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Giraavaru people : ウィキペディア英語版
Giraavaru people

The Giraavaru people (Tivaru people) are the indigenous people of Giraavaru Island, part of the Maldives. Of Dravidian origin, and the earliest island community of the Maldives, their presence predates Buddhism and the arrival of a Northern kingly dynasty in the archipelago. Their ancestors were Tamils from the Malabar Coast (modern Kerala). Their former status was rather like the toddy-tapping lower castes of Kerala and other Divehis regarded them as impure. They themselves averred that their customs and morals were purer then those of other Divehis.〔(【引用サイトリンク】author=Maloney, Clarence )
The Giraavarus were isolated and thus an endogamous society with a relatively low population for more than a millennia. As a result, the population showed a number of heritable genetic disorders when they were forcibly assimilated with a population in the forties.
==Origins==
The Giraavaru origins are most probably in fishermen from the Malabar coast of the Subcontinent that settled the Maldives in very ancient times.〔Xavier Romero-Frias, ''The Maldive Islanders, A Study of the Popular Culture of an Ancient Ocean Kingdom''〕 They are mentioned in the legend about the establishment of the capital and kingly rule in Malé, where the Giraavaru people granted permission to a visiting king ''Koimala Kalo'' prior to the foundation of his kingdom on Malé. Although the Giraavaru was much larger and civilized at the time, most of the island has eroded due to changing weather (''Gira'' means eroding and ''varu'' could have come from ''faru'' meaning reef).
Until the twentieth century the Giraavaru people displayed recognisable physical, linguistic and cultural differences to the nearby islands. They were strictly monogamous and prohibited divorce. Their folklore was preserved in song and dance. Their music was audibly different from that of the other islanders. The most distinct items were the necklaces of tiny blue beads which no other Maldivian wore.〔
It is said that the Giraavaru people were always headed by a woman and that throughout Maldivian history, a woman (''foolhuma-dhaitha''), represented the Sultan's civil authority in Giravaru Island. The Sultans of the Maldives used to recognise the autonomy of the Giraavaru people and did not apply quite the same laws on them as they did on the rest of their realm. The Giravaru people never seemed to fully recognise the sovereignty of the Sultans. Ordinary Maldivians were required to address the Malé nobility in a different level of speech. However, the Giravaru people did not observe this custom and addressed the Malé nobility as they would usually address themselves. It was believed that the Giravaru people were mortally scared of toads.
Things changed since 1932 when a written constitution was adopted. The customary rights of the indigenous Giraavaru people were not recognised in that document. Any rights they seemed to have enjoyed under the absolute rule of the Sultans were extinguished by default.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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