Jaat: Difference between revisions

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==Further reading==
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* Census Of India 1911 Volume XIV Punjab Part 2 by Pandit Narikishan Kaul
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Latest revision as of 20:32, 30 April 2021

Jat
Regions with significant populations
India and some parts of Pakistan
Languages
HaryanviHindiPunjabiRajasthaniSindhiBrajBhashaUrdu
Religion
Hinduism • Islam • Sikhism

Jaat or Jat or Jutt or Jats (Hindi: जाट or जट्ट, Punjabi: ਜੱਟ) The Jats are a ancient Kshatriya community of northern India and Pakistan. Jat are a large group of people, found mostly in India and some parts of Pakistan.

History[edit]

Jats occupies the most fertile land of India and dominate Northwest India. "Jat" is a label of a wide-ranging non-elite community, which had its origins in pastoralism in the lower Indus valley of Sindh.[1]

"... (North India) contained large numbers of non-elite tillers. In the Punjab and the western Gangetic Plains, convention defined the Rajput's non-elite counterpart as a Jat. Like many similar titles used elsewhere, this was not so much a caste name as a broad designation for the man of substance in rural terrain. … To be called Jat has in some regions implied a background of pastoralism, though it has more commonly been a designation of non-servile cultivating people".[2] Mostly Jaat are knowns as zamindar.

Distribution[edit]

Jaats inhabited throughout the Punjab region, Sindh and some other northwestern parts of Subcontinent Jats are commonly called as Zamindar with Jats being synonymous with landlord.[citation needed]

Famous people[edit]

References[edit]

  1. Asher, Catherine & Talbot, Cynthia 2006. India before Europe. Cambridge University Press, p270. ISBN 978-0-521-80904-7
  2. Bayly, Susan (2001). Caste, Society and Politics in India from the Eighteenth Century to the Modern Age. Cambridge University Press. p. 37. ISBN 978-0-521-79842-6. Retrieved 15 October 2011.


Further reading[edit]

  • Census Of India 1911 Volume XIV Punjab Part 2 by Pandit Narikishan Kaul
  • 'A glossary of the tribes and castes of the Punjab and North West Frontier Province' by H.A. Rose, Page 354, published in 1919.






Written by:-Navjeet Saharan (Sardarshahar)