Barthwal
'Barthwal' (Devanagari:बड़थ्वाल) is surname, rather a sub-caste of Garhwali Brahmins. There is a similar caste, 'Bartwal' ('h' missing / बर्त्वाल) - e people are 'thakur' or 'jajman' (as they are popularly called in [Uttarakhand] ). Most Barthwals are concentrated in [Pauri Garhwal district (Pauri District)] of Uttarakhand. The deity of Barthwals is 'Bhairav', where as some of them rides on dog. Statistically, their population totals in the thousands. The caste of Barthwal as well as bartwal famous for doing various activities.
Like many sub-castes of Garhwal, it is said that they are not native to Garhwal. One version (Rahul Sankrayatan's) has it that they descended from four brothers, each of which settled in different locations in Pauri district. Another version has it that they all originally belonged to a village 'Badeth' in Dwarikhal Block, near Silogi, in Bichla Dhangu 'patti' (a division of block, generally consisting of 25-50 villages) and some of Barthwal lives in udaypur Patti village Gankya now known as ganeshpur. From there, their descendents moved to nearby Khand, Balori (near district headquarter of Pauri) and elsewhere with the passage of time. But most of the Barthwal's are generated and belong to village 'Badeth' but due to the short fall of residential area they are shift to another places.
Among Barthwals, the most notable name is Pitambar Dutt Barthwal of Pali village, who was the first D.Litt of India in Hindi literature; his thesis was on Kabir's philosophy of dualism. (Second D.Litt after him was Dr Rajendra Prasad, the first President of India). Another notable figure among Barthwals was Mukund 'Daivagya', the renowned astronomer of village Khand who normally lived in Devprayag; his books on astronomy and astrology continue to be part of the curriculum in higher studies of astrology. Mahidhar Barthwal, another famous name among Barthwals, wrote a book classifying the different castes of Garhwal, "Garhwal mein kaun kahan". Mr Barthwal, while living in Pradhan of Pali Village, received an award from former President of India Sh. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam for promoting cleaniness and proper sanitation. Presently Mr. Barthwal lives in Kotdwar, a small town in Uttarakhand. In his book, Barthwal proved that the Swarnkars (goldsmiths) of Garhwal were originally 'dome' (the scheduled caste, traditionally the lowest rung of the caste system). The Swarnkars were so infuriated that they had the book banned. However, the Hon'ble High Court of Allahabad, ruled that the ban be lifted and Mahidhar Prasad's thesis was vindicated.