamy|first=Vijaya|title=Historical dictionary of the Tamils|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=H4q0DHGMcjEC&pg=PA107|accessdate=16 January 2012|year=2007|publisher=Scarecrow Press|isbn=978-0-8108-5379-9|pages=107–108}}</ref>


In ], the Vishwakarmas have claimed a higher social status for many years, and believe that the trades which they traditionally follow are superior to the work of a manual labourer because they require artistic and scientific skills as well as those of the hand. According to George Varghese, their claim to high status is "one of the mainstays of Vishwakarma identity" in what is otherwise a fragmented, incoherent community that has often suffered from internal differences of opinion.<ref name="Varghese">{{cite journal |journal=Economic and Political Weekly |volume=38 |issue=45 |date=8–14 November 2003 |pages=4794–4802 |first=George |last=Varghese K. |title=Globalisation Traumas and New Social Imaginary: Visvakarma Community of Kerala |jstor=4414253}}</ref> Their claim has been voiced by Edava Somanathan, a member of the community and its only historian in the written word. Somanathan's works, according to Varghese, "...&nbsp;are written from a pro-community perspective. Therefore, there are a lot of exaggerations and ] tirades in Kerala". Somanathan argues that the artisanal groups were a part of the ], pre-dating the arrival of Brahmins and their caste-based division of society. He claims implausible achievements are evidenced in both the arts and sciences during that egalitarian pre-Brahmin era, including the construction of aeroplanes.<ref name="Varghese" />{{fcn|date=July 2023}}
===Karnataka===
The Vishwakarma caste of south ], is composed of several sub-castes: Kulachar, Shiv Achar, Uttaradi (goldsmiths), Matachar (founders), Muddekammaras, and Chikkamanes.<ref name="gold">{{Cite book|last=Heesterman|first=J. C.|coauthors=A. W. van den Hoek, D. H. A. Kolff|others=M. S. Oort|title=Ritual, state, and history in South Asia: essays in honour of J.C. Heesterman |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=EtwtSZwyWpgC&printsec=frontcover&dq=Ritual,+state,+and+history+in+South+Asia:+essays+in+honour+of+J.C.+Heesterman&hl=en&sa=X&ei=vOW_UZ3SFKrE4AOQmYDgDQ&ved=0CC8Q6AEwAA|pages=442–455|chapter=Goldsmiths of Karnataka}}</ref>{{vs|date=June 2013}} Most of these sub-castes do not intermarry and have a hierarchy among themselves.<ref name="gold" /> These subcastes are varied according to various regions of Karnataka, but all worship the goddess ].{{cn|date=September 2013}}


This claim to Brahmin status is not generally accepted outside the community, despite their assumption of some high-caste traits, such as wearing the ], and the Brahminisation of their rituals. For example, the sociologist ], who developed the concept of ], juxtaposed the success of the ] caste in achieving advancement within ] society by such means with the failure of the Vishwakarma to achieve the same. Their position as a ] has not aided their ambition.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Modern Anthropology of India: Ethnography, Themes and Theory |first=Aya |last=Ikegame |chapter=Karnataka: Caste, dominance and social change in the 'Indian village' |editor1-first=Peter |editor1-last=Berger |editor2-first=Frank |editor2-last=Heidemann |publisher=Routledge |year=2013 |page=128 |isbn=9781134061112 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sBgLb8XIGR8C&pg=PA128}}</ref> They have been included in the list of ]es in some states of India.<ref></ref>
==Diet==
Vishwakarmas in North and South India follow a ] and abstain from liquor.<ref name="Mukherjee1978">{{cite book|author=Meera Mukherjee|title=Metalcraftsmen of India|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=QxkEAAAAMAAJ|accessdate=18 June 2013|year=1978|publisher=Anthropological Survey of India, Government of India|pages=60, 62, 124}}</ref><ref name="ManoharShah1996">{{cite book|author1=Aashi Manohar|author2=Shampa Shah|title=Tribal arts and crafts of Madhya Pradesh|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=poDWAAAAMAAJ|accessdate=18 June 2013|year=1996|publisher=Mapin Publishing|isbn=978-0-944142-71-4|page=29}}</ref>


==Notables== ==List of castes==
The following castes are considered to be members of the Vishwakarma community :
*] {{refn|1 = According to the Shankara Vijaya, when Adi Shankara visited ], the Devakammalars became angry at his claim of being a ] believing an impostor was trying to assume a title that was their own exclusive property. Questioning Shankara his right to the distinction, he sang in reply: ''Acharyo Sankaranama Twashta putro nasansaya Viprakula Gourordiksha Visvakarmantu Brahmana'': I am a decendent of Twashter, I am a Brahmin of the Vishwakarma Caste.{{cite book|authors=Alfred Edward Roberts (Proctor of the Supreme Court of the Island of Ceylon, Member of the Ceylon Branch of the Royal Asatic Society.) |title=Visvakarma, and His Descendants |publisher=Ceylon Visvakarma Union, Colombo, Ceylon, 1909| page=10}}|group = note}}


* ]<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bfAMAQAAMAAJ&dq=lohar+vishwakarma&pg=PA1520 |title=Communities, Segments, Synonyms, Surnames and Titles |page=1519 |year=1996 |publisher=Anthropological Survey of India|isbn=978-0-19-563357-3 }}</ref>
==Notes==
* ]<ref name=agg>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=COcwoYRCYhcC&dq=Suthar+sutar+vishwakarma&pg=PA160 |title=Educational and Social Uplift of Backward Classes |page=160 |author=SP Aggrawal, JC Aggrawal |publisher=Concept Publishing Company |year=1991 |isbn=978-81-7022-339-9}}</ref>
{{reflist|group=note|1}}
* ]<ref name=pasw>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GulBDMgxcU0C&dq=Khati+vishwakarma&pg=PA218 |page=218 |title=Encyclopaedia of Dalits in India: Emancipation and empowerment |publisher=Kalpaz Publications |editor=Sanjay Paswan, Jaideva Paramanshi|year=2002|isbn=978-81-7835-269-5 }}</ref>
* ]<ref name=pasw/>
* ]<ref name=pasw/>


==References== == Synonyms ==

=== Tamil Nadu ===
The Tamil Vishwakarmas are locally known as ], although they prefer to be known as Vishwakarma. They are divided into the ''Kannar'' (brass-workers), ''Kollar'' (blacksmiths), ''Tattar'' (goldsmiths), ''Tatchar'' or ''Suthar''/''Sutar''<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EjORKo7maRUC&dq=Suthar+carpenter&pg=PA135 |editor=AM Shah |publisher=Taylor&Francis |page=135 |title=The Structure of Indian Society |year=2012|isbn=978-1-136-19770-3 }}</ref> (carpenters) and ''Kartatchar'' (sculptor), Vishwa Brahim.<ref name="Ramaswamy2007">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=H4q0DHGMcjEC&pg=PA107|title=Historical dictionary of the Tamils|last=Ramaswamy|first=Vijaya|publisher=Scarecrow Press|year=2007|isbn=978-0-8108-5379-9|pages=107–108|access-date=16 January 2012}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=List of Backward Classes approved by Government of Tamil Nadu|url=https://bcmbcmw.tn.gov.in/bclist.htm|website=}}</ref>

=== Karnataka ===
The Vishwakarma caste of south ] is composed of several sub-castes: Kulachar, Uttaradi (goldsmiths), Matachar (founders), Muulekammaras, and Chikkamanes. Sub-castes do intermarry, and have a hierarchy among themselves.<ref name="gold">{{cite book |editor1-first=A. W. |editor1-last=van den Hoek |editor2-first=D. H. A. |editor2-last=Kolff |editor3-first=M. S. |editor3-last=Oort |title=Ritual, State, and History in South Asia: Essays in Honour of J. C. Heesterman |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EtwtSZwyWpgC&pg=PA433 |pages=442–455 |publisher=BRILL |first=Jan |last=Brouwer |chapter=The Latecomers: A case study of caste and sub-caste of goldsmiths in Karnataka, South India|year=1992 |isbn=9004094679 }}</ref>{{vs|date=June 2013}}

=== Andhra Pradesh & Telangana ===
In Andhra they are known as Viswa brahmin or Viswakarma (Ausula or Kamsali, Kammari, Kanchari, Vadla or Vadra or ] and Silpi)<ref>{{Cite web|title=CENTRAL LIST OF OBCs FOR THE STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH|url=https://bcmbcmw.tn.gov.in/bclist.htm}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=Central Government list of OBC - Telangana|url=http://www.ncbc.nic.in/user_panel/GazetteResolution.aspx?Value=mPICjsL1aLvZW9%2FwXcIbxcNal%2FTghxZUuV7adcx5Bs1cEGdzKqq0GufcXEZAUTq0}}</ref>

==See also==
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ] (Vishwakarma Jayanti)
* ]
* ]

== References ==
{{reflist}} {{reflist}}


=== Bibliography ===
==Further reading==

*{{cite book|author=John Duncan Martin Derrett|title=Essays in Classical and Modern Hindu Law: Dharmaśāstra and related ideas|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=rZrLMgEACAAJ|year=1976|publisher=Brill|isbn=978-90-04-04475-3|pages=45–46}}
{{ref begin}}
* {{cite book |author=Vijaya Ramaswamy |chapter=Traditional Crafts, Technology, and Society in Pre-Colonial Peninsular India |editor=Rajat Datta |title=Rethinking a Millennium: Perspectives on Indian History from the Eighth to the Eighteenth Century |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2H4PGhFB9ScC&pg=PA277 |year=2008 |publisher=Aakar Books |isbn=978-81-89833-36-7 }}
{{ref end}}

== Further reading ==
*{{cite book |first=Jan |last=Brouwer |chapter=The Visvakarma Worldview |title=Prakriti: The Integral Vision |volume=1 (Primal Elements: The Oral Tradition) |editor-first=Baidyanath |editor-last=Saraswati |year=1995 |publisher=Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts |location=New Delhi |isbn=81-246-0037-6 |url=http://ignca.nic.in/ps_01011.htm}}
*{{cite book |first=Jan |last=Brouwer |chapter=The Story of the Magnetic Fort |title=The Leiden Tradition in Structural Anthropology: Essays in Honour of P.E. de Josselin de Jong |editor1-first=Rob |editor1-last=de Ridder |editor2-first=Jan A. J. |editor2-last=Karremans |publisher=Brill |location=Leiden |year=1987 |isbn=9789004085176 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bQcVAAAAIAAJ}}
*{{cite book |first=Jan |last=Brouwer |title=The Makers of the World: Caste, Craft and Mind of South Indian Artisans |url=https://archive.org/details/makersofworld00brou |url-access=registration |location=Delhi |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=1995|isbn=978-0-19-563091-6 }}
*{{cite book|first=John Duncan Martin |last=Derrett |title=Essays in Classical and Modern Hindu Law: Dharmaśāstra and related ideas |url=https://archive.org/details/essaysinclassica0001derr |url-access=registration |year=1976 |publisher=Brill |isbn=978-90-04-04475-3 |pages=–46}}
*{{cite book |first=Vijaya |last=Ramaswamy |chapter=Traditional Crafts, Technology, and Society in Pre-colonial Peninsular India |editor-first=Rajat |editor-last=Datta |title=Rethinking a Millennium: Perspectives on Indian History from the Eighth to the Eighteenth Century : Essays for Harbans Mukhia |publisher=Aakar Books |location=Delhi |year=2008 |isbn=9788189833367 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2H4PGhFB9ScC&pg=PA275}}


] ]
] ]
] ]
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Latest revision as of 21:12, 7 December 2024

Hindu artisan caste

The Vishwakarma community are a social group of India, sometimes described as a caste. They claim themselves to be Brahmin or of high-status in the caste hierarchy, although these claims are not generally accepted outside the community. The community comprises five subgroups—carpenters, blacksmiths, bronze smiths, goldsmiths and stonemasons— claim to be descendants of Vishvakarma, the builder and architect of heavenly realm, a Hindu deity.

Origin myths

The community claims to be descended from the god Vishvakarma, who is considered by Hindus to be the divine architect or engineer of the universe. He had five children — Manu, Maya, Tvastar, Shilpi and Visvajna — and these are believed by the Vishwakarma community to have been the forebears of their five subgroups, being respectively the gotras (clans) of blacksmiths, carpenters, bell metalworkers (metal casters), stonemasons and goldsmiths. It is not known whether these five subgroups historically practised endogamy, which is a frequently-found feature of the Indian caste system.

The origin myths of the Vishwakarma community were first consolidated in the early 18th century, during the British colonial rule. These myths were compiled in the Vishwakarma Puranam, whose original manuscript is undated but was most probably created in the mid-17th or 18th century. According to a popular myth recorded in the Vishwakarma Puranam, the five children of the god Vishwakarma served the gods as artisans, and possessed the ability to create things by simply visualising them. They had conserved their veerya by being celibates, and lived in a fort on the coast of Ilangapuri (Sri Lanka). The fort was made of lodestone, and the enemy weapons thrown at it were stuck to its walls, rendering it invincible. Their chief enemy was Karunakaran, a vassal of the Chola emperor. In order to defeat the Vishwakarmas, Karunakaran planted many beautiful women (Brahmin women according to some versions of the legend) in the fort. These women married the Vishwakarmas, thus destroying their spiritual power, and learned the secret that a certain type of poisonous grass could be used to burn up the fort. Using this secret, the enemy blew up the fort, and the Vishwakarmas were scattered in various areas, where they were forced to work as artisans and craftsmen for mortal humans.

History

While many sources refer to the five subgroups of the Vishwakarma as artisans, historian Vijaya Ramaswamy believes that the Vishwakarma of the medieval period should be distinguished as craftsmen, arguing that "... while every craftsman was an artisan, every artisan was not a craftsman". Ramaswamy notes that the socio-economic and geographic stability of a medieval village-based maker of ploughs differed considerably from that of the various people who banded together as Vishwakarma and lived a relatively itinerant lifestyle that was dependent on the "temple economy" that waxed and waned as dynasties such as the Vijayanagar Empire were formed and disintegrated. The latter group, who did work in proximity to each other while constructing and embellishing temples, had opportunities for socio-economic advancement but also bore the risks of withdrawal of patronage and changes in religious focus.

Position in society

In Andhra Pradesh, Telangana and Uttar Pradesh they come under Other Backward Class.

In Kerala, the Vishwakarmas have claimed a higher social status for many years, and believe that the trades which they traditionally follow are superior to the work of a manual labourer because they require artistic and scientific skills as well as those of the hand. According to George Varghese, their claim to high status is "one of the mainstays of Vishwakarma identity" in what is otherwise a fragmented, incoherent community that has often suffered from internal differences of opinion. Their claim has been voiced by Edava Somanathan, a member of the community and its only historian in the written word. Somanathan's works, according to Varghese, "... are written from a pro-community perspective. Therefore, there are a lot of exaggerations and anti-brahmin tirades in Kerala". Somanathan argues that the artisanal groups were a part of the Indus Valley civilisation, pre-dating the arrival of Brahmins and their caste-based division of society. He claims implausible achievements are evidenced in both the arts and sciences during that egalitarian pre-Brahmin era, including the construction of aeroplanes.

This claim to Brahmin status is not generally accepted outside the community, despite their assumption of some high-caste traits, such as wearing the sacred thread, and the Brahminisation of their rituals. For example, the sociologist M. N. Srinivas, who developed the concept of sanskritisation, juxtaposed the success of the Lingayat caste in achieving advancement within Karnataka society by such means with the failure of the Vishwakarma to achieve the same. Their position as a left-hand caste has not aided their ambition. They have been included in the list of Other Backward Classes in some states of India.

List of castes

The following castes are considered to be members of the Vishwakarma community :

Synonyms

Tamil Nadu

The Tamil Vishwakarmas are locally known as Kammalar, although they prefer to be known as Vishwakarma. They are divided into the Kannar (brass-workers), Kollar (blacksmiths), Tattar (goldsmiths), Tatchar or Suthar/Sutar (carpenters) and Kartatchar (sculptor), Vishwa Brahim.

Karnataka

The Vishwakarma caste of south Karnataka is composed of several sub-castes: Kulachar, Uttaradi (goldsmiths), Matachar (founders), Muulekammaras, and Chikkamanes. Sub-castes do intermarry, and have a hierarchy among themselves.

Andhra Pradesh & Telangana

In Andhra they are known as Viswa brahmin or Viswakarma (Ausula or Kamsali, Kammari, Kanchari, Vadla or Vadra or Vadrangi and Silpi)

See also

References

  1. Streefkerk, Hein (1985). Industrial Transition in Rural India: Artisans, Traders, and Tribals in South Gujarat. Bombay: Ramdas Bhatkal, Popular prakasham Pvt Ltd. p. 103. ISBN 0861320670.
  2. R.De, Ridder; J.A.J, Karremans (1987). The Leiden Tradition in Structural Anthropology. Netherlands: E.J Brill. ISBN 9004085173.
  3. ^ Varghese K., George (8–14 November 2003). "Globalisation Traumas and New Social Imaginary: Visvakarma Community of Kerala". Economic and Political Weekly. 38 (45): 4794–4802. JSTOR 4414253.
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  5. Vijaya Ramaswamy 2008, p. 277.
  6. Vijaya Ramaswamy 2008, pp. 287–288.
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  9. "CENTRAL LIST OF OBCs FOR THE STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH".
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  11. Reconfiguring OBC politics in UP - Deccan Herald
  12. Ikegame, Aya (2013). "Karnataka: Caste, dominance and social change in the 'Indian village'". In Berger, Peter; Heidemann, Frank (eds.). The Modern Anthropology of India: Ethnography, Themes and Theory. Routledge. p. 128. ISBN 9781134061112.
  13. Central List of OBCs
  14. Communities, Segments, Synonyms, Surnames and Titles. Anthropological Survey of India. 1996. p. 1519. ISBN 978-0-19-563357-3.
  15. SP Aggrawal, JC Aggrawal (1991). Educational and Social Uplift of Backward Classes. Concept Publishing Company. p. 160. ISBN 978-81-7022-339-9.
  16. ^ Sanjay Paswan, Jaideva Paramanshi, ed. (2002). Encyclopaedia of Dalits in India: Emancipation and empowerment. Kalpaz Publications. p. 218. ISBN 978-81-7835-269-5.
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  18. Ramaswamy, Vijaya (2007). Historical dictionary of the Tamils. Scarecrow Press. pp. 107–108. ISBN 978-0-8108-5379-9. Retrieved 16 January 2012.
  19. "List of Backward Classes approved by Government of Tamil Nadu".
  20. Brouwer, Jan (1992). "The Latecomers: A case study of caste and sub-caste of goldsmiths in Karnataka, South India". In van den Hoek, A. W.; Kolff, D. H. A.; Oort, M. S. (eds.). Ritual, State, and History in South Asia: Essays in Honour of J. C. Heesterman. BRILL. pp. 442–455. ISBN 9004094679.
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Bibliography

Further reading

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