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Though there is no doubt on the Chutia polity, the origins of this kingdom are obscure. [28] It is generally held that the Chutias established a state around Sadiya and contiguous areas [10] —though it is believed that the kingdom was established in the 13th century before the advent of the Ahoms in 1228, [29] and Buranjis, the Ahom chronicles, indicate the presence of a Chutia state [30 ...
The Chutia people (Pron: / ˈ s ʊ ð iː j ɑː / or Sutia) are an ethnic group that are native to Assam and historically associated with the Chutia kingdom. [6] However, after the kingdom was absorbed into the Ahom kingdom in 1523–24, the Chutia population was widely displaced and dispersed in other parts of Upper Assam [7] [8] as well as Central Assam. [9]
The Dimasa Kingdom [4] also known as Kachari kingdom [5] was a late medieval/early modern kingdom in Assam, Northeast India ruled by Dimasa kings. [6] [7] [8] The Dimasa kingdom and others (Kamata, Chutiya) that developed in the wake of the Kamarupa kingdom were examples of new states that emerged from indigenous communities in medieval Assam as a result of socio-political transformations in ...
Chughtai or Chagatai (Urdu, Persian: چغتائی; Turkish: Çağatay,) is a family name that originated in the Chagatai Khanate as taken up by the descendants and successors of Chagatai Khan who was the second son of Mongol Emperor Genghis Khan. [1]
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The identification of the Chutias language as a Bodo language identical with the Deori language (as Brown had done in the past) has been disputed by modern-day linguists. Any such claim (and any claim that crucially depended on Brown's identification) will have to be abandoned.
The term Kachari has been used through much of history to denote the same people who came to be termed as Bodo. [23] One of the earliest usage can be found in the 16th century Assamese language Bhagavata, [24] where the word Kachari is used synonymously with Kirata in a list that mentions Koch and Mech separately. [25]
Some of these accounts have been reproduced in W. B. Brown's An Outline Grammar of the Deori Chutiya Language spoken in Assam , Shillong, 1895, embodying in an appendix the remarks of H. J. Kellner on certain papers of Lt. E. T. Dalton concerning these accounts ; in Sir Edward Gait's A History of Assam , ed. 2, Calcutta-Simla, 1926, and his ...