Showing posts with label self governing villages. Show all posts
Showing posts with label self governing villages. Show all posts

Monday, December 8, 2025

From Sabha to the Constitution: Civilisational Roots, Colonial Experiments, Epigraphical Evidence, and the Urgent Renewal of Village Democracy in India

Introduction

India represents the longest continuous civilisational experiment in decentralised governance in world history. Long before the emergence of the modern nation-state, Indian villages functioned as autonomous political, judicial and economic communities. Decentralisation in India is not an imported administrative device but a civilisational principle grounded in dharma, duty, and community. 


Village Democracy as India’s Governance DNA  

The dominant narrative of democracy locates its origins in the Greek city-state, Roman republicanism, or modern European constitutionalism. India followed a distinctly different trajectory. Here, democracy did not emerge from urban assemblies or aristocratic estates; it arose from the village. For more than two millennia, Indian villages governed land, irrigation, revenue, justice, education, charity, and social order through dharmic local assemblies rather than centralised state bureaucracies.

Charles Metcalfe famously described Indian villages as “little republics, having nearly everything that they want within themselves”. Unlike Western political systems that concentrated sovereignty in the state, Indian political life distributed sovereignty across thousands of local dharmic communities.


The Classical Foundations: Sabha, Panchayat, and Dharma  

Ancient Indian governance operated through sabhas (deliberative assemblies) and panchayats (judicial–administrative councils). These were not informal bodies but legally recognised corporate institutions owning property, enforcing contracts, regulating commons, and adjudicating disputes.

Panchayats functioned as the grassroots tier of judicial authority, settling most civil and social disputes without reference to royal courts. The king was not the daily administrator of society but the custodian of dharma.

Dharma served as the ethical foundation of this decentralised order. Unlike modern legality, which depends on coercive enforcement, dharmic governance relied on shared moral obligation and social consensus. Compliance was secured through legitimacy rather than surveillance.


Epigraphical Foundations of Village Self-Governance  

Beyond textual sources, India’s decentralised governance system is **directly attested through hundreds of temple and land-grant inscriptions**, making it one of the best-documented pre-modern local governance traditions in the world.

The Uttaramerur Inscription (c. 920–930 CE)  

The most famous documentary evidence of village democracy is found in the Vaikuntha Perumal Temple inscriptions at Uttaramerur (Tamil Nadu), issued during the reigns of Parantaka I and subsequent Chola rulers. These inscriptions provide a complete constitutional blueprint of village governance.

They record:

- Ward-wise village organisation (kudumbu system)

- Electoral selection through Kudavolai (lottery)

- Strict eligibility qualifications (property ownership, Vedic education, tax compliance)

- Severe disqualifications (corruption, moral misconduct, audit failure)

- Functional committees for irrigation, tanks, justice, temples, revenue, and charity

- Mandatory public auditing of accounts

- Rotation, recall, and disbarment mechanisms


Other Major Epigraphical Records of Local Governance  

1. Chola Nadu Tank Committees – Inscriptions from Tirukkalukkunram, Tiruvallur, and Tiruchirapalli record technical irrigation committees with punishment for negligence.  

2. Karnataka Brahmadeya and Devadana Inscriptions – Village assemblies managing tax exemptions, water rights, and temple economies.  

3. Andhra Satavahana and Ikshvaku Inscriptions – Local guilds and village arbitration councils (nigamas and gramikas).  

4. Western Indian Copper Plate Grants (Guptas, Maitrakas) – Autonomous village land administration and dispute settlements.  

5. Kerala Temple Sabha Inscriptions – Deeply decentralised temple–village financial governance networks.


Together, these records confirm that:

- Villages possessed corporate legal identity

- Assemblies exercised judicial, fiscal, and administrative authority

- Governance was procedural, rule-bound, and audited

- Power was distributed, not centralised


The Chola Kudavolai System: Ethical Electoral Governance  

The Kudavolai system described above represents one of the most sophisticated pre-modern electoral systems in world history. Candidates were selected through lottery only after clearing strict moral, educational, fiscal, and social qualifications. Disqualifications included corruption, abuse of office, financial irregularities, and moral misconduct. Committees managed irrigation, land revenue, justice, temple administration, and public works under strict public audit.

This system integrated:

- Moral filtration  

- Randomised anti-factional selection  

- Continuous public accountability  

- Term limits and recall  

Modern democracies continue to struggle to achieve this combination simultaneously.


Colonial Disruption and the Dismantling of Village Sovereignty  

British colonial rule fundamentally disrupted India’s decentralised equilibrium. Through the Permanent Settlement, Ryotwari, and Mahalwari systems, land revenue was centralised, and villages were converted into instruments of extraction rather than self-governing communities.

Village courts were weakened, customary law delegitimised, and Panchayats reduced to advisory bodies. Maine himself later lamented that the village institutions which had survived centuries of political upheaval were severely weakened under modern administrative centralisation (Maine, 1871).


Early Twentieth-Century Revival Experiments  

A. The Aundh Experiment (1939–48)  

The princely state of Aundh adopted the most radical decentralisation experiment in modern India. Through the Aundh Panchayat Constitution (1939), the ruler voluntarily transferred all authority—administrative, fiscal, and judicial—to elected village panchayats. The state existed only as a federation of self-governing villages. Gandhi described it as the closest living embodiment of Gram Swaraj.

B. Baroda State Reforms (Sayajirao Gaekwad III)  

Baroda pioneered compulsory education, village courts, local boards, and decentralised administration between 1900–1930, building institutional capacity long before Independence.

C. Maratha & Princely State Experiments  

Kolhapur, Indore, and Mysore expanded village self-governance in sanitation, education, public health, and legal access.

D. Bengal & Chittagong Local Self-Government Acts (1919–1930s)  

The Montagu–Chelmsford reforms institutionalised district and union boards across Bengal and eastern India.

E. Travancore & Cochin (Kerala)  

Kerala’s later democratic depth drew directly from early village institutions in health, education, and land governance developed during the princely period.


Gandhi’s Gram Swaraj and Moral Decentralisation  

For Gandhi, swaraj meant ethical self-rule, not mere administrative devolution. Political power without self-restraint produced exploitation. True freedom required villages to be economically self-reliant, politically autonomous, and morally disciplined (Gandhi, 1909/1938). Authority was inseparable from service.


The 73rd Constitutional Amendment as Civilisational Restoration  

The 73rd Amendment (1992) constitutionally recognised Panchayats as “institutions of self-government,” establishing the Gram Sabha as the foundation of rural democracy. While framed as a technical reform, it represents a delayed civilisational restoration of India’s ancient village sovereignty.

Rudolph and Rudolph (1987) interpret this as the re-emergence of “negotiated authority,” where modern institutions operate through continuous engagement with social traditions rather than their displacement.


Diagnosis: Structural Weaknesses of Contemporary Panchayati Raj  

Despite constitutional status, today’s Panchayats suffer from:

1. Limited fiscal autonomy  

2. Misalignment of functions, funds, and functionaries  

3. Ritualised rather than deliberative Gram Sabhas  

4. Weak administrative capacity  

5. Elite capture and micro-clientelism  

6. Fragmented accountability  

7. Disconnection from moral legitimacy  

8. Collapse of local dispute resolution  

9. Short planning horizons  

10. Weak enforcement of social audits  


Reforming Panchayati Raj: A Civilisationally Anchored Framework  

Immediate Measures  

Mandatory Gram Sabha clearance, enforceable social audits, Kudavolai-inspired committee selection, commons registries, village mediation panels.


Medium-Term Reforms  

Statutory 3F alignment, own-source revenues, performance-linked grants, Panchayat secretariats, women’s leadership pipelines.


Long-Term Structural Reforms  

Village judicial systems, decentralised education governance, binding State Finance Commissions, constitutional clarity on village powers.


These align closely with Ostrom’s core principles of durable self-governance.


Conclusion: From Stone Inscriptions to Constitutional Law  


From the stone pillars of Uttaramerur to the text of the Indian Constitution, India’s decentralised governance tradition reveals an uninterrupted civilisational memory of village sovereignty. Ancient sabhas, epigraphical Panchayat constitutions, Chola electoral ethics, Aundh, Baroda, Gandhian Swaraj, and the 73rd Amendment together affirm one truth:  


Indian democracy is strongest when it flows upward from the village, not downward from the state.


Its renewal today is not nostalgia—it is institutional realism grounded in two millennia of governance practice.

Sunday, April 7, 2024

The Unknown Story of the Valour of the Yogic Village of Sorade - Sandeep Balakrishna

THE TRANQUILITY OF MALENADU is undoubtedly a blessing but it is also a cloak that conceals thousands of profound stories of history. The curious seeker will be left with wanting more if he as much as parts the bearded lushness of its deceptive shrubs. The dedicated historian will realize the sorry reality of his own mortality the moment he prises open the past of just one precinct, one temple, or one Agrahara. The profound interconnections are delicately bound to one another in a mirror-like fashion of its flora and fauna. The pleasure-seeking traveller, the most unfortunate of all species, will merely marvel at the fuliginous mornings of Malenadu from the illusory luxury of his resort room.

Malenadu has a thousand gates to enter and embrace it. One of the slogans of Hassan is the boast that it is the gateway to Malenadu. It is a well-founded boast but it is also borrowed glory. Like Hassan, other places skirting Malenadu, can claim the same boast. By the mere virtue of proximity, these geographies are indeed fortunate.

But when we push the geography farther away by three hundred kilometres and begin our journey from Bangalore, we arrive at Shivamogga, one of the nerve-centres of Malenadu. And when we travel twenty-seven kilometres westwards from Shivamogga along a crooked line, we arrive at an enchanting forest-pocket named Choradi. 

Choradi is the location of our story.

Today, it is a large village populated by about 2600 people. Its profound history is now as obscure and as inaccessible as the thousands of Malenadu valleys which no one knows about simply because they don’t care.

Its journey roughly begins sometime in the fourth century CE, during the rule of the Kadamba dynasty of Banavasi. Its original name was Soraḍe (ಸೊರಡೆ).

But a slight detour is essential before we narrate the full story.

In 1920-21, the Mysore Archeological Department, visited Choradi and found several valuable stone and other inscriptions in its vicinity. As part of this expedition, they came across the deserted house of a Nadiga (town or village chief or officer) in a village east of Choradi. In its compound, they sighted a key that unlocked a glowing but now-faded gem of history: a stone inscription lying on the ground, battered by eons of natural onslaughts. Its size was modest: 3.3/2.6 feet.

Good things come in small sizes.

The inscription, written in Haḷagannaḍa (Old Kannada) opened a new world.

An Independent, Self-Governing Village Republic

The immediate fact that it revealed was stunning: Soraḍe was an independent village republic. Although the entire region was under the control of the Kadambas, Soraḍe did not owe allegiance to any king. In contemporary verbiage, this village, an Agrahara, was a flourishing and early model of what is today known as self-governing village community. Soraḍe was regulated by the Village Assembly, a ubiquitous feature in the history, structure and functioning of the Hindu administrative system from untold antiquity. The story of Soraḍe brilliantly reveals the historical fact that even the king largely left these villages untouched. The villagers paid no taxes to anyone and managed their affairs with extraordinary competence and justice.

External control and regulation become unnecessary when internal discipline is perfected.

This shows that by all standards, Soraḍe was tightly-knit, prosperous and sizably populous. But more importantly, its people were made of a different material. This is how they describe themselves and the justified pride they take in their village.

"All the inhabitants of the ancient Agrahara of Soraḍe are devoted to the observance of Pranayama and other Yoga practices, and are fully in control of their sense organs."

But the event that occasioned this inscription is the real story.

Once, a bunch of power-drunk officers of the Kadamba ruler Tailapa (II or III) launch an unprovoked raid against Soraḍe in order to steal their cows. They were in for a rude shock. The doughty village police chief, Cīladalāra bōpadalāra met the marauders head on and gave them a thrashing they would never forget. He saved the cows but died a hero in the battle.

Soraḍe sung praises of his undaunted valour, mourned his martyrdom and were convinced that through his meritorious service, he had attained Suraloka, or Svarga or the celestial abode (…bōpadalāra Kādi suralōka prāptan ādaḍe…). The villagers also reserved harsh words for Tailapa himself, branding his officers as “royal cow-lifters”: Kadambara tailapanGōva koḷḷ ahitaraṁ.

And then, in a characteristic act of nobility, Mācōja, an important officer of the Village Assembly, ratified the unanimous decision of the village to honour the martyred warrior. This was the decision in official language:

All the inhabitants of the ancient Agrahara of Sorade, devoted to the observance of Pranayama and other Yoga practices, all of them assembled in thousands, made a gift of a wetland and a dry field together with the remission of house-tax and family-tax to Cīladalāra bōpadalāra in appreciation of the victory he won against royal cow lifters on their way to make a raid of cows of the village. WHOEVER TAKES AWAY THIS GIFT WILL BE CAST OUT OF THE COUNTRY.


The last line is an extraordinary reflection of and an unabashed declaration of the fierce and confident spirit of independence of the people of Soraḍe. This is also Yoga. If they could pulverize the royal thieves, they could also safeguard their gift to their beloved martyr. This is the real deal of Sanatana political, social and community history that has been suppressed.

A scene of Bōpadalāra’s battle with the enemies has been engraved on the Soraḍe inscription along with the text. This inscription is just an infinitesimal example of our historical treasure-chest that yields such real-life demonstrations of the innate Hindu nobility shaped by eons of living the Dharmic life, of adhering to the Purushartha ideal and of placing Sanatana values above individualism.

Who knows, you might find a Choradi or Soraḍe in your vicinity.

Courtesy: https://www.dharmadispatch.in/history/the-unknown-story-of-the-valour-of-the-yogic-village-of-sorade