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candidates were called till may 15, 1912, on which date the school was started. The students were not charged fees for the first year. The school was sometimes mentioned as the Patil school or the Delhi Durbar Patil School. The Patils formed an important class of hereditary village officers. They were mostly illiterate, ignorant and unable to do their duties properly. To make the Patil independent of the
Kulkarni, who always took advantage of his illiteracy and used the Patil as a tool, special subjects were taught in the school (1)revenue (2)criminal work (3)village accounts (4)sanitation. The school seems to have run for about seven years
90:
Patil settled villages and collected revenues from the villagers, thus a Patil family typically owned 80-90 percent of village land. Colonising multiple villages promoted a Patil to a
Deshmukh. The Patil was entitled to several free services from village peasants and artisans. The Patil presided over
737:
The
Patilki of Kokamthan was held by four co-sharers. One of them wished to sell it, probably because he could not pay the govt. revenue due to him. Abaji Purandare agreed to buy it for Rs.5000, assuming it to be free of other encumbrances......The villagers approached Naro Appaji Tulshibagwale, who
822:
He declared on
February 21,912 that he would start in commemoration at the Imperial Coronation Darbar at Delhi, a special school called the Delhi Darbar Memorial Patil School, to train the Patil's sons for the duties of village officers and improve the quality of their work. The names of the
202:, a social reformer, decided to end the dependency of the Patil on the Kulkarni. On 15 May 1912, he started a school called the "Patil School" to train future Patils in their duties as village officers. This school was in operation for seven years. The
778:
As most patils are illiterate the entire correspondence of a village is conducted in the joint name of the patil-kulkarni and both these officials are required to sign all government papers ( an illiterate Patil puts down his thumb impression or other
756:
When he had occasion to stay in the Deccan, Holkar fixed his residence at
Chandwnd; for before he was Holkar. he had been the Deshmukh of Chandwad. As Vinchoor fOrmed a part of Chandwad, the honour of being a Patil thereof was claimed by Vithal
667:
When he had occasion to stay in the Deccan, Holkar fixed his residence at
Chandwnd; for before he was Holkar. he had been the Deshmnkh of Chandwad. As Vinchoor formed a part of Chandwad, the honour of being a Patil thereof was claimed by Vithal
800:
The Police Patil, a village officer, is responsible for the vital registration. Though at present there is a regulation that the Police Patil should be educated up to at least the 4th vernacular standard, he was not always a literate person
274:
The village chief is called
Karbhari in Marathi. There is another word viz., patil for village chief. Mr. Sarwate and Gujarati translator Mr. Vidvansa have translated this Karbhari word as 'patel' which is equivalent of Marathi word
197:
and they would jointly sign all government documents. The Patil would typically put his thumbprint or other marks on the document. The
Kulkarni would sometimes take advantage of the illiteracy of the Patil and "use him as a tool".
488:
Bhaurao Patil Known as ' Karmaveer ' ( hero of action ), Bhaurao Patil ( 1887–1959 ) was the most unusual and ... A Jain from the chiefly agricultural Jains of southern
Maharashtra ( as opposed to the merchant Jains of
432:
Prior to the introduction of the modern
Panchayat system of elections, the traditional political office of village headmanship was hereditary, and controlled by the large Lingayat patrilineage of Patil.
206:
commented that in 1955, it was made mandatory for the Police Patil to be educated up to at least the 4th grade although he was not usually a literate person before.
686:
Their family surname is really Sambrani and the unusual surname of Patil, unusual for Deshastha Brahmins, comes from the Patilki of Mugadh village near Dharwar City
254:
These were the district head (deshmukh), district accountant (deshpande), village headman (patil), village accountant (kulkarni) and village menial (mahar)
738:
agreed to buy the Patilki for Rs.5000.00 and pay the villagers Rs.2960. Note that Naro Appaji Tulshibagwale and Abaji Purandare were Deshastha Brahmins.
529:
203:
142:
The ancestors of some of the important personalities of the Maratha empire held hereditary Patilki rights for villages in Maharashtra.
556:
We come across some Brahmin Patil as well. It was mainly due to the purchase of a Patilki watan or grant of such a watan by the king.
704:
They were originally Danis of Saswada doing duty as recorders of grain and accepting a portion of the same as their Kulkarni Vatan.
146:'s family had Patilki rights at Verul. Shivaji grandfather, Maloji bought Patilki rights to additional villages in present day
569:
645:
618:
347:
247:
579:
597:
Sardesai, G.S., 1946. New history of the Marathas. Vol. I: Shivaji and his line (1600-1701). Phoenix Publications, Bombay.
404:
deshmukh and patil watandars mostly belonged to the Maratha caste and very rarely to the brahmin or the muslim community .
473:
372:
64:
of the village. His main duties were to be the collector of revenue, as well as being the head of police and justice.
298:
389:
541:
841:
717:
460:
The secular Deshastha Brahmins have such surnames as Desai, Deshpande, Deshmukh, Kulkarni and Patil.
193:, Sambranis and Tulshibagwales. Hence the correspondence would be carried in the name of Patil and
846:
528:
Sen, S., 1925. Administrative system of the Marathas. University of Calcutta, Calcutta. page 216
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318:
239:
The Government of Social Life in Colonial India: Liberalism, Religious Law, and Women's Rights
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8:
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John Briggs in Maharashtra: A Study of District Administration Under Early British Rule
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Charisma and Commitment in South Asian History: Essays Presented to Stanley Wolpert
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445:
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104:
57:
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147:
92:
71:, a Patil was called "Khot". Historian Ness writes that "what the Patil and
132:
116:
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The patil was seldom a Brahmin, Muhammadan Patils were by no means rare.
718:"'Economic Backwardness' in History Deviation from a Eurocentric Theme"
186:
163:
155:
475:
Education and the Disprivileged Nineteenth and Twentieth Century India
190:
136:
80:
266:
Jennifer Marie Bayer; Central Institute of Indian Languages (1983).
48:
In ancient times, a Patil was the head of a village working under a
194:
178:
171:
76:
72:
61:
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29:: पाटिल) (meaning "village headman") is an Indian last name and a
167:
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128:
120:
108:
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727:. Department of Economics, University of Mumbai, Mumbai: 15, 16
151:
112:
96:
68:
796:
Fertility Survey of Nasik, Kolaba and Satara (North) Districts
286:
793:
26:
798:. Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics. p. 62.
124:
100:
60:, the Patil was the village headman and the most important
336:"The Saturday Oil-pressers: The Bene Israel in the Konkan"
139:. This watan was either purchased or granted by the king.
682:
The evolution and growth patterns of international trade
574:. Cambridge UK: Cambridge University Press. p. 41.
154:
rulers of Gwalior held similar rights in the village of
269:
To greater heights: faculty research of CIIL, 1969-1979
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The village cart: translation of T.N. Atre's Gaav gada
771:
593:
591:
272:. Central Institute of Indian Languages. p. 506.
606:
45:, and is also used to describe the wife of a Patil.
588:
333:
305:patil 'village head' patlin 'wife of village-head'
504:Social, economic, and cultural history of Bijapur
419:A populistic community and modernization in India
293:. John Benjamins Publishing Company. p. 41.
259:
833:
33:or surname. The female variant of the title is
815:
450:. Anthropological Survey of India. p. 478
235:
679:
507:. Idarah-i Adabiyat-i Delli Delhi. p. 56
231:
229:
633:
600:
471:
204:Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics
754:. Arya Bhusltana Press, Pune. p. 42.
665:. Arya Bhusltana Press, Pune. p. 42.
627:
367:. Cambridge University Press. p. 23.
310:
242:. Cambridge University Press. p. 53.
226:
789:
787:
752:A brief History of the Vinchoorkar Family
663:A brief History of the Vinchoorkar Family
316:
287:Ramesh Vaman Dhongde; Kashi Wali (2009).
818:Shahu Chhatrapati: A Royal Revolutionary
794:N. V. Sovani; Kumudini Dandekar (1955).
702:. Arya Bhushana Press, Pune. p. 1.
539:
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767:
765:
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327:
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700:A Brief Story of the Vinchurkar family
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394:. Indian History Congress. p. 178
391:Proceedings of Indian History Congress
362:
613:. Diamond Publications. pp. 8–.
500:
443:
806:
762:
607:Prof. A. R. Kulkarni (1 July 2008).
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52:who was head of the district. Under
715:
323:. Mittal Publications. p. 118.
13:
637:The Great Maratha Mahadaji Scindia
14:
858:
640:. Sarup & Sons. pp. 1–.
543:Maharashtra in the Age of Shivaji
472:Bhattacharya, Sabyasachi (2002).
363:Gordon, Stewart (February 2007).
342:. Orient Blackswan. p. 100.
164:Sardar Vithal Sadashiv Vinchurkar
365:The Marathas 1600-1818, Volume 2
772:Trimbaka Nārāyaṇa Ātre (2000).
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709:
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654:
561:
533:
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494:
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236:Rachel Sturman (29 June 2012).
91:all village festivals, such as
501:Verma, Dinesh Chandra (1990).
478:. Orient BlackSwan. p. 43
437:
409:
381:
356:
280:
1:
416:Ishwaran, Karigoudar (1977).
317:Deshpande, Arvind M. (1987).
219:
177:The majority of Patils were
7:
684:. World Press. p. 77.
546:. R.J. Deshmukh. p. 32
334:Brenda Joseph Ness (2004).
209:
10:
863:
338:. In Roger D. Long (ed.).
103:. Patil watan was held by
725:IRIS Knowledge Foundation
422:. E. J. Brill. p. 58
200:Shahu Maharaj of Kolhapur
83:were to the district, or
816:Dhananjay Keer (1976).
166:(Dani) held Patilki of
75:were to a village, the
680:Lila T. Patil (1970).
571:The Marathas 1600-1818
540:Kulkarni, R.A (1969).
16:Indian honorific title
634:N. G. Rathod (1994).
185:families such as the
444:Bhanu, B.V. (2004).
181:, with exception of
750:Vinchoorkar, S. R.
661:Vinchoorkar, S. R.
568:Gordon, S. (2007).
388:Bhan, B.V. (2000).
150:. The ancestors of
716:Hatekar, Neeraj.
698:Vinchurkar, S.R.
647:978-81-85431-52-9
620:978-81-8483-073-6
349:978-81-250-2641-9
249:978-1-107-01037-6
183:Deshastha Brahmin
54:Deccan sultanates
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842:Indian feudalism
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215:Patil (surname)
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160:Satara district
131:communities of
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847:Marathi people
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776:. p. 78.
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187:Vinchurkars
170:village in
133:Maharashtra
836:Categories
220:References
191:Purandares
179:illiterate
156:Kanherkhed
56:, and the
174:pargana.
137:Karnataka
81:Deshpande
42:Patlinbai
757:Shivdev.
668:Shivdev.
511:11 April
489:Gujarat)
482:11 April
454:11 April
426:11 April
398:11 April
275:'patil'.
210:See also
195:Kulkarni
189:(Dani),
172:Chandwad
117:Lingayat
77:Deshmukh
73:Kulkarni
62:Vatandar
50:Deshmukh
801:before.
731:2 April
550:2 April
290:Marathi
168:Vinchur
144:Shivaji
121:Brahmin
109:Dhangar
105:Maratha
85:Pargana
779:mark).
644:
617:
578:
371:
346:
297:
246:
152:Shinde
129:Muslim
113:Hatkar
97:Diwali
93:Dasara
69:Konkan
36:Patlin
721:(PDF)
31:title
27:Hindi
23:Patil
733:2018
642:ISBN
615:ISBN
576:ISBN
552:2018
513:2023
484:2023
456:2023
428:2023
400:2023
369:ISBN
344:ISBN
295:ISBN
244:ISBN
135:and
127:and
125:Jain
101:Holi
99:and
21:The
158:in
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79:or
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