Polyandry in India

Polyandry has been practiced in India and is still practiced by a minority. The popular Hindu epic, Mahabharatha provides a striking example of polyandry, Draupadi, daughter of king of Panchāla being married to five brothers.[1] Polyandry was practiced by some south Indian tribes, prevalent among the Todas of Nilgiris, Nairs of Travancore and Ezhavas of Malabar. While polyandrous unions have disappeared from the traditions of many of the groups and tribes, it is still practiced by some Paharis especially in Jaunsar Bawar region in Northern India.

Recent years, have seen the rise in fraternal polyandry in the agrarian societies in Malwa region of Punjab to avoid division of farming land.[2]

Contents

Toda

Todas are tribal people residing in the Nilgiri hills in South India who once practiced polyandry.[3] They practiced a form of polyandrous relationship which is considered to be a classic example of polyandry. They practiced both fraternal and sequential polyandry. The males who shared one or two wives were almost always full or half-brothers.[4] Polyandry among Todas existed for several centuries. A Toda woman when married was automatically married to her husband's brothers.[5] One of the husbands who is arranged to perform the ceremony of giving bow and arrow to a child becomes the father when a child is born. When the next child is born, another husband performs the duties and thus becomes a father.[6]

Kerala

Polyandry and Polygamy were prevalent in Kerala till the late 19th century and isolated incidents were reported till mid-20th century. The castes practicing polyandry were Nairs, Thiyyas, Kammalans and a few of the artisan castes.[7][8] In case of Nairs and other related castes, a man's property is inherited by his sister's children and not his own.[9] Several unrelated men had a common wife in Nair polyandry. Under Nair polyandry, the only conceivable blood-relationship could be ascertained through females.[10] However, polyandry among Nairs is a contested issue with opinion divided between ones who support its existence[11][12] and ones who do not support it based on the fact that no stable conjugal relationship is formed in Nair polyandry.[13]

Jaunsar Bawar

Polyandry is still practiced in Jaunsar-Bawar in Uttarkhand.[14] A distinct group of people called Paharis live in the lower ranges of Himalayas in Northern India from southeastern Kashmir all the way through Nepal. Polyandry has been reported among these people in many districts but studied in great detail in Jaunsar-Bawar. It is a region in Dehradun district in Uttar Pradesh. The practice is believed to have descended from their ancestors who had earlier settled down in the plains from Himalayas.[15] Polyandrous union occurs in this region when a woman marries the eldest son in a family. The woman automatically becomes the wife of all his brothers upon her marriage. The brothers can be married to more than one woman if the first woman was sterile or if the age differential of the brothers were high. The wife is shared equally by all brothers and no one in the group has exclusive privilege to the wife. The woman considers all the men in the group her husband and the children recognise them all their father.[16][17]

Other tribes

Fraternal polyandry exists among the Khasa of Dehra Dun; and among the Gallong, the Mala Madessar, the Mavilan, etc. of Kerala. Non-fraternal polyandry exists among the Kota; and among the Karvazhi, Pulaya, Muthuvan, and Mannan in Kerala.[18] In 1911 Census of India, E.A. Gait mentions polyandry of the Tibetans, Bhotias, Kanets of Kulu valley, people of state of Bashahr, Thakkars and Megs of Kashmir, Gonds of Central Provinces, Todas and Kurumbas of Nilgiris, Tolkolans of Malabar, Ishavans, Kaniyans and Kammalans of Cochin, Muduvas of Travancore and of Nairs.[19]

References

  1. ^ James Samuelson (1890). India, Past and Present, Historical, Social and Political. Trübner (London). pp. 18, 20, 46, 47. http://books.google.com/?id=vQ4oAAAAYAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=India,+Past+and+Present,+Historical,+Social+and+Political. 
  2. ^ Draupadis bloom in rural Punjab Times of India, Jul 16, 2005.
  3. ^ ANTHONY R. WALKER (February 28 - March 12, 2004). "The truth about the Todas". Frontline 21 (5). http://www.hinduonnet.com/fline/fl2105/stories/20040312000206600.htm. 
  4. ^ Austin L. Hughes (14 July 1988). Evolution and human kinship. OUP USA. p. 101. ISBN 019505234X, ISBN 978-0195052343. http://books.google.com/?id=5g9002yyTW8C&pg=PP1&dq=Evolution+and+human+kinship. 
  5. ^ Bron B. Ingoldsby and Suzanna D. Smith (7 September 2005). Families in global and multicultural perspective. Sage Publications, Inc. p. 104. ISBN 0761928197, ISBN 978-0761928195. http://books.google.com/?id=UR3HhhtRy3gC&printsec=frontcover&dq=Families+in+global+and+multicultural+perspective. 
  6. ^ The Todas by William Halse Rivers Rivers
  7. ^ A study of polyandry - Prince Peter Of Greece And Denmark (1963) The Hague : Moulton. Open Library ID OL15135517M pp. 159
  8. ^ Polyandry in India: Demographic, economic, social, religious, and psychological concomitants of plural marriages in women - Manis Kumar Raha and Palash Chandra Coomar (1987) Gian Pub. House. ISBN 8121201055 pg.432
  9. ^ The imperial gazetteer of India by William Wilson Hunter
  10. ^ H. W. H., H. W. (12 February 1886). "Primitive marriage". Science (American Association for the Advancement of Science) 7 (158): 147–149. doi:10.1126/science.ns-7.158S.147. JSTOR 1760231. PMID 17759687. 
  11. ^ A.Aiyappan (March 1932). "Nayar Polyandry". Man (Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland) 32: 78–79. JSTOR 2790087. 
  12. ^ L. K. Ananthakrishna Iyer (November 1932). "Nayar Polyandry.". Man (Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland) 32: 269–270. JSTOR 2790609. 
  13. ^ Marvin K. Opler, Marvin K. (September 1943). "Woman's Social Status and the Forms of Marriage". The American Journal of Sociology (The University of Chicago Press) 49 (2): 125–148. doi:10.1086/219347. JSTOR 2770359. 
  14. ^ "The mystique of the mountains". Frontline. November–December 2003. http://www.hinduonnet.com/fline/fl2024/stories/20031205000106600.htm. 
  15. ^ Miriam Koktvedgaard Zeitzen (5 August 2008). Polygamy: A Cross-Cultural Analysis. Berg Publishers. p. 109. ISBN 184520221X, ISBN 978-1845202217. http://books.google.com/?id=WIzHjpTJgdQC&printsec=frontcover&dq=Polygamy+Miriam+Koktvedgaard+Zeitzen. 
  16. ^ Gerald D. Berreman, Gerald D. (1962). "Pahari Polyandry:A comparison". American Anthropologist 64 (1): 60–75. doi:10.1525/aa.1962.64.1.02a00070. 
  17. ^ Gerald D. Berreman, Gerald D. (February 1975). "Himalayan Polyandry and the Domestic Cycle". American Ethnologist (Blackwell Publishing on behalf of the American Anthropological Association) 2 (1): 127–138. doi:10.1525/ae.1975.2.1.02a00070. JSTOR 643539. 
  18. ^ Polyandry a Social System in India
  19. ^ Polyandry in Ancient India by Sarva Daman Singh

Bibliography