Gadkari

Gadkari is a surname native to the Indian state of Maharashtra. Gadkari surname is found among the Hindu CKP[1] and Deshastha Brahmin[2][3][4] communities.[5]

Etymology

The name Gadkari is believed to be a combination of two words (Gad and Kari). Gad means a fort and Kari means one who maintains or protects it. So Gadkari means a person who protects the fort.[6]

Gadkari as a title

Gadkari was a historical title given mostly in Maharashtra, to a person who was appointed to protect the fort.[7]

Notable people

References

  1. "chandraseniya kayastha prabhus aim for better community connect". CKP as a community has been known for its “writing and fighting skills”. Some prominent faces that it boasts as members are [...] Ram Ganesh Gadkari [...]
  2. Kumar Ketkar. "Obidiently yours". The Hindu. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
  3. Harish Damodaran. INDIA'S NEW CAPITALISTS: Caste, Business, and Industry in a Modern Nation. Hachette UK. p. 20. Retrieved 25 November 2018. The Mhaiskars are Chitpavan, while Gadkari is a Deshastha Brahmin
  4. "Son Of The Sangh". The Caravan. Retrieved 1 April 2018. NITIN GADKARI WAS BORN in 1957, to Jairam and Bhanutai Gadkari. The Gadkaris were a Deshastha Brahmin family of modest means, with some agricultural land in Dhapewada village, near Nagpur. They lived in an area of old Nagpur called Mahal, close to the RSS’s headquarters.
  5. Maharashtra State Gazetteers: General Series: Maharashtra, land and its people(CHAPTER 5—ORGANISATION OF SPACE) (PDF). Directorate of Government Print., Stationery and Publications. 1968. p. 136. There was also a gadkari (head of the civil administration of the fort and for tax-collection from the surrounding villages) who was generally a Kayastha and a Brahmin who was the Temple priest, letter-writer etc. Sometimes, people of some other caste held these posts.
  6. "Gadkari means protector of fort: BJP". The Siasat Daily. Retrieved 18 November 2009.
  7. Crispin Bates. Mutiny at the Margins: New Perspectives on the Indian Uprising of 1857: Volume I: Anticipations and Experiences in the Locality. SAGE Publishing. p. 178. Retrieved 26 March 2013.
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