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Bompas, Cecil Henry

"Folklore of the Santal Parganas"

EBOOK FOLKLORE OF THE SANTAL PARGANAS ***


Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Distributed Proofreaders Team,
from scans provided by the Million Book Project


Folklore of the Santal Parganas

Translated by
Cecil Henry Bompas
of the Indian Civil Service

1909


Preface
The Santals are a Munda tribe, a branch of that aboriginal element
which probably entered India from the North East. At the present day
they inhabit the Eastern outskirts of the Chutia Nagpore plateau.
Originally hunters and dwellers in the jungle they are still but
indifferent agriculturists. Like the Mundas and Hos and other
representatives of the race, they are jovial in character, fond of
their rice beer, and ready to take a joke.
Their social organization is very complete; each village has its
headman or manjhi, with his assistant the paranik; the jogmanghi
is charged with the supervision of the morals of the young men and
women; the naeke is the village priest, the godet is the village
constable. Over a group of villages is the pargana or tribal chief.


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