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An Ahir woman harvesting wheat in
Nadapa, east of
Bhuj
'Ahir' (a corruption of the word, "fearless") is a subgroup of the
Yadav caste of
India.
The people of the Ahir tribe are traditionally cow herders and shepherds. They are a subcaste of
Dhangar and are not only found in the Kaatch (Kutch) area of western Gujarat, but also in Rajasthan, Maharashtra, Punjab, Uttar Pradesh and Bihar. The Ahirs also share most gotras with the Jats (Abhars) and have the same physical appearance as them. This led to the theory they being of the same stock.
According to tradition, the Abhiras had the distinction of founding the first recorded kingdom on the banks of the sacred river
Saraswati. On the other side of the river was the kingdom of the
Suras. The Sarswati gradually went underground, and the Suras were blamed for the mishap and charged with sins with which the river was burdened. Both the Suras and Abhiras had to migrate away from their kingdom and were alienated from the rest of society.
Hindu writers have described the Ahirs as living in the north and west, the quarter varying according to the locality of the writer.The Sabha-parva and Bhisma-parva sections of the
Mahabharata mention the province of Abhira, situated near what once was the Sarasvati River in ancient Sind .Suras and Abhira has together been referred to as Surabhiras in scriptures and later works does not discriminate between the two.Many scholars have sought link between Indian Abhira and Surabhir with Biblical equivalent Ophir and Sofir.
Ptolemy says there was a country called Abhira at the mouth of the River
Indus.Sreemad Bhagwatam gives similar account and location matches with
Sind.
Christian Lassen (1800-1876) author of
Indische Alterthumskunde vol I p. 354, thinks “Ophir†was a seaport on the south west coast of India. Mrs.Manning says it was situated on the western coast of India.
Gesenius, Sir
Emerson Tennent, and
Max Muller appear to agree with Christian Lassen .Because of so many views in favour sometimes Abhira is regarded as equivalent of
Ophir, mentioned in the
Bible and sofir (also the
coptic name of
India) refers to surabhir .
According to the
Markandeya Purana, all the
Haiheya aggressors (warrior caste) were killed in a massacre led by
Parshuram. In that time, the Ahirs were either a sub-clan of the Hayheya or sided with the Hayheya. Only the Abhiras survived by escaping into the craters between mountains. The sage Markandeya remarked that "all Haiheya have been killed but Abhira have survived; they will surely rule the earth in
Kaliyuga." The Ahirs also attacked
Arjun as he entered the Ahirvati and launced attacks against the
Yadus.
[1] VÄtsyÄyana also mentions the
Abhira kingdoms in the ''
Kama Sutra''
[1].References of Abhira being residents of kingdom ruled by Yudhisthira is found in Bhagwatam.
[2]
Shreemad Bhagwatam, which gives detailed account of dynasties ruling after great war of
Mahabharata, talks in detail about Abhira rulers
::''Then will follow seven kings of the Abhira race from the city of Avabhrti, and then ten Gardabhis. After them, sixteen kings of the Kankas will rule and will be known for their excessive greed.Eight Yavanas will then take power, followed by fourteen Turuskas, ten Gurundas and eleven kings of the Maula dynasty.These Abhiras, Gardabhis and Kankas will enjoy the earth for 1,099 years.''
Gupta Dynasty's account exactly matches with the Abhira Kings mentioned in the Bhagwatam.Many believe both
Guptas and
Mauryas were abhir
[3].
They are identified by different names in different regions of the country:
Andar, Ahiyaru ,
Ahir, Appugol,
Maldhari / Bharwad /
Rabari, Bharavadaru,
Dhangar, Dhangad / Dhanwar / Dhanka /Dhangod, Doddi Gowda, Gadhariya, Gadaria,
Gowda,
Gaddi, Gadri,
Gollavadu,
Gounder,Halumatha, Heggades, Idyar, Khuruk, Kuda,
Kuruba,
Kuruba Gowda, Kurumba, Kurmar,
Kurumbar, Kalavar,
Kuruma,
Kurumavaaru, Kurkhi, Kurupu,
Naikers, Nikhers,
Oraon, Pal / Pala, Palaru, Paalakyatriya, Poduvar, Yadavalu.
See also
★
Dhangar
★
Gadhvi
★
chudasama
References
1. ''The Birth of Yaduvansh'']
Sunita Singh
2. http://vedabase.net/sb/2/4/18/en
3. http://www.encyclopediaofauthentichinduism.org/articles/33_two_more.htm
External links
1.
Ophir-Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary
2.
Abhira Located in Sind-Shrimad Bhagwatam
3.
History of Antiquity – By Max Dunker volume IV