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  2. Gauda and Kunbi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gauda_and_Kunbi

    Gaudas, Kunbis, Velip and another shepherding tribe called the Dhangar, have organised themselves into an aboriginal-focussed network, called The Gauda, Kunbi, Velip and Dhangar Federation (GAKUVED). Another Adivasi -rights resource center, called MAND , also works for their betterment.

  3. List of Kunbi people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Kunbi_people

    Tukaram - Referred to as Sant Tukaram or Tukaram Maharaj, a 17th century Maharashtrian saint. [1]Gulabrao Maharaj - Although blind, he was still credited with giving a vision of life to the people.

  4. Kunbi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kunbi

    A group of Kunbis in Central India, 1916. Kunbi (alternatively Kanbi) (Marathi: ISO 15919: Kuṇabī, Gujarati: ISO 15919: Kaṇabī) [1] [2] [3] is a generic term applied to several castes of traditional farmers in Western India.

  5. Kingdom of Gauda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_Gauda

    A Buddhist Mahāyāna Text Mañjuśrī-Mūlakalpa records the existence of Gauda kingdom in Bengal before it was replaced by Gupta Empire in the 4th century. King Loka who was born in Vardhamāna is mentioned who must have ruled in the early 4th century CE.

  6. Cumbarjua - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cumbarjua

    According to historian Vinayak Narayan Shenvi Dhume, in 1770, Cumbarjua was made up of 486 houses (400 Hindus + 86 Catholics). The Hindu families comprised Goud Saraswat caste of Smarth and Vaishnau, Daivajnas, blacksmiths, carpenters, Kunbis, Gaudas, potters, washermen, fishermen and cobblers.

  7. Shashanka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shashanka

    Map of the Shashankas or "Gauda Kingdom", circa 600 CE.[2]There are several major contemporary sources of information on his life, including copperplates from his vassal Madhavavarma (king of Ganjam), copperplates of his rivals Harsha and Bhaskaravarman, the accounts of Banabhatta, who was a bard in the court of Harsha, and of the Chinese monk Xuanzang, and also coins minted in Shashanka's reign.

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  9. Christianization of Goa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christianization_of_Goa

    In the late 1920s in what was Portuguese Goa and Damaon, some prominent Hindu Goan Brahmins requested the Vinayak Maharaj Masurkar, a guru of an ashram in Masur, Satara district of British Bombay (present-day Maharashtra); to actively campaign for the 're-conversion' of Catholic Gauda and Kunbis to Vaishnavite Hinduism. [36]