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== back to square one? == | |||
{{Controversial3}} | |||
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{{ping|Ekdalian|Admantine123|Dympies}}. Dympies, I have been away from the Rajput page for a long time but you are making the same changes that the admin had warned you about (and another admin had prevented you from editing caste pages because of that)- the edits being disputed are associating the origin of Rajput(community) to Rajputra. But you are repeating the same edits - as if the discussion with admins never occurred. Is there something I am missing? If so, please correct me. Ekdalian has started a discussion on the admin board (unfortunately it got diverted). I think we should probably start the discussion on the admin board again - that focuses on content - not the editors - and get admins involved. It is clear from the sources that Rajputs was a community of farmers like many others who tried to employ bards to rewrite their past. They had not descended from princes of ancient times. That's what the admin explained, am I right? {{talkquote| | |||
Because of their length, the previous discussions on this page have been archived. | |||
Richard Eaton 2019, p. 87, In Gujarat, as in Rajasthan, genealogy proved essential for making such claims. To this end, local bards composed ballads or chronicles that presented their patrons as idea warriors who protected Brahmins, cows and vassals, '''as opposed to the livestock herding chieftains that they actually were, or had once been'''. As people, who created and preserved the genealogies, local bards therefore played critical roles in brokering for their clients socio-cultural transitions to a claimed Rajput status. A similar thing was happening in the Thar desert region, where from the fourteenth century onwards mobile pastoral groups gradually evolved into landed, sedentary and agrarian clans. Once again, it was bards and poets, patronized by little kings, who transformed a clan's ancestors from celebrated cattle-herders or cattle-rustlers to celebrated protectors of cattle-herding communities. The difference was subtle but critical, since such revised narratives retained an echo of a pastoral nomadic past while repositioning a clan's dynastic founder from pastoralist to non-pastoralist. The term 'Rajput', in short, had become a prestigious title available for adoption by upwardly mobile clan in the process of becoming sedentary. By one mechanism or another, a process of 'Rajputization' occurred in new states that emerged from the turmoil following Timur's invasion in 1398, especially in Gujarat, Malwa and Rajasthan. | |||
If further archiving is needed, see ]. | |||
}} ] (]) 17:02, 27 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
:I completely agree with {{u|LukeEmily}}. You don't have the required consensus for the Rajputra related content! Hope you understand. Thanks. ] (]) 18:18, 27 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
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:{{u|LukeEmily}}, I can't understand the logic of this new thread when you are aware that the content in question was being discussed in the above thread titled . And remember, admins won't help with the content, they are as much contributors here as you and me. Anyways, I have no problem repeating the same things again. Please go through the first lead line of ] : | |||
{{talkquote|Rajput (from Sanskrit rājaputra meaning "son of a king"), is a large multi-component cluster....}}. Almost all scholars say that the term "Rajput" is derived from "Rajputra". But you disagree! | |||
From ]: | |||
==]== | |||
The arbitration committee has reached a final decision in the case associated with this article. | |||
{{talkquote|The use of the term Rajaputra for specific clans of Rajput or as a collective term for various clans emerged by the 12th century.}} | |||
For the arbitration committee. --] 22:31, 17 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
From ] : | |||
{{talkquote|Rāuta is actually the Prakrit form of Rajaputra (modern Hindi Rajput); and a Rajaputra caste had established itself well before the thirteenth century.}} | |||
:1) {{user|Shivraj Singh}} (and all sockpuppets) is banned from editing ] and ]. | |||
:2) {{user|DPSingh}} (and all sockpuppets) is banned from editing ] and ]. | |||
:3) {{user|Gurkhaboy}} (and all sockpuppets) is banned from editing ] and ]. | |||
:4) All users listed as the "Hindus only side" at ] are banned from editing ] and ]. | |||
:5) All editors of Rajput are reminded of the necessity to more or less follow the core Misplaced Pages policies of ], ], and ]. Advocates of an Islamic point of view are specially reminded that Rajput is a noble Hindu caste and that the bulk of the information in the article should reflect that reality. | |||
Any party banned by this decision who violates the ban may be briefly blocked, up to a week in the event of repeat offenses. After 5 blocks the maximum ban shall increase to one year. Blocks are to be logged at ] | |||
From ] (the same source cited in "disputed content") : | |||
==move and move back== | |||
{{talkquote|The rājaputras began to form a loose federation of castes well before the twelfth century in a manner characteristic of the Indian social system.}} | |||
The old article was entitled 'Rajput', but instead of dealing with all Rajputs generally, it dealt only with Rajputs as a Hindu caste. Not only that, but it also had a very slanted POV. | |||
From ] (again the same source cited in "disputed content"): | |||
So I moved the old article, unaltered, to ]. | |||
{{talkquote|By the twelfth century the term Rājaputra or 'king's son' had approximately acquired the connotations of the 'Rajput' caste.}} | |||
This new article is intended to deal with all Rajputs in general, and not just those who subscribe to one particular religion. | |||
If you disagree with these modern scholars, then what you are left with is ]. Its not me who is linking ''Rajput'' with ''Rajputra'', reliable sources do so. | |||
--] 19:21, 18 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
Now coming to the quote you have provided, how exactly do you think the "disputed content" contradicts Tanuja Kothiyal. She talks about the humble background of Rajputs and the "disputed content" too talks about Rajputras being mercenary soldiers, not some kings or princes. The content in question is not supposed to be disputed but you 2-3 editors are trying to extract something out of nothing. ] (]) 18:44, 27 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
: Bhola, that's grabbing the article for one side of the dispute, with a vengeance. Even though Shivraj and his buds are banned, I think they must represent a fairly widespread view in contemporary India, riven as it is by communal controversies. Their view should be represented. ] 20:37, 18 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
::Dympies, the dispute is not about the derivation of the word Rajput from Rajaputra. Hindu scriptures have given Rajput a different meaning(ksatriya father,, shudra mother etc) to show that it is a mixed varna caste but that is a different discussion - and more relevant to Rajputisation. But this discussion on the Rajput caste page is not about the derivation of the word rajput . Dympies, you said, and I quote you: {{tq|{{talkquote|Rajput (from Sanskrit rājaputra meaning "son of a king"), is a large multi-component cluster....}}. Almost all scholars say that the term "Rajput" is derived from "Rajputra". But you disagree!-Dympies}} . Answer: No, I do not disagree! The derivation is in fact from Rajputra irrespective of the meaning given in Hindu Scriptures. ''''The issue is that the community is not derived from Rajputra. For example, "Luke" may be based on ] but that does not mean that I have descended from him. That would be an absurd claim!'''' Comments from {{noping|Sitush}}, {{ping|Abecedare}} on {{ping|Bishonen}}'s page in 2023. Abecedare has explained it very eloquently. Original discussion is | |||
''''From Abecedare about Dympies' edits that he pointed to in the main discussion'''': | |||
{{tq|The POV-pushing issue in short: I don't believe that there is much dispute that the word "Rajput" is derived from the word "Rajputra" (lit. son of Kings), and I would easily accept that the latter word appears in texts dating to BCE, or even that the two words were sometimes used interchangeably in the Medieval times. But there seems to be a subtle attempt in the current article to fallaciously imply that the age of the word ''Rajputra'' is indicative of the age of the community and that's it's literal meaning is indicative of the community's origins. I say subtle because this effect is achieved not through some outright false statement (afaict) but by, for example, positioning the unduly lengthy Early_references section, which deals mainly with the word ''Rajputra'' and how it has been used, at the head of the Origins section. By the way, Alf Hiltebeitel, cited later in the article, specifically mentions and dismisses such attempts by, among others, Asopa who is cited repeatedly in the ''Early references'' section. To quote from a footnote explaining the types of "contrived evidence" used to derive the origins of Rajputs: Five types of evidence are prominent:...(5) Sanskrit etymology, especially to misread and antiquate the Agnivmssa (Asopa 1972, 1976, 1, 11, nn. 3-5) or the "solar and lunar races" (Vaidya 1924, 259-300). Attempts to trace Agnivamsa Rajputs directly from Vedic and epic sources (e.g., Vaidya 1924,7; Asopa 1972, 1976, 21-24) are unconvincing, and Asopa's epic references (1972, 1976, 11) are either far-fetched or unintelligible. 442 of Rethinking India’s Oral and Classical Epics'' Will leave any admin action to Bishonen. -''Abecedare'' 16:30, 18 June 2023 (UTC)}} | |||
''''From Sitush in the same discussion'''':{{tq| As far as I am concerned, this putative etymology is a figment. We have for years had reliable sources that indicate no mention before the 14C or thereabouts and not even the most trenchant of pov-pushers/sockfarms has suggested the community name is directly related to Rajputra. - ''Sitush'' 20:37, 18 June 2023 (UTC) (from Sitush to Dympies) I am an experienced non-admin and purely in the context of this discussion I think you are trying to glorify a caste in a non-compliant way''. Whether you have done that before, make a habit of it/aren't learning, are being tendentious and/or repeatedly disruptive etc is something I haven't looked into but the words "thin ice" certainly come to mind.Sitush (talk) 08:48, 19 June 2023 (UTC)}} | |||
This is why I said that we are back to square one. | |||
Thanks ] (]) 20:50, 27 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::{{u|LukeEmily}}, as now you are short of sources, you have resorted to sharing comments of other editors. Like in your last comment, you shared your views, now you are sharing their views. We explicitly go by sources and if notable authors have mentioned '']'' and '']'' while discussing the broader Rajput subject, it becomes ] irrespective of our ]. | |||
:::Again and again, you are misquoting my content. You say that the dispute is not about the derivation of the word Rajput from Rajaputra. But "Early references" section is meant to deal with terms only. If you wish to discuss their humble origins quoting scholars, there is "Scholars' views" section. Where does my content imply that Rajputs descended from sons of kings? Its more about the term ''Rajput'' deriving from the term ''Rajputra'' whose literal meaning is "son of king" but by the beginning of 12th century, it had completely lost its literal meaning and now being used for people doing humble jobs like that of mercenary soldiers. Both sources further say that the term ''Rajputra'' had now acquired the connotations of caste (or group of castes), which later came to be known as ''Rajput'' in Hindi. | |||
:: Aha. I didn't mean to step on anyone's toes. I'm fairly new to Misplaced Pages, and didn't realize how long and heated the debate over this article has been. In haste, I took the advice of ] without reading the discussion and history of the page. I didn't mean to grab the article for any side of the dispute, nor was my move motivated by any vengeance towards anyone. I don't know Shivraj or his buds and didn't intend to exclude anyone's views. That's why I didn't make any changes to the article when I moved it. For the record I still think that moving this existing communally-exclusive article was a good idea, as was the idea of starting a new non-communal 'Rajput' article at this location. ] 21 February 2006 | |||
:::You clearly have some knowledge deficit. I would like you to read sub-section to understand the link between ''Rajput'' and ''Rajputra''. You would also get some glimpse of ]'s '']'' (which is considered an important text for history of Rajputs) whose mention in "Early references" is being opposed by you here. ] (]) 00:45, 28 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::Dympies, putting rajputra in the "origin" section is completely misleading to the readers.] (]) 08:58, 28 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::{{tq|The issue is that the community is not derived from Rajputra. For example, "Luke" may be based on Luke the Evangelist but that does not mean that I have descended from him. That would be an absurd claim!}} this statement by {{u|LukeEmily}} and this one {{tq| But there seems to be a subtle attempt in the current article to fallaciously imply that the age of the word Rajputra is indicative of the age of the community and that's it's literal meaning is indicative of the community's origins.}} from {{noping|Abecedare}} explains it all. Although Dympies is putting good sources but they are irrelevant here. They only say that how the term Rajput came into existence and it doesn't mean they descended from Rajputra. Before this thread becomes long let me tag {{u|RegentsPark}} and {{u|Vanamonde93}} to read it to understand what is the issue that resurfaces again and again on this article. ] (]) 01:56, 28 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::I have been explaining to you since before but it doesn't seem you are willing to accept the points at all. Your rebuttal is not convincing. Explained so many times that "Early references" is not meant to discuss the genes of Rajputs but rather the early mentions of terms like ''Rajput'' and ''Rajputra'' (the term which, as per scholars, became ''Rajput'' in Hindi and other recent languages). And {{u|Adamantine123}}, your ] won't help here as you yourself acknowledge that the sources are good. ] (]) 02:20, 28 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
*If I am understanding correctly, the dispute here is not about the etymological connection to "Rajputra" ''per se'', it's about whether that term can be translated in context to "son of a king", and therefore whether that translation applies to the name Rajput - do I have that right? What are the sources which provide information about that translation? ] (]) 04:45, 28 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
*:The author has discussed Kashmir's texts in context of Rajputs. And if one among the two texts is as notable as '']'', its mention becomes a must in "Early references". ] (]) 05:46, 28 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
*:{{ping|Vanamonde93}}, please look at the discussion and comments from Sitush and {{ping|Abecedare}}. That thread explains the issue and analysis very well. Dympies was banned from editing any Rajput related articles for exactly the same issue(caste promotion) in 2023 after a discussion about his edits. The issue was that he was falsely and subtlety portraying that the community has descended from princes (as written by abecedare). Then Dympies was topic banned later (not just for Rajputs) but south asia related topics - if I remember correctly. Later his ban was lifted which resulted in the topic ban for Rajputs being automatically lifted. I did not check when his topic ban was removed but now the edits being made by him are the giving the same false narrative for which he was topic banned in the first place. The bottom line is that word Rajput is derived from Rajputra but that is not the same as Rajputs being the descendants of Rajputras(princes). Please also see my quotes in green above. I found some false narrative in some of his other edits too but will mention them separately.] (]) 08:28, 28 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
*::Thanks {{u|LukeEmily}} for the detailed explanation. ] (]) 08:34, 28 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
*This is the main comment from Abecedare which sums up the issue. {{tq|I haven't confirmed as to who's responsible exactly (possibly Dympies through edits such as , , ), but the current version of the article confuses the issue of the origins of the word "Rajput" with the origin of the community (now) referred to with that name. And for the average reader, this confusion would have the effect of pushing back the origins of the Rajput community by a few millennia and tracing it to royalty. The POV-pushing issue in short: I don't believe that there is much dispute that the word "Rajput" is derived from the word "Rajputra" (lit. son of Kings), and I would easily accept that the latter word appears in texts dating to BCE, or even that the two words were sometimes used interchangeably in the Medieval times. But there seems to be a subtle attempt in the current article to (fallaciously) imply that the age of the word Rajputra is indicative of the age of the community and that's it's literal meaning is indicative of the community's origins. I say subtle because this effect is achieved not through some outright false statement (afaict) but by, for example, positioning the unduly lengthy Early references section, which deals mainly with the word Rajputra and how it has been used, at the head of the Origins section}}. Sorry for the reposting this as the thread is long. ] (]) 08:42, 28 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
I am restoring the content with some changes in content and an additional quote. This should settle the dispute. If someone still has any objection, feel free to revert. ] (]) 08:56, 28 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
: Furthermore, you give absolutely no references supporting your claims to such huge Muslim Rajput populations. ] 20:37, 18 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
:The word etymology is better as early reference means ancient text like Mahabharata and Ramayana were refering to Rajput community. This validates the pseudo-historical theory that Rajput community was present from the time of Mahabharata and Ramayana and thus invalidates the theories given by modern scholars that they were descendants of local and foreign tribes and were peasant pastoralists earlier. ] (]) 06:38, 29 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
:: You're right that I didn't cite my references but it seems to me that a great deal of claims are made by other contributors to this article who don't give any legitimate references either. Are the claims that I made any less credible than theirs? Do my claims need to be singled out for special scrutiny while theirs don't? Nevertheless, I can cite my references if you're interested. I got my figures from sources that I thought were reputable, such as 'The Historical Atlas of South Asia' edited by Joseph Schwartzberg (Oxford University Press, 1992), and from official government publications from pre-partition British India, like 'The Imperial Gazetteer of India' (1909-1922) and from portions of the Ethnographic Survey of India (another official government project), such as 'A Glossary of the Tribes and Castes of the Punjab and North-West Frontier Province' (1911-19) and 'The Tribes and Castes of the North-western Provinces and Oudh" by (1896). The data in all of those books come from the results of censuses. ] 21 February 2006 | |||
==Ideal heading for "Early references"== | |||
::: Bhola -- if you've got real references, great. They have been in short supply here. Give figures, dates, and then footnote with the exact source and page where you got them. Then if others disagree, they have to come up with competing references. We don't need to come to conclusion -- we can just say "these references imply A and these references imply B" and let readers draw their own conclusions. ] 03:36, 22 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
{{u|LukeEmily}}, you have messed up long standing section of "Early references" by making two edits and . In the first edit, you gave the following edit summary: ''The concern by several editors (including admin and Sitush) has been your subtle attempt to mix up words Rajputra and rajput and associate rajputra with the community. Why are you against separating them as far as the references are concerned?'' | |||
Now, after my long-long explanations in previous threads, nobody will seriously give me false blame of mixing up rajput and rajputra but you are not among them. Most of the known writers have no issue mixing them but you again and again quote an year old discussion to get things changed according to your ]. Anyone having a basic knowledge of ] and ] words will not make a fuss over "rajputra" becoming "rajput" while switching from Sanskrit to younger dialects. | |||
You say that readers may wrongly take the "early references" as references to the community. Why do you doubt the basic English of our readers when in this section, we have discussed only the terms. Read this quote given in the citation for ] : {{tq|"Deeply set in the minds of historians of all hues is the association of medieval Rajasthan with the Rajputs. This is so deeply set indeed that one tends to forget that the earliest reference to the Rajputra, in a sense other than that of a prince, comes not from the records of Rajasthan, but occurs in the Bakhshali manuscript (seventh century) from North West Frontier Province, in the sense of mercenary soldier and as Irfan Habib points out in the Chachnama (eigth century) of Sind, in the sense of an elite horsemen."}} | |||
I don't understand why it is imagined, at this point, that the main Rajput article will reflect only the PoV of those who have been banned yesterday. Extremely counter-intuitive --- anyway, IMO, it is possible to write an eminently NPOV and understated article, making mention of "Muslim Rajputs" while keeping within the Arbcom's admonition that ''"Advocates of an Islamic point of view are specially reminded that Rajput is a noble Hindu caste and that the bulk of the information in the article should reflect that reality"''. Let us work on that, and abandon this unwarranted fork. ] 21:05, 18 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
Most of the other references in the section are also given in this manner only by their respective authors. They mention these texts while discussing the broader Rajput topic. They refrain from giving a verdict by calling them references to the community and retain the ambiguity leaving it for readers to decide. We are supposed to follow their style of writing without applying our ]. The content which wasn't discussed by writers in context of Rajputs like Lichhavi inscriptions and Pali canon has already been removed from the section long back. | |||
hm, what's going on? where are all the talk archives? Why the wild forking? I ''am'' hoping we will have a chance of disecting the issue in peace now and pinning the various aspects of the term into neat sections, like butterflies, just like we boring encyclopedists like our material, neatly labelled and spread out. "The Rajputs are a noble Hindu caste and that the bulk of the information in the article should reflect that reality" indeed. I think this is undisputed. What we need to do is cleanup the unorganized state of the article, and minimize overlap between this article and the related ] and ]. More than half of the present article can be deleted as already covered there. Please do not refactor this article without taking these sub-articles into account also. If we keep ] as a separate article, it needs its own short section here, and will be a ''sub-article'' of this one. ] <small>]</small> 14:39, 19 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
::ah, the archives are now at ] thanks to the kneejerk fork. They should be merged back here. ] <small>]</small> 14:41, 19 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
As far as keeping all mentions in the same para is concerned, we give importance to the chronological order. After the mentions of ''Rajputra'' in 7th-8th century, the term "Thakur" appears in Chachnama and a 10th century text. Then again "rajputra" comes in 12th century text followed by "rajput" in 14th century (at last, obviously). Segregating the three terms in three different sub-sections will only make it messy (like we have in present version). | |||
: Please use your divine admin powers to undo Bhola's rename and move, which was done without any consultation with other editors. ] 18:20, 19 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
::I moved it back and merged the talk page histories. ] <small>]</small> 21:33, 19 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
In your , you moved a poorly sourced para from origin section to "etymology of rajput" sub-section. First, you need to check the meaning of "etymology" in dictionary. When you talk about its etymology, the term "rajput" literally means nothing but "son of king". We don't need to discuss etymology again and again as it is well-described in the first lead line itself. Also, mentioning "etymology" in heading of section unnecessarily elongates it which has already become very long thanks to your repeated objections. I am hence, re-titling the section to "Early references to terms like ''rajputra'',''rajput'',''thakur''. I hope this will settle the dispute. ] (]) 18:26, 31 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
==Tidy up== | |||
I am wondering. This article is focussing on Rajastani exploits of rajputs, but we know rajputs had kingdoms in Punjab also and if we were to include ALL such exploits for fairness then we would have an overly HUGE page. In it's present form it's already too long and not enough elaboration on an actual rajput and the different clans. We could possible include where each tribe ruled majorly in it's times instead as a reference rather than an entire 'article within an article'? | |||
:{{u|Dympies}}, your edit is only going to confuse the readers! Stop POV-pushing please; you do not have the consensus! Thanks. ] (]) 18:44, 31 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
Im also removing the point that no further Muslim conquests took place in the 9th century due to the formidable reputation of the rajputs as there is no proof of this from the middle eastern side to corroborate this, so it's more a 'proud assumption' rather than proof I think? Please feel free to correct me guys. I've also done a tidy up of 'language' in the history section of where unencyclopedic words such as 'treacherously' and 'crushed' have been replaced suitably. | |||
::{{Agree}} no changes required in the section of ]. ] ] 21:00, 31 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
::Dympies, did you read this comment by {{ping|Sitush}} written to you?{{tq|We have for years had reliable sources that indicate no mention before the 14C or thereabouts and not even the most trenchant of pov-pushers/sockfarms has suggested the community name is directly related to Rajputra. - Sitush 20:37, 18 June 2023 (UTC) (from Sitush to Dympies) I am an experienced non-admin and purely in the context of this discussion I think you are trying to glorify a caste in a non-compliant way. Whether you have done that before, make a habit of it/aren't learning, are being tendentious and/or repeatedly disruptive etc is something I haven't looked into but the words "thin ice" certainly come to mind.Sitush (talk) 08:48, 19 June 2023 (UTC)}}. After this discussion, the page was supposed to be fixed. It was not fixed(maybe other editors including myself were working on other topics and were not interested in Rajput). Hence, the argument about long standing does not hold water. You brought attention back to this page. It is very clear from the sources that Rajputs and Rajputras are different and we cannot confuse the readers. Editors including admins have objected to your edits that confuse the two words. Since there is an unnecessary discussion on Rajputra(prince) and its references, an average reader will most likely confuse the two words on a caste page. Nothing has been removed. So what is the objection? Rajputra and Rajput have distinct meanings so they cannot be mixed up. You said, {{tq|When you talk about its etymology, the term "rajput" literally means nothing but "son of king"}}. This may be your opinion, but the sources do not agree with you. There are many but just giving one from the article {{tq|The term 'Rajput' before the fifteenth century meant 'horse soldier', 'trooper', 'headman of a village' or 'subordinate chief'. Moreover, individuals with whom the word was associated were generally considered to be products of varna–samkara of mixed caste origin, and thus inferior in rank to Kshatriyas}}. Trooper does not mean son of a king. The other interesting point to notice is that the word Rajput itself has many different meanings. For example, horse soldier is not necessarily the same as trooper. Even Hindu scriptures(Sudracarasiromani , Sudrakamalakara , etc) have defined the word "Rajput" as a person with mix varna who has to follow the ritual duties of a shudra although he may fight. But let us not discuss hindu scriptures here. But the bottom line is we cannot confuse the readers by mixing Rajputra and Rajput.] (]) 01:19, 2 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::I was talking specifically about etymology of the term ''rajput'' rather than its different connotations, and its etymology is clear (per sources) that ''rajput'' is derived from ''rajaputra''. If you have sources talking about specific texts giving different meanings of ''rajput'', they are welcome for inclusion in the section. Anyways, I have no problem in segregating the section into three sub-sections if it helps our readers. ] (]) 10:29, 2 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::{{ping|LukeEmily}} You should avoid your interpretation of hindu shastras to make a point. This is plain original research and is contrary to talk page guidelines. Consider this a formal warning. <span style="font-family:'forte'">] <b>(])</b></span> 14:31, 2 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
== Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 1 November 2024 == | |||
Can other editors help in this respect with other sections? | |||
{{edit extended-protected|Rajput|answered=yes}} | |||
Looking better guys, let's keep up the good work.--] 22:24, 19 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
] (]) 01:57, 1 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:We need to cast this into ]. This is the main article and should give easy access to all specialized Rajput-related sub-articles. Specifically, it is about the ''people'' (ethnologically). Material already at ] and ] should be very briefly summarized, with the use of {{tl|main}}. Please do match the content of this article to the content of the history articles and see how this article may be shortened without loss of information. ] <small>]</small> 22:49, 19 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
Rajputs never originated from peasant or pastoral communities they were kings as mentioned in their name | |||
:{{notdone}}. It is not clear what edits you are suggesting. ] (]) 05:09, 1 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
== S.L.Dhani == | |||
==Resigning Misplaced Pages membership== | |||
I am resigning my wikipedia membership effective immediately. | |||
{{ping| Ratnahastin}}, I did not know Dhani was lawyer. If he is not reliable for caste pages, then I am OK with my edit being reverted. Thanks for your edit. ] (]) 18:58, 2 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
Rajputs remember a few things: | |||
==Etymology of term ''Rajput''== | |||
* Arbcom has decided against me NOT BECAUSE OF THE CONTENT OF RAJPUT ARTICLE but how I dealt with the intervention of Bachman. Arbcom DOES NOT DECIDE ON THE CONTENTS OF THE ARTICLES. So is communicated to me by Charles Matthews of Arbcom. | |||
The present version of this sub-section (]) says that the term was used for troopers, village head etc before 15th century. However in the same sub-section we have discussed ] (1380) which mentions ''Rajput'' among castes (jati) inhabiting the Jaunpur city. How should we address this clear contradiction? While Kirtilata's mention seems more authentic as it gives us full quotes (in Devanagari) along with author's interpretation, it seems Dirk Kolff wasn't aware of this mention citing whom 2-3 authors have written the same | |||
misinforming thing. ] (]) 19:39, 2 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::It is not a contradiction. Have all Rajputs of today descended from the Rajputs mentioned in the poem in Jaunpur city? First, even if there were a contradiction, opinion of a poet from the 13th century can hardly match the opinion of modern scholars who have a lot more research and can access a lot of documentation by different writers. Secondly, it not clear if Vidyapati (while referring to Jati) simply meant class of people performing an occupation (not hereditary) or a class that was hereditary. It is quite well known that in olden days castes were flexible - otherwise terms such as sanskritisation and rajputisation would not exist. Thirdly, he discusses a specific city. Also, does vidyapati say that none of these Rajputs were troopers? Trying to call so many modern sources wrong based on a (vague or otherwise) verse from a 13th century poem is ]. Also, see quotes by Eaton who has summarized the issue.] (]) 01:53, 3 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::Vidyapati talks of Rajput ''kulas'' (कुल), so its obviously hereditary in nature. And no, Vidyapati doesn't say that they were not troopers but Kolff means to imply that the term was never used to refer to a caste before 15th century and that is contradicted by Kirtilata. ] (]) 18:07, 4 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::This is ]. We just need to stick to modern reliable sources rather than guess what a 13th century poet meant in a poem or even if he was accurate if he actually meant caste in its present sense.] (]) 21:42, 4 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::{{u|Dympies}}, I remember that you were earlier talking about including only the meaning of term Rajputra with no connection to modern day Rajputs. But, now, it seems that change in the entire article is going on by doing ] of sources and ]. ] (]) 04:00, 5 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::{{u|Adamantine123}}, the entire structure of the article's upper sections is undergoing change thanks to {{noping|LukeEmily}}'s push for doing so by citing Oxford dictionary for meaning of ''etymology''. ] (]) 04:19, 5 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::{{ping|Adamantine123}} Can you cite examples that makes you believe that the "change in the entire article is going on by doing WP:SYNTH of sources and WP:OR." ? <span>] <b>(])</b></span> 04:24, 5 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::: edit, here actual meaning of the word Rajput is given by some scholars, but this edit made it an opinion while the literal meaning ''son of a king'' is being made the only true meaning forcibly. ] (]) 08:04, 5 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::This isn't synthesis. As Kirtilata contradicts the content, it would be called their "opinion" only. ] (]) 14:18, 5 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::Opinion of mediaeval period writers and poet is not comparable to modern scholars. They were biased. ] (]) 16:59, 5 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::Opinion is not coming from Vidyapati. His is the primary source but its interpretation is coming from a modern writer only. ] (]) 06:33, 6 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::{{u|Dympies}}, why are you trying to put the view of Kalhana, a medieval era author as one of the theory of origin of Rajput caste in origin section ?. I think this was already discussed and senior editors like {{u|Sitush}} explained it earlier to you. ] (]) 12:56, 8 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
== Rajput vs Rajputra == | |||
*Also for the record Arbcom never asked me to provide any evidence against Bachman. Infact no body from the rajput side presented any evidence at all. Arbcom unilaterally decided based only on Bachman's one sided evidence! Also at one point arbcom considered desysopping Bachman. | |||
In the Sundarakand, Angad, the son of the Vanara(Monkey) king Vali, is referred to as "Rajputra" by Jambavant, showing how this title was not restricted to humans. | |||
*Bachman has a racist mindset as is evident from his comments here so do not let him bully you: | |||
In Yudhakand Adi Kavi Valmiki distinguished the human prince from other princes by referring to him as "Manush Rajputra," meaning "son of the king of men," to prevent any confusion for the readers. | |||
*Bachman,Zora and in general the entire muslim side operates without references and pushes references without having read a single one of them. | |||
Similarly, in the Yuddha Kanda, Ravana's son Indrajit is referred to as "Rajputra." Here, Valmiki specifically calls him "Rakshasa Rajputra," meaning "son of the king of demons." ] (]) 07:48, 3 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
*References on the rajput page (look for my last save) are pretty much complete. | |||
:{{ping|RegentsPark}} Requesting you to take action against this user; just look at the username! Thanks. ] (]) 12:12, 3 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
*Impumozhi is another person who reads a few websites and thinks he is an expert. See his blatant lies discussed here: http://en.wikipedia.org/Talk:Rathore. Read the entire section of the heading "Impumozhi is a liar". So do not let him have a free reign on rajput related articles. | |||
==IGNOU Source== | |||
The source is a textbook published by the ] for its students. The unit 14 is authored by Prem Kumar , not Nandini Sinha as attributed by LukeEmily. Prem Kumar also only has a masters in arts (ancient Indian history ). That's why I said this source is not reliable enough for these highly contentious claims. And from what I can gather from talkpage archives, LukeEmily appears to be pushing this exact view since past two years despite opposition by multiple established editors including Fowler&fowler and TrangaBellam. I only see this as ] in an attempt to restore content that has no consensus for inclusion. ] (]) 07:01, 9 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::{{ping|Ratnahastin}}, your views are wrong. Nandini Kapur is clearly listed as the contributor and Prem Kumar is a historian by definition. Your other summary about other editor's comments is misleading. The earlier discussions were about the issue of ]. Now it is due since we are adding references to unrelated things like Rajputra. It makes absolutely no sense to leave out the sources that mention the word Rajput explicitly when there are references being added for the term rajputra but none for rajput. There is an oxford university source that mentions the same. The ] no longer applies. I will discuss more tomorrow.] (]) 09:11, 9 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
== Recent Revert: November '24 == | |||
* Lastly these were the pages on my watchlist and it would be nice for one of the fellow rajputs to look after them. | |||
Hello {{u|Ratnahastin}}, as mentioned in my edit summary, the author is a reliable one and such content from Puranas are mentioned in almost all caste related articles! {{u|LukeEmily}} has attributed the same to the author as well. Please mention here why you consider the source as unreliable which is the reason provided by you for the revert. Thanks. ] (]) 07:11, 9 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
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:{{Ping|Ekdalian}} Check the above section. ] (]) 07:12, 9 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
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:Sorry, missed the above section where you have explained your views. ] (]) 07:12, 9 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
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:::{{ping|Ekdalian}}, his views are wrong. Nandini Kapur is clearly listed as the contributor and Prem Kumar is a historian by definition. Ratnahastins other summary about other editor's comments is misleading. The earlier discussions were about the issue of ]. Now it is due since we are adding references to unrelated things like Rajputra. It makes absolutely no sense to leave out the sources that mention the word Rajput explicitly when there are references being added for the term rajputra but none for rajput. There is an oxford university source that mentions the same. The ] no longer applies.] (]) 09:08, 9 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
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::::This exact dispute has been , you are only trying to restore the content that has no consensus for restoration using the same sources. What you're engaging in is called disruptive editing. ] (]) 09:13, 9 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
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::::::No, the issue was the ] vs ] and TB agreed it was due. At that time, we did not have a long references section and the discussion was left incomplete - so Undue was a valid argument(although I did not agree completely). It is related to Rajputisation and less to Rajput hence there was an issue of undue on the Rajput page. Whether it was due or undue at that time is debatable, but now it is certainly due because of the references section to ancient scriptures. If we remove the references for Rajputra, then it becomes due only for Rajputization and debatable for Rajput. What you are engaging in is called POV pushing. We cannot selectively choose scriptures we like vs don't like. Please do no not mix up the two issues(that issue was different) discussed earlier. Lets chat tomorrow.] (]) 09:29, 9 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
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:::::::Also, Ratnahastin, please can you explain why you have not objected to the expansion of Rajputra section that Sitush and admin both disagreed with?09:33, 9 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
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{{od}}{{u|LukeEmily}}, previously, you had a long discussion with users like Akalanka820 and F&f regarding the same and I was under impression that they made you understand that the content is undue for this page. But you have time and again tried to restore the content. A few days back, you added the same content citing a sub-standard book written by an advocate and now you have come up with yet another sub-standard IGNOU open university textbook. You have previously removed content from references section saying KS Singh is not a good source for "controversial content" despite the content not being controversial and coming from his National series (published in OUP). I would remind you that you are considered aware of ] and ] topic designation, so you should exercise caution in this area. ] (]) 10:54, 9 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
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:This page has been distorted by your addition of long early reference section, which is completely in undue. I propose, we should create a different article on etymology of word Rajputra rather than doing this here. ] (]) 16:18, 9 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
] 02:35, 20 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
::Making proposals about creating POV forks right after you faced heavy scrutiny over your edits in the caste area is not a good idea. ] (]) 17:39, 9 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
---- | |||
:::{{ping|Dympies}}, why is a PhD(Nandini Kapur) historian substandard? As far as the discussion with F&F was concerned, it was a different context. The point was the ] source discussed Rajputisation. And we did not have a section where rajputras were references at that time - which is the issue now. Second, if you follow it carefully, it was left incomplete. F&F had said in the end that he had just got the source and he is going to read it and post a summary. We never discussed it after that. So the discussion was incomplete. I reiterate, '''it makes no sense at all to mention where Rajputra in mentioned in Hindu scriptures and not mention where Rajput in Hindu scriptures - as mentioned by academic sources. This is no-brainer. Either both are undue or both are due on this page. We cannot cherry pick based on what is offensive and what is not.'' Vajpeyi is due for Rajputisation but I am not working on that right now. I have no special interest in the Rajput caste and had stopped editing it for more than an year until I saw POV pushing that Sitush and admin had warned against. As far as your implicit threat to {{ping|Adamantine123}} is concerned, you need to look at the mirror. Adamantine123 did not face heavy scrutiny over caste article edits, only a comment about some assumptions made about editors caste.] (]) 17:48, 9 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
Its a sad day in the history of the Rajputs. | |||
::::Why are misattributing the unit-14 to Nandini Kapur, in spite of being told before? Your own source clearly states that it was prepared by Prem Kumar, even the profile I cited lists him as the contributor. Inclusion of Vajpayee was vehemently opposed by Fowler&fowler in the past too, you have no consensus to include anything from her work. I really do not understand what makes you think Dympies's message was an "implicit threat" to Adamantine123, it appears to be an assumption of bad faith on your part. I'll reiterate what Dympies said that you are aware of CT/OPs, therefore you should follow talkpage guidelines closely. ] (]) 18:01, 9 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
] 02:23, 21 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
::::::Ratnahastin, please click the link given in the citation: . The contributors are both Kapur and Prem Kumar for item 14. Secondly, both are academics, both are historians. Is it not inappropriate to ask a user not to suggest fork based on something completely unrelated? Was any scrutiny related to edits on caste pages? The answer is no. So why did dympies bring that up on the talk page where we are discussing content?] (]) 01:47, 11 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
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:::::::How can you say its completely unrelated when the community decided not to allow creation of seperate page ''Rajputra'' and sources in ] page establishes its relevance in this page only. Luke, it was you who created different sub-sections for different terms and you yourself contributed to Rajputra sub-section. In fact, in your content, it mentioned Rajputra as a mixed caste, much like scholars say about Rajput caste. So, its silly to give such suggestions when something else is being discussed. ] (]) 08:39, 11 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
the arbcom found, | |||
:::::Let's not discuss about what happened at ANI as admins may have understood everything going out there. Discuss only stuff related to article on this page. ] (]) 07:55, 10 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:The ip addresses used by Shivraj Singh created {{Vandal|Shreeharsha123}}, {{Vandal|Srichandp}}, {{Vandal|Alidiare}}. {{Vandal|Shirazian69}} and {{Vandal|Sroy05}}. | |||
::::Luke, the main issue with your content is the source. We certainly need better sources for contentious caste topics than an open university textbook. I remember in your last discussion with F&f and Akalanka820, you were seen citing a quora answer. You need to do better than this. ] (]) 18:26, 9 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
so, do you mean "''resign''", or "change socks"? I am tired of being called names over upholding WP fundamentals, either here or on my talk. Could someone bother removing the PAs above? ] <small>]</small> 18:20, 20 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
:::::There is no wikipedia rule barring university books. Nandini Kapur is a historian and that's enough. I saw Ratnahastin citing a non historian here which was removed by Rasteem. That's bad. ] (]) 07:58, 10 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::Avoid making comments targeting editors on this page. Please focus on the issue with articles only. ] (]) 07:42, 10 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::@], @], @] As all of you are already discussing here some disputes, I'd like to know your opinions, as I believe the removal of two paragraphs from ] should be removed. One paragraph is backed by non-established/Non reliable historian per ] & ] need a remove And also, I believe the word (''Thakur'') in ] is more related to ] so it should be removed and moved there in ] As this is only backed by one source, it is contradictory to all other theories in the section and much confusing. ] ] 08:35, 10 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::The Thakur sub-section is there to stay. It can be expanded later. ] (]) 09:01, 10 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::@] Disagree no need to expand ] here. As there on ] have already some theories regarding the ] of the word Thakur. It is contradictory and we'll confusing to all other theories of Etomology and early references of the word ] & ]. ] ] 10:30, 10 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::The section is not about etymology alone but it covers "Early references" too. If scholars find it relevant to discuss ''Thakur'' in context of Rajputs, then so do we. ] (]) 11:13, 10 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::Agree with {{ping|Rasteem}}. It is confusing to the average reader.] (]) 23:35, 13 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::Yes it is very confusing to all other theories in the section also it is contradictory to all other early references for the words "Rajput" and Rajputra". When ] page already have related theories of origin of the word ''Thakur'' then why not to add this theory also there? Also Thakur (title) article has mentioned about the "]" community & usage of title for the community. Per ] it should be removed from this article and added there on ]. ] ] 23:45, 13 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::How can you call it ] when the term is clearly discussed by writers in context of Rajputs? Infact, the terms ''thakur'' and ''rajput'' are used interchangeably to refer to the caste. ] (]) 17:08, 14 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
==Section order== | |||
{{ping|LukeEmily}} Per ], We usually order the sections based on the precedence of similar articles. For example, the articles such as ], ], ], ] have etymology/terminology section at the top and even in non-caste social group articles, we see a precedent for the etymology section being first in terms of order, e.g at ], ], ], etc. Also, there is no need for moving such a detailed etymology section down as it breaks the flow of the article and feels out of place. - ] (]) 15:43, 16 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:Why are you edit warring aggressively with different users on large number of Rajput related pages for issues that doesn't hold importance. ] (]) 23:39, 16 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
==Sock puppets are back== | |||
::Talk page is not for sharing your grievances with other users but to discuss the article. Given your edit summary and comment here, it seems you do not have any valid rationale to revert that edit and you only did so to illustrate a ], which is disruptive. {{Tq|issues that doesn't hold importance}} - Perhaps you should read what I wrote above. It's not a minor issue. - ] (]) 01:31, 17 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::{{ping|Ratnahastin|Adamantine123}}, OK Thanks. Then I don't have issues with the etymology section being at the top per se as long as it is not bloated with POV information which leads to a false narrative for a new reader. It should include only early references (scriptural) and meaning of Rajput/rajputra. For example Rajputra is mentioned in Ramayana, etc and it means so and so and rajput is mentioned in so and so scriptures and it means so and so. Right now it looks like a lot of information from origin and emergence of a community is present there selectively in a POV manner. I will look more into recent changes as I have been away for a week or so. Will comment more soon.] (]) 13:25, 26 November 2024 (UTC) | |||
== Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 11 December 2024 == | |||
The sock puppets of old have returned it appears. Can something be done about this as it's not progressing the article at all. | |||
{{edit extended-protected|Rajput|answered=yes}} | |||
I've removed some bias propoganda material at the end of the article re Muslim conversion as it is irrelevant and antagonistic here. Also contained points that Hinduism was solely saved by rajputs which is in my opinion insulting to the non rajput hindu populace as well as a baseless assumption. | |||
In the Misplaced Pages page about Rajputs,Islam is mentioned in the Religion section.This is straightforward outrageous and unacceptable.Rajputs are simply against Islam,millions of Rajputs like Maharana Pratap have died protecting Hindu religion from Islam.Today if Hindu religion stands prosperous is due to sacrifice of Rajputs or else India would simply be under Sharia law. | |||
Remove this as soon as possible as the Rajputs have never been Muslim,together we can make Misplaced Pages more reliable and trust worthy. | |||
Thanking you ] (]) 13:14, 11 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:{{notdone}} Please be specific about the change you would like to see (for example, remove the following text from the article). If you're asking for the removal of sourced content, you will need to explain why the source is not reliable, not appropriate, or improperly used. ] <small>(])</small> 13:52, 11 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
== Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 29 December 2024 == | |||
Cross references to other rajastani rajputs is also something I think should be removed as they have their own articles. We can provide names as references instead as a link? They take up too much space and are tainted with propoganda. (Why not mention all of the hundreds of other Rajput kings in that case? Im not recommending this, but displaying my point)--] 15:22, 25 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
{{edit extended-protected|Rajput|answered=no}} | |||
== Featured article == | |||
Please remove Islam from Religion section of this Misplaced Pages page.Rajputs are Hindus only,they are not even Sikhs. ] (]) 14:13, 29 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
== Rajput identity in Dharmashastras, politics and historical facts. == | |||
This article definitely has the scope to become a featured article. However, massive cleanup of the article is required. --] 17:23, 28 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
:quite massive, yes. ] <small>]</small> 18:03, 28 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
Since, editors have been discussing texts and scriptures mentioning Rajputs, adding a section on the talk page summarizing the opinions of texts, mughals and brahmins. '''The bottom line is that Brahmins have disagreed with the Kshatriya status, and hence the religious texts says that the Rajputs may fight like a Kshatriya but have to follow the rituals of a shudra. It also shows that the Kshatriya claim is only in political sense.''' | |||
==images== | |||
This article is supposed to be about a people, right? Caste, ethnicity, nation, whatever. I note that there is no single photograph of a person. Instead, people seem to prefer to add architecture, statues and heroic drawings on postage stamps. I happened to add a 19th century photograph of actual Rajputs. Whatever happened to that? There should, of course, be photos of contemporary people. Make sure that the article is not dominated by the "History" section. We have ] for that, alright? Give a tight summary of that here, but don't dwell on it. Give contemporary population statistics, folklore and customs etc. instead. Right now, the historical part is about '''80%''' of the article. It should be 25% at most, ''summarizing''. If nothing happens, I will radically export historical stuff to the history article. ] <small>]</small> 18:03, 28 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
] discusses the Rajputs in the context of Hindu ] texts and shows the dissonance between the meaning of Rajput in the practical political arena versus the literal meaning of ''rajaputa'' in Hindu religious texts and how both meanings could coexist.{{sfn|Ananya Vajpeyi|2005|pp=257-258}} | |||
:Who are you and what are your credentials to make these claims? Statues and stamps are more valuable then living people. History section infact needs to be cleaned and expanded more. | |||
The ''Jatinirnayaprakaranama'' of ''Sudrakamalakara'', an early 1600s Dharmaśāstra text written by Kamalakarabhatta for ''ugra'' or ''rajaputa'' is the projeny of a Kshatriya father and Shudra mother. Vajpeyi clarifies that although ''ugra'' literally means scary or fierce, in this context the medieval writers only used this term in the context of his qualities as a warrior. Seshasakrishna's ''Sudracarasiromani'', a text that predates ''Sudrakamalakara'' also supports this definition for a ''rajaputa''. '''There is a professional and religious distinction: a ''rajaputa'' may fight, however, he has to follow the duties similar to sudras or ''sudrasamana''.''' She says ''Ugra'' or ''rajaputa'' is listed as one of the six types of a ''sankarajati''(mixed caste) given in the text, whose father's varna is higher than that of the mother, and are thus an ''anulomajas'' or "one born in accordance with the natural flow". There are five other types of ''anulomajas'' unions given by Kamalakarabhatta. Thus, as per the medieval Brahminical Dharmashastras, Rajputs are a mixed ''jati''.{{sfn|Ananya Vajpeyi|2005|pp=257|ps =: section RAJPUTS ACCORDING TO THE DHARMASASTRA: Whatever the realities of Rajputization among powerful tribal families seeking to enter the varna system with a certain status, and emigre brahmanas helping them to do so, by brahmanical dharmasastra definitions prevalent in Shivaji’s lifetime, Rajputs are a miscegenated jati produced from non-alike fathers and mothers of specified types. According to the Sudrakamalakara, an authoritative Sanskrit text on the dharma of sudras written by Gagabhatta’s own uncle, Kamalakarabhatta, in the early part of the seventeenth century, the progeny of a ksatriya man and a sudra woman would be an ugra, otherwise known as a rajaputa.33 Such a person does battle and is expert in wielding weapons, but he must follow the duties proper to a sudra. In Kamalakara’s classification, being a sankarajati, or mixed group, ugras, or rajaputas are sudrasamana, as goodas (or as bad as!) sudras. ‘Ugra’ literally means ‘scary’, or ‘ferocious’.In equating the ugra and the rajap"uta, medieval dharma«s"astra writers nodoubt intended to refer to the warlike properties of the class of person they were describing.See Kamalakarabhatta, ‘Jatinirnayaprakaranam’, in his ®Sudrakamalakara,p. 255. A progeny whose father has a higher varna than the mother, as in this case,is called an anulomaja, or ‘one born in accordance with the natural flow’ (that is,the descending order) of social hierarchy, from man (superior) to woman (inferior).Kamalakara lists the ugra among the six types of anulomajas (ibid.: 254–5). An earlier text in this genre, the ®Sudracarasiromani by Sesakrsna, also provides thesame definition of a rajaputa (Ibid.: 15)}} | |||
:+] 11:52, 1 March 2006 (UTC)+ | |||
In the political context, the word meaning edges towards Kshatriya although in Hindu religious texts ''rajaputa'' is closer to Shudra.{{sfn|Ananya Vajpeyi|2005|pp=257,258}} | |||
: The main stay of the article is as Dab has stated. I actually had a friend look at it, in it's current form, he still cant understand what exactly a rajput is, lol! The photos provided by Dab should be imported back and although I cleared up some of the poor taste propoganda here, our RSS friends are back with other aliases again. 100 000 rain clouds or storms or something. This was going to happen given the bans. Can we see some enforcements on these extremists? --] 21:10, 28 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
Some emigrant Brahmins may have been involved in Rajputising tribes to the Rajput status.{{sfn|Ananya Vajpeyi|2005|pp=257,258}} | |||
:Are you the Jarral contributor? You have put some crackpot assertions on Jarral that I deleted today. | |||
:+] 11:52, 1 March 2006 (UTC)+ | |||
::who am I? I am a rather experienced Wikipedian with some 25,000 edits and hundreds of articles under my belt. My advice was not confrontational or partisan, but matter of fact: This is the article about the Rajput people. Compare, if you like, ] or ] or ] or ]. Note the {{tl|Ethnic group}} template, note how there is a "history" section typically taking less than 50% of the article, along with sections like "culture", "institutions", "identity", etc.; especially when there ''is'' a specialized history article, ''what'' is the point of just duplicating information already there? | |||
Despite this, '''Vajpayi states that, periodically, Brahmins have characterized Rajput as self-seekers, and stated that they are not real Kshatriyas'''.{{sfn|Ananya Vajpeyi|2005|pp=258|ps =: THE POLYPHONY OF RAJPUT IDENTITY:From its earliest appearance in north India, the category of ‘Rajput’ seems to have been by definition an open and accommodating one. Repeatedly, over the course of centuries, its persistence, or reinvention, allowed politically and sometimes even economically ascendant groups, especially those with a clan-based structure, to be recruited into ksatriya status. Time and again brahmana and non-Rajput ksatriya interests denigrated it as a category for arrivistes, insinuating or charging that Rajputs were nothing but ersatz ksatriyas}} | |||
::You proved quality and quantity are not related. In future develop a consensus on this page before you make your edits. | |||
:: +] 06:04, 2 March 2006 (UTC)+ | |||
:::and who may you be? someone's sockpuppet? we didn't go through this tedious rfar just to continue these childish games. Your article is at "Invasion", where it belongs. If you care about working on it, you are most welcome to. Contribute constructively. If you are not already banned, edit warring is the best way to become banned soon. ] <small>]</small> 09:04, 3 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
===sub-articles=== | |||
this is crazy. if typhoon has his way, the Rajput article has more information about the invasions than the specialized ]. At least make plain what you propose. Why are you removing ]? Is the ] article unrelated to Rajputs? I see the following possibilities. Express your preference. ] <small>]</small> 09:29, 3 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
====], sub-articles ], ]==== | |||
]. The "Invasions" episodes are part of Rajput history, but since we have most information about them, they get to have their own historical sub-article. | |||
*] <small>]</small> 09:29, 3 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
Other than establishing marital ties with already established Rajput families, constructing false genealogies and adopting titles such as ], Rajputising also involved starting the pretensions of rituals of twice-borns ( wearing sacred thread etc.).{{sfn|Ananya Vajpeyi|2005|pp=254|ps =: As the work of Sinha, Singh, Chattopadhyaya, and Thapar cumulatively shows, these included, for the ruling families of various tribes:(a) Concern with status: (i) The construction of spurious genealogies tracing descent from mythic ksatriya, or quasi-historical Rajput ancestors;and (ii) the express aspiration, often achieved through diligent pursuit over generations, to ksatriya status in the var]na hierarchy. (b) Adoption of rituals: (i) The ostentatious performance of the rituals of the twice-born castes, especially the ksatriyas; and (ii) the display of the markers of dvija ritual identity, like the wearing of the sacred thread, or the use of Vedic mantras.(c) Expansion of kinship networks: Aggressive affiliation with established Rajput families, through (i) (re)claiming long-lost kinship ties andor (ii) forming new marriage alliances (specifically, by asking for theirdaughters).(d) Change in terminology: (i) The adoption of Rajput titles like raja and rana that connoted a high birth if not royalty; and (ii) absorbing and espousing Sanskrit vocabulary in matters of state and religion, or switching}} | |||
====], sub-article ]==== | |||
] should be a redirect to ] and the various invasions should be discussed in detail there. | |||
====], no sub-articles==== | |||
There is not enough material to branch off specialized articles. ] should be the only article on Misplaced Pages discussing Rajput history and the invasions stuff in particular. Make both ] and ] into redirects to ]. | |||
<s>'''However, one ritual that was not given much significance was the ]. When a clan leader was made king by the Mughal emperor, the ] mark on the head of leader by the Muslim emperor confirmed his Royal status and the Hindu ritual of ] was only of secondary importance. Aurangzeb eventually stopped the custom of ''Tika'' and the custom was replaced by bowing or ''taslim'' to the Mughal emperor, who would return the salute. This possibly implies that it was still up to the Mughal emperor to ultimately give or deny the Rajput status to the clan leader.'''</s>{{sfn|Ananya Vajpeyi|2005|pp=251|ps =: (marking themselves as Hindu in contradistinction to the Muslim Mughals), including ones that installed the new head of a clan as king when an older one passed away, their most important royal ritual was not the abhiseka but the tika (literally: ‘auspicious mark’).20 This ritual was not the installation ceremony as such, but the recognition of the new king, or a confirmation of his royal status, by the Mughal emperor, who was the greater power above him (Hallissey 1977: Chapter 3, also 91–2).Clearly, the fact that it was always and only the Mughal emperor who conferred the tika, and always and only Rajput chieftains who receivedit from him, made this something of a hybrid ritual Aurangzeb’s abolition of the tika in the twenty-second or twenty-third yearof his reign is mentioned, but not analysed in any detail, in Sarkar (1916: 100,1930: 92) and in Sharma (1962: 108). This information is drawn from the Massiri-Alamgiri. Sarkar (1916) further points out that ‘the newly created rajahs had onlyto make their bow (taslim) to the Emperor who returned their salute’. Perhaps thisindicates that Aurangzeb retained the right to confirm or deny the royal status of a Rajput designated as king.}} | |||
====other suggestions==== | |||
The description of Rajputs in the Hindu Dharmashastras, self image that the Rajputs presented, and the Mughal view of the Rajputs was disparate. This incongruity, according to Vajpayi makes the Rajput identity ].{{sfn|Ananya Vajpeyi|2005|pp=257,258}} ] (]) 10:50, 30 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
==Banned== | |||
:You are misinterpreting the source again it seems. This is after you were warned by {{noping|Fowler&fowler}} for doing the same exact thing with the same source, it is clear that you do not understand what Vajpeyi is saying so you should stop bringing her up. ] (]) 01:19, 31 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::You can feel free correct my misunderstanding of the source. I have stricken out the last part the Ratnahastin objected to - will read it again. Please see the entire discussion with Fowler&Fowler. It was left incomplete. Fowler&Fowler was going to post a summary of the source since he had not read the source during the discussion and had just received a copy later. There was no discussion of the source after F&F got the copy. The issue at the time was ] since we had not discussed any scriptures on the page. Trangabellum did not agree but I agreed with F&F at the time. So there was no consensus. I was grateful to F&F for suggesting an excellent Sanksrit book - and I got a copy of it. (I need to thank F&F for the suggestion - the book is excellent). But the context has changed now. Too many irrelevant scriptures have been added since then. Also, after the discussion with F&F, I had contacted a retired Sanskrit scholar (well known and hence I cannot name the scholar here and the person does not edit wikipedia to the best of my knowledge) and requested to look at the sudrakamalakara (original sanskrit text) and compare it with Vajpayee. He had agreed that Vajpayee's interpretation was 100% accurate. He also told me how to get a copy of the images of the handwritten scripture. Anyway, that would come under ] so the opinion of the Sanksrit scholar can be dismissed if you want. However, if you feel my interpretation of the source is wrong, please feel can you correct it?] (]) 03:31, 31 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
===References=== | |||
Gurkhaboy got banned? He is a Western University educated scholar on the Rajputs. People like Dr. King, Dr. McCleod, Dr. Malvika Kasturi and Dr. J. T. O'Connell know him or of him. I think this article is gonna take a really bad turn. | |||
{{cot|bg=cornsilk|indent=1.6em|Click a footnote link above (or 'show') to view refs.}} | |||
~~ Daniel Ponzi | |||
{{reflist-talk|title=}} | |||
:it couldn't be getting much worse, could it? These people didn't get banned for being clueless, but for misbehaving. ] <small>]</small> 09:01, 3 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
{{cob}} | |||
Dab, you know fully well I didn't misbehave, nor was I insulting, so get off your high horse. I could have brought a lot to this article but I left when I saw Shivraj and you guys just go at it. But when I saw the Pakistani side not cite even one reference and your comments about Hindus, thats when I got involved. Go through your arguements and I rarely come up, never used a sockpuppet, didi,'t say that its "Hindus only", nor did I revert the article like others did. How old are you anyways? What do you mean by "These people"? Just because you were made an admin doesn't mean you should demean others. You just got away with misbehaving with your comments and being partial. An admin has to be held to a higher standard, something that you lack through your comments. And instead of being gracious about the matter you can't refrain but give snooty remarks. Are you just an angry person? You could have made this article amazing, but because of your disgust for Shivraj you began blindly acting into the hands of one side which does not have an legitimate arguement, thus you compromise your judgement and the integrity of the article. You should learn to keep yourself cool even if the likes of Shivraj.] 11:44, 3 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
:wait a minute - I apologize, I didn't mean you. I never even listed you as part and parcel of the "Hindu trolls". You appear on the "good faith Hindu side" in ]. I did not realize before now that ''you'' were banned, I mean I saw your name on the remedy, but I didn't check back with the evidence. So I apologize for my statement above as not referring to you. I am unsure why you were banned, in fact I would be prepared to ask for clarification, especially concerning ban expiration. As it is, I certainly welcome you to continue constructively contributing via the talkpage. ] <small>]</small> 12:26, 3 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
Dab I would love to work with you, but I am banned and that makes me fear this article being highjacked again by sock puppets and Pakistanis. You understand my concern.] 12:33, 3 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
==bibliography== | |||
could some of the involved editors ''please'' help me clean up with the bibliography? Alphabetize it, sort it, figure out which books are needed as reference to statements in the article and which are just here as reading suggestions, figure out which books would be more at home in the "History" or "Invasion" bibliographies. We don't give reviews interspersed with the bibliography. If you want to make a statement about a book, do it in the article body. Please. I am tired of trying to improve readability of this article if it's just torn to shreds by edit warriors within the hour. I invested in the rfar to enable editors to work in peace from vitriolic pov-pushers, now please take advantage of that by building a great article. (typhoon, get acquainted with ] and ] before edit-warring. ] <small>]</small> 09:09, 3 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
Why not delete all of them since it was Shivraj who put them there I think. Personally Dab, I think you guys should rewrite the article without the "Hindu trolls" contributions. They did put a lot of work into it, it was just sad that they didn't know how to work with others or compromise. However, it would only be fair to start from scratch and have eminent scholars like Raja, Supersaiyan and Wisesaber write the article as they see fit. Everyone had a problem with the references before, so unless you can validate them you should revamp everything. Cheers ] 11:48, 3 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
:we shouldn't delete contributions because the contributor was banned, but keep what is valuable, and discard what is not. The bibliography contains valuable references. However, only those entries both relevant the article and attributable to an author and a publisher/year should be kept, and the non-English ones only if used as references for specific statements, not as general "further reading". I am trying to clean it up, but I keep getting summarily reverted for no specified reason. ] <small>]</small> 12:18, 3 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
Dab, don't look at me I never misbehaved as you claimed I did. I am not doing the reverts, I never used sock puppets and didn't take part in some of these nastiest discussions I have ever seen on a historical subject. Since I can't edit, I can't help. I don't want my efforts to be highjacked by a group of teenaged Pakistanis who have their own agenda of demeaning my heritage. Your Rajput article mentions my family in Nepal and Mewar, and yet I am banned so the only thing I can tell you perhaps call Dr. Kasturi at the Univeristy of Toronto and ask her 001-905-828-3748, thats her office number. Zora was reading her book. THe reference to Jatts is incorrect and can be established by a book called "THe origins of the Jats" by Dr. Dhillon, as I recall, he is in Ottawa, haven't talked with him since I entered Meds. I got angry with you because of your anti-Hindu comments. ] 12:31, 3 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
:I apologized above: I didn't claim you misbehaved in the arbcom case, and did so above only by mistake. My comments were never intended to be anti-Hindu, they were anti-nationalist and anti-fundamentalist, and it seems appropriate to apologize to you now if they appeared otherwise to you. I do not think that there is a higher incidence of fanatism or irrationality in Hinduism than in the other major religions, and the problems we were having here are no different from the problems we get with fundamentalist Christians or Muslims on other articles. My attitude towards Hindu fundamentalists is no more hostile than that towards fundamentalists of other religions. The problems at this particular article are especially severe since religious dogmatism meets ethnic pride, a combination that tends to bring out the very worst in any people. ] <small>]</small> 13:21, 3 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
I believe you and I could turn out to become very good friends. I have some pressing engagements (ie Licensing exam and organising a Medical relief camp for Nepal) after March 30 I should have more time and will be more than happy to assist you, but please get the ban taken off me since I do not have a clue how this whole Misplaced Pages really works. Sincerely, Dr. Chauhan ] 13:52, 3 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
:I cannot take bans off anyone any more than imposing them on anyone. But I assure you that if you constructively point out issues here on talk, citing your sources, I will make sure to defend them against "Pakistani teenagers" if such should be trying to sneak in bias. It is true that bad behaviour doesn't make your point any more false than that good behaviour makes it true, but I am not aware that I have taken anything on hearsay even from the most honey-mouthed editor. Both sides need watertight verifiability. Even better would be, however, if there were no "two sides" but a many-faceted collaboration towards exhaustive coverage of the topic. ] <small>]</small> 14:43, 3 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
Dab, I believe a great misunderstanding developed between us, but I kindly suggest that the Pakistani side was not citing references and they should have. If you go to the Muslim Rajput site, the have a pic of Bhutto who everyone in the SAS dept knows was not a Rajput. They should also be careful and cite their sources. I agree with you about fanatics and have had my own vicious arguments with other Rajputs who claim things out of thin air. However, if one can truly validate the source and give a good arguement then we should look at it. The Pakistanis were blowing a lot of hot air and claims of this and that, but no references. I know you understand where I am coing from. ] 21:53, 3 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
==Images for future use== | |||
], in ] ]]] | |||
]]] | |||
], Home of ] rulers of (], ])]] | |||
] of Udaipur]] | |||
] rulers of ]]] | |||
__________________________________________________________________________________________ | |||
==A suggestion== | |||
Perhaps we could also provide a picture of Maharaja Ganga Singh of Bikaner during his appointment to the British War Cabinet WW1 and as he is presented in the famous painting by Sir James Guthrie "The great statesmen of the war", also we could place a pic of Maharaja Raghubir Singh of Kotah Bundi and also Maharaja Dhiraj Gyanendra Bir Bikram Shahdev of Nepal as well as HRH Sri teen Maharaja Jung Bahadur of Nepal (my great great grandfather). ] 21:47, 3 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
:A separate page on HH Ganga Singh is certainly appropriate, and if you provide an image without copyright issues, we could use it there -- in this connection, GS's grandson, HH Karni Singh, wrote a scholarly dissertation entitled ''"The Relations of the House of Bikaner with the Central Powers, 1465-1949"'', for which he received a PhD. This can serve as an unimpeachable source for crafting a section on mughal-rajput relations. I know that a copy is available at the Seshadri Iyer memorial library in Bangalore, and I am trying to get hold of a copy through the library network where I live. If trolls are kept at bay, it is not impossible to write a sensible piece here and also create many other useful articles. This whole era of Indian history cries out for attention. ] 22:23, 3 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
I personally own a lot of these potraits of Maharajas, my personal collection, so no copyright issues involved, however I am waiting to have the ban lifted so that I may contribute to the article. ] 22:46, 3 March 2006 (UTC) |
Latest revision as of 13:50, 8 January 2025
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back to square one?
@Ekdalian, Admantine123, and Dympies:. Dympies, I have been away from the Rajput page for a long time but you are making the same changes that the admin had warned you about (and another admin had prevented you from editing caste pages because of that)- the edits being disputed are associating the origin of Rajput(community) to Rajputra. But you are repeating the same edits - as if the discussion with admins never occurred. Is there something I am missing? If so, please correct me. Ekdalian has started a discussion on the admin board (unfortunately it got diverted). I think we should probably start the discussion on the admin board again - that focuses on content - not the editors - and get admins involved. It is clear from the sources that Rajputs was a community of farmers like many others who tried to employ bards to rewrite their past. They had not descended from princes of ancient times. That's what the admin explained, am I right?
Richard Eaton 2019, p. 87, In Gujarat, as in Rajasthan, genealogy proved essential for making such claims. To this end, local bards composed ballads or chronicles that presented their patrons as idea warriors who protected Brahmins, cows and vassals, as opposed to the livestock herding chieftains that they actually were, or had once been. As people, who created and preserved the genealogies, local bards therefore played critical roles in brokering for their clients socio-cultural transitions to a claimed Rajput status. A similar thing was happening in the Thar desert region, where from the fourteenth century onwards mobile pastoral groups gradually evolved into landed, sedentary and agrarian clans. Once again, it was bards and poets, patronized by little kings, who transformed a clan's ancestors from celebrated cattle-herders or cattle-rustlers to celebrated protectors of cattle-herding communities. The difference was subtle but critical, since such revised narratives retained an echo of a pastoral nomadic past while repositioning a clan's dynastic founder from pastoralist to non-pastoralist. The term 'Rajput', in short, had become a prestigious title available for adoption by upwardly mobile clan in the process of becoming sedentary. By one mechanism or another, a process of 'Rajputization' occurred in new states that emerged from the turmoil following Timur's invasion in 1398, especially in Gujarat, Malwa and Rajasthan.
LukeEmily (talk) 17:02, 27 October 2024 (UTC)
- I completely agree with LukeEmily. You don't have the required consensus for the Rajputra related content! Hope you understand. Thanks. Ekdalian (talk) 18:18, 27 October 2024 (UTC)
- LukeEmily, I can't understand the logic of this new thread when you are aware that the content in question was being discussed in the above thread titled "Recent removal of content from Early References". And remember, admins won't help with the content, they are as much contributors here as you and me. Anyways, I have no problem repeating the same things again. Please go through the first lead line of Rajput :
Rajput (from Sanskrit rājaputra meaning "son of a king"), is a large multi-component cluster....
. Almost all scholars say that the term "Rajput" is derived from "Rajputra". But you disagree!
From Upinder Singh:
The use of the term Rajaputra for specific clans of Rajput or as a collective term for various clans emerged by the 12th century.
From Irfan Habib :
Rāuta is actually the Prakrit form of Rajaputra (modern Hindi Rajput); and a Rajaputra caste had established itself well before the thirteenth century.
From J. S. Grewal (the same source cited in "disputed content") :
The rājaputras began to form a loose federation of castes well before the twelfth century in a manner characteristic of the Indian social system.
From Andre Wink (again the same source cited in "disputed content"):
By the twelfth century the term Rājaputra or 'king's son' had approximately acquired the connotations of the 'Rajput' caste.
If you disagree with these modern scholars, then what you are left with is WP:OR. Its not me who is linking Rajput with Rajputra, reliable sources do so.
Now coming to the quote you have provided, how exactly do you think the "disputed content" contradicts Tanuja Kothiyal. She talks about the humble background of Rajputs and the "disputed content" too talks about Rajputras being mercenary soldiers, not some kings or princes. The content in question is not supposed to be disputed but you 2-3 editors are trying to extract something out of nothing. Dympies (talk) 18:44, 27 October 2024 (UTC)
- Dympies, the dispute is not about the derivation of the word Rajput from Rajaputra. Hindu scriptures have given Rajput a different meaning(ksatriya father,, shudra mother etc) to show that it is a mixed varna caste but that is a different discussion - and more relevant to Rajputisation. But this discussion on the Rajput caste page is not about the derivation of the word rajput . Dympies, you said, and I quote you:
. Answer: No, I do not disagree! The derivation is in fact from Rajputra irrespective of the meaning given in Hindu Scriptures. 'The issue is that the community is not derived from Rajputra. For example, "Luke" may be based on Luke the Evangelist but that does not mean that I have descended from him. That would be an absurd claim!' Comments from Sitush, @Abecedare: on @Bishonen:'s page in 2023. Abecedare has explained it very eloquently. Original discussion is
. Almost all scholars say that the term "Rajput" is derived from "Rajputra". But you disagree!-DympiesRajput (from Sanskrit rājaputra meaning "son of a king"), is a large multi-component cluster....
- Dympies, the dispute is not about the derivation of the word Rajput from Rajaputra. Hindu scriptures have given Rajput a different meaning(ksatriya father,, shudra mother etc) to show that it is a mixed varna caste but that is a different discussion - and more relevant to Rajputisation. But this discussion on the Rajput caste page is not about the derivation of the word rajput . Dympies, you said, and I quote you:
'From Abecedare about Dympies' edits that he pointed to in the main discussion':
The POV-pushing issue in short: I don't believe that there is much dispute that the word "Rajput" is derived from the word "Rajputra" (lit. son of Kings), and I would easily accept that the latter word appears in texts dating to BCE, or even that the two words were sometimes used interchangeably in the Medieval times. But there seems to be a subtle attempt in the current article to fallaciously imply that the age of the word Rajputra is indicative of the age of the community and that's it's literal meaning is indicative of the community's origins. I say subtle because this effect is achieved not through some outright false statement (afaict) but by, for example, positioning the unduly lengthy Early_references section, which deals mainly with the word Rajputra and how it has been used, at the head of the Origins section. By the way, Alf Hiltebeitel, cited later in the article, specifically mentions and dismisses such attempts by, among others, Asopa who is cited repeatedly in the Early references section. To quote from a footnote explaining the types of "contrived evidence" used to derive the origins of Rajputs: Five types of evidence are prominent:...(5) Sanskrit etymology, especially to misread and antiquate the Agnivmssa (Asopa 1972, 1976, 1, 11, nn. 3-5) or the "solar and lunar races" (Vaidya 1924, 259-300). Attempts to trace Agnivamsa Rajputs directly from Vedic and epic sources (e.g., Vaidya 1924,7; Asopa 1972, 1976, 21-24) are unconvincing, and Asopa's epic references (1972, 1976, 11) are either far-fetched or unintelligible. 442 of Rethinking India’s Oral and Classical Epics Will leave any admin action to Bishonen. -Abecedare 16:30, 18 June 2023 (UTC)
'From Sitush in the same discussion':As far as I am concerned, this putative etymology is a figment. We have for years had reliable sources that indicate no mention before the 14C or thereabouts and not even the most trenchant of pov-pushers/sockfarms has suggested the community name is directly related to Rajputra. - Sitush 20:37, 18 June 2023 (UTC) (from Sitush to Dympies) I am an experienced non-admin and purely in the context of this discussion I think you are trying to glorify a caste in a non-compliant way. Whether you have done that before, make a habit of it/aren't learning, are being tendentious and/or repeatedly disruptive etc is something I haven't looked into but the words "thin ice" certainly come to mind.Sitush (talk) 08:48, 19 June 2023 (UTC)
This is why I said that we are back to square one.
Thanks LukeEmily (talk) 20:50, 27 October 2024 (UTC)
- LukeEmily, as now you are short of sources, you have resorted to sharing comments of other editors. Like in your last comment, you shared your views, now you are sharing their views. We explicitly go by sources and if notable authors have mentioned Kathasaritasagara and Rajatarangini while discussing the broader Rajput subject, it becomes WP:DUE irrespective of our WP:OR.
- Again and again, you are misquoting my content. You say that the dispute is not about the derivation of the word Rajput from Rajaputra. But "Early references" section is meant to deal with terms only. If you wish to discuss their humble origins quoting scholars, there is "Scholars' views" section. Where does my content imply that Rajputs descended from sons of kings? Its more about the term Rajput deriving from the term Rajputra whose literal meaning is "son of king" but by the beginning of 12th century, it had completely lost its literal meaning and now being used for people doing humble jobs like that of mercenary soldiers. Both sources further say that the term Rajputra had now acquired the connotations of caste (or group of castes), which later came to be known as Rajput in Hindi.
- You clearly have some knowledge deficit. I would like you to read Emergence as a community sub-section to understand the link between Rajput and Rajputra. You would also get some glimpse of Kalhana's Rajatarangini (which is considered an important text for history of Rajputs) whose mention in "Early references" is being opposed by you here. Dympies (talk) 00:45, 28 October 2024 (UTC)
- Dympies, putting rajputra in the "origin" section is completely misleading to the readers.LukeEmily (talk) 08:58, 28 October 2024 (UTC)
The issue is that the community is not derived from Rajputra. For example, "Luke" may be based on Luke the Evangelist but that does not mean that I have descended from him. That would be an absurd claim!
this statement by LukeEmily and this oneBut there seems to be a subtle attempt in the current article to fallaciously imply that the age of the word Rajputra is indicative of the age of the community and that's it's literal meaning is indicative of the community's origins.
from Abecedare explains it all. Although Dympies is putting good sources but they are irrelevant here. They only say that how the term Rajput came into existence and it doesn't mean they descended from Rajputra. Before this thread becomes long let me tag RegentsPark and Vanamonde93 to read it to understand what is the issue that resurfaces again and again on this article. Adamantine123 (talk) 01:56, 28 October 2024 (UTC)- I have been explaining to you since before but it doesn't seem you are willing to accept the points at all. Your rebuttal is not convincing. Explained so many times that "Early references" is not meant to discuss the genes of Rajputs but rather the early mentions of terms like Rajput and Rajputra (the term which, as per scholars, became Rajput in Hindi and other recent languages). And Adamantine123, your canvassing won't help here as you yourself acknowledge that the sources are good. Dympies (talk) 02:20, 28 October 2024 (UTC)
- You clearly have some knowledge deficit. I would like you to read Emergence as a community sub-section to understand the link between Rajput and Rajputra. You would also get some glimpse of Kalhana's Rajatarangini (which is considered an important text for history of Rajputs) whose mention in "Early references" is being opposed by you here. Dympies (talk) 00:45, 28 October 2024 (UTC)
- If I am understanding correctly, the dispute here is not about the etymological connection to "Rajputra" per se, it's about whether that term can be translated in context to "son of a king", and therefore whether that translation applies to the name Rajput - do I have that right? What are the sources which provide information about that translation? Vanamonde93 (talk) 04:45, 28 October 2024 (UTC)
- The author has discussed Kashmir's texts in context of Rajputs. And if one among the two texts is as notable as Rajatarangini, its mention becomes a must in "Early references". Dympies (talk) 05:46, 28 October 2024 (UTC)
- @Vanamonde93:, please look at the discussion and comments from Sitush and @Abecedare:. That thread explains the issue and analysis very well. Dympies was banned from editing any Rajput related articles for exactly the same issue(caste promotion) in 2023 after a discussion about his edits. The issue was that he was falsely and subtlety portraying that the community has descended from princes (as written by abecedare). Then Dympies was topic banned later (not just for Rajputs) but south asia related topics - if I remember correctly. Later his ban was lifted which resulted in the topic ban for Rajputs being automatically lifted. I did not check when his topic ban was removed but now the edits being made by him are the giving the same false narrative for which he was topic banned in the first place. The bottom line is that word Rajput is derived from Rajputra but that is not the same as Rajputs being the descendants of Rajputras(princes). Please also see my quotes in green above. I found some false narrative in some of his other edits too but will mention them separately.LukeEmily (talk) 08:28, 28 October 2024 (UTC)
- Thanks LukeEmily for the detailed explanation. Ekdalian (talk) 08:34, 28 October 2024 (UTC)
- This is the main comment from Abecedare which sums up the issue.
I haven't confirmed as to who's responsible exactly (possibly Dympies through edits such as , , ), but the current version of the article confuses the issue of the origins of the word "Rajput" with the origin of the community (now) referred to with that name. And for the average reader, this confusion would have the effect of pushing back the origins of the Rajput community by a few millennia and tracing it to royalty. The POV-pushing issue in short: I don't believe that there is much dispute that the word "Rajput" is derived from the word "Rajputra" (lit. son of Kings), and I would easily accept that the latter word appears in texts dating to BCE, or even that the two words were sometimes used interchangeably in the Medieval times. But there seems to be a subtle attempt in the current article to (fallaciously) imply that the age of the word Rajputra is indicative of the age of the community and that's it's literal meaning is indicative of the community's origins. I say subtle because this effect is achieved not through some outright false statement (afaict) but by, for example, positioning the unduly lengthy Early references section, which deals mainly with the word Rajputra and how it has been used, at the head of the Origins section
. Sorry for the reposting this as the thread is long. LukeEmily (talk) 08:42, 28 October 2024 (UTC)
I am restoring the content with some changes in content and an additional quote. This should settle the dispute. If someone still has any objection, feel free to revert. Dympies (talk) 08:56, 28 October 2024 (UTC)
- The word etymology is better as early reference means ancient text like Mahabharata and Ramayana were refering to Rajput community. This validates the pseudo-historical theory that Rajput community was present from the time of Mahabharata and Ramayana and thus invalidates the theories given by modern scholars that they were descendants of local and foreign tribes and were peasant pastoralists earlier. Adamantine123 (talk) 06:38, 29 October 2024 (UTC)
Ideal heading for "Early references"
LukeEmily, you have messed up long standing section of "Early references" by making two edits and . In the first edit, you gave the following edit summary: The concern by several editors (including admin and Sitush) has been your subtle attempt to mix up words Rajputra and rajput and associate rajputra with the community. Why are you against separating them as far as the references are concerned?
Now, after my long-long explanations in previous threads, nobody will seriously give me false blame of mixing up rajput and rajputra but you are not among them. Most of the known writers have no issue mixing them but you again and again quote an year old discussion to get things changed according to your WP:OR. Anyone having a basic knowledge of tatsama and tadbhava words will not make a fuss over "rajputra" becoming "rajput" while switching from Sanskrit to younger dialects.
You say that readers may wrongly take the "early references" as references to the community. Why do you doubt the basic English of our readers when in this section, we have discussed only the terms. Read this quote given in the citation for Bakhshali manuscript : "Deeply set in the minds of historians of all hues is the association of medieval Rajasthan with the Rajputs. This is so deeply set indeed that one tends to forget that the earliest reference to the Rajputra, in a sense other than that of a prince, comes not from the records of Rajasthan, but occurs in the Bakhshali manuscript (seventh century) from North West Frontier Province, in the sense of mercenary soldier and as Irfan Habib points out in the Chachnama (eigth century) of Sind, in the sense of an elite horsemen."
Most of the other references in the section are also given in this manner only by their respective authors. They mention these texts while discussing the broader Rajput topic. They refrain from giving a verdict by calling them references to the community and retain the ambiguity leaving it for readers to decide. We are supposed to follow their style of writing without applying our WP:OR. The content which wasn't discussed by writers in context of Rajputs like Lichhavi inscriptions and Pali canon has already been removed from the section long back.
As far as keeping all mentions in the same para is concerned, we give importance to the chronological order. After the mentions of Rajputra in 7th-8th century, the term "Thakur" appears in Chachnama and a 10th century text. Then again "rajputra" comes in 12th century text followed by "rajput" in 14th century (at last, obviously). Segregating the three terms in three different sub-sections will only make it messy (like we have in present version).
In your second edit, you moved a poorly sourced para from origin section to "etymology of rajput" sub-section. First, you need to check the meaning of "etymology" in dictionary. When you talk about its etymology, the term "rajput" literally means nothing but "son of king". We don't need to discuss etymology again and again as it is well-described in the first lead line itself. Also, mentioning "etymology" in heading of section unnecessarily elongates it which has already become very long thanks to your repeated objections. I am hence, re-titling the section to "Early references to terms like rajputra,rajput,thakur. I hope this will settle the dispute. Dympies (talk) 18:26, 31 October 2024 (UTC)
- Dympies, your edit is only going to confuse the readers! Stop POV-pushing please; you do not have the consensus! Thanks. Ekdalian (talk) 18:44, 31 October 2024 (UTC)
- Agree no changes required in the section of Etymology and Early references. ®asteem Talk 21:00, 31 October 2024 (UTC)
- Dympies, did you read this comment by @Sitush: written to you?
We have for years had reliable sources that indicate no mention before the 14C or thereabouts and not even the most trenchant of pov-pushers/sockfarms has suggested the community name is directly related to Rajputra. - Sitush 20:37, 18 June 2023 (UTC) (from Sitush to Dympies) I am an experienced non-admin and purely in the context of this discussion I think you are trying to glorify a caste in a non-compliant way. Whether you have done that before, make a habit of it/aren't learning, are being tendentious and/or repeatedly disruptive etc is something I haven't looked into but the words "thin ice" certainly come to mind.Sitush (talk) 08:48, 19 June 2023 (UTC)
. After this discussion, the page was supposed to be fixed. It was not fixed(maybe other editors including myself were working on other topics and were not interested in Rajput). Hence, the argument about long standing does not hold water. You brought attention back to this page. It is very clear from the sources that Rajputs and Rajputras are different and we cannot confuse the readers. Editors including admins have objected to your edits that confuse the two words. Since there is an unnecessary discussion on Rajputra(prince) and its references, an average reader will most likely confuse the two words on a caste page. Nothing has been removed. So what is the objection? Rajputra and Rajput have distinct meanings so they cannot be mixed up. You said,When you talk about its etymology, the term "rajput" literally means nothing but "son of king"
. This may be your opinion, but the sources do not agree with you. There are many but just giving one from the articleThe term 'Rajput' before the fifteenth century meant 'horse soldier', 'trooper', 'headman of a village' or 'subordinate chief'. Moreover, individuals with whom the word was associated were generally considered to be products of varna–samkara of mixed caste origin, and thus inferior in rank to Kshatriyas
. Trooper does not mean son of a king. The other interesting point to notice is that the word Rajput itself has many different meanings. For example, horse soldier is not necessarily the same as trooper. Even Hindu scriptures(Sudracarasiromani , Sudrakamalakara , etc) have defined the word "Rajput" as a person with mix varna who has to follow the ritual duties of a shudra although he may fight. But let us not discuss hindu scriptures here. But the bottom line is we cannot confuse the readers by mixing Rajputra and Rajput.LukeEmily (talk) 01:19, 2 November 2024 (UTC)- I was talking specifically about etymology of the term rajput rather than its different connotations, and its etymology is clear (per sources) that rajput is derived from rajaputra. If you have sources talking about specific texts giving different meanings of rajput, they are welcome for inclusion in the section. Anyways, I have no problem in segregating the section into three sub-sections if it helps our readers. Dympies (talk) 10:29, 2 November 2024 (UTC)
- @LukeEmily: You should avoid bringing up your interpretation of hindu shastras to make a point. This is plain original research and is contrary to talk page guidelines. Consider this a formal warning. Ratnahastin (talk) 14:31, 2 November 2024 (UTC)
Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 1 November 2024
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103.159.45.191 (talk) 01:57, 1 November 2024 (UTC)
Rajputs never originated from peasant or pastoral communities they were kings as mentioned in their name
- Not done. It is not clear what edits you are suggesting. Dympies (talk) 05:09, 1 November 2024 (UTC)
S.L.Dhani
@Ratnahastin:, I did not know Dhani was lawyer. If he is not reliable for caste pages, then I am OK with my edit being reverted. Thanks for your edit. LukeEmily (talk) 18:58, 2 November 2024 (UTC)
Etymology of term Rajput
The present version of this sub-section (Rajput#Rajput) says that the term was used for troopers, village head etc before 15th century. However in the same sub-section we have discussed Kirtilata (1380) which mentions Rajput among castes (jati) inhabiting the Jaunpur city. How should we address this clear contradiction? While Kirtilata's mention seems more authentic as it gives us full quotes (in Devanagari) along with author's interpretation, it seems Dirk Kolff wasn't aware of this mention citing whom 2-3 authors have written the same misinforming thing. Dympies (talk) 19:39, 2 November 2024 (UTC)
- It is not a contradiction. Have all Rajputs of today descended from the Rajputs mentioned in the poem in Jaunpur city? First, even if there were a contradiction, opinion of a poet from the 13th century can hardly match the opinion of modern scholars who have a lot more research and can access a lot of documentation by different writers. Secondly, it not clear if Vidyapati (while referring to Jati) simply meant class of people performing an occupation (not hereditary) or a class that was hereditary. It is quite well known that in olden days castes were flexible - otherwise terms such as sanskritisation and rajputisation would not exist. Thirdly, he discusses a specific city. Also, does vidyapati say that none of these Rajputs were troopers? Trying to call so many modern sources wrong based on a (vague or otherwise) verse from a 13th century poem is WP:OR. Also, see quotes by Eaton who has summarized the issue.LukeEmily (talk) 01:53, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
- Vidyapati talks of Rajput kulas (कुल), so its obviously hereditary in nature. And no, Vidyapati doesn't say that they were not troopers but Kolff means to imply that the term was never used to refer to a caste before 15th century and that is contradicted by Kirtilata. Dympies (talk) 18:07, 4 November 2024 (UTC)
- This is WP:OR. We just need to stick to modern reliable sources rather than guess what a 13th century poet meant in a poem or even if he was accurate if he actually meant caste in its present sense.LukeEmily (talk) 21:42, 4 November 2024 (UTC)
- Dympies, I remember that you were earlier talking about including only the meaning of term Rajputra with no connection to modern day Rajputs. But, now, it seems that change in the entire article is going on by doing WP:SYNTH of sources and WP:OR. Adamantine123 (talk) 04:00, 5 November 2024 (UTC)
- Adamantine123, the entire structure of the article's upper sections is undergoing change thanks to LukeEmily's push for doing so by citing Oxford dictionary for meaning of etymology. Dympies (talk) 04:19, 5 November 2024 (UTC)
- @Adamantine123: Can you cite examples that makes you believe that the "change in the entire article is going on by doing WP:SYNTH of sources and WP:OR." ? Ratnahastin (talk) 04:24, 5 November 2024 (UTC)
- This edit, here actual meaning of the word Rajput is given by some scholars, but this edit made it an opinion while the literal meaning son of a king is being made the only true meaning forcibly. Adamantine123 (talk) 08:04, 5 November 2024 (UTC)
- This isn't synthesis. As Kirtilata contradicts the content, it would be called their "opinion" only. Dympies (talk) 14:18, 5 November 2024 (UTC)
- Opinion of mediaeval period writers and poet is not comparable to modern scholars. They were biased. Adamantine123 (talk) 16:59, 5 November 2024 (UTC)
- Opinion is not coming from Vidyapati. His is the primary source but its interpretation is coming from a modern writer only. Dympies (talk) 06:33, 6 November 2024 (UTC)
- Dympies, why are you trying to put the view of Kalhana, a medieval era author as one of the theory of origin of Rajput caste in origin section ?. I think this was already discussed and senior editors like Sitush explained it earlier to you. Adamantine123 (talk) 12:56, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
- Opinion is not coming from Vidyapati. His is the primary source but its interpretation is coming from a modern writer only. Dympies (talk) 06:33, 6 November 2024 (UTC)
- Opinion of mediaeval period writers and poet is not comparable to modern scholars. They were biased. Adamantine123 (talk) 16:59, 5 November 2024 (UTC)
- This isn't synthesis. As Kirtilata contradicts the content, it would be called their "opinion" only. Dympies (talk) 14:18, 5 November 2024 (UTC)
- This edit, here actual meaning of the word Rajput is given by some scholars, but this edit made it an opinion while the literal meaning son of a king is being made the only true meaning forcibly. Adamantine123 (talk) 08:04, 5 November 2024 (UTC)
- Dympies, I remember that you were earlier talking about including only the meaning of term Rajputra with no connection to modern day Rajputs. But, now, it seems that change in the entire article is going on by doing WP:SYNTH of sources and WP:OR. Adamantine123 (talk) 04:00, 5 November 2024 (UTC)
- This is WP:OR. We just need to stick to modern reliable sources rather than guess what a 13th century poet meant in a poem or even if he was accurate if he actually meant caste in its present sense.LukeEmily (talk) 21:42, 4 November 2024 (UTC)
- Vidyapati talks of Rajput kulas (कुल), so its obviously hereditary in nature. And no, Vidyapati doesn't say that they were not troopers but Kolff means to imply that the term was never used to refer to a caste before 15th century and that is contradicted by Kirtilata. Dympies (talk) 18:07, 4 November 2024 (UTC)
- It is not a contradiction. Have all Rajputs of today descended from the Rajputs mentioned in the poem in Jaunpur city? First, even if there were a contradiction, opinion of a poet from the 13th century can hardly match the opinion of modern scholars who have a lot more research and can access a lot of documentation by different writers. Secondly, it not clear if Vidyapati (while referring to Jati) simply meant class of people performing an occupation (not hereditary) or a class that was hereditary. It is quite well known that in olden days castes were flexible - otherwise terms such as sanskritisation and rajputisation would not exist. Thirdly, he discusses a specific city. Also, does vidyapati say that none of these Rajputs were troopers? Trying to call so many modern sources wrong based on a (vague or otherwise) verse from a 13th century poem is WP:OR. Also, see quotes by Eaton who has summarized the issue.LukeEmily (talk) 01:53, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
Rajput vs Rajputra
In the Sundarakand, Angad, the son of the Vanara(Monkey) king Vali, is referred to as "Rajputra" by Jambavant, showing how this title was not restricted to humans.
In Yudhakand Adi Kavi Valmiki distinguished the human prince from other princes by referring to him as "Manush Rajputra," meaning "son of the king of men," to prevent any confusion for the readers.
Similarly, in the Yuddha Kanda, Ravana's son Indrajit is referred to as "Rajputra." Here, Valmiki specifically calls him "Rakshasa Rajputra," meaning "son of the king of demons." Regentsparak78 (talk) 07:48, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
- @RegentsPark: Requesting you to take action against this user; just look at the username! Thanks. Ekdalian (talk) 12:12, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
IGNOU Source
The source is a textbook published by the IGNOU for its students. The unit 14 is authored by Prem Kumar , not Nandini Sinha as attributed by LukeEmily. Prem Kumar also only has a masters in arts (ancient Indian history ). That's why I said this source is not reliable enough for these highly contentious claims. And from what I can gather from talkpage archives, LukeEmily appears to be pushing this exact view since past two years despite opposition by multiple established editors including Fowler&fowler and TrangaBellam. I only see this as tendentious editing in an attempt to restore content that has no consensus for inclusion. Ratnahastin (talk) 07:01, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
- @Ratnahastin:, your views are wrong. Nandini Kapur is clearly listed as the contributor and Prem Kumar is a historian by definition. Your other summary about other editor's comments is misleading. The earlier discussions were about the issue of WP:DUE. Now it is due since we are adding references to unrelated things like Rajputra. It makes absolutely no sense to leave out the sources that mention the word Rajput explicitly when there are references being added for the term rajputra but none for rajput. There is an oxford university source that mentions the same. The WP:UNDUE no longer applies. I will discuss more tomorrow.LukeEmily (talk) 09:11, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
Recent Revert: November '24
Hello Ratnahastin, as mentioned in my edit summary, the author is a reliable one and such content from Puranas are mentioned in almost all caste related articles! LukeEmily has attributed the same to the author as well. Please mention here why you consider the source as unreliable which is the reason provided by you for the revert. Thanks. Ekdalian (talk) 07:11, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
- @Ekdalian: Check the above section. Ratnahastin (talk) 07:12, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
- Sorry, missed the above section where you have explained your views. Ekdalian (talk) 07:12, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
- @Ekdalian:, his views are wrong. Nandini Kapur is clearly listed as the contributor and Prem Kumar is a historian by definition. Ratnahastins other summary about other editor's comments is misleading. The earlier discussions were about the issue of WP:DUE. Now it is due since we are adding references to unrelated things like Rajputra. It makes absolutely no sense to leave out the sources that mention the word Rajput explicitly when there are references being added for the term rajputra but none for rajput. There is an oxford university source that mentions the same. The WP:UNDUE no longer applies.LukeEmily (talk) 09:08, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
- This exact dispute has been discussed at length in past, you are only trying to restore the content that has no consensus for restoration using the same sources. What you're engaging in is called disruptive editing. Ratnahastin (talk) 09:13, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
- No, the issue was the WP:DUE vs WP:UNDUE and TB agreed it was due. At that time, we did not have a long references section and the discussion was left incomplete - so Undue was a valid argument(although I did not agree completely). It is related to Rajputisation and less to Rajput hence there was an issue of undue on the Rajput page. Whether it was due or undue at that time is debatable, but now it is certainly due because of the references section to ancient scriptures. If we remove the references for Rajputra, then it becomes due only for Rajputization and debatable for Rajput. What you are engaging in is called POV pushing. We cannot selectively choose scriptures we like vs don't like. Please do no not mix up the two issues(that issue was different) discussed earlier. Lets chat tomorrow.LukeEmily (talk) 09:29, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
- Also, Ratnahastin, please can you explain why you have not objected to the expansion of Rajputra section that Sitush and admin both disagreed with?09:33, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
- No, the issue was the WP:DUE vs WP:UNDUE and TB agreed it was due. At that time, we did not have a long references section and the discussion was left incomplete - so Undue was a valid argument(although I did not agree completely). It is related to Rajputisation and less to Rajput hence there was an issue of undue on the Rajput page. Whether it was due or undue at that time is debatable, but now it is certainly due because of the references section to ancient scriptures. If we remove the references for Rajputra, then it becomes due only for Rajputization and debatable for Rajput. What you are engaging in is called POV pushing. We cannot selectively choose scriptures we like vs don't like. Please do no not mix up the two issues(that issue was different) discussed earlier. Lets chat tomorrow.LukeEmily (talk) 09:29, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
- This exact dispute has been discussed at length in past, you are only trying to restore the content that has no consensus for restoration using the same sources. What you're engaging in is called disruptive editing. Ratnahastin (talk) 09:13, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
- @Ekdalian:, his views are wrong. Nandini Kapur is clearly listed as the contributor and Prem Kumar is a historian by definition. Ratnahastins other summary about other editor's comments is misleading. The earlier discussions were about the issue of WP:DUE. Now it is due since we are adding references to unrelated things like Rajputra. It makes absolutely no sense to leave out the sources that mention the word Rajput explicitly when there are references being added for the term rajputra but none for rajput. There is an oxford university source that mentions the same. The WP:UNDUE no longer applies.LukeEmily (talk) 09:08, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
LukeEmily, previously, you had a long discussion with users like Akalanka820 and F&f regarding the same and I was under impression that they made you understand that the content is undue for this page. But you have time and again tried to restore the content. A few days back, you added the same content citing a sub-standard book written by an advocate and now you have come up with yet another sub-standard IGNOU open university textbook. You have previously removed content from references section saying KS Singh is not a good source for "controversial content" despite the content not being controversial and coming from his National series (published in OUP). I would remind you that you are considered aware of WP:GSCASTE and WP:ARBIPA topic designation, so you should exercise caution in this area. Dympies (talk) 10:54, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
- This page has been distorted by your addition of long early reference section, which is completely in undue. I propose, we should create a different article on etymology of word Rajputra rather than doing this here. Adamantine123 (talk) 16:18, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
- Making proposals about creating POV forks right after you faced heavy scrutiny over your edits in the caste area is not a good idea. Dympies (talk) 17:39, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
- @Dympies:, why is a PhD(Nandini Kapur) historian substandard? As far as the discussion with F&F was concerned, it was a different context. The point was the Ananya Vajpeyi source discussed Rajputisation. And we did not have a section where rajputras were references at that time - which is the issue now. Second, if you follow it carefully, it was left incomplete. F&F had said in the end that he had just got the source and he is going to read it and post a summary. We never discussed it after that. So the discussion was incomplete. I reiterate, 'it makes no sense at all to mention where Rajputra in mentioned in Hindu scriptures and not mention where Rajput in Hindu scriptures - as mentioned by academic sources. This is no-brainer. Either both are undue or both are due on this page. We cannot cherry pick based on what is offensive and what is not. Vajpeyi is due for Rajputisation but I am not working on that right now. I have no special interest in the Rajput caste and had stopped editing it for more than an year until I saw POV pushing that Sitush and admin had warned against. As far as your implicit threat to @Adamantine123: is concerned, you need to look at the mirror. Adamantine123 did not face heavy scrutiny over caste article edits, only a comment about some assumptions made about editors caste.LukeEmily (talk) 17:48, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
- Why are misattributing the unit-14 to Nandini Kapur, in spite of being told before? Your own source clearly states that it was prepared by Prem Kumar, even the profile I cited lists him as the contributor. Inclusion of Vajpayee was vehemently opposed by Fowler&fowler in the past too, you have no consensus to include anything from her work. I really do not understand what makes you think Dympies's message was an "implicit threat" to Adamantine123, it appears to be an assumption of bad faith on your part. I'll reiterate what Dympies said that you are aware of CT/OPs, therefore you should follow talkpage guidelines closely. Ratnahastin (talk) 18:01, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
- Ratnahastin, please click the link given in the citation: here. The contributors are both Kapur and Prem Kumar for item 14. Secondly, both are academics, both are historians. Is it not inappropriate to ask a user not to suggest fork based on something completely unrelated? Was any scrutiny related to edits on caste pages? The answer is no. So why did dympies bring that up on the talk page where we are discussing content?LukeEmily (talk) 01:47, 11 November 2024 (UTC)
- How can you say its completely unrelated when the community decided not to allow creation of seperate page Rajputra and sources in Rajput page establishes its relevance in this page only. Luke, it was you who created different sub-sections for different terms and you yourself contributed to Rajputra sub-section. In fact, in your content, it mentioned Rajputra as a mixed caste, much like scholars say about Rajput caste. So, its silly to give such suggestions when something else is being discussed. Dympies (talk) 08:39, 11 November 2024 (UTC)
- Ratnahastin, please click the link given in the citation: here. The contributors are both Kapur and Prem Kumar for item 14. Secondly, both are academics, both are historians. Is it not inappropriate to ask a user not to suggest fork based on something completely unrelated? Was any scrutiny related to edits on caste pages? The answer is no. So why did dympies bring that up on the talk page where we are discussing content?LukeEmily (talk) 01:47, 11 November 2024 (UTC)
- Let's not discuss about what happened at ANI as admins may have understood everything going out there. Discuss only stuff related to article on this page. Adamantine123 (talk) 07:55, 10 November 2024 (UTC)
- Luke, the main issue with your content is the source. We certainly need better sources for contentious caste topics than an open university textbook. I remember in your last discussion with F&f and Akalanka820, you were seen citing a quora answer. You need to do better than this. Dympies (talk) 18:26, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
- There is no wikipedia rule barring university books. Nandini Kapur is a historian and that's enough. I saw Ratnahastin citing a non historian here which was removed by Rasteem. That's bad. Adamantine123 (talk) 07:58, 10 November 2024 (UTC)
- Why are misattributing the unit-14 to Nandini Kapur, in spite of being told before? Your own source clearly states that it was prepared by Prem Kumar, even the profile I cited lists him as the contributor. Inclusion of Vajpayee was vehemently opposed by Fowler&fowler in the past too, you have no consensus to include anything from her work. I really do not understand what makes you think Dympies's message was an "implicit threat" to Adamantine123, it appears to be an assumption of bad faith on your part. I'll reiterate what Dympies said that you are aware of CT/OPs, therefore you should follow talkpage guidelines closely. Ratnahastin (talk) 18:01, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
- Avoid making comments targeting editors on this page. Please focus on the issue with articles only. Adamantine123 (talk) 07:42, 10 November 2024 (UTC)
- @Adamantine123, @Dympies, @LukeEmily As all of you are already discussing here some disputes, I'd like to know your opinions, as I believe the removal of two paragraphs from Rajput should be removed. One paragraph is backed by non-established/Non reliable historian per Fringe & Dubious need a remove And also, I believe the word (Thakur) in Etymology and meaning is more related to Thakur (title) so it should be removed and moved there in Thakur (title)#Etymology and meaning As this is only backed by one source, it is contradictory to all other theories in the section and much confusing. ®asteem Talk 08:35, 10 November 2024 (UTC)
- The Thakur sub-section is there to stay. It can be expanded later. Dympies (talk) 09:01, 10 November 2024 (UTC)
- @Dympies Disagree no need to expand Thakur here. As there on Thakur (title) have already some theories regarding the Etomology and origin of the word Thakur. It is contradictory and we'll confusing to all other theories of Etomology and early references of the word Rajputara & Rajput. ®asteem Talk 10:30, 10 November 2024 (UTC)
- The section is not about etymology alone but it covers "Early references" too. If scholars find it relevant to discuss Thakur in context of Rajputs, then so do we. Dympies (talk) 11:13, 10 November 2024 (UTC)
- Agree with @Rasteem:. It is confusing to the average reader.LukeEmily (talk) 23:35, 13 November 2024 (UTC)
- Yes it is very confusing to all other theories in the section also it is contradictory to all other early references for the words "Rajput" and Rajputra". When Thakur (title) page already have related theories of origin of the word Thakur then why not to add this theory also there? Also Thakur (title) article has mentioned about the "Rajput" community & usage of title for the community. Per WP:Due it should be removed from this article and added there on Thakur (title)#Etymology and meaning. ®asteem Talk 23:45, 13 November 2024 (UTC)
- How can you call it undue when the term is clearly discussed by writers in context of Rajputs? Infact, the terms thakur and rajput are used interchangeably to refer to the caste. Dympies (talk) 17:08, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
- Yes it is very confusing to all other theories in the section also it is contradictory to all other early references for the words "Rajput" and Rajputra". When Thakur (title) page already have related theories of origin of the word Thakur then why not to add this theory also there? Also Thakur (title) article has mentioned about the "Rajput" community & usage of title for the community. Per WP:Due it should be removed from this article and added there on Thakur (title)#Etymology and meaning. ®asteem Talk 23:45, 13 November 2024 (UTC)
- Agree with @Rasteem:. It is confusing to the average reader.LukeEmily (talk) 23:35, 13 November 2024 (UTC)
- The section is not about etymology alone but it covers "Early references" too. If scholars find it relevant to discuss Thakur in context of Rajputs, then so do we. Dympies (talk) 11:13, 10 November 2024 (UTC)
- @Dympies Disagree no need to expand Thakur here. As there on Thakur (title) have already some theories regarding the Etomology and origin of the word Thakur. It is contradictory and we'll confusing to all other theories of Etomology and early references of the word Rajputara & Rajput. ®asteem Talk 10:30, 10 November 2024 (UTC)
- The Thakur sub-section is there to stay. It can be expanded later. Dympies (talk) 09:01, 10 November 2024 (UTC)
- @Adamantine123, @Dympies, @LukeEmily As all of you are already discussing here some disputes, I'd like to know your opinions, as I believe the removal of two paragraphs from Rajput should be removed. One paragraph is backed by non-established/Non reliable historian per Fringe & Dubious need a remove And also, I believe the word (Thakur) in Etymology and meaning is more related to Thakur (title) so it should be removed and moved there in Thakur (title)#Etymology and meaning As this is only backed by one source, it is contradictory to all other theories in the section and much confusing. ®asteem Talk 08:35, 10 November 2024 (UTC)
- @Dympies:, why is a PhD(Nandini Kapur) historian substandard? As far as the discussion with F&F was concerned, it was a different context. The point was the Ananya Vajpeyi source discussed Rajputisation. And we did not have a section where rajputras were references at that time - which is the issue now. Second, if you follow it carefully, it was left incomplete. F&F had said in the end that he had just got the source and he is going to read it and post a summary. We never discussed it after that. So the discussion was incomplete. I reiterate, 'it makes no sense at all to mention where Rajputra in mentioned in Hindu scriptures and not mention where Rajput in Hindu scriptures - as mentioned by academic sources. This is no-brainer. Either both are undue or both are due on this page. We cannot cherry pick based on what is offensive and what is not. Vajpeyi is due for Rajputisation but I am not working on that right now. I have no special interest in the Rajput caste and had stopped editing it for more than an year until I saw POV pushing that Sitush and admin had warned against. As far as your implicit threat to @Adamantine123: is concerned, you need to look at the mirror. Adamantine123 did not face heavy scrutiny over caste article edits, only a comment about some assumptions made about editors caste.LukeEmily (talk) 17:48, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
- Making proposals about creating POV forks right after you faced heavy scrutiny over your edits in the caste area is not a good idea. Dympies (talk) 17:39, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
Section order
@LukeEmily: Per MOS:SNO, We usually order the sections based on the precedence of similar articles. For example, the articles such as Dalit#Terminology, Ahir#Etymology, Gavli#Etymology, Bania (caste)#Etymology have etymology/terminology section at the top and even in non-caste social group articles, we see a precedent for the etymology section being first in terms of order, e.g at Marathi people#Etymology, Bengalis#Etymology, Punjabis#Etymology, etc. Also, there is no need for moving such a detailed etymology section down as it breaks the flow of the article and feels out of place. - Ratnahastin (talk) 15:43, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
- Why are you edit warring aggressively with different users on large number of Rajput related pages for issues that doesn't hold importance. Adamantine123 (talk) 23:39, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
- Talk page is not for sharing your grievances with other users but to discuss the article. Given your edit summary and comment here, it seems you do not have any valid rationale to revert that edit and you only did so to illustrate a WP:POINT, which is disruptive.
issues that doesn't hold importance
- Perhaps you should read what I wrote above. It's not a minor issue. - Ratnahastin (talk) 01:31, 17 November 2024 (UTC)- @Ratnahastin and Adamantine123:, OK Thanks. Then I don't have issues with the etymology section being at the top per se as long as it is not bloated with POV information which leads to a false narrative for a new reader. It should include only early references (scriptural) and meaning of Rajput/rajputra. For example Rajputra is mentioned in Ramayana, etc and it means so and so and rajput is mentioned in so and so scriptures and it means so and so. Right now it looks like a lot of information from origin and emergence of a community is present there selectively in a POV manner. I will look more into recent changes as I have been away for a week or so. Will comment more soon.LukeEmily (talk) 13:25, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
- Talk page is not for sharing your grievances with other users but to discuss the article. Given your edit summary and comment here, it seems you do not have any valid rationale to revert that edit and you only did so to illustrate a WP:POINT, which is disruptive.
Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 11 December 2024
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In the Misplaced Pages page about Rajputs,Islam is mentioned in the Religion section.This is straightforward outrageous and unacceptable.Rajputs are simply against Islam,millions of Rajputs like Maharana Pratap have died protecting Hindu religion from Islam.Today if Hindu religion stands prosperous is due to sacrifice of Rajputs or else India would simply be under Sharia law. Remove this as soon as possible as the Rajputs have never been Muslim,together we can make Misplaced Pages more reliable and trust worthy. Thanking you 2409:40C1:3C:BE82:ECB2:D039:BA3A:1B0C (talk) 13:14, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
- Not done Please be specific about the change you would like to see (for example, remove the following text from the article). If you're asking for the removal of sourced content, you will need to explain why the source is not reliable, not appropriate, or improperly used. RegentsPark (comment) 13:52, 11 December 2024 (UTC)
Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 29 December 2024
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Please remove Islam from Religion section of this Misplaced Pages page.Rajputs are Hindus only,they are not even Sikhs. 2409:40C1:3C:9478:A827:57A9:FD86:438E (talk) 14:13, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
Rajput identity in Dharmashastras, politics and historical facts.
Since, editors have been discussing texts and scriptures mentioning Rajputs, adding a section on the talk page summarizing the opinions of texts, mughals and brahmins. The bottom line is that Brahmins have disagreed with the Kshatriya status, and hence the religious texts says that the Rajputs may fight like a Kshatriya but have to follow the rituals of a shudra. It also shows that the Kshatriya claim is only in political sense.
Ananya Vajpeyi discusses the Rajputs in the context of Hindu Sanskrit Dharmashastra texts and shows the dissonance between the meaning of Rajput in the practical political arena versus the literal meaning of rajaputa in Hindu religious texts and how both meanings could coexist. The Jatinirnayaprakaranama of Sudrakamalakara, an early 1600s Dharmaśāstra text written by Kamalakarabhatta for ugra or rajaputa is the projeny of a Kshatriya father and Shudra mother. Vajpeyi clarifies that although ugra literally means scary or fierce, in this context the medieval writers only used this term in the context of his qualities as a warrior. Seshasakrishna's Sudracarasiromani, a text that predates Sudrakamalakara also supports this definition for a rajaputa. There is a professional and religious distinction: a rajaputa may fight, however, he has to follow the duties similar to sudras or sudrasamana. She says Ugra or rajaputa is listed as one of the six types of a sankarajati(mixed caste) given in the text, whose father's varna is higher than that of the mother, and are thus an anulomajas or "one born in accordance with the natural flow". There are five other types of anulomajas unions given by Kamalakarabhatta. Thus, as per the medieval Brahminical Dharmashastras, Rajputs are a mixed jati.
In the political context, the word meaning edges towards Kshatriya although in Hindu religious texts rajaputa is closer to Shudra. Some emigrant Brahmins may have been involved in Rajputising tribes to the Rajput status.
Despite this, Vajpayi states that, periodically, Brahmins have characterized Rajput as self-seekers, and stated that they are not real Kshatriyas.
Other than establishing marital ties with already established Rajput families, constructing false genealogies and adopting titles such as "rana", Rajputising also involved starting the pretensions of rituals of twice-borns ( wearing sacred thread etc.).
However, one ritual that was not given much significance was the Abhisheka. When a clan leader was made king by the Mughal emperor, the Tika mark on the head of leader by the Muslim emperor confirmed his Royal status and the Hindu ritual of Abhisheka was only of secondary importance. Aurangzeb eventually stopped the custom of Tika and the custom was replaced by bowing or taslim to the Mughal emperor, who would return the salute. This possibly implies that it was still up to the Mughal emperor to ultimately give or deny the Rajput status to the clan leader.
The description of Rajputs in the Hindu Dharmashastras, self image that the Rajputs presented, and the Mughal view of the Rajputs was disparate. This incongruity, according to Vajpayi makes the Rajput identity Polyphonous. LukeEmily (talk) 10:50, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
- You are misinterpreting the source again it seems. This is after you were warned by Fowler&fowler for doing the same exact thing with the same source, it is clear that you do not understand what Vajpeyi is saying so you should stop bringing her up. Dympies (talk) 01:19, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
- You can feel free correct my misunderstanding of the source. I have stricken out the last part the Ratnahastin objected to - will read it again. Please see the entire discussion with Fowler&Fowler. It was left incomplete. Fowler&Fowler was going to post a summary of the source since he had not read the source during the discussion and had just received a copy later. There was no discussion of the source after F&F got the copy. The issue at the time was WP:DUE since we had not discussed any scriptures on the page. Trangabellum did not agree but I agreed with F&F at the time. So there was no consensus. I was grateful to F&F for suggesting an excellent Sanksrit book - and I got a copy of it. (I need to thank F&F for the suggestion - the book is excellent). But the context has changed now. Too many irrelevant scriptures have been added since then. Also, after the discussion with F&F, I had contacted a retired Sanskrit scholar (well known and hence I cannot name the scholar here and the person does not edit wikipedia to the best of my knowledge) and requested to look at the sudrakamalakara (original sanskrit text) and compare it with Vajpayee. He had agreed that Vajpayee's interpretation was 100% accurate. He also told me how to get a copy of the images of the handwritten scripture. Anyway, that would come under WP:OR so the opinion of the Sanksrit scholar can be dismissed if you want. However, if you feel my interpretation of the source is wrong, please feel can you correct it?LukeEmily (talk) 03:31, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
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