Caste name | Bais |
---|---|
Varna | Kshatriya |
Subdivisions | Hindustani, Punjabi, Kashmiri |
Populated states | Punjab region, Kashmir and Oudh |
Languages | Sanskrit, Hindi, Punjabi, Urdu, Awadhi and most Lahnda languages |
Religions | Hinduism, Islam, Sikhism and Buddhism |
The Bais Rajput are one of the Chattis Rajkul - 36 Royal Rajput lineages. They were included as Byce Rajputs a name hardly used now and also a clan of the 108 ancient Dhangar clans.
The Bais Rajput held dominion over several empires and kingdoms of northern India and also owned much land. Writing in 1890, William Crooke comments that "The Bais pride themselves in being the most enterprising, the wealthiest, the best housed, and the best dressed people in Oudh."
The original ancient pronunciation was Bhaiñs or Baiñs with the nasally pronounced 'n'. The name was subject to distortion via pronunciation and accent and so today, in the area of Oudh the pronunciation has found its was to be pronounced with out the nasally pronounced 'n'. Evidence for this can be seen in the ancient texts such as Dhangar texts and texts from the time of Harshavardhana which were written a long time before the Bais Rajputs gradually adopted the pronunciation of Bais.
The pronunciation and phonetic spelling Bais was coined around after the takeover of Oudh and is predominantly used in north western India and some parts of the Punjab in both India & Pakistan. It was accepted as the official pronunciation in Hindi and the official pronunciation and spelling in English by the British observers because it was how it was mainly pronounced in Baiswara where the observers discovered the Bais Rajputs.
! Pronounced & spelt (officially): | ! | ! Languages: |
Bais Rajput | ||
Bhains Rajput | Sanskrit, Punjabi language |
Also spelt:
The word Bhains is pronounced .
The Bais Rajputs are considered to be Suryavanshi. They are an ancient Hindu warrior caste. Their eponymous ancestor was Gautamiputra Satakarni also known as Shalivahana, the king of Shalikot presently known as Sialkot in Pakistan. Shalivahana is the mythic son of a snake who conquered the great Raja Vikramaditya of Ujjain in 55 AD and established his own area. The clan claims to have come from Manji Paithan in the Dekhan in 78 AD when Shalivahana was king.
As listed in the list of Dhangar clans in India:
Bhains:
Lineage(Vansh): Suryavanshi
Kul Gotra: Bhains
Rishi Gotra: Bharadwaj
Surnames:
Bais are considered also to be Nagvanshi. Baiswara is group of 365 villages comprising mostly Bais clansmen. King of Thanesar Harshvardhan united the whole nation and chose his capital as Kannauj.
At the time of the Mughals the Bais Rajput were known as Bhale Sultan (Lords of the spear) in recognition of their warlike and brave nature.
The reputation of the clan can be estimated by analysing historical references. According to tribal tradition in Sultanpur about half a millennia ago Rae Barar, the son of Amba Rae, brother of the then Raja of Morarmau, commanded a troop of cavalry entirely from the Bais Rajput clan, in the imperial service and was deputed to exterminate the troublesome Bhars, (whom the Bais Rajput had already defeated to gain Oudh), in the Isauli Pargana. Having accomplished his mission he returned to Delhi and presented himself at the head of his troop before the Emperor, who, struck with their manly bearing, exclaimed "Ao, Bhale Sultan!": "Come, spears of the Sultan!". During the days of the British Raj the Bais Rajput became particularly famous for their skills in tank building for the use of their own armies. Their Rajas and aristorats were recorded building tanks around 1730 and again in 1780.
In the 1800s a ban was imposed on all Bais Rajputs in participating in any warfare for any cause other than the cause of the Bais Rajputs themselves.
At the time of Tilokchand, the eponymous hero of the Bais Rajputs the Bais Rajput were at a peak or Arooj. They were brought to the limelight in many different ways, mainly in power. The Bais Rajput also played a major part in the Indian Mutiny of 1857 fighting on both sides.
Not only did the Bais Rajput trade, but the economy of the northern half of modern day India and the west of modern day Pakistan played in the hands of the Bais Rajput. The Bais Rajputs also gained a reputation as money lenders.
Their wealth caused the Bais Rajput to become the "best dressed and housed people" in the areas where they lived.
In these masses of lands many towns were erected but there still remained vast amounts of lands wasteful as they were not being used for any cause. The Bais Rajputs then decided in making money from these lands by agriculture. They hired many farmers to work the lands and produced profits adding to their already rich positions in wealth.
The Bais Rajputs are known for well building. They ordered the building of many wells that are being used still to the present day all over South Asia especially in areas of Oudh, Lucknow and the villages around Mangla Dam.
, a Bais Rajput Field Hockey legend. Dhyan Chand was given the title 'Hockey Wizard' by many of his fans. India has failed to again produced such a great undisputed master of any sport.]]
Dhyan Chand was not the last of the sports personalities to début with Gold medals in the Olympics. The list carried on and most of them were the close relatives or family of Dhyan Chand, such as his brother Roop Singh Bais and many more.
Amongst the Bais Rajput neither man nor woman, rich or poor, will put a hand to cultivation or labour of any sort. The Bais Rajputs divide their inheritance according to a system of primogeniture by which the three elder sons receive larger shares.
The Bais Rajput live in groups of villages named Baiswara, where Bais Rajput have ever migrated they have also formed such coalition of villages, namely the move to The Hills States of Punjab and Azad Kashmir. Baiswara are easily recognisable as most villages prize the name 'Bais' in the name of their village for example: Shere Bhainsi (Kashmir), Pind Bhainso (Pakistan) or Bais Godam (India).
The 'Bais' 'Rajput' clan never kill snakes, which they hold in great reverence. The Baise believe that no snake has destroyed, or ever can destroy, one of the clan. They seem to take no precautions against snake bite except hanging a vessel of water at the head of the sufferer, with a small tube at the bottom, from which the water is poured on his head for as long as he can bear it. So important is the snake to the Bais that the cobra forms part of the clan's flag.
! Give daughters to: | ||||||
! | ! Take wives from: |
|
Chauhan | Amethiya | ||
Rathor | ||||||
Kachwaha | Bachgoti | |||||
Chandel | ||||||
Bhadauria | Dikhit | |||||
Tonwar | Raghuvanshi | |||||
Parihar | Gahlot | |||||
Sengar | Gautam | |||||
Bisen | ||||||
Dikhit | Kalhans | |||||
Gaharwar | Khichar | |||||
Raikwar | ||||||
Kanhpuriya | ||||||
Janwar | ||||||
Karchuliya | ||||||
Bisen |
Some Muslim Bais Rajput Thakurs experience problems in expressing their Thakur identity following the religion of Islam as it does not allow one to be self extravagant and flamboyant in acts. They form part of the larger Khanzada community in Awadh.
Category:Rajput clans Category:Rajput clans of Uttar Pradesh Category:Hindu dynasties Category:Social groups of Uttar Pradesh Category:Social groups of Jammu and Kashmir Category:Chhatis Rajkul
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