[73] Ca.s.sia fistula.
[74] This is incorrect, at present at any rate, as the Karma is danced during the harvest period. But it is probable that the ritual observances for communal fishing and hunting have now fallen into abeyance.
[75] C. P. Gazetteer (1871), Introduction, p. 130.
[76] This section contains some information furnished by R. B. Hira Lal.
[77] Notes on the Gonds, pp. 15, 16.
[78] Indian Caste, i. p. 325.
[79] See article Birhor.
[80] See article Bhunjia.
[81] Notes, p. 1.
[82] Highlands of Central India, p. 156.
[83] Report on Bastar Dependency, p. 41.
[84] a.s.sessment of revenue for land.
[85] Quoted in C.P. Gazetteer (1871), Introduction, p. 113.
[86] Chhindwara Settlement Report.
[87] Report on Bastar Dependency, p. 43.
[88] Ind. Ant. (1876), p. 359.
[89] See para. 65, Tattooing.
[90] See para. 41, Religion.
[91] Balaghat District Gazetteer, p. 87.
[92] Rawan was the demon king of Ceylon who fought against Rama, and from whom the Gonds are supposed to be descended. Hence this song may perhaps refer to a Gond revolt against the Hindus.
[93] The amaltas or Ca.s.sia fistula, which has flowers like a laburnum. The idea is perhaps that its leaves are too small to make a proper leaf-cup, and she will not take the trouble to get suitable leaves.
[94] Hislop, Notes, p. 2.
[95] Chhindwara Settlement Report.
[96] This article is based on a paper by Pandit Pyare Lal Misra.
[97] This article is compiled from papers by Mr. Kesho Rao Joshi, Headmaster, City School, Nagpur, and Pyare Lal Misra, Ethnographic Clerk.
[98] Page 67.
[99] In the Maratha Districts the term Ganges sometimes signifies the Wainganga.
[100] Dam apparently here means life or breath.
[101] Gunthorpe, p. 91.
[102] This article contains material from Mr. J. C. Oman"s Mystics, Ascetics and Saints of India, Sir E. Maclagan"s Punjab Census Report, 1891, and Dr. J. N. Bhattacharya"s Hindu Castes and Sects (Calcutta, Messrs. Thacker, Spink and Co.).
[103] Elaeocarpus.
[104] Mr. Marten"s C.P. Census Report (1911), p. 79.
[105] Orpheus, p. 137.
[106] Oman, Mystics, Ascetics and Saints, p. 269.
[107] Bhattacharya, Hindu Castes and Sects, p. 380.
[108] Bhattacharya, ibidem, and Oman, Mystics, Ascetics and Saints, pp. 160, 161.
[109] Buchanan, Eastern India, i. pp. 197, 198.
[110] Nesfield, Brief View of the Caste System, p. 86.
[111] J. C. Oman, Cults, Customs and Superst.i.tions of India (London, T. Fisher Unwin), p. 11.
[112] Mystics, Ascetics and Saints of India, pp. 156, 157.
[113] Sir E. Maclagan, Punjab Census Report (1891), p. 112.
[114] This article is based on notes by Mr. Percival, a.s.sistant Conservator of Forests, and Rai Bahadur Hira Lal.
[115] For further details see article on Gond Gowari.
[116] See article on Kunbi.
[117] Early History of India, 3rd ed. pp. 409, 411.
[118] Mr. Smith ascribes this discovery to Messrs. A. M. T. Jackson (Bombay Gazetteer, vol. i. Part I., 1896, p. 467); D. R. Bhandarkar, Gurjaras (J. Bo. R.A.S. vol. xx.); and Epigraphic Notes (ibidem, vol. xxi.); and Professor Kielhorn"s paper on the Gwalior Inscription of Mihira Bhoja in a German journal.
[119] Bombay Gazetteer, Hindus of Gujarat, Appendix B, The Gujars.
[120] The Khazars were known to the Chinese as Yetas, the beginning of Yeta-i-li-to, the name of their ruling family, and the nations of the west altered this to Hyatilah and Ephthalite. Campbell, ibidem.
[121] See article on Panwar Rajput, para. 1.
[122] Campbell, loc. cit. p. 495.