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Manipur at a
glance
The People:
Anthropods, Man had developed his anthrop
area, and laboured upon the surrounding environment for his
survival first. Later his behavior titled towards exploitation of the natural resources of
the biosphere. Therefore, the study of the ekistic elements,
heritage and developmental history of a population becomes essential in highlighting the
bio-conenoses, working in the pertinent environment system wherein the same population
thrives.
Manipur assumes an
isolated entity not only in its geographical setting but also in peopling by virtue of the
land being the buffer zone between the Caucasoid-Dravidian belt of the west and the
oriental Mongoloid belt of the east. Manipur has four main aboriginal ethnic groups viz.,
the Meiteis of the valley and the Nagas,
the Kukis and the Mizos of the
surrounding hill tribes. Incidentally, the term "hillmen"
has the same connotation with "tribesmen. The "Pangals"
(Manipuri Muslims) are the immigrants in the later part of the
history of the land. Anthropometrically, the Meiteis and the hillmen are characterised by short stature, mesorrhine,
mesocephalic (or brachy cephalic)
and leptoproscopic face. The Pangals
on the other hand have long face, mesorrhine, dolicho-mesocephalic head forms. The Meiteis
are of Mongoloid stock with a high percentage of Aryan blood. The original settlers of the
land speak a number of languages and dialects, which have linguistic affinities.
The origin of the Meiteis and other tribes are shrouded with many theories. The Meiteis and the other tribes have been identified with the "Kiratas" of the Vedic literature (Chatterjee,
1950). However, many historians have rejected t`e theory of
Hindu origin of the Meitei. Pemberton (1835) considers them to
be the descendants of a Tartar Colony from N-W frontiers of
G.A. Grierson
put forward another theory that the Tibeto Burman and other Mongolian ethnic groups inhabited the upper courses
of the Yangtza and the Hung-Ho rivers in
Archaeological findings have
revealed that Manipur was inhabited by pre-historic man since stone
age. Cultural relics of pre- and post-historic periods are found from many caves
and open-air sites. Mention may be made of the discovery of caves at Kangkhui
(Ukhrul District), Sangbu (Chandel District), Tharon (Tamenglong District), Nongpok Keithelmanbi (Senapati District), Mongjam (Imphal District) and Wangoo (Bishenpur District). The palaeolithic man lived in caves while the Neolithic lived in open
-air sites. Neolithic man reached the
When Tai origin is questioned,
well-established proto-historic and historic relationships between the Meiteis, Mon-Khmer and the Tai are supposed to have produced Tai
influence on the language and culture of the Meiteis.
The Meiteis
of today are Tibeto-Burman Mongoloid with Australoid, Aryan
and Thai admixture and still blended with some Negrito and
Dravidian elements. This racial blending is intimately hooked to the evolution of a
distinct civilization in Manipur valley. The ethnonym "Meiteis" was originally applied to the "Ningthouja" salai (clan-dynasty),
which was one of the seven salais who ruled seven independent
principalities in the valley in the early part of the recorded history. Later on the Ningthouja salai overruled other
principalities thereby absorbing the different social groups thereof to form the "Meiteis. Again, Mc Culloch (1859) and
Brown (1874) subscribe to the theory of the Naga Kuki origin of the Meiteis. Hodson (1908) was also fully described the Nagas
and Kukis of the hills. This ethnic homogeneity facilitated
the absorption of many tribes into the Meitei social groups.
Besides, oriental Mongolians
consisting of Shans Burmese and Chinese etc. who settled in
the valley either as war captives or peaceful immigrants were also observed. The
settlement of people from the East continued since the time of king Naothingkhong
in the 7th century A.D. till the time of king Maramba
in the 18th century A.D.
Absorption of people from the
rest of
Cultural superiority of the Meiteis was discernible in almost all fields. Their millennia-old
political organisation, social set up, religion, language and
literature, martial tradition, dance and music and other fine arts etc. each is a class by
itself.
Manipur's
prehistoric cultural affinity with the Chinese Neolithic culture of second millennium B.C.
has been exposed at the 1981 excavation at Napachik. The
Chinese records of the second century B.C. by Chang-Kien (Acharyya, 1988), have thrown limelights
on Manipur's cultural link with
The beginning of Manipuri literature may go back to 1500-2000 years from now. The Meiteis had a strong sense of historicity and maintained chronicles
and numerous records about their genealogy, society, religion, government, astrology,
charms and mantras, lexicography, medicine, earth sciences etc. More than one thousand Meitei scripture had already existed before 18th century
A.D. Such a rich heritage could be developed and maintained because, the Meiteis probably became literate long back and art of writing was
spread extensively as a result of their historic association with the Chinese who were the
first literate people on the earth and who invented paper and the art of writing etc. A
cultural onslaught occurred when all the archaic Meitei
scriptures were destroyed by king Garibiniwaz at the time of proselytization of the Meiteis into
Bengali Vaishnavism in the 18th century A.D. Proselytization of the Meiteis into
Hinduism and the Tribals into Christianity have brought about
a metamorphosis of their original culture to a state of a blend of old and new but not to
a replacement of the former by the latter.
The Meiteis
had their own system of religion, which had its own myths and legends, Gods and Goddesses,
priests and priestesses, rituals and festivals, etc. though it
was more or less akin to the animism of the tribals. The Meiteis embraced Hinduism in the 18th century A.D. The
tribes of the hills remained unconverted and were relegated by the new Manipuri Hindus to the "degraded heathens". In the later
part of the history, when Manipur fell into the hands of British Administrators,
missionaries were brought in the hills. The first even conversion of Manipuri
tribals to Christianity took place at Ukhrul
(in the eastern hills) in 1894. American Baptist mission landed earlier at the Northeast
and Southeast hills of Manipur. Roman Catholic mission became active in the 1950's.
The Manipuri Muslims or "Meitei
Pangals" were settled with their religion in
The foregoing lines hint at a
pluralistic society in Manipur structured on a multi-lingual base of civilization and
culture. Description of all social taboos of different sections of the people will be
beyond the scope of this work. Nevertheless, a brief overview of the general social norms
of the people is essential. Caste stratification was not featured in the pristine form of Manipuri society. The existence of the seven salais
(clans) was exogamous and not endogamous as in the Hindu caste system. Womenfolk enjoyed
an equal status with men folk before the advent of Hinduism. "Sati" and "Pardah" systems were unknown. At present, families are
patriarchal. Polygamy once common in earlier times has become less prevalent. Child
marriage is absent. Widow remarriage is socially permitted.
Women are hardworking and are seen in almost every field where
men are. Wives are very much loyal to their husbands. Dowry does not constitute an
essential feature in marriages.
The seven salais of the Meiteis have further
divisions into Sangeis (surnames). The components of Meitei confederacy are:
Ningthouja (Mangang)
(with 125 sageis)
Moirang (67 sageis)
Khuman (67 sageis)
Angom (62 sageis)
Luwang (58 sageis)
Chenglei (sarang-Leisangthem
) (35 sageis) and
Khaba-Nganba (21 sageis)
There are 44 tribes in the state
speaking different dialects. Twenty-nine such groups have now become the constitutional
categories under the label " Scheduled
Tribes". The non-Hindu, Meiteilon speaking population has
been placed under the "Scheduled Caste" category. The Meitei
Hindus constitute the largest ethnic group of the state.
In a total geographical
area of 22,327 sq km, a population of 18,37,149 (1991 census)
is distributed at an average density of 82 persons per sq km. However, the distribution
pattern is very much skewed in the plains as the density in the valley works out to be 529
pesons per sq km. While it is as low as 32
per sq km in the hills against the all-India average density of 267 people per sq km in
1991. The sex ratio is 978 females for every 1000 males. In the pluralistic
ethno-religious complex, the scheduled tribes and scheduled castes constitute 34.41 p.c.
and 2.02 p.c. of the total population respectively. The Hindus outnumber other religious
groups having a share of 58 p.c. followed by the Christians (34.11 p.c.) and the Muslims
(7.26 p.c.). The other religious communities whose migration from
other parts of
| Dev. of Technology | Manipur at a Glance | Industrial Scenario | Market Organisation | Natural Resources | Human Resource |
| Technology sources | Technology for transfer by MASTEC | Local Technology in Manipur | Banking and Finance | Grant makers |
| Entrepreneurship development | Industrial Consultancy of NE | State Govt. Departments | Other useful websites |
| Contact us | About TBIS | About MASTEC | Current News | Home |