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Kshatriya |
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Kshatriyaor KsatriyaIn Hindu India, the second-highest of the four varnas, or social classes, traditionally the military or ruling class. In ancient times before the caste system was completely defined, they were considered first in rank, placed higher than the Brahmans, or priestly class. The legend that they were degraded by an incarnation of Vishnu as a punishment for their tyranny may reflect a historical struggle for supremacy between priests and rulers. In modern times the Kshatriya varna includes members from a variety of castes, united by their status in government or the military or their land ownership. Kshatriya (Sanskrit, from kshatra, “dominion,” “rule”), one of the four main varnas, or social estates of ancient India. The Kshatriya varna originated among Aryan tribes in the pre-Indian period as a result of the separation of military and government functions from productive labor when the primitive society was in the stage of decay. In the ancient Indian states, the Kshatriyas, who constituted the military and tribal aristocracy, assumed the ruling political and economic position; they were the rulers of states, officials, landowners, and professional soldiers. By the middle of the first millennium A.D. membership in the Kshatriya varna had ceased to determine the composition of the ruling class. In the Middle Ages it existed only as a traditional idea; for example, members of the military feudal Rajput caste, who had no hereditary link with the ancient varna, were called Kshatriyas. REFERENCESKane, P. V. History of Dharmasastra, vol. 2, part 1. Poona, 1941. Chapter 2.Law, B. C. Ancient Mid-Indian Kshatriya Tribes. Calcutta, 1924. Want to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit the webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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No references found | India) reconstructs the history of India's Ksatriya caste, traditionally understood as the warrior caste, for the period 600-186 BC. 35) Symbolically, he might well have thought of Sanskrit as the Brahman-owned enchanted fruit appropriated but ultimately restored by the Ksatriya (the military or governing caste); see the preceding note. |
Ksatriya |
KSAFC KSAK KSAL KSAM KSAM Ksamavani KSAMB KSAMC KSANY KSAO KSAOC KSAP KSAPS KSAPT Ksar Ksar Ksar el Kebir Ksar El-Kebir Ksar-el-Kebir KSARDA KSARNG KSAS KSASA KSASF KSAT Ksatria Ksatria Ksatriya KSAUKsavjer Šandor Gjalski Ksavjer Sandor Gjalski Ksawery Rowinski KsAWWA KSB KSBA KSBAA KSBC KSBD KSBDC KSBE KSBHA KSBI KSBIH KSBIT KSBK KSBKBT KSBL KSBMA KSBMB KSBNR KSBO KSBOA | |||||||
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