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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 In literature  





3 See also  





4 References  





5 Further reading  














Dogar






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


The Dogar are a Punjabi people of Muslim heritage (bradari).[1] 'Dogar' is commonly used as a last name.[1]

History[edit]

Dogar people settled in Punjab during the Medieval period.[2] They have been classified as a branch of the Rajput[3] (a large cluster of interrelated peoples from the Indian subcontinent). Initially a pastoral people, the Dogar took up agriculture in the Punjab, where they became owners of land in the relatively arid central area where cultivation required particularly strenuous work.[4] In addition to cultivating crops such as jowar (millet) and wheat, they seem partly to have continued pastoral practices, sometimes as nomads.[2] The arid conditions proved challenging, especially in the light of competition from peoples with more established agricultural ways (notably the Jats), and over the centuries the Dogar people developed a long-lasting reputation for marauding behaviour,[4] such as animal raiding and other types of theft, including highway robbery.[2]

In the late 17th century, the Dogars residing within the faujdari of Lakhi Jangal (in present-day Multan) were among the tribes that challenged the authority of the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb.[5]

In literature[edit]

In the Sufi poet Waris Shah's tragic romance of 1766, Heer Ranjha, Dogars are scorned as commoners (along with Jats and other agricultural groups).[6]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b John, A (2009). Two dialects one region: a sociolinguistic approach to dialects as identity markers (PDF) (MA thesis). Ball State University. Archived from the original on 5 November 2022.
  • ^ a b c Singh, C (1988). "Conformity and conflict: tribes and the 'agrarian system' of Mughal India" (PDF). The Indian Economic & Social History Review. 25 (3): 319–340. doi:10.1177/001946468802500302.[permanent dead link]
  • ^ Fiaz, HM; Akhtar, S; Rind, AA (2021). "Socio-cultural condition of South Punjab: a case of Muzaffargarh District". International Research Journal of Education and Innovation. 2 (2): 21–40. doi:10.53575/irjei.3-v2.2(21)21-40.
  • ^ a b Chaudhuri, BB (2008). Peasant History of Late Pre-colonial and Colonial India. Vol. 8. Pearson Education India. pp. 194–195. ISBN 978-8-13171-688-5.
  • ^ Singh C (1988). "Centre and periphery in the Mughal State: the case of seventeenth-century Panjab". Modern Asian Studies. 22 (2). 313. doi:10.1017/s0026749x00000986. JSTOR 312624. S2CID 144152388.
  • ^ Gaeffke, P (1991). "Hīr Vāriṡ Śāh, poème panjabi du XVIIIe siècle: Introduction, translittération, traduction et commentaire. Tome I, strophes 1 à 110 by Denis Matringe [review]". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 111 (2): 408–409. doi:10.2307/604050. JSTOR 604050. ...and we come across scathing remarks about 'plebeians' such as Jats, Dogars and other agricultural castes.
  • Further reading[edit]

    Agrawal

    Arains

  • Mian
  • Mehr
  • Kardar
  • Ramay
  • Ahirs

  • Ahirs
  • Ghosi
  • Hindu Ghosi
  • Aharwar
  • Ranghar
  • Awan

  • Ahmed Gul Khel
  • Budhal
  • Khattar
  • Khokhar
  • Malik
  • Chauhans

    Scheduled Castes

  • Balmiki
  • Bazigar
  • Chamar
  • Khatik
  • Mazhabi Sikh
  • Mochi
  • Mirasi
  • Nat
  • Ramdasia Sikh
  • Ravidasi
  • Gakhars

    Gurjars

  • Bhati
  • Baisla
  • Jats

  • Bajwa
  • Bhutta
  • Buttar
  • Chaudhary
  • Cheema
  • Chohan
  • Dhankhar
  • Deol
  • Gill
  • Grewal
  • Jaswal
  • Kahlon
  • Kharal
  • Khokhar
  • Maan
  • Malhi
  • Noon
  • Ranjha
  • Randhawa
  • Sandhu
  • Sekhon
  • Sidhu
  • Sial tribe
  • Sipra
  • Sodhi
  • Sohal
  • Tiwana
  • Uppal
  • Virk
  • Warraich
  • Wyne
  • Labana

    Khatris

  • Bhamba
  • Bhambri
  • Bhandari
  • Bhasin
  • Bindra
  • Chadha
  • Chopra
  • Dhawan
  • Duggal
  • Gambhir
  • Ghai
  • Gujral
  • Kakkar
  • Kandhari
  • Kapoor
  • Khanna
  • Khattar
  • Khosla
  • Khukhrain
  • Kohli
  • Khullar
  • Madhok
  • Mahendru
  • Makan
  • Malhotra
  • Mehra
  • Mehrotra
  • Nagpal
  • Nanda
  • Narula
  • Nayyar
  • Oberoi
  • Puri
  • Roshan
  • Sabharwal
  • Sahni
  • Sehgal
  • Seth
  • Sethi
  • Sodhi
  • Soni
  • Talwar
  • Tandon
  • Thapar
  • Trehan
  • Vadera
  • Vadra
  • Vohra
  • Mohyal Brahmins

  • Bhimwal
  • Chhibber
  • Datt
  • Lau
  • Mohan
  • Vaid
  • Rajputs

  • Bhatti
  • Janjua
  • Rathore
  • Chauhan
  • Minhas
  • Jaswal
  • Jamwal
  • Rana
  • Raja
  • Wattoo
  • Tarkhans

  • Sohal
  • Others

  • Bagga
  • Bakarwal
  • Bania
  • Dogar
  • Kamboj
  • Kumhar
  • Saini
  • Sansi
  • Sayyid
  • Shaikh

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dogar&oldid=1229956981"

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