Bhat
Bhat (Hindustani: भट (Devanagari), بھٹ (Nastaleeq)), also spelled as Butt (Pahari: بٹ),[1][2][3] both of which are a shortened rendition of Bhatta, also spelled Bhatt, (Hindustani: भट्ट (Devanagari), بھٹّ(Nastaleeq)),[2][4] is a common surname in India and Pakistan.
Etymology
Historians state the surname is a distorted form of Bhatta, which originates from Sanskrit (भटट), meaning "scholar" according to the Brāhmaṇa.[5] While the original shortened rendition of "Bhatta" was "Bhat" or "Bhatt,"[4] many of the migrants to the Punjab region started spelling their surname as "But" or "Butt" which is the spelling of the clan used in the Pahari language.[3][6][7]
Geographic distribution
Deccan
The Bhatt of South India were said to be invited there King Pratapa Rudra of the Kshatriya dynasty of Warangal (1295 to 1323) After the fall of this dynasty, the Bhatraju became court bards and entertainers for a number of Vellama and Reddi chiefs who had carved out small principalities for themselves in the Telegu country. The Bhatraju are now a Telugu speaking community.[8]
Goa
The surname is in use among some Konkani Christians who trace their ancestry to the Goud Saraswat Brahmins of Goa.[9]
Karnataka
This is a common surname among Goud Saraswat Brahmins and Havyaka Brahmins of Karnataka.
Kashmir
Bhat, also spelled as Butt, is a Kashmiri surname, found among individuals native to the Kashmir Valley of India, as well as Kashmiri émigrés who have migrated to the Punjab,[1][10][11][12] a region divided between India and neighbouring Pakistan.[6] A large number of such Muslim Kashmiris migrated to the Punjab in the late 19th century due to natural disasters and oppression at the hands of the Dogra Hindu rulers of Kashmir.[13] Kashmiris bearing the surname Bhat/Butt belong to the larger Bhat caste of Brahmins found in the rest of the India;[2][3][4] the surname is shared by both Hindus and Muslims.[14][15]
Punjab
In the Punjab Province of British India, the Hindu Bhats of Hissar were "found [in] two sub-castes, Brahm and a few Raj."[16] The Muslim Bhats living in Hissar dated their conversion from Hinduism to Islam to the period of Aurangzeb's reign.[17] Some Muslim Bhats/Butts found in the Punjab migrated from Kashmir and Jammu during the 1878 famine,[6][7] and are Brahmin Hindu converts to Islam.[1][2][18]
In areas such as the Punjab region most of the Northern Hindu Saraswat Brahmins and some various other northern Hindu castes, such as Rajputs converted to the Sikh Bhat/Bhatra sangat during the missionary efforts of prince Changa Bhat Rai who earned the title "Bhat Rai", who was the grandson of Raja Shivnabh, a Hindu king who had met Guru Nanak and converted to Sikhism during the 16th century.[19] During the 14th to 16th century many Saraswat Brahmins were forced to lead unsettled lives due to religious oppression, unable to practice their hereditary profession as Hindu priests, artists, teachers, scribes, technicians class (varna). They used their academia in there unsettled life travelling as scribes, genealogies, bards and astrologists. In the 15th century the religion of Sikhism was born causing many to follow the word of Guru Nanak Dev. The Sikhs also share the Bhat heritage, and are known as the Bhat or Bhatra and Bhatta sangat and were amongst the first followers of Guru Nanak.[20] Even though Sikhism itself does not support separation by caste, the social system meant that the Bhatra followed a hereditary profession of travelling missionaries, scribes, genealogies, bards astrologists and itinerant salesman;[21] however it is not uncommon to see Bhats in other professions such as farming and retail.
Notable individuals
Academics
- B. V. Rajarama Bhat, Indian mathematician
- Miriam Butt, Professor of Linguistics and Chair of the Department of Linguistics (Fachbereich Sprachwissenschaft) at the University of Konstanz
- P. Gururaja Bhat, Indian archaeologist
- Pamposh Bhat, Kashmiri Indian environmentalist
- Rasheed Butt, a renowned Pakistani artist and recipient of "The Pride of Performance" 1989
- Shyam Bhat, physician
- Suresh Bhat, Marathi Indian ghazal writer
- U. Narayan Bhat, Indian mathematician
- U. R. Bhat, economist
- Vasanti N. Bhat-Nayak, Indian mathematician
- Vinay Bhat, Indian American chess player
Actors, models and musicians
- Ahmed Butt, male Pakistani model and actor
- Ahmed Ali Butt, Pakistani actor and member of rock band Entity Paradigm
- Ali Azmat Butt, Pakistani rock artist, and former lead singer rock band Junoon
- Ambreen Butt, female Pakistani model
- Anuradha Bhat, Indian playback singer
- Asha Bhat, Indian model
- Asim Butt, Pakistani painter and sculptor and a member of the Stuckist Art Movement
- Danish Bhat, Kashmiri Indian actor
- Farhan Saeed Butt, lead singer of rock band Jal
- Ganapati Bhat, Hindustani classical vocalist
- Hrishitaa Bhatt, Indian model
- Pooja Bhatt, Gujarati Indian actress
- Praneet Bhat, Kashmiri Indian actor
- Rahul Bhat, Kashmiri Indian actor
- Ramesh Bhat, Indian actor
- Shubhraj Bhat, Indian actor
- Yogaraj Bhat, Indian actor
Military
- Muhammad Zaki Butt, former Air Commodore in the Pakistan Air Force and bodyguard of Quaid-e-Azam, Muhammad Ali Jinnah
- Ziauddin Butt, former Chief of the Inter-Services Intelligence
Politics
- Hassan Butt, former spokesman for the disbanded British Islamist group Al-Muhajiroun
- Ghulam Mustafa Bhat, current elected Mayor of Srinagar
- Maheshdas Bhat, Grand Vizier (Wazīr-e Azam) of the Mughal court in the administration of the Mughal Emperor Akbar
- Masarat Alam Bhat, Kashmiri separatist
- Maqbool Bhat, executed Kashmiri separatist
- Munir Butt, British civil servant and philanthropist
- Suha Bhat, also known as "Saif-ud-Din" and was the former Prime Minister of Kashmir, during the rule of Sultan Sikandar Butshikan.
- Nawaz Sharif Butt, Pakistani Prime Minister and at present Pakistan Muslim League (N) President
- Shahbaz Sharif Butt, present Chief Minister of Punjab
- Munir Butt - KCMG, former British diplomat, economic and foreign policy advisor to Prime Minister's Margaret Thatcher and John Major
- Shakeel Bhat, outspoken Kashmiri separatist activist, labelled as "Islamic Rage Boy" by Western media
- S. L. Bhat, Kashmiri Indian serving as the Chairman of the Jammu & Kashmir Public Service Commission
Scientists
- Noor Muhammad Butt, a Pakistani nuclear physicist, research scientist and chairman of Pakistan Science Foundation
- Parvez Butt, is a Pakistani nuclear engineer and former chairman of the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission
Sports
- Arif Butt, Pakistani cricket player
- Arvind Bhat, Indian badminton player
- Abhishek Bhat, Indian cricket player
- Ijaz Butt, Pakistani cricket player
- Muhammad Sharif Butt, Pakistani sprinter
- Pramila Bhatt, Indian cricketer
- Raghuram Bhat, Indian cricketer
- Rehan Butt, field hockey player
- Samad Bhat, Kashmiri Indian cricket player
- Salman Butt, Pakistani cricketer
- Sadia Butt, Pakistani cricketer
- Shujauddin Butt, Pakistani cricketer
- Yasir Butt, Pakistani squash player
See also
References
- 1 2 3 The Journal of the Anthropological Survey of India. The Survey. 2003. Retrieved 10 January 2015.
The But/Butt of Punjab were originally Brahmin migrants from Kashmir during 1878 famine.
- 1 2 3 4 The quarterly journal of the Mythic society (Bangalore)., Volume 96. The Society. Retrieved 2010-12-02.
Even today most common family name in Kashmir is Butt, a distortion of Bhatt, a Hindu surname common amongst the Brahmins in India.
- 1 2 3 "Madras journal of literature and science, Volume 4". Athenæum Press. Retrieved 2010-12-02.
Bhatt (vulgarly Butt) is the distinctive name of a class of Bramins in the north; and in the south the same class bear the distinctive title of Pattar.
- 1 2 3 Saligram Bhatt. Kashmiri Scholars Contribution to Knowledge and World Peace. Retrieved 2010-12-02.
Bhat {Bhatt} surnames are found in Uttaranchal, Northern Belt, Central and Western parts of the country and is a surname of sizeable Brahmins in Konkan, Maharashtra and Gujarat; where they had migrated in sizeable strength. Bhatta's who migrated to Gauda {Bengal} were called Acharaya's {Scholars} and thus Bhattacharaya's. In Nepal they became priests, ardent worshippers of Bhadrakali and spread Kali worship; mostly around Pashupatinath Temple. In Uttaranchal they became Purohit {Priestly} class, adopted surname Purohit, many changed profession but retained Bhatt surname. In northern plains, few became Bhatta's, many Bhatt's; in both cases Purohit {Priestly} class. In Central and Western parts, strict requirements of a Bhatta {Purohit} could not be sustained and to indicate their Brahmin roots they opted for surname only. Thus Bhatta and Purohit are surnames of the same category. Bhatta has a shortened version, Bhat {Bhatt}; referring to the same class of people. Surname Bhat {Bhatt} in Kas'mira can also be traced to short form of Bhatta. In Kas'mira, Bhatta honorific has been associated with many personalities, scholars of 9th and 10th centuries, scriptures and specific in many cases in 14th century and later.
- ↑ For definition of ब्राह्मण brāhmaṇa, with last syllable showing a Vedic accent, used as a noun as "m. (having to do with Brahman or divine knowledge), one learned in the Veda, theologian, priest, Brāhman, man of the first four castes"; and definition of ब्राह्मण brāhmaṇa, with only first syllable showing a Vedic accent, used as an adjective as "a. (i) belonging to a Brāhman, Brāhmanic", see: Macdonell 1924, p. 199.
- 1 2 3 The Journal of the Anthropological Survey of India, Volume 52. The Survey. Retrieved 2010-12-02.
The But/Butt of Punjab were originally Brahmin migrants from Kashmir during 1878 famine.
- 1 2 P.K. Kaul. Pahāṛi and other tribal dialects of Jammu, Volume 1. Eastern Book Linkers. Retrieved 2010-12-02.
The But/Butt of Punjab were originally Brahmin migrants from Kashmir during 1878 famine.
- ↑ Bhatt pages 141 to 142 in The last wanderers : nomads and gypsies of India by Tejinder Singh Randhawa ISBN 0-944142-35-4
- ↑ Sarasvati's Children: A History of the Mangalorean Christians, Alan Machado Prabhu, I.J.A. Publications, 1999, p. 137
- ↑ Explore Kashmiri Pandits. Dharma Publications. Retrieved 2010-12-02.
- ↑ A Glossary of the Tribes and Castes of the Punjab and North-West Frontier Province. Nirmal Publishers and Distributors. Retrieved 2007-03-25.
The most important Kashmiri element is in Indian Punjab and is found in the cities of Ludhiana and Amritsar, which still contain large colonies of weavers, employed in weaving carpets and finer fabrics.
- ↑ Kashmiris’ contribution to Ludhianvi culture. The Tribune. Retrieved 2007-03-25.
In fact, the Ludhiana hosiery industry owes its origin to Kashmiris. According to the Ludhiana District Gazetteer, during a devastating famine in the 19th century a number of Kashmiris migrated to Ludhiana. They are known world over for their handicraft skills. They started weaving woollen fabric here. Slowly the trade got popular and Ludhiana started to be identified with hosiery only.
- ↑ Bahl, Arvin (2007). From Jinnah to Jihad: Pakistan's Kashmir Quest and the Limits of Realism. Atlantic Publishers & Dist. p. 76. ISBN 9788126907212.
- ↑ Parvéz Dewân. Parvéz Dewân's Jammû, Kashmîr, and Ladâkh: Kashmîr. Manas Publications. Retrieved 2010-12-02.
This is a surname shared by Hindus and Muslims.
- ↑ Sharma, Usha (1 January 2001). Political development in Jammu, Kashmir and Ladakh. Radha Publications. ISBN 9788174870629. Retrieved 11 January 2015.
Surnames like 'Bhatt' and 'Pandit' are common to both Hindus and Muslims.
- ↑ Glossary of the Tribes and Castes of the Punjab and North West Frontier Province. Asian Educational Services. 1 December 1996. p. 99. ISBN 9788120605053.
The organisation of the Hindu Bhats almost baffles description, so fluid are its intricacies. In Hissar are found two sub-castes, Brahm and a few Raj. The former are clients of the Mahajans, performing certain functions for them at weddings, &c.; they wear the janeo, avoid widow marriage and only eat food cooked by a Gaur Brahman, while the Raj are landholders and cultivators, receiving dues at Jat weddings.
- ↑ Glossary of the Tribes and Castes of the Punjab and North West Frontier Province. Asian Educational Services. 1 December 1996. p. 99. ISBN 9788120605053.
The Muhammadan Bhats are even fewer in numbers than the Hindu, and far less elaborately organised. In Hissar they date their conversion to Alamgir's reign, and still continue to minister to Mahajans and other Hindus as well as to Mughals and Pirzadas, but Shaikhs only fee them at a daughters wedding; as do also oilmen and weavers who give them 8 annas. But they get fees on the birth of a son.
- ↑ Rose, H.A. (1 January 1997). Glossary Of The Tribes And Castes Of The Punjab And North-west Frontier Province, Vol. 2. Atlantic Publishers & Dist. p. 479. ISBN 9788185297699.
But (Bat), Pandits and Brahman proselytes.
- ↑ Haqiqat Rah Muqam shivnabh raje ki page 624 [p.1248]khari
- ↑ HA Rose, Glossary of Tribes and Castes of the Punjab (Lahore 1883), quoted by Pradesh
- ↑ HA Rose, Glossary of Tribes and Castes of the Punjab (Lahore 1883), quoted by Pradesh