Though the precise
Etymology
Etymology ( ) is the study of the origin and evolution of words—including their constituent units of sound and meaning—across time. In the 21st century a subfield within linguistics, etymology has become a more rigorously scientific study. ...
of
Assam
Assam (, , ) is a state in Northeast India, northeastern India, south of the eastern Himalayas along the Brahmaputra Valley, Brahmaputra and Barak River valleys. Assam covers an area of . It is the second largest state in Northeast India, nor ...
, a state in
India
India, officially the Republic of India, is a country in South Asia. It is the List of countries and dependencies by area, seventh-largest country by area; the List of countries by population (United Nations), most populous country since ...
is unclear—there is general agreement that it is related to the
Ahom people
The Ahom (Pron: ) or Tai-Ahom (; ) is an ethnic group from the Indian states of Assam and Arunachal Pradesh. The members of this group are admixed descendants of the Tai people who reached the Brahmaputra valley of Assam in 1228 and the loc ...
.
["Ahoms also gave Assam and its language their name (''Ahom'' and the modern ''ɒχɒm'' 'Assam' come from an attested earlier form ''asam'', ''acam'', probably from a Burmese corruption of the word ''Shan/Shyam'', cf. ''Siam'': Kakati 1962; 1-4)." ] Whatever the source of the English name, ''Assam'' is itself an anglicization.
Scholarly views
John Peter Wade (1805) called the
Ahom kingdom, that commenced on the Konder Chokey, "Kingdom of Assam".
["The Kingdom of Assam, where it is entered from Bengal, commences on the north of the Berhampooter, at the Khonder Chokey, nearly opposite to the picturesque estate of the late Mr Raush at Goalpara; and at the Nagrabaree Hill on the South", Wade, Dr John Peter, (1805)]
A Geographical Sketch of Assam
in Asiatic Annual Register, reprinted Some have speculated that the Bodo word "Ha-com" meaning low land was Sanskritised to 'Asama', dating its origin to at least first millennium common era.
[Subir Ghosh, ''Frontier travails: Northeast, the politics of a mess'', 2001, Page 20 the word may have been borrowed from a Boro formation like Ha-som, meaning low land. If this derivation is correct, the name Asama may go back to a period long before the coming of the Shans/Ahoms. It appears, therefore, reasonable to suggest that the Sanskrit formation, Asama, is based on Ha-com] While some believe the name Asama is a Sanskrit originated word which means unparalleled because of its unequal terrain with hills interspersed with valleys
Banikanta Kakati quotes Grierson in
Linguistic Survey of India
The Linguistic Survey of India (LSI) is a comprehensive survey of the languages of British India, describing 364 languages and dialects. The Survey was first proposed by George Abraham Grierson, a member of the Indian Civil Service and a lingu ...
that "While the Shan called themselves Tai, they came to be referred to as ''Āsām'', ''Āsam'' and sometimes as ''Acam'' by the indigenous people of the country. The modern Assamese word ''Āhom'' by which the Tai people are known is derived from ''Āsām'' or ''Āsam''. The epithet applied to the Shan conquerors was subsequently transferred to the country over which they ruled and thus the name Kāmarūpa was replaced by Āsām, which ultimately took the Sanskritized form ''Asama'', meaning "unequalled, peerless or uneven" Satyendranath Sarma repeats this derivation while quoting Kakati. Colin Masica too endorses this view.
Satyendra Nath Sarma writes "Assamese is the easternmost Indo-Aryan language of India, spoken by nearly eight millions of people inhabiting mostly the Brahmaputra valley of Assam. The word Assamese is an English formation built on the same principle as Simhalese or Canarese etc. It is based on the English word Assam by which the British rulers referred to the tract covered by the Brahmaputra valley and its adjoining areas. But the people call their country Asama and their language Asamiya".
Early names
Kamarupa
The earliest epigraphic mention of the Assam region comes from
Samudragupta
Samudragupta (Gupta script: ''Sa-mu-dra-gu-pta'', ( 335–375 CE) was the second emperor of the Gupta Empire of ancient India. A military genius and a patron of arts, he is regarded among the greatest rulers in Indian history. As a son of th ...
's
Allahabad stone pillar from the fourth century CE, where it is called ''
Kamarupa
Kamarupa (; also called Pragjyotisha or Pragjyotisha-Kamarupa), an early state during the Classical period on the Indian subcontinent, was (along with Davaka) the first historical kingdom of Assam. The Kamrupa word first appeared in the ...
''. The pillar lists the frontier kingdoms (''pratyanta nripati'') and lists Kamarupa (
Western Assam
Lower Assam division is one of the 5 administrative divisions of Assam in India. It was formed in 1874, consisting of the undivided Kamrup district of Western Assam, undivided Darrang and Nagaon districts of Central Assam and Khasi & Jaint ...
) along with
Davaka
Davaka (Skt. *Ḍavāka) was a kingdom of ancient Indian subcontinent, located in current central region of Assam state. The references to it comes from the 4th century Allahabad pillar inscription of Samudragupta, where it is mentioned as one ...
, a region in the central Assam (undivided Nagaon district). Therefore, during the fourth century, the eastern boundary of the Kamarupa did not extend beyond west Assam. The ''
Kalika Purana
The Kalika Purana (), also called the Kali Purana, Sati Purana or Kalika Tantra, is one of the eighteen minor Puranas (''Upapurana'') in the Shaktism tradition of Hinduism. The text was likely composed in Assam or Cooch Behar district, Cooch Behar ...
'' (10th century) and the ''
Yogini Tantra
The ''Yogini Tantra'' is a 16th- or 17th-century tantric text by an unknown author from either Assam or Cooch Behar: "One of the most explicit descriptions of Tantric sexual rites occurs in Yogini tantra, a sixteenth-century text from Cooch Beha ...
'' (16th/17th century) refer to Kamarupa as a kingdom from Karatoya in the west to Dikkaravasini in the east. Dikkaravasini is identified with present-day Sadiya. The copper-plate inscription from
Vaidyadeva calls Kamarupa a ''mandala'' within his own kingdom. Later epigraphic sources from Assam call the kingdom ''Pragjyotisha-Kamarupa''. In the early twelfth century, epigraphic sources from the
Pala dynasty
The Pāla Empire was the empire ruled by the Pala dynasty, ("protector" in Sanskrit) a medieval Indian dynasty which ruled the kingdom of Gauda. The empire was founded with the election of Gopāla by the chiefs of Gauda in late eighth centu ...
mention Kamarupa as a ''mandala'' of the kingdom they ruled. The invasion of western Assam by Allauddin Hussein of
Gaur
The gaur (''Bos gaurus''; ) is a large bovine native to the Indian Subcontinent and Southeast Asia, and has been listed as Vulnerable species, Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List since 1986. The global population was estimated at a maximum of 21,000 ...
up to
Barnadi river in 1498 is recorded in coins from the early sixteenth century, declaring Hussein as the conqueror of ''Kamru'' (Kamrup) (and not ''Assam''). The Kamarupa kings called themselves the ''Maharajadhiraja'' of Pragjyotisha. One of the kings Vaidyadeva, referred to Pragjyotisha as a ''bhukti'' and Kamarupa as a ''mandala'' (a smaller division, possibly within Pragjyotisha).
Asam and variations
Assam, Asam and other variations started appearing in relatively recent times, and their uses cannot be attributed to any period earlier than the sixteenth century,
and is associated with the Shan invaders. The names appeared primarily in three different scripts: the Assamese, Persian and the Roman scripts. The sixteenth century is the period when
Srimanta Sankardeva
Srimanta Sankardev (, ; 1449–1568) was a 15th–16th century Assamese polymath; a saint-scholar, poet, playwright, dancer, actor, musician, artist social-religious reformer and a figure of importance in the cultural and religious history of ...
established his
Ekasarana Dharma
''Ekasarana Dharma'' () is a Vaishnavism#Later medieval period, Vaishnavite religion propagated by Srimanta Sankardeva in the 15th-16th century in the Indian state of Assam. It reduced focus on Vedic ritualism and focuses on devotion (''bhak ...
. This was accompanied by a profusive production in literature. At the same time,
Vishwa Singha established the
Koch kingdom
The Kamata Kingdom ; in the eastern Sivalik Hills, emerged in western Kamarupa probably when Sandhya, a ruler of Kamarupanagara, moved his capital west to Kamatapur sometime after 1257 CE. Since it originated in the old seat of the Kamarup ...
in the west and the
Ahom kingdom saw both a rapid expansion in territory and an increasing Hindu and Assamese influence in its court under
Suhungmung
Suhungmung (), or Dihingia Roja was one of the most prominent Ahom Kings who ruled at the cusp of Assam's medieval history. His reign broke from the early Ahom rule and established a multi-ethnic polity in his kingdom. Under him the Ahom Ki ...
. This increased prominence of the Ahom kingdom brought it to the attention of those outside the Brahmaputra valley.
Local forms
Locally, Vaishnavite writers and biographers used different forms of the name indiscriminately (e.g. Āsām, Āsam, Asam) to refer to the Ahom community.
The earliest mention of ''Asama'' is found in the
Assamese Bhagavat of Sankardeva
The Bhagavat of Sankardev is the Assamese adaptation of the Bhagavata Purana made by Srimanta Sankardev in 15th-16th century in the regions that form present-day Assam and Cooch Behar. Though the major portions of the work was transcreated by S ...
, which was composed in early sixteenth century. The relevant stanza is (i
iTrans:
''kiraTa kachhaari khaachi gaaro miri''
''yavana ka~Nka govaala , ''
''asama maluka dhobaa ye turuka''
''kubaacha mlechchha chaNDaala , , ''
The Ahoms were called ''Asam'' in the eighteenth century ''Darrangraj Vamshavali'' of Suryya Khari Daibajna;
[ variously as ''Āsām'', ''Āsam'', and ''Asam'' in the seventeenth century ''Shankar-carit'' of Daityari Thakur;][ and ''Acam'' in ''Kamrupar Buranji''. According to a count provided by , the ''Kamrupar Buranji'' names the country some thirty times, of which ''Āsām'' was used three times, ''Ācam'' was used three times, and ''Ācām'' was used for the rest, though in other Buranjis other spellings are also seen. Furthermore, Bhuyan mentions that though both "" (''s'') and "" (''c'') have been used in the name, it is likely that it was pronounced mostly with .
The name ''asama'' (as well as ''acam'', ''asam'', ''asam'', ''asam'') was used in the form ''asamakshara'' to denote the ]Ahom script
The Ahom script or Tai Ahom Script is an abugida that is used to write the Ahom language, a dormant Tai language undergoing revival spoken by the Ahom people till the late 18th-century, who established the Ahom kingdom and ruled the eastern pa ...
in Sanskrit-Ahom bilingual copper plate grants of the Ahom kings.
Mughal forms
As opposed to the local uses, where ''Asam'' and similar formations were used to denote the Ahom community, external sources used variations of ''Asam'' to denote the kingdom ruled by the Ahoms. The Ain-I-Akbari of the sixteenth century uses the form ''Asham'' (آشام) to denote the Ahom kingdom. The official chronicler of Mir Jumla also calls the place "Asam".
European forms
The earliest Europeans who came in contact with Assam (and who had the opportunity to write the name in the Latin script), were travelers who went to Bengal and adventurers who accompanied military expeditions against the Ahom kingdom; these groups used variations of the name ''Asam'' to denote the kingdom.
In a map o
"Kingdom of Bengale"
drawn by Joh. van Leenen around 1661 and published around 1662, Assam was clearly named and correctly identified. One of the first unambiguous references comes from Thomas Bowrey in 1663 about Mir Jumla's death: "They lost the best of Nabobs, the Kingdome of Acham, and, by consequence, many large privileges". Though Bowrey wrote his manuscript in the 17th century, the manuscript itself was published for the first time in the 20th century. On the other hand, Jean-Baptiste Tavernier
Jean-Baptiste Tavernier (1605–1689) was a 17th-century French gem merchant and traveler. Tavernier, a private individual and merchant traveling at his own expense, covered, by his own account, 60,000 leagues in making six voyages to Persia ...
's ''Travels in India'', published in 1676 uses the spelling "Assem" for Assam in the French original (''Aſem'' in the English translation, published in 1678). Thus the earliest English use of the name was "Aſem", with a Long s
The long s, , also known as the medial ''s'' or initial ''s'', is an Archaism, archaic form of the lowercase letter , found mostly in works from the late 8th to early 19th centuries. It replaced one or both of the letters ''s'' in a double-''s ...
.
Colonialists then followed these travelers and adventurers. Both Grierson and Gait agree that the British used ''Asam'' before finally settling on ''Assam''. In various documents of the British East India Company relating to the last few Ahom kings, the name of country was mentioned as ''Assam''. The 1826 Treaty of Yandabo
The Treaty of Yandabo ( ) was the peace treaty that ended the First Anglo-Burmese War. The treaty was signed on 24February 1826, nearly two years after the war formally broke out on 5March 1824, by General Sir Archibald Campbell on the British ...
, marking the conquest of the Ahom kingdom at the hands of the British, uses ''Assam'' to denote the area under the erstwhile Ahoms and its protectorates (Darrang Koch, Jaintias, Kacharis and some hill areas in the present Arunachal Pradesh and Nagaland).
After the British took control of the region, the name ''Assam'' was extended to the province that was then much larger than the Ahom kingdom. It then included, Garo Hills
The Garo Hills (IPA: ˈgɑ:ro:) are part of the Garo-Khasi range in the Meghalaya state of India. They are inhabited by the Garo people. It is one of the wettest places in the world. The range is part of the Meghalaya subtropical forests ecor ...
and Lushai Hills (Mizoram
Mizoram is a states and union territories of India, state in northeastern India, with Aizawl as its Capital city, capital and largest city. It shares 722-kilometres (449 miles) of international borders with Bangladesh to the west, and Myanmar t ...
). Since that time, the boundaries of Assam have been repeatedly redrawn, though the name ''Assam'' remained. Today, the political boundary of Assam contains roughly the historical Ahom Kingdom and its protectorates, the Kachari kingdom
The Dimasa Kingdom also known as Kachari kingdom was a late medieval/early modern kingdom in Assam, Northeast India ruled by Dimasa kings. The Dimasa kingdom and others ( Kamata, Chutiya) that developed in the wake of the Kamarupa kingdom we ...
, Koch Hajo
Koch Hajo (1581–1616) was the kingdom under Raghudev and his son Parikshit Narayan of the Koch dynasty that stretched from Sankosh River in the west to the Bhareli River in the east on the north bank of the Brahmaputra River. It was created by ...
and a part of the Jaintia Kingdom.
Modern name Assam
According to , the English word ''Assamese'' parallels other demonym
A demonym (; ) or 'gentilic' () is a word that identifies a group of people ( inhabitants, residents, natives) in relation to a particular place. Demonyms are usually derived from the name of the place ( hamlet, village, town, city, region, ...
s (''Chinese'', ''Sinhalese'', ''Nepalese'', etc.), building on ''Assam'', an Anglicization of the Sanskrit word ''Asama'' that itself refers to the Brahmaputra Valley. Other writers (most notably Banikanta Kakati and S N Sarma) have repeated this claim. has mentioned that the British used ''Asam'' before finally settling on ''Assam''; though Grierson claims that the form ''Assam'' is English, ''The Assam Tribune'' has reported the finding of a Dutch map drawn around 1661 with a label ''Assam''.
Theories on etymology
The precise etymology of the name ''Assam'' or ''Asam'' () is not known, though many explanations have been put forward. Among the different theories, two attribute the name to the terrain of the region while three attribute it to the Shan invaders of the 13th century.
Ha-com: from Bodo
One of the earliest theories published was provided by Baden-Powell in 1896, when he proposed that the name could possibly derive from the Bodo ''Ha-com'', meaning "low or level country". He rejected the possibility that the name ''Assam'' (''Asam'') could be derived from ''Aham'' (Ahom). Subsequent writers like P. C. Choudhury and R N Mosahary lend credence to this theory. So, if Ha-Com is the source of Sanskrit Asama, then it traces its origin from very early times, long before any Ahom invasion.
Asama: from Sanskrit
Two different meanings of the Sanskrit word ''Asama'' have been used to explain the name: one meaning "uneven" (terrain) and the other "unequaled".
reports that according to some people, the name "Assam" is derived from the Sanskrit ''asama'', meaning "uneven" which describes the terrain of the region in contrast to the flat plains of Samatata, though he rejects this explanation on the grounds that the word was never used before the advent of the Ahoms and that the Vamshavali of the Darrang kings used it to refer to the Ahom ''community'' and not to the land.
The second theory Gait reported is that ''Asama'', meaning "unequal" or "peerless", was a name the local people gave the undefeated Ahoms, according to a tradition that the Ahoms themselves believed in. Gait rejects this notion as well, noting that the local tribal people would not have given a Sanskrit name to the invaders.
Though Gait rejects both these explanations, he nevertheless asserts that the name is somehow associated with the Ahoms. George Grierson, Banikanta Kakati, and Dimbeswar Neog
Dimbeswar Neog (1899–1966), also known as the Indradhenu Poet, was a renowned writer, literati, critic, educator and poet of Assamese literature.
Early life
Born in the little riverine village of Kamarfadia in Sibsagar, Assam, Dimbeswar Ne ...
, also reject the Sanskrit origin of the name. Satyendra Nath Sharma accepts Banikanta Kakati's view ''in toto''.
Though both explanations have been rejected in the academic literature, the notion that the name ''Assam'' has a Sanskrit origin continues to hold sway in popular perceptions, due mainly to two standard dictionaries of Assamese: '' Hemkox'' and ''Chandrakanta Abhidhan''. The ''Hemkox'' forwards the second theory, associating the name to the meaning "unequaled".
A-Sham: from the name ''Sham''
Gait reports that some associated the name with the Shan who are called ''Syam'' by the Assamese, an explanation which he found not convincing. nevertheless Grierson has accepted that the 13th century natives of Assam called the Shan (Sham) invaders by this name. Dimbeswar Neog notes that the Indic prefix ''a''- does not necessarily mean an antonym in Assamese and it could just be a synonym (e.g. ''kumari''/''akumari'', ''bihane''/''abihane''), a feature that is also seen in Sanskrit (''sur''/''asur''); therefore, ''Asham'' could mean the same as ''Sham'', and the name could be derived as ''Sham'' () > ''Āshām'' () > ''Āsam'' () > ''Asam'' (). Amalendu Guha, too derives it from ''Sham''; but instead of using an Indo-Aryan rule, derives it from the Bodo form, ''Ha-Sham'', meaning the land of the ''Sham'' people. Masica too believes that ''Assam'' derives from an earlier attested form of ''asam'', ''acam'' which in turn is from a Burmese corruption of the name ''Shan/Shyam''.
A-cham: from Tai
derives the name from a Tai root, ''cham'' (defeated), with an Indic prefix for negation, ''a-'', so that ''a-cham'' would mean undefeated.["In Tai the root ''cham'' means "to be defeated". With the privative Assamese affix ''ā'' the whole formation ''Āchām'' would mean undefeated." ]
Notes
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{{Assam
Assam
Assam, Etymology of
Assam, Etymology of
Assam, Etymology of
Cultural history of Assam