Maratha

Maratha
/meuh rah"teuh/, n.
a member of a Hindu people inhabiting central and western India.
Also, Mahratta.

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people
also spelled  Mahrattā, or Mahrattī,  

      a major people of India, famed in history as yeoman warriors and champions of Hinduism. Their homeland is the present state of Mahārāshtra, the Marāṭhī-speaking region that extends from Bombay to Goa along the west coast of India and inland about 100 miles (160 km) east of Nāgpur.

      The term Marāṭhā is used in three overlapping senses: within the Marāṭhī-speaking region it refers to the single dominant Marāṭhā caste or to the group of Marāṭhā and Kunbī castes; outside Mahārāshtra, the term often loosely designates the entire regional population speaking the Marāṭhī language, numbering approximately 65,000,000; and, used historically, the term denotes the regional kingdom founded by the Marāṭhā leader Śivājī in the 17th century and expanded by his successors of many castes in the 18th century.

      The Marāṭhā group of castes is a largely rural class of peasant cultivators, landowners, and soldiers. Some Marāṭhā and Kunbī have at times claimed Kshatriya (the warrior and ruling class) standing and supported their claims to this rank by reference to clan names and genealogies linking themselves with epic heroes, Rājput clans of the north, or historic dynasties of the early medieval period. The Marāṭhā and Kunbī group of castes is divided into subregional groupings of coast, western hills, and Deccan Plains, among which there is little intermarriage. Within each subregion, clans of these castes are classed in social circles of decreasing rank. A maximal circle of 96 clans is said to include all true Marāṭhā, but the lists of these 96 clans are highly various and disputed.

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Universalium. 2010.

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