Page:Castes and Tribes of Southern India, Volume 7.djvu/21

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TELAGA

Tangēdu.— Tangēdu or Tangēdla {Cassia auriculata) has been recorded as an exogamous sept of Kāpu and Padma Sāle. The bark of this shrub is one of the most valuable Indian tanning agents, and is, like myrabolams {Terminalia fruits), used in the manufacture of indigenous dyes.

Tantuvāyan (thread - wearer). — An occupational name used by various weaving castes.

Tapodhanlu. — The name, meaning those who believe in self-mortification as wealth, adopted by some Telugu mendicants.

Tārakan.— See Muttan.

Tartharol.— The name, recorded by Dr. W. H. R. Rivers,[1] of a division of the Todas. Tartal is also given by various writers as a division of this tribe.

Tarwād.— Defined by Mr. Wigram[2] as a marumakkathāyam family, consisting of all the descendants in the female line of one common female ancestor.

Tāssan.— A Malayalam synonym for the Telugu Dasari.

Tattān.— The goldsmith section of the Tamil and Malayalam Kammalans.

Teivaliol.— The name, recorded by Dr. W. H. R. Rivers,[3] of a division of the Todas.

Telaga.— "The Telagas," Mr. H. A. Stuart writes,[4] "are a Telugu caste of cultivators, who were formerly soldiers in the armies of the Hindu sovereigns of Telingana. This may perhaps account for the name, for it is easy to see that the Telugu soldiers might come to be regarded as the Telugus or Telagas par excellence. The sub-divisions returned under this name show that there has been some confusion between the Telagas

  1. The Todas, 1906.
  2. Malabar Law and Custom,
  3. The Todas, 1906.
  4. Madras Census Report, 1891.