24/11/2024
The Gujar are a pastoralist tribe indigenous to the Pahari Hills of Western Punjab. Between the 4th-7th century they joined the Alkhan Huns in their invasion of India, with the resulting migration and conquests across the region.
As per the 1931 Census, Gujars were split about equally between Muslims and Hindus.
Muslim Gujars were traditionally concentrated in the Pahari Hill, adjoining the plains of the Indus Valley in Punjab, while Hindu Gujars were traditionally found in the western Ganges basin.
Linguistic surveys from the British period found that Pahari Gujars, largely Muslim, had preserved their pastoral tradition and native language of Gujari, while most of the Hindu Gujars, who had settled down as farmers in the Gangetic Basin, no longer spoke Gujari.
Linguists further specified that true Gujari was centred in the western Pahari Hills (Jammu, Hazara, Swat), while Gujars in the eastern hills (Kangra-Hoshiarpur) and Punjabi plains spoke a "mongrel" dialect of Gujari mixed with Punjabi.
This is supported by interviews with Gujars in the eastern Punjab hills of Himachal and adjoining Gangetic plain (Uttar Pradesh), who identify Jammu-Kashmir and Hazara as their ancestral homeland, where “pure” Gujari is still spoken.
Analysis of various Gujari dialects suggests the existence of an “overarching link-dialect”, found in the Western Pahari hill region of Poonch (red star). The hills between the Chenab and Indus rivers (outlined red) contain the highest concentration of Gujars in South Asia.
Early researchers wrote that “either Gujari is a form of Rajasthani, or Rajasthani is a form of Gujari”.
As a result of this presumed linguistic affinity, and significant Gujar population in Rajasthan (once called Gujara), some have claimed Rajasthan to be the Gujar homeland.
Modern lexical analysis however has found that Gujari is most closely related to Hindko, a dialect spoken in the Pahari Hills adjoining West Punjab.
“There is no reason to suggest a Rajasthani origin” for Gujari.
Genetic PCA suggests that Rajasthani Gujars once clustered with West Pahari Gujars of Pakistan, but over time mixed with and shifted toward Gangetic tribes (red). The reverse is unlikely based on the position of Pakistani Gujars relative to neighbouring Pahari tribes (blue).
The Gujar expansion from the Pahari Hills is often tied to the Hun invasions, as after this period (4th-7th century), we find an explosion of the term “Gujara” across regions traversed both by Hun campaigns and Gujar settlers.
Prior to their invasion of the Gangetic Basin, the Alchon (Alkhan) Huns established themselves as a confederacy across Gandara, Swat, Kashmir, and Punjab.
Toranama soon unified the Huns and established his capital at Akhnur, in the West Pahari hills along the Chenab.
It is likely the Akhnur based Huns enlisted the neighboring, turbulent Gujar hill-tribes into military service.
In the same way centuries later, the Turco-Persians based in Ghazni would enlist the predatory Pashtuns of the nearby Suleiman mountains, for their India campaigns.
The highest concentration of Gujars are found in the Gujrat district of West Punjab, where 19th century Gujar traditions hail the restorer Ali Khan, likely an Islamized version of the Hunnic Alakhan, described in the 12th century by Kalhana as the "Gujara king".
Gujar tribes like the Chauhan and Tomara are considered Rajputs across India.
A 9th century Haryana inscription claims Tomara descend from a Raja Jaula, likely a Sanskritzed reference to Hunnic Shahi Toramana Jauvla, described in a 6th century West Punjab inscription.
It is likely that some number of Gujar adventurers into the Gangetic Basin intermarried with local Kshatriyas, producing some of the ancestors of later Rajputs. Cursory genetic analysis is not inconsistent with such a theory. Were the Gujars perhaps a race of Huns who stormed out of Central Asia to conquer India?
Unlikely, as genetically, the Gujars contain more indigenous (Harappan) and less exotic (Khorasan + East Asian) ancestry than neighbouring Potohar-Pahari tribes.
To recap, the Gujars are a West Pahari tribe that joined the Huns in their invasion of India from the 4th-7th century; those who intermarried with gangetic Kshatriyas became Rajputs, while those who intermarried with gangetic herders (Ahir/Meena) retained the Gujar name.
via ArainGang Twitter

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