The term "Maratha" originally referred to the
speakers of the Marathi language. In the 17th century, it emerged as a
designation for soldiers serving in the armies of Deccan sultanates (and later
Shivaji). A number of Maratha warriors, including Shivaji's father, Shahaji,
originally served in those armies. By the mid-1660s, Shivaji had established an
independent Maratha kingdom. After his death, Marathas fought under his sons
and defeated Aurangzeb in the war of 27 years. It was further expanded into a
vast empire by Maratha Confederacy including Peshwas, stretching from central
India in the south, to Peshawar (in
modern-day Pakistan) on the Afghanistan border in the north, and with
expeditions to Bengal in the east. By the 19th century, the empire had become a
confederacy of individual states controlled by Maratha chiefs such as Gaikwads
of Baroda, the Holkars of Indore, the Scindias of Gwalior, the Puars of Dhar
and Dewas, and Bhonsles of Nagpur. The Confederacy remained the pre-eminent
power in India until their defeat by the British East India Company in the
Third Anglo-Maratha War (1817–1818).
By 19th century, the term Maratha had several
interpretations in the British administrative records. In the Thane District
Gazetteer of 1882, the term was used to denote elite layers within various
castes: for example, "Maratha-Agri" within Agri caste,
"Maratha-Koli" within Koli caste and so on. In the Pune District, the
words Kunbi and Maratha had become synonymous, giving rise to the Maratha-Kunbi
caste complex. The Pune District Gazetteer of 1882 divided the Kunbis into two
classes: Marathas and other Kunbis. The 1901 census listed three groups within
the Maratha-Kunbi caste complex: "Marathas proper", "Maratha
Kunbis" and "Konkani Marathas". The Kunbi class comprised
agricultural workers and soldiers. The upper-class "Marathas proper"
(comprising 96 clans) claimed Rajput descent with Kshatriya status, and
included princes, officers and landowners. Some of the Maratha clans claiming
Rajput descent include Bhonsales (from Sisodias), Chavans (from Chauhans), and
Pawar (from Parmar).
Gradually, the term Maratha came to denote an endogamous
caste. From 1900 onwards, the Satyashodhak Samaj movement defined the Marathas
as a broader social category of non-Brahmin groups. These non-Brahmins gained
prominence in Indian National Congress during the Indian independence movement.
In independent India, these Marathas became the dominant political force in the
newly-formed state of Maharashtra.
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