Kamma (caste)

(Redirected from Kammas)

Kamma is a largely Hindu caste from South India. The community of Kammas is believed to have originated from agriculturists of the Kammanadu region of the erstwhile Guntur district and Ongole division in Andhra Pradesh.[1][2] Propelled by their military activity in the Vijayanagara Empire, Kammas are believed to have spread out from the region during the Vijayanagara period, followed by some in-migration during the British period and out-migration again during the twentieth century.[3] Today they are regarded as one of the richest groups in Andhra Pradesh[4] and are a dominant caste from Coastal Andhra with socio-economic and political prominence throughout the Telugu-speaking regions of India (the states of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana).[5][6]

Kamma
ReligionsHinduism
Languages
Country
Region
StatusForward caste

They also have a notable, albeit smaller, presence in Tamil Nadu and Karnataka.[7] In recent times, a sizeable number of Kammas have migrated to the United States.[8]

Origins

 
 
60km
40miles
 
Gundlakamma
 
Konidena
 
 
Chirala
 
Addanki
 
Bapatla
 
Vinukonda
 
 
Sattenpalle
Kammanadu region

The modern community of Kammas is believed to have originated from agriculturists of the Kammanadu region in coastal Andhra Pradesh.[2][9] The region, lying between the Gundlakamma River and the Krishna River in the erstwhile Guntur district (which included the three subdistricts later transferred to the Ongole district in 1970), had an identity dating back to ancient times. The term "kamma" either referred to the two rivers that formed the boundaries of the region,[10] or to the Buddhist monastic institutions called sanghakammas believed to have been once prevalent in the region.[11]

As the people of the region migrated to other parts, they were often referred to as the Kamma community (kamma-kula).[12] Terms such as kamma-brahmana, kamma-komati, kamma-sreshti and kamma-kapu are attested in inscriptions as descriptions of people.[13][14][15] The migration was apparently quite extensive, and was made by possible by the Kammanadu's strategic location with access to the Deccan plateau as well as to the regions in the south and southwest.[16] By 1872, only one-fourth of their total population was living in the original region. But the migrants retained links to the homeland and returned to it whenever the situation was favourable.[17]

Medieval history

Post-Kakatiya period

The tradition holds that the Kammas, along with Velamas and Reddis, evolved out of the community of Kapus (cultivators) in the post-Kakatiya period. A popular legend collected by Edgar Thurston narrates that Kammas originated from the youngest son of a certain Belthi Reddi, who managed to recover his mother's ear-ornament (called "kamma" in Telugu) that had been appropriated by Emperor Prataparudra's minister. The other sons of Belthi Reddi are similarly said to have given rise to the other prominent caste communities of the Telugu people.[18]

Vijayanagara period

Kammas served as ministers, military generals, and governors in the Vijayanagara Empire.[19][20] During the reign of Krishnadevaraya, Kammas are said to have formed the bulwark of the Vijayanagara army. Their role in protecting the last great Hindu kingdom of India was significant.[21][non-primary source needed] Krishnadevaraya's court had a significant presence of Kamma officers, and they entered into matrimonial alliances with the royal family.[19] It's possible that the influence of Kamma generals led to the importance of the Telugu language in Vijayanagara and the rise of Telugu colonies in Tamil Nadu.[22] Some of the notable Kamma Nayak clans of Vijayanagara include the Pemmasanis, Sayapanenis, and Ravellas.

Of the Pemmasani Nayaks, they controlled parts of Rayalaseema and had large mercenary armies that were the vanguard of the Vijayanagara Empire in the sixteenth century.[23] Pemmasani Ramalinga Nayudu was a leading military commander under Krishnadevaraya, and Rama Raya and the Aravidus rose to power following a civil war largely because of the support of Pemmasani Erra Timmanayudu.[24] Pemmasani Pedda Timmaraja was the minister of Sriranga I and later for Venkata II, the latter of whom oversaw the revival of the Vijayanagara Empire.[25] It is also known that a Pemmasani Nayak, Timmanayudu, had court poets and ministers of his own, such as Channamaraju.[26] Pemmasani Timmanayudu also assisted Venkata II in putting down a rebellion by the Nandyala Chiefs led by Krishnamaraja in 1580.[27] The Pemmasani Nayaks are associated with Gandikota, where they started as commandants and later gained control of Gandikota Seema from the Nandyala Chiefs. Numerous Hindu temples, such as Bugga Ramalingeshwara Swamy Temple[28] and Chintalarayaswamy Temple,[28] were constructed and patronized by the Pemmasanis.

The Sayapaneni Nayaks started in service of Vijayanagara when Krishnadevaraya granted administrative control of the Dupadu Region to Shayappanayadu, a twenty-year old from the family.[29] According to the Dupati kaifiyat, this area was consolidated by Vengala Nayudu and Venkatadri Nayudu, who are Shayappa Nayudu's descendants, and their rule is presented as a peaceful epoch.[30] Although modest actors in the Deccan, their main strength lay in their ability to shift allegiances, facilitated by Niyogi Brahmins, as seen with their initial allegiance to the Vijayanagara Empire and later to the Qutb Shahis and the Nizams after Vijayanagara's demise.[31]

The Ravella Nayaks were another prominent clan that served the Vijayanagara Empire militarily and administratively since the Sangama Dynasty,[19] and they exercised control (on behalf of Vijayanagara) over Srisailam,[19] Udayagiri, Podili, and Kochcherlakota Seemas (regions) at various periods.[32] The exploits of this clan are described by the poet Ratnakaram Gopala Kavi in Sovgandhika Prasavapaharanamu, including mentions of defeating the Qutb Shahis, Gajapatis, and recapturing forts like Adoni.[32][33] Noted individuals in the Ravella Nayaks include Ravella Linga II, who is surmised to be one of the chief generals of the Vijayanagara Army during the reign of Rama Raya.[32]

When the Vijayanagara Empire was troubled after the Battle of Tallikota in 1565, the Pemmasani Nayaks, Ravella Nayaks and Sayapaneni Nayaks helped the Aravidu Dynasty in keeping the Muslims at bay. It took another 90 years to consolidate the Muslim power in Andhra country with the capture of Gandikota in 1652 and the defeat of Pemmasani Timmanayudu by Mir Jumla.[27] Following the Battle of Talikota, many Kamma Nayaks either migrated to the dominions of the Madurai and Thanjavur Nayaks where they governed villages and supplied military officers[34] or obtained favours from the Qutb Shahis and Mughals and settled in Telugu regions as local military chiefs.[35]

Qutb Shahi and Nizam period

Kammas were also in service of the Qutb Shahis.[36] Their roles included serving as the regional aristocracy,[37] revenue officers[38] and military commanders.[36] During the reign of the Qutb Shahis and Nizams, the Sayapaneni Nayaks (1626–1802) ruled a block of territory between the Krishna River and Nellore as vassals.[39][40] It was also in the Qutb Shahi period that the Vasireddy clan of Vasireddy Venkatadri Nayudu received the deshmukhi of the Nandigama pargana in 1670. Vasireddy Venkatadri Nayudu, a Kamma zamindar, controlled 551 towns and villages in the Guntur and Krishna Districts, had a retinue of several thousand men, and became known for his patronization of Hindu religious rituals, festivals, temples, and Brahmins.[41] The Kamma Yarlagadda zamindars of Challapalli obtained their zamindari in 1596 and deshmukhi jurisdiction in 1640, and they assisted the Muslim rulers in their military expeditions and collection of land taxes.[42] This conferred on the Yarlagaddas the privileges of maintaining their own military force and control over the inhabitants in their area.[42]

Following Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb's reign, coastal Andhra witnessed a series of widespread rebellions against the local Mughal officials that enabled Kamma warrior chiefs to usurp administrative power over hundreds, if not thousands, of square miles of land.[43] In the 1600-1800s, Kammas acquired land in the interior Deccan Plateau due to grants that were given by the Nizam of Hyderabad to encourage cultivation in uncultivated areas of Telangana.[44][45] Moreover, in the Telangana region, Muslim rulers collected taxes through intermediaries from the dominant castes, such as the Kammas, who were given the title Chowdary.[45]

British period

Although the 1802 Permanent Settlement by the British benefited the Kamma landed aristocracy by reinforcing the Zamindari system,[46] most Kammas saw their landholdings consolidated, and their influence consequently increased, by the introduction of the ryotwari system as a replacement for the zamindari system in the 19th century.[47] Akin to the jenmis of Kerala, there were also big Kamma ryotwari landlords in Andhra.[48] Some Kammas also were in the Madras Army of the British East India Company. Among Telugu Hindus, the East India Company army initially recruited predominantly from the Kamma, Raju, and Velama castes and restricted recruitment from other castes.[49][50]

In the 1872 census, the Kammas made up 40 per cent of the agricultural population of the Krishna district (which included the present Guntur district until 1904). Along with Brahmins, they formed the dominant community of the district.[51] By 1921, their population in the district increased to 47 per cent, representing a large in-migration. Following Brahminical traditions, Kammas emulated the rituals of the Brahmins,[46] and the literate Kammas learned the Vedas, wore the sacred threads, taught Sanskrit and even performed pujas for the lower-caste members, which is said to have generated controversies.[52] Despite their attachment to Brahminical orthodoxy, the Kammas also related to the Kapus in a narrative.[52] Kammas formed the Kamma Mahajana Sabha, a caste association, in 1910, which received encouragement from the political leaders. Ranga also started a Madras Kamma Association in 1919 and founded a journal Kamma Patrika, later renamed to Ryot Patrika.[53] Kamma caste associations also spawned in Tamil Nadu in the 1920s, with two Kamma zamindars leading the Kamma Mahajana Sabha and the Dakshina Desa Kamma Mahasabha.[54] Kammas constituted 6 per cent of the population in the Telugu-speaking areas of the Madras Presidency in 1921, a figure slightly higher than Brahmins, but lagging far behind the 'Kapu or Reddi'.[55]

Construction of dams and barrages and establishment of an irrigation system in Godavari and Krishna River deltas by Arthur Cotton was a great boon to the Kamma farmers. Availability of water and the natural propensity for hard work made the Kammas wealthy and prosperous.[56] The money was put to good use by establishing numerous schools and libraries and encouraging their children to take up modern education.[57] In 1921, Kammas had the highest literacy rate among other dominant castes, such as Reddis and Kapus, though it was lower than Brahmins.[54] The money was also invested into various companies, industries, such as food processing and transportation, and moneylending.[46] The Kammas of Tamil Nadu, who speak Telugu at home,[58] have also excelled in the cultivation of black cotton soils and later diversified into various industrial enterprises, particularly in Coimbatore and Kovilpatti.[59][60] Coimbatore was known as the ‘Manchester of South India’ and its textile industry, which is the main economic sector in the city, is almost entirely controlled by affluent Kamma families that were the landed aristocracy of Kongu Nadu.[61]

By the mid 20th century, many Kammas had benefited greatly from the numerous educational institutes that had proliferated throughout Coastal Andhra such as Andhra Christian College or Guntur Medical College. Many of these were high-fee private educational institutes also formed by wealthy members of the dominant castes who often gave preference to students from their community in admissions.

Today

Today they are regarded as the wealthiest group in Andhra Pradesh[4] and an entrepreneurial community influential in various industries, such as information technology, real estate, media and Telugu cinema.[62][63][64] They are a dominant caste from Coastal Andhra with socio-economic and political prominence throughout the Telugu-speaking regions of India (the states of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana).[5][6] In united-Andhra Pradesh (including present-day Andhra Pradesh and Telangana), Kammas made up 4.8% of the total state population in the last census.[62][when?] Kammas also have a notable, albeit smaller, presence in Tamil Nadu and Karnataka.[7]

Migration to USA

In recent times, a sizeable number of Kammas have migrated to the United States.[8] Starting in the 1950s, some members of the dominant castes from Andhra Pradesh had gone to the US for higher education. After the lifting of immigration quota system in 1965, the highly-educated doctors, engineers and scientists started moving to US. Kammas, mainly from well-off families and having benefited from the spread of educational institutions in Coastal Andhra, took up the opportunity to move. After the IT boom in the 1990s, even more migrated to America. The success of those who migrated already incentivized more of their relatives and members of their network to migrate as well, and today having an "NRI child" is seen as a matter of pride for Kamma parents in coastal Andhra. For Kamma and other dominant caste women, although some have been sent by families for higher studies in America, many have moved to America due to marriage with NRI men.[65]

Classification

The varna system of Brahmanic ritual ranking never took hold in South Indian society outside Kerala. There were essentially three classes: Brahmin, non-Brahmin and Dalit.[66] Kammas naturally fall into the non-Brahmin class.[67] Classification of social groups in the Andhra region has changed frequently as the various communities jostle for status.[68] During the British Raj, the Kammas were considered to be "upper Shudra"/"Sat Shudra", along with the Reddy and Velama castes, under the varna system.[69][70][71]

Selig Harrison said in 1956 that

Kamma lore nurtures the image of a once-proud warrior clan reduced by Reddi chicanery to its present peasant status. Reddi duplicity, recounted by Kamma historian K. Bhavaiah Choudary, was first apparent in 1323 AD at the downfall of Andhra's Kakatiya dynasty. Reciting voluminous records to prove that Kammas dominated the Kakatiya court, Chaudary suggests that the Reddis, also influential militarists at the time, struck a deal at Kamma expense with the Moslem conquerors of the Kakatiya regime. The Kammas lost their noble rank and were forced into farming.[72]

Politics

Prior to the bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh, creating the new state of Telangana, the Kammas and the Reddys were politically and economically dominant in the state.[6] From 1953 to 1983, many Kammas initially associated themselves with the Indian National Congress and offered the party financing and media support.[73] During the 1980s, they played a key role in state and national politics with the inception of the Telugu Desam Party by its then President N. T. Rama Rao also called as NTR.[74]

Dynasties

Notable people

Politics

Industry

Sciences

Film

References

  1. ^ Nāgabhūṣaṇaśarma, M.; Sastry, M. V.; Śēṣagirirāvu, C. (1995), History and culture of the Andhras, Telugu University, p. 80, ISBN 9788186073070 Quote: "Next to birth and profession, it was region which accounted for sectarian sub-divisions in all the castes like those of Kammanadu being called Kamma-Brahmana, Kamma-Kapu, Kamma-Sresthi and so on."
  2. ^ a b Sastry, P. V. Parabrahma (1996), Rural Studies in Early Andhra, V.R. Publication, p. 59 Quote: "The modern Kamma sect of people in Andhra desa is originally of the Kapu families hailing from Kamma nadu or Kamma rashtra of the medieval period."
  3. ^
  4. ^ a b Xiang, Biao (2007). Global "Body Shopping": An Indian Labor System in the Information Technology Industry. Princeton University Press. p. 31. ISBN 978-0-691-11852-9.
  5. ^ a b Benbabaali, Caste Dominance and Territory in South India (2018), pp. 2–3; Keiko, Politics and representation of caste identity (2008), p. 356
  6. ^ a b c Srinivasulu, K. (September 2002). "Caste, Class and Social Articulation in Andhra Pradesh: Mapping Differential Regional Trajectories" (PDF). London: Overseas Development Institute. pp. 3–4. Retrieved 30 March 2013.
  7. ^ a b Benbabaali, Caste Dominance and Territory in South India (2018), pp. 6–7, 25–29, 29–30
  8. ^ a b Bhaskar, T. L. S.; Bhat, Chandrashekhar (2007). "Contextualising Diasporic Identity". In Oonk, Gijsbert (ed.). Global Indian Diasporas: Exploring Trajectories of Migration and Theory. Amsterdam University Press. pp. 108–109, 112. ISBN 978-90-5356-035-8.
  9. ^ Keiko, Politics and representation of caste identity (2008), p. 356: "their actual dominance was originally limited to two districts on the lower banks of the Krishna River, namely Krishna and Guntur districts."
  10. ^ Lincoln, Bommala Abraham (1992), A study of place-names of Bāpaṭla Taluk: a study on onomastics, B. Subhashini, p. 118: "Here, Kamma indicates a stream. Cf: Gundlakamma: Prakasam District; Perakamma: a big Kamma, River Krishna"
  11. ^ Benbabaali, Caste Dominance and Territory in South India (2018), pp. 6–7: According to epigraphical records, the Krishna delta area was known as Kammanadu during the Chola empire—a toponym that probably came from the Buddhist monastic institutions called sanghakammas.
  12. ^ Hanumantha Rao 1995, pp. 52–53.
  13. ^ Pramila, Kasturi (1 January 2002), Economic and social conditions of Āndhra Deśa, A.D. 1000 to 1323 A.D., Bharatiay Kala Prakashan, p. 189, ISBN 9788186050927
  14. ^ Sarma, M Somasekhara; Sōmaśēkharaśarma, Mallampalli (1948), History of the Reddi Kingdoms (circa. 1325 A.D. to Circa 1448 A.D.), Andhra University, p. 278
  15. ^ Nāgabhūṣaṇaśarma, Modali; Sastry, Mudigonda Veerabhadra; Śēṣagirirāvu, Cīmakurti (1995), History and culture of the Andhras, Telugu University, p. 80, ISBN 9788186073070
  16. ^ Keiko, Politics and representation of caste identity (2008), p. 356: "Its historical prominence, however, derived from the fact that it opened into the extensive Deccan plateau."
  17. ^ Keiko, Politics and representation of caste identity (2008), pp. 357–359: "their population in the Krishna delta in the 1872 census was one-fourth of their total strength in the entire Madras Presidency, but had increased by 1921 to about 47 per cent."
  18. ^ Talbot, Austin Cynthia (2001), Pre-colonial India in Practice: Society, Region, and Identity in Medieval Andhra, Oxford University Press, p. 206, ISBN 978-0-19803-123-9
  19. ^ a b c d Hanumantha Rao 1995, p. 158.
  20. ^ Benbabaali, Caste Dominance and Territory in South India (2018), p. 7.
  21. ^ Jackson, William (2005). Vijayanagara Voices. Ashgate Publishing. p. 124. ISBN 0-7546-3950-9.
  22. ^ B. S. L. Hanumantha Rao, ed. (1995). Socio-cultural History of Ancient and Medieval Andhra. Telugu University. p. 158. ISBN 9788186073087. Krishnaraya's court also was dominated by Kamma officers and they entered into matrimonial alliance with the royal family. The honoured position that Telugu language occupied at Vijayanagara Court and rise of Telugu Colonies in the far south may reasonably be attributed to the influence of Kamma generals
  23. ^ Stein 1989, p. 88: "Controlling numerous villages and many large towns, these powerful chiefs commanded large mercenary armies that were the vanguard of Vijayanagara forces during the sixteenth century."
  24. ^ Murthy, N. S. Ramachandra (1 January 1996). Forts of Āndhra Pradesh: From the Earliest Times Upto 16th C. A.D. Bharatiya Kala Prakashan. p. 202. ISBN 9788186050033.
  25. ^ Heras, Henry. The Aravidu Dynasty Of Vijayanagara. B. G. Paul And Co., Madras. pp. 266, 307.
  26. ^ "Proceedings Of The Annual Conference". South Indian History Congress. 18: 37. 1999.
  27. ^ a b Yellapracada, Sriramamurty. "Political History of Gandikota During the Vijayanagar Period 1336 to 1669 AD". Proceedings of the Indian History Congress. 21: 278–288 – via JSTOR.
  28. ^ a b Ramaswami, N. S. (1976). Temples of Tadpatri. Govt. of Andhra Pradesh. pp. 10–11.
  29. ^ D'Attilio, Daniel (1995). The Last Vijayanagara Kings: Overlordship and Underlordship in South India, 1550-1650. University of Wisconsin--Madison. p. 50.
  30. ^ Narayana Rao, Velcheru (2001). Textures of Time : Writing History in South India, 1600-1800. Delhi: Other Press. ISBN 81-7824-023-8. OCLC 49616884. The principality is consolidated by Shayappa and by his son and grandson, Vengala Nayudu and Venkatadri Nayudu, whose rule is presented as re-presenting a rather peaceful epoch.
  31. ^ Narayana Rao, Velcheru (2003). Textures of Time : Writing History in South India. New York: Other Press. ISBN 1-59051-044-5. OCLC 50143515. Their main strength lies in their capacity to shift allegiances on a pragmatic basis, usually through the mediation of a Niyogi Brahmin . . . the Kamma Nayaks thus create their political base under Vijayanagara, shift to the Qutb Shahi state of Golconda (using a common enemy, the Boyas of the region, to build a case), and then to the post-Mughal state of Asaf Jati Nizams in Hyderabad.
  32. ^ a b c Dutt, K. I. (1936). "Kamma Commanders of the Vijayanagara Empire". Journal of the Andhra Historical Society. X: 223–224.
  33. ^ Ray, Nisith Ranjan (1978). Sources of the History of India. Vol. 1. Institute of Historical Studies. p. 152.
  34. ^ Gough, Kathleen (26 February 1982). Rural Society in Southeast India. Cambridge University Press. p. 29. doi:10.1017/cbo9780511557606. ISBN 978-0-521-23889-2.
  35. ^ Satyanarayana, A. (2007). Society, Economy, and Polity in Modern Andhra. Kanishka Publishers Distributors. p. 7. ISBN 978-81-7391-971-8.
  36. ^ a b Chapter III: Economics, Political, Economic, and Social Background of Deccan 17th-18th Century, p.57 https://shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/25652/10/10_chapter%203.pdfhttps://shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/25652/10/10_chapter%203.pdf
  37. ^ Reddy, Pedarapu Chenna (1 January 2006). Readings In Society And Religion Of Medieval South India. Research India Press. p. 163. ISBN 9788189131043.
  38. ^ Proceedings of Seminar on Industries and Crafts in Andhra Desa, 17th and 18th Centuries, A.D. Department of History, Osmania University. 1996. p. 57.
  39. ^ Narayanarau, V.; Shulman, D. D.; Subrahmanyam, S. (2002). Textures of Time: Writing History in South India. Other Press LLC. p. 264. ISBN 1-59051-044-5.
  40. ^ Richards, John F. (1993). Power, administration, and finance in Mughal India. Variorum. p. 331. ISBN 978-0-86078-366-4.
  41. ^ Frykenberg, Elite Groups in a South Indian District 2011, pp. 269–270.
  42. ^ a b Satyanarayana, A. (2007). Society, Economy, and Polity in Modern Andhra. Kanishka Publishers Distributors. pp. 6–7. ISBN 978-81-7391-971-8.
  43. ^ Richards, John F. (1970). Mughal Rule in Golconda, 1687-1724. University of California, Berkeley. p. 185.
  44. ^ Sherman, Taylor C. (25 August 2015). Muslim Belonging in Secular India. Cambridge University Press. p. 60. ISBN 978-1-107-09507-6.
  45. ^ a b Benbabaali, Caste Dominance and Territory in South India (2018), pp. 8
  46. ^ a b c Benbabaali, Caste Dominance and Territory in South India (2018), pp. 1946
  47. ^ Kumar, P. Pratap (2013). "Andhra Pradesh: Economic and social relations". In Berger, Peter; Heidemann, Frank (eds.). The Modern Anthropology of India: Ethnography, Themes and Theory. Routledge. p. 18. ISBN 9781134061112.
  48. ^ Satyanarayana, A. (1991). Andhra Peasants Under British Rule: Agrarian Relations and the Rural Economy 1900-1940. South Asia Publications. p. 108. ISBN 978-0-945921-16-5.
  49. ^ Pati, Biswamoy (25 February 2010). The Great Rebellion of 1857 in India: Exploring Transgressions, Contests and Diversities. Routledge. p. 170. ISBN 978-1-135-22514-8.
  50. ^ Chattopadhyaya, Haraprasad (1957). The Sepoy Mutiny, 1857: A Social Study and Analysis. Bookland. p. 77.
  51. ^ Keiko, Politics and representation of caste identity (2008), p. 357.
  52. ^ a b Keiko, Politics and representation of caste identity (2008), pp. 358–359.
  53. ^ Keiko, Politics and representation of caste identity (2008), pp. 360–361.
  54. ^ a b Benbabaali, Caste Dominance and Territory in South India (2018), pp. 1947–1948
  55. ^ Keiko, Politics and representation of caste identity (2008), p. 356.
  56. ^ Murty, K. R. (2001). Parties, Elections and Mobilisation. New Delhi: Anmol Publications. p. 20.
  57. ^ Bhattacharya, Sabyasachi (2002). Education and the disprivileged: nineteenth and twentieth century India. Orient Blackswan. p. 58. ISBN 978-81-250-2192-6.
  58. ^ Benbabaali, Caste Dominance and Territory in South India (2018), pp. 27
  59. ^ Stein, Burton (1989). Vijayanagara. Cambridge University Press. p. 46. ISBN 0-521-26693-9.
  60. ^ Chari, Sharad (2004). Fraternal Capital. Stanford University Press. p. 162. ISBN 0-8047-4873-X.
  61. ^ Benbabaali, Caste Dominance and Territory in South India (2018), pp. 26
  62. ^ a b Murali, Kanta (2 February 2017). Caste, Class, and Capital: The Social and Political Origins of Economic Policy in India. Cambridge University Press. p. 164. ISBN 978-1-108-17954-6.
  63. ^ Jodhka, Surinder S.; Naudet, Jules (15 May 2019). Mapping the Elite: Power, Privilege, and Inequality. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-909791-3.
  64. ^ Keiko, Politics and representation of caste identity (2008), p. 355–356.
  65. ^ Roohi, Sanam (10 December 2017). "Caste, kinship and the realisation of 'American Dream': high-skilled Telugu migrants in the U.S.A." Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies. 43 (16): 2756–2770. doi:10.1080/1369183X.2017.1314598. ISSN 1369-183X.
  66. ^ Fox, Richard G. (January 1969), "Varna Schemes and Ideological Integration in Indian Society", Comparative Studies in Society and History, 11 (1): 27–45, doi:10.1017/S0010417500005132, ISSN 0010-4175, S2CID 145053341: "When recognition of a regional varna scheme has been unavoidable—such as the tripartite division into Brahmins, non-Brahmins, and Untouchables in much of the South— it has been explained in terms of an historical corruption or breakdown of the standard four-class system, rather than regarded as a functional entity in its own right."
  67. ^ Gopi, K. N. (1978), Process of Urban Fringe Development: A Model, Concept Publishing Company, p. 35
  68. ^ Kumar, P. Pratap (2013). "Andhra Pradesh: Economic and social relations". In Berger, Peter; Heidemann, Frank (eds.). The Modern Anthropology of India: Ethnography, Themes and Theory. Routledge. p. 14. ISBN 9781134061112.
  69. ^ Bhattacharya, Sabyasachi (2002). Education and the disprivileged: nineteenth and twentieth century India. Orient Blackswan. p. 17. ISBN 978-81-250-2192-6.
  70. ^ Jaffrelot, Christophe (2002). "The subordinate caste revolution". In Alyssa Ayres; Philip Oldenburg (eds.). India briefing: quickening the pace of change. M. E. Sharpe. p. 138. ISBN 978-0-7656-0813-0.
  71. ^ Irschick, Eugene F. (3 September 2018). A History of the New India: Past and Present. Routledge. p. 164. ISBN 978-1-317-43617-1.
  72. ^ Harrison, Caste and the Andhra Communists (1956)
  73. ^ Pingle, Gautam (2011). "Reddys, Kammas and Telangana". Economic and Political Weekly. 46 (36): 19–21. ISSN 0012-9976. JSTOR 41719929.
  74. ^ Political Parties in South Asia, S. K. Mitra and M. Enskat, 2004, Praeger/Greenwood, p.115, ISBN 0-275-96832-4
  75. ^
  76. ^ Ramaswamy, Vijaya (2014), "Mapping migrations of South Indian weavers before, during and after the Vijayanagara Period: Thirteenth and Eighteenth Centuries", in Lucassen, Jan; Lucassen, Leo (eds.), Globalising Migration History: The Eurasian Experience (16th-21st Centuries), BRILL, p. 99, ISBN 978-90-04-27136-4
  77. ^ A. Satyanarayana, ed. (2007). Society, Economy, and Polity in Modern Andhra. Kanishka Publishers Distributors. p. 7.
  78. ^ Kotta Bhavaiah Choudary, ed. (2007). A Brief History of the Kammas. The University of California. p. 63.
  79. ^ Kancha Ilaiah Shepherd, Karthik Raja Karuppusamy, ed. (2021). The Shudra: Vision for a New Path. Penguin Random House India Private Limited. p. 176. ISBN 9789390914241. Venkaiah Naidu, though he comes from the rich Shudra Kamma community, could not acquire any philosophically independent leadership status because he did not have the vision and courage to challenge RSS–BJP Brahminism.
  80. ^ Agarala Easwara Reddi, D. Sundar Ram, ed. (1994). State Politics in India: Reflections on Andhra Pradesh. M.D. Publications Pvt. Ltd. p. 102. ISBN 9788185880518. The rise to power of NTR , a Kamma , for the first time after 27 years of Congress Rule in Andhra Pradesh , did produce a reaction , particularly among the Congress
  81. ^ Erich Reiter, Peter Hazdra, ed. (2013). The Impact of Asian Powers on Global Developments. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 129. ISBN 9783662131725. A case in point is Chandrababu Naidu, Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh. He is a Kamma (Andhra peasant caste), which means that he can rely on the extensive rural base which supports his party "Telugu Desam" (= Telugu Land; Telugu is the language of Andhra Pradesh).
  82. ^ Harish Damodaran, ed. (2018). INDIA'S NEW CAPITALISTS: Caste, Business, and Industry in a Modern Nation. Hachette UK. p. 135. ISBN 9789351952800.

Bibliography

Further reading