The Agri Matrimony are so called because they migrated to Gujarat from the city of Agra. According to other traditions, they are said to have originated in Maharashtra.
They speak a dialect which is a mixture of Marathi and Gujarati languages. The Agri are found mainly in Valsad District. There customs are similar to other Gujarati Hindus. Agri marriages are happening in Gujarat and some more states of our country through Marriage portals. They are mainly a community are of cultivators, with many now being landless agricultural labourers.
Koli Traditionally classified as a tribe, they were redesignated as a Hindu caste, containing the sub castes Agri and Ahir. Free Matrimonial Sites have become a part of Marriages in India, providing right matches for people within their own community as well as in other communities too. Koli, large caste living in the central and western mountain area of India, numbering about 650,000 in the late 20th century. The largest groups of Koli live in Maharashtra and Gujarat states. Although identified as cultivators and labourers, many Koli survive only by gathering firewood and hiring out as labourers, subsisting on berries and mangoes in summer when food is scarce. The coastal Koli fish and a few literate Koli are employed in Bombay schools or local government. Agri matches are shown by various Online Matrimonial Sites.
They speak a dialect which is a mixture of Marathi and Gujarati languages. The Agri are found mainly in Valsad District. There customs are similar to other Gujarati Hindus. Agri marriages are happening in Gujarat and some more states of our country through Marriage portals. They are mainly a community are of cultivators, with many now being landless agricultural labourers.
Koli Traditionally classified as a tribe, they were redesignated as a Hindu caste, containing the sub castes Agri and Ahir. Free Matrimonial Sites have become a part of Marriages in India, providing right matches for people within their own community as well as in other communities too. Koli, large caste living in the central and western mountain area of India, numbering about 650,000 in the late 20th century. The largest groups of Koli live in Maharashtra and Gujarat states. Although identified as cultivators and labourers, many Koli survive only by gathering firewood and hiring out as labourers, subsisting on berries and mangoes in summer when food is scarce. The coastal Koli fish and a few literate Koli are employed in Bombay schools or local government. Agri matches are shown by various Online Matrimonial Sites.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.