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AreKatika Marriage Bureau
Marriage Bureau of Suryavanshi Arekatika Community.
AreKatika Marriage Bureau
Marriage Bureau site of Suryavanshi Arekatika Community.
AreKatika Marriage Bureau
Marriage Bureau site of Suryavanshi Arekatika Community.
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Thursday, 28 November 2013
Tuesday, 8 October 2013
04:51 by Unknown
Gotra is the Sanskrit term for a much older system of
tribal clans. The Sanskrit term “Gotra” was initially used by the Vedic
people for the identification of the lineages. Generally, these lineages
mean patrilineal descent from the sages or rishis in Brahmins, warriors
and administrators in Kshatriyas and ancestral trade men in Vaisyas.
The lineage system, either patrilineal or matrilineal,
was followed by South Asian people. In present-day Hinduism, Gotra is
applied to all the lineage systems.
The case of sage Vishwamitra is the example. Thus the
gotra must have been of the lineage of the learning one chose rather
than the lineage of one’s birth. Rama is stated to be the descendant of
Ikshwaku, but the lineage was broken when Kalmashpada got his son
through Niyoga of Vashista with Kalmashapada’s wife Madayanthi, and not
through a biological liaison. Yet Rama is said to be Ikshwaku’s
descendant and not of Vashistha. Some claim of a continuous biological
linkage with the ‘Moola purusha’ [or most significant personality] of
the Gotra, whereas it need not be the case. Some times, a Gotra is based
on the Guru for the family or one of the ancestors.
In Hindu society, the term Gotra means clan. Gotra, a
term applied to a clan, a group of families, or a lineage – exogamous
and patrilineal – whose members trace their descent to a common
ancestor, usually a sage (Rishi) of ancient times.
Panini defines ‘gotra’ for grammatical purposes as “apatyam pautraprabhrti gotram”
(IV. 1. 162), which means “the word gotra denotes the progeny (of a
sage) beginning with the son’s son. When a person says ”I am
Kashypasa-gotra”, he means that he traces his descent from the ancient
sage Kashyapa by unbroken male descent.
According to the Baudhâyanas’rauta-sûtra, Vishvâmitra,
Jamadagni, Bharadvâja, Gautama, Atri, Vashista, Kashyapa and Agasthya
are 8 sages; the progeny of these eight sages is declared to be gotras.
This enumeration of eight primary gotras seems to have been known to
PâNini. The offspring (apatya) of these eight are gotras and others than
these are called ‘ gotrâvayava ‘.[1]
The Gotra classification took form probably sometime during the
Yajur-Veda period, after the Rig-Veda period. It is believed that the
Gotras (now account to a total of 49) started to consolidate some around
10-8 Century B.C. The present day, Gotra classification is created from
a core of 8 Rishis (The Saptha-Rishis + Agastya) who were the
originators of their Clan.
The Seven Rishis (Saptarshi), as below, are recognized
as the mind born sons of the creator Brahma. The ‘Shatapatha Brahmana’
gives their names as:
1. Atri
2. Bharadwaja
3. Gautama
4. Jamadagni
5. Kashyapa
6. Vasishtha
7. Vishwamitra and
8. Agastya
Out of these seven Rishis, Viaswamitra was basically a Kshatriya king, who chose and rose to become an ascetic Rishi.2. Bharadwaja
3. Gautama
4. Jamadagni
5. Kashyapa
6. Vasishtha
7. Vishwamitra and
8. Agastya
These Rishis belonged to different sects like Shakti, Shavites and Vishnavites and had different deities for worship. Such deities came to be known as the Kula-devtas.
The lines of descent from the major Rishis are
originally divided into Ganas [sub divisions] and each Gana is further
divided into families. However, subsequently the term Gotra is
frequently applied to the Ganas and to the families within the Ganas
interchangeably.
A gotra is of immense importance to a Hindu for it
shores up his identity. All Hindu ceremonies require a statement of the
gotra. A devout Hindu speaks out his gotra and pravara every day in the
morning. Gotra also comes of use during the performance of the rites of
passage or sanskaras. People of the same gotra (sa-gotra) are not
allowed to marry, to prevent inbreeding. At weddings, the gotra of the
bride and the groom are proclaimed aloud to establish that they are not
breaking this socially ordained genetic precaution.
Marriages between certain gotras are also not allowed;
for instance, marriages between those of the Vasishtha and Vishvamitra
gotras are not permitted. This is because these two sages were opponents
and their descendants are traditional foes.
There are 49 established Hindu gotras. All members of a
particular gotra are believed to possess certain common characteristics
by way of nature or profession. Many theories have been propounded to
explain this system.
According to the Brahminical theory, the Brahmins are
the direct descendants of seven or eight sages who are believed to be
the mind-born sons of Brahma. These eight sages are called ‘Gotrakarins’
from whom all the 49 gotras (especially of the Brahmins) have evolved.
For instance, from Atri sprang the Atreya and Gavisthiras gotras.
According to this theory, the Kshatriyas
and Vaishyasdo not have a gotra and are to speak out the gotras of
their Purohita during the various ceremonies. However according to some
Kshatriyas and Vaishyas, they are also descendants of these sages.
Because of this, many a time a Brahmin, Kshatriya and a Vaishya claim
the same gotra. The members of a gotra however need not necessarily be
blood relations, but could be spiritual inheritors or descendants of a
guru’s pupils.
Among the Kshatriyas, Rajputs claim to be the direct
descendants of the Sun (Suryavanshi), the moon (Chandravanshi) or the
fire (Agnikula). They are also divided into numerous clans, each bearing
the name of some great ancestor. Similarly every caste and class of the
Hindus is divided into many clans.
In olden times the members of the Brahminical gotras had
certain characteristic features distinguishing them from the others:
the Bhargavas had their heads shaven, the Angirasas wore five braids and
so on.
Gotra closely connected with the concept of gotra is
that of pravara which is the invocation of Agni by the name of the
ancestral sage of whichever Brahmin consecrates the sacrificial fire. As
a rule, there are not more than four or five sages in one pravara. Two
gotras having a common pravara are not allowed to marry. For instance
those of the Kashyapa and Shandilya gotras cannot intermarry because
they share the same sage, Asita, in their pravaras.
Abhivada, the formal proclamation of one’s ancestry, is only enjoined upon ‘twice-born’ (see also Upanayanam)
males. It includes not just the gotra and pravara but, for a Brahmin,
the Veda to which he ‘belongs’, the Sutra or Vedic interpretation
favoured by his gotra and finally his own name. It is said with the
thumb behind the ears, in the traditional gesture of invoking ancestors.
Today’s great classical musicians invoke their gurus similarly before
beginning a concert.
Vasishtha, Maitra – Varuna, Kaundinya Trayarishiya
gotre, Apastambha sutra, Yajushtagadhyayi, Sri Parashuraman Sharmana
aham asmiboho. In the Rig-Veda (see Veda), the word gotra means a
‘cowpen’. In the Vedic period, marriage within the family was a common
occurrence. The term gotra was used in its present sense for the first
time in the Brahmanas. It was systematised by about the 4th century BC
to accommodate changed social rules and laws and by the time of the
Sutras, it was a well-established system. Even today almost all families
abide by its rules.
List Of Hindu Gotras out of 49:
Angiras | Atri | Bhardwaj |
Bhargav | Bhrigu | Dasodia |
Gautam | Gargya | Grandhisila |
Hansaj | Harinama | Heritasa |
Jamadagni | Kashyapa | Koundinya |
Kulsa | Lohitaksha | Marichi |
Mudgal | Naidhruva | Pamidikula |
Parthiva | Sawarna | Serawat |
Shandilya | Shankha | Siwa |
Upamanyu | Vardrayana | Vasishtha |
Vatsa | Vishwamitra |
Importance of Gotras in Marraiges
The Gotra system was instituted for the purposes of
identifying one’s ancestors and pay respects during various invocations
and other rituals to honour their fathers, fore-fathers and so on, up to
their respective Rishis.
In present days, Gotra is mainly linked with marriages. Marriage will
not be allowed within the same Gotra in order to avoid impure
matrimony. This thinking is in tune with the modern day genetic
paradigms of hybrid vigour.In a patrilineal Hindu society, the bride belongs to her father’s Gotra before the marriage and to her husband’s Gotra after the marriage. The groom on the other hand only belongs to his father’s Gotra throughout his life.
A gotra must be distinguished from a kula. A kula is a set of people following similar cultural rituals, often worshiping the same divinity (the Kula-Devta, god of the clan). Kula does not relate to lineage or caste. In fact, it is possible to change one’s kula, based on one’s faith or Iṣṭa-devatā.
It is common practice in preparation for Hindu marriage
to inquire about the kula-gotra (clan-lineage) of the bride and groom
before approving the marriage.
Marriages within the gotra (‘sa-gotra’ marriages) are
not permitted under the rule of exogamy in the traditional matrimonial
system. In almost all Hindu families, marriages within the Gotra
(‘sa-gotra’ marriages) are not permitted under the rule of exogamy in
the traditional matrimonial system. The word ‘sagotra’ is union of the
words ‘sa’ + ‘gotra’, where ‘sa’ means same or similar. People within
the Gotra are regarded as kin and marrying such a person would be
thought of as incest. But marriage within the kula/jati is allowed and
even sometimes preferred.
The Tamil words ‘sagotharan’ (brother) and ‘sagothari’
(sister) derive their roots from the Sanskrit word ‘sahodara’ (सहोदर)
meaning co-uterine or born of the same womb.
North Indian Hindu society not only follows the rules of
gotra for marriages, but also had many regulations which went beyond
the basic definition of gotra and had a broader definition of
incestuousness.
Some communities in North India do not allow marriage
with some other communities on the lines that both the Communities are
having brotherhood.
04:29 by Unknown
In Hindu society, the term gotra means clan. It broadly refers to people who are descendants in an unbroken male line from a common male ancestor. Pāṇini defines gotra for grammatical purposes as apatyam pautraprabhrti gotram , which means "the word gotra denotes the progeny (of a sage) beginning with the son's son." When a person says "I am Kashypasa-gotra," he means that he traces his descent from the ancient sage Kashyapa by unbroken male descent. According to the Brihadaranyaka Upanisad 2.2.6, Gautama and Bharadvāja, Viśvāmitra and Jamadagni, Vasiṣṭha and Kaśyapa, and Atri are seven sages (also known as Saptarishi); the progeny of these eight sages is declared to be gotras. This enumeration of eight primary gotras seems to have been known to Pāṇini. The offspring (apatya) of these eight are gotras and others than these are called ' gotrâvayava '.
All members of a particular gotra are believed to possess certain common characteristics by way of nature or profession. Many theories have been propounded to explain this system. According to the brahminical theory, the Brahmins are the direct descendants of seven or eight sages who are believed to be the mind-born sons of Brahma. They are Gautama, Bharadvaja, Vishvamitra, Jamadagni, Vashista, Kashyapa and Atri. To this list, Agasthya is also sometimes added. These eight sages are called gotrakarins from whom all the 49 gotras (especially of the Brahmins) have evolved. For instance, from Atri sprang the Atreya and Gavisthiras gotras.
A gotra must be distinguished from a kula. A kula is a set of people following similar cultural rituals, often worshiping the same divinity (the Kula-Devata, god of the clan). Kula does not relate to lineage or caste. In fact, it is possible to change one's kula, based on one's faith or Iṣṭa-devatā.
It is common practice in preparation for Hindu marriage to inquire about the kula-gotra (meaning clan lineage) of the bride and groom before approving the marriage. In almost all Hindu families, marriage within the same gotra is prohibited, since people with same gotra are considered to be siblings. But marriage within the jati is allowed and even preferred. In Jat caste marriage within people from same gotra as self, mother and grandmother is not practiced.
For example, Jatts in Northern India have 2500 Gotras, Gujjars in Uttar pradesh have 3000 Gotras and Mudirajas of Andhra Pradesh & Tamil Nadu have 2600 Gotras.
Gotra is always passed on from father to children among most Hindus. However, among Malayalis and Tulu's its passed on from mother to children.
As a Rigvedic term, gotra simply means "cow shelter" and more generally "stable, enclosure". The narrowed meaning "family, lineage kin" (as it were "herd within an enclosure") is younger, first recorded around the mid 1st millennium BCE (e.g., Chandogya Upanishad).
These "lineages" as they developed during that time meant patrilineal descent among Brahmins (the Brahmin gotra system), warriors and administrators in Kshatriyas and ancestral trademen in Vaisyas[citation needed].
In present-day Hinduism, gotra is applied to all the lineage systems.
In a patrilineal Hindu society (most common), the bride belongs to her father's gotra before the marriage, and to her husband's gotra after the marriage The groom on the other hand only belongs to his father's gotra throughout his life.
Marriages within the gotra ('sagotra' marriages) are not permitted under the rule of exogamy in the traditional matrimonial system. The word 'sagotra' is union the words 'sa' + gotra, where 'sa' means same or similar. People within the gotra are regarded as kin and marrying such a person would be thought of as incest. The Kannada words 'sahodara' (brother) and 'sahodari' (sister) derive their roots from the Sanskrit word 'saha udara' (सहोदर) meaning co-uterine or born of the same womb. In communities where gotra membership passed from father to children, marriages were allowed between maternal uncle and niece,[3] while such marriages were forbidden in matrilineal communities, like Nairs and Tuluvas, where gotra membership was passed down from the mother.
A much more common characteristic of South Indian Hindu society is permission for marriage between cross-cousins (children of brother and sister) as they are of different Gotras. Thus, a man is allowed to marry his maternal uncle's daughter or his paternal aunt's daughter, but is not allowed to marry his father's brother's daughter. She would be considered a parallel cousin who is treated as a sister as she would be of same Gotra.
North Indian Hindu society not only follows the rules of gotra for marriages, but also had many regulations which went beyond the basic definition of gotra and had a broader definition of incestuousness.[5] Some communities in North India do not allow marriage with some other communities on the lines that both the Communities are having brotherhood.[6]
An acceptable social workaround for sagotra marriages is to perform a 'Dathu' (adoption) of the bride to a family of different gotra (usually dathu is given to the bride's maternal uncle who obviously belongs to different gotra by the same rule) and let them perform the 'kanniyadhanam' ('kanniya' (girl) + 'dhanam' (to donate)).[citation needed]
Khap panchayats in Haryana have been making a huge fuss over banning "same gotra marriages." Kadyan Khap International convener Naresh Kadyan had moved a petition seeking amendment to the Hindu Marriage Act (HMA) so as to legally prohibit marriages in the same gotra. However, the petition was dismissed as withdrawn after a vacation Bench of Justices S N Dhingra and A K Pathak of the Delhi High Court warned that a heavy cost would be imposed on the petitioner for wasting the time of the court. In course of the proceedings, the bench observed, “You don’t know what is a gotra. Which Hindu text prescribes banning of sagotra (same clan) marriage? Why are you wasting the time of the court? If you are not able to substantiate your words, then you should not have come before the court.” [7]
In a court case "Madhavrao vs Raghavendrarao" which involved a Deshastha Brahmin couple, the German scholar Max Mueller's definition of gotra as descending from eight sages and then branching out to several families was thrown out by reputed judges of a Bombay High Court.[3] The court called the idea of Brahmin families descending from an unbroken line of common ancestors as indicated by the names of their respective gotras "impossible to accept."[4] The court consulted relevant Hindu texts and stressed the need for Hindu society and law to keep up with the times emphasizing that notions of good social behavior and the general ideology of the Hindu society had changed.[5] The court also said that the mass of material in the Hindu texts is so vast and full of contradictions that it is almost an impossible task to reduce it to order and coherence.
All members of a particular gotra are believed to possess certain common characteristics by way of nature or profession. Many theories have been propounded to explain this system. According to the brahminical theory, the Brahmins are the direct descendants of seven or eight sages who are believed to be the mind-born sons of Brahma. They are Gautama, Bharadvaja, Vishvamitra, Jamadagni, Vashista, Kashyapa and Atri. To this list, Agasthya is also sometimes added. These eight sages are called gotrakarins from whom all the 49 gotras (especially of the Brahmins) have evolved. For instance, from Atri sprang the Atreya and Gavisthiras gotras.
A gotra must be distinguished from a kula. A kula is a set of people following similar cultural rituals, often worshiping the same divinity (the Kula-Devata, god of the clan). Kula does not relate to lineage or caste. In fact, it is possible to change one's kula, based on one's faith or Iṣṭa-devatā.
It is common practice in preparation for Hindu marriage to inquire about the kula-gotra (meaning clan lineage) of the bride and groom before approving the marriage. In almost all Hindu families, marriage within the same gotra is prohibited, since people with same gotra are considered to be siblings. But marriage within the jati is allowed and even preferred. In Jat caste marriage within people from same gotra as self, mother and grandmother is not practiced.
For example, Jatts in Northern India have 2500 Gotras, Gujjars in Uttar pradesh have 3000 Gotras and Mudirajas of Andhra Pradesh & Tamil Nadu have 2600 Gotras.
Gotra is always passed on from father to children among most Hindus. However, among Malayalis and Tulu's its passed on from mother to children.
Origins
As a Rigvedic term, gotra simply means "cow shelter" and more generally "stable, enclosure". The narrowed meaning "family, lineage kin" (as it were "herd within an enclosure") is younger, first recorded around the mid 1st millennium BCE (e.g., Chandogya Upanishad).
These "lineages" as they developed during that time meant patrilineal descent among Brahmins (the Brahmin gotra system), warriors and administrators in Kshatriyas and ancestral trademen in Vaisyas[citation needed].
In present-day Hinduism, gotra is applied to all the lineage systems.
Marriages and gotras
In a patrilineal Hindu society (most common), the bride belongs to her father's gotra before the marriage, and to her husband's gotra after the marriage The groom on the other hand only belongs to his father's gotra throughout his life.
Marriages within the gotra ('sagotra' marriages) are not permitted under the rule of exogamy in the traditional matrimonial system. The word 'sagotra' is union the words 'sa' + gotra, where 'sa' means same or similar. People within the gotra are regarded as kin and marrying such a person would be thought of as incest. The Kannada words 'sahodara' (brother) and 'sahodari' (sister) derive their roots from the Sanskrit word 'saha udara' (सहोदर) meaning co-uterine or born of the same womb. In communities where gotra membership passed from father to children, marriages were allowed between maternal uncle and niece,[3] while such marriages were forbidden in matrilineal communities, like Nairs and Tuluvas, where gotra membership was passed down from the mother.
A much more common characteristic of South Indian Hindu society is permission for marriage between cross-cousins (children of brother and sister) as they are of different Gotras. Thus, a man is allowed to marry his maternal uncle's daughter or his paternal aunt's daughter, but is not allowed to marry his father's brother's daughter. She would be considered a parallel cousin who is treated as a sister as she would be of same Gotra.
North Indian Hindu society not only follows the rules of gotra for marriages, but also had many regulations which went beyond the basic definition of gotra and had a broader definition of incestuousness.[5] Some communities in North India do not allow marriage with some other communities on the lines that both the Communities are having brotherhood.[6]
An acceptable social workaround for sagotra marriages is to perform a 'Dathu' (adoption) of the bride to a family of different gotra (usually dathu is given to the bride's maternal uncle who obviously belongs to different gotra by the same rule) and let them perform the 'kanniyadhanam' ('kanniya' (girl) + 'dhanam' (to donate)).[citation needed]
Khap panchayats in Haryana have been making a huge fuss over banning "same gotra marriages." Kadyan Khap International convener Naresh Kadyan had moved a petition seeking amendment to the Hindu Marriage Act (HMA) so as to legally prohibit marriages in the same gotra. However, the petition was dismissed as withdrawn after a vacation Bench of Justices S N Dhingra and A K Pathak of the Delhi High Court warned that a heavy cost would be imposed on the petitioner for wasting the time of the court. In course of the proceedings, the bench observed, “You don’t know what is a gotra. Which Hindu text prescribes banning of sagotra (same clan) marriage? Why are you wasting the time of the court? If you are not able to substantiate your words, then you should not have come before the court.” [7]
In a court case "Madhavrao vs Raghavendrarao" which involved a Deshastha Brahmin couple, the German scholar Max Mueller's definition of gotra as descending from eight sages and then branching out to several families was thrown out by reputed judges of a Bombay High Court.[3] The court called the idea of Brahmin families descending from an unbroken line of common ancestors as indicated by the names of their respective gotras "impossible to accept."[4] The court consulted relevant Hindu texts and stressed the need for Hindu society and law to keep up with the times emphasizing that notions of good social behavior and the general ideology of the Hindu society had changed.[5] The court also said that the mass of material in the Hindu texts is so vast and full of contradictions that it is almost an impossible task to reduce it to order and coherence.
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