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The
age of Kullu's hill rulers, or rajas has passed into history. The scriptures
tell us that the original name of Kullu Valley was Kulanthapitha meaning
"the end of the habitable world." This can be appreciated by
anyone who has stood at the top of Rohtang Pass, bounding Kullu and Lahul.
The human population of the region has always been largely settled in
mountain villages and in the tributaries of the Beas River. The farmers
and shepherds of these villages, with their pragmatic knowledge and techniques,
have always been the central link between human society and natural ecosystems
in the Sainj-Tirthan region. Agriculture in these mountains was largely
for subsistence until the 1960s, when profit-making commercial agriculture
and horticulture began to transform the economy and agriculture of the
area.
Historical
Background
Human settlements in the Upper Beas Basin began well over 2,000 years
ago, with a gradual migration northward from the lowlands up into the
river valleys. Archeological knowledge of subsequent centuries, especially
regarding agriculture and land use, is limited. The dominant caste of
farmers and shepherds on the land were people called Kanets. By the 1800s
they owned over 80% of the agricultural land in Kullu subdivision. They
referred to themselves simply as zamindars, the owners of the land. In
the early 1900s they began to claim the caste name of Rajput, a status
which was recognized officially in the 1930s.
Perhaps as much as 1,000 years ago, Rajputs of high status began penetrating
the upper Beas region from the Punjab lowlands, during the early Muslim
invasions. The most powerful Rajput families in modern centuries were
descended from Kullu Raja's retainers and they did not intermarry with
Kanets. Brahmins also gradually moved into the mountains from the north
Indian lowlands. They looked down on local religious traditions. They
built temples to the high gods of Hinduism, and served as hereditary temple
priests (pujaris). In spite of their high ritual (caste) status, many
of these Brahmins also held land, and worked the plough, unlike most plains
Brahmins. At the lowest caste level were small numbers of untouchables,
today's Scheduled Castes or Dalits.
Rural villagers had very limited tillable soils in the mountain valleys
for their agricultural use. Even in the 19th century there was a high
ratio of rural population to tillable land. On their small tilled terraces
they grew hardy subsistence crops which were adapted to local conditions.
Farmers
grew a variety of basic food grains. In the valley bottoms, rice, the
main summer or kharif grain, was cultivated under irrigation. The irrigation
canals (kuls) were cooperatively managed by the villagers under the direction
of village officials chosen for that specific task. Winter or rabi grains
included wheat, buckwheat and barley (the latter was cultivated in higher
fields and was a favorite in Inner Saraj, location of present GHNP). In
early modern times the kharif crop was enriched by several new plants
from the Americas, such as corn, amaranth, and potato.
Cultivated with the grains, or on smaller plots, the farmers grew beans,
sarsun (mustard) for cooking oil, as well as squashes, green beans, and
leafy green vegetables. By the 19th century many European vegetables were
also grown. On steeper hillsides they grew fruit and nut trees such as
apricot and peach for oil, walnut, and other nuts. In these thin mountain
soils, severely deficient in nutrients and basic chemicals, crops do not
grow without enrichment with manure. The sources of manure were an important
element of traditional agriculture, linking tilled fields with domestic
livestock and the forest. Farmers used cattle and sheep manure and chaff,
mixed with green cuttings from small pine and fir trees. For fertilizing
crops this was an effective combination, but it did damage to the cut
trees, if it was not done with restraint. Finally, there are indications
that villagers practiced leaving their terraces fallow at least every
third year.
Forest use was another dimension of the villagers' subsistence. They had
open access to the forest for firewood and construction timber. They collected
a wide variety of medicinal herbs, which anyone was allowed to harvest.
Bamboo was reserved for the basket-makers. For occasional meat they hunted
mammals and birds in the forest, especially in winter when the snows drove
ungulates down the mountainsides toward the farm settlements. Villagers
did not use guns, but laid snares for quail, pheasant, and even mammals
such as ghoral, bharal (blue sheep) and musk deer.
The
most important non-agricultural use of land in the Kullu and Seraj region
was animal grazing in the countryside (known as pastoralism). Village
households had small numbers of cattle, sheep and goats for subsistence
use. As a link with the commercial economy, both local villagers and outsiders
also kept larger flocks of sheep and goats, which had to migrate in search
of food. Each spring, when receding snows allowed, flocks moved upwards
through the forest zone into alpine pastures (or thach) for summer grazing
on nutritious upland vegetation. It is a matter of dispute whether these
high openings in the forest were partly or entirely created by shepherds
using fire to eliminate trees.
It is also debated whether the villagers' livestock caused severe deforestation
around settlements at lower elevations, especially on the warm, dry, south-facing
slopes in the river valleys. Dietrich Brandis, the most knowledgeable
early British observer(1877), described a degree of degradation of the
landscape of the lower Tirthan valley which was already as severe as today:
"The lower part of the Tirth valley presents a lamentable scene of
desolation, the slopes on either side...being furrowed by torrents and
scarred all over by landslips and incipient ravines, which indicate that
grazing and burning are destroying rapidly the natural covering of the
hill sides."
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