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The Vishwakarma (or Viśvákarma) community, also called Viswa brahman, is a group that is sometimes referred to as a caste and which comprises five sub-groups: carpenters, blacksmiths, bell metalworkers, goldsmiths and stonemasons who according to Indian Mythology and the Vishvakarmas themselves are descendants of the Hindu god Vishwakarma. They worship various forms of this deity and follow five Vedas: Rigveda, Yajurveda, Samaveda, Atharvaveda, and Pranava Veda.
Name
According to Thurston (1909), Lord Visvakarma has 5 faces and hence this community is called Panchala or Panchabrahmalu. The communal name of Vishwakarma is of fairly recent usage. The census administrator J. E. Hutton recorded in 1931 a caste called the Vishwakarma, which was an administrative creation defined as a community of artisans who were geographically disparate but shared fairly similar occupations. The Vishwakarma comprised numerous previously diverse castes.
The community prefer the new name, which has evidential support in 12th-century inscriptions that refer to smiths and sculptors belonging to the Vishwakarma kula, although Vijaya Ramaswamy notes that "... the Vishwakarma community is obviously cutting across caste lines" and "... comprises five socially and economically differentiated jatis". Prior to the Raj period, these communities were referred to names such as Kammalar in present-day Tamil Nadu and Kerala, Panchalar in Karnataka and Panchanamuvaru in Andhra Pradesh, while there are also medieval inscriptions that refer to them as the Rathakarar and Kammala-Rathakarar.
Origin
The god Vishwakarma is considered by followers of the Hindu faith to be the divine architect or engineer of the universe. He had five children each born from his 5 faces i.e. Manu, Maya, Tvastar, Shilpi and Visvajna - and these are believed by the Vishwakarma community to have been the forebears of their five sub-groups, being respectively the gotras (clans) of blacksmiths, carpenters, bell metalworkers (metal casters), stonemasons and goldsmiths. It is not known whether these five subgroups historically practiced endogamy, which is a frequently-found feature of the Indian caste system.
History
While many sources refer to the five sub-groups of the Viskwakarma as artisans, 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
'Global Encyclopaedia of the Brahmana Ethnography' by K.S. Krishna Rao, lists the Visvakarma Brahmans. The Visvakarmas are different from the local artisan groups of Andra Pradesh, Kerala and Tamil Nadu and are called as Visvakarma Brahman. According to vedas and purana they have claimed a status as Brahmins or some equivalent 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.
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. Other Indian Vishwakarma populations are in: Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Bengal, Delhi, Haryana, Bihar, and Orissa.
Kerala
Vishwakarmas of Kerala are also known as Achary or Viswa Brahmanar. They exist in Kerala in two communities: one Tamil, one Malayali. According to George Varghese, the Visvakarmas claim to high status is "one of the mainstays of Viskwakarma 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 them". 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 remarkable achievements are evidenced in both the arts and sciences during that egalitarian pre-Brahmin era, including the construction of aeroplanes.
Tamil Nadu
In Tamil Nadu, Tamil Achari or Asari are known as Tamil Kammalars. They are goldsmiths and landlords.
Karnataka
The Vishwakarma caste of south Karnataka, is composed of several sub-castes: Kulachar, Shiv Achar, Uttaradi (goldsmiths), Matachar (founders), Muddekammaras, and Chikkamanes. Most of these sub-castes do not intermarry and have a hierarchy among themselves. These subcastes are varied according to various regions of Karnataka, but all worship the goddess Kali.
Diet
Vishwakarmas in North and South India follow a vegetarian diet and abstain from liquor.
Notables
Saints
- Potuluri Veera Brahmendra Swamy
- Eshwaridevi matham - granddaughter of Potuluri Virabrahmendra Swami
Actors
Directors
Notes
- ^ Rao, K.S. Krishna (2008). Global encyclopaedia of the Brahmana ethnography (1st ed. ed.). New Delhi, India: Global Vision Pub. House. ISBN 8182202086. Retrieved 22 January 2014.
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has extra text (help) - "The Panchals are the followers of the five Vedas, the fifth being Pranava Veda."Karnataka (India) (1987). Karnataka State Gazetteer: Belgaum. Printed by the Director of Print, Stationery and Publications at the Govt. Press.
- E. Thurston, Castes and Tribes of South India (Madras: Government Press, 1909)
- ^ 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.
- Bhagat, Ram B. (April — June 2006). "Census and caste enumeration: British legacy and contemporary practice in India". Genus. 62 (2): 119–134. JSTOR 29789312.
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(help) (subscription required) - ^ Ramaswamy, Vijaya (2004). "Vishwakarma Craftsmen in Early Medieval Peninsular India". Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient. 47 (4): 548–582. JSTOR 25165073. (subscription required)
- Art and Culture of Marginalised Nomadic Tribes in Andhra Pradesh, By P. Sadanandam
- Singh, Kumar Suresh. Rajasthan,. Vol. Volume 2. Dipak Kumar Samanta, Sushil Kumar Mandal, N. N. Vyas,. Anthropological Survey of India. p. 201.
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suggested) (help)CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link) - Thurston, Edgar. Castes and tribes of Southern India,. Vol. Volume 3. pp. 126–129.
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suggested) (help) - Iyer, L. A. Krishna (1968). Social history of Kerala. Book Centre. p. 6. Retrieved 16 January 2012.
The Kammalars are divided into two classes, the Tamil Kammalar and the Malayali Kammalar.
- Ramaswamy, Vijaya (2007). Historical dictionary of the Tamils. Scarecrow Press. pp. 107–108. ISBN 978-0-8108-5379-9. Retrieved 16 January 2012.
- ^ Heesterman, J. C. "Goldsmiths of Karnataka". Ritual, state, and history in South Asia: essays in honour of J.C. Heesterman. M. S. Oort. pp. 442–455.
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suggested) (help) - Meera Mukherjee (1978). Metalcraftsmen of India. Anthropological Survey of India, Government of India. pp. 60, 62, 124. Retrieved 18 June 2013.
- Aashi Manohar; Shampa Shah (1996). Tribal arts and crafts of Madhya Pradesh. Mapin Publishing. p. 29. ISBN 978-0-944142-71-4. Retrieved 18 June 2013.
- Pillai, R.N. (1991). Veerabrahmam : India's Nostradamus saint. New Delhi: Abhinav Publications. p. 9. ISBN 8170172799. Retrieved 11 Jan 2014.
- S., Sankaranarayanan. "A legend in his lifetime". Archived from the original on 28 Jan 2013. Retrieved 22 January 2014.
M.K. Thyagaraja Bhagavathar, popularly known as MKT, was born in Mayavaram on March 7, 1910, the first son of Krishnamurthy Asari, a goldsmith
Further reading
- John Duncan Martin Derrett (1976). Essays in Classical and Modern Hindu Law: Dharmaśāstra and related ideas. Brill. pp. 45–46. ISBN 978-90-04-04475-3.