Online Encyclopedia

LACCADIVE ISLANDS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 37 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LACCADIVE ISLANDS  , a

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group of
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coral reefs and islands in the
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Indian Ocean, lying between 10° and 12° 20' N. and 71° 40' and 740 E . The name Laccadives (laksha dwipa, the "
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hundred thousand isles ") is that given by the
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people of the
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Malabar coast, and was probably meant to include the Maldives; they are called by the natives simply
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Dial, " islands," or Amendivi, from the chief island . There are seventeen
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separate reefs, " round each of which the too-
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fathom
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line is continuous " (J . S . Gardiner) . There are, however, only thirteen islands, and of these only eight are inhabited . They fall into two groups —the
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northern, belonging to the collectorate of South Kanara, and including the inhabited islands of Amini, Kardamat, Kiltan and Chetlat; and the
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southern, belonging to the administrative
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district of Malabar, and including the inhabited islands of Agatti, Kavaratti, Androth and Kalpeni . Between the Laccadives and the Maldives to the south lies the isolated Minikoi, which physically belongs to neither group, though somewhat nearer to the Maldives (q.v.) . The
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principal submerged banks lie north of the northern group of islands; they are Munyal, Coradive and
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Sesostris, and are of greater extent than those on which the islands lie . The general
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depth over these is from 23 to 28 fathoms, but Sesostris has shallower soundings " indicating patches growing up, and some traces of a rim " (J . S . Gardiner) .

The islands have in nearly all cases emerged from the eastern and protected

side of the
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reef, the western being completely exposed to the S.W. monsoon . The islands are small, none exceeding a mile in breadth, while the
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total
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area is only about 8o sq. m . They lie so low that they would be hardly discernible but for the coco-nut groves with which they are thickly covered . The
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soil is
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light coral sand, beneath which, a few feet down, lies a stratum of coral stretching over the whole of the islands . This coral, generally a
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foot to a foot and a
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half in thickness, has been in the principal islands wholly excavated, whereby the underlying
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damp sand is rendered available for cereals . These excavations—a
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work of vast labour—were made at a remote period, and according to the native tradition by giants . In these spaces (totam, " garden ") coarse grain,
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pulse, bananas and vegetables are cultivated; coco-nuts grow abundantly everywhere . For rice the natives depend upon the mainland . Population and Trade.—The population in 1901 was 10,274 . The people are Moplas, i.e. of mixed
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Hindu and Arab descent, and are Mahommedans . Their manners and customs are similar to those of the coast Moplas; but they maintain their own ancient caste distinctions . The language spoken is Malayalim, but it is written in the Arabic character .

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Reading and writing are
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common accomplishments among the men . The chief industry is the manufacture of coir . The various processes are entrusted to the
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women . The men employ themselves with boatbuilding and in conveying the island produce to the coast . The exports from the Laccadives are of the
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annual value of about 17,000 .
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History.—No data exist for determining at what period the Laccadives were first colonized . The earliest mention of them as distinguished from the Maldives seems to be by Albfriini (c. io3o), who divides the whole
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archipelago (Dfbajat) into the Divah Kuzah or Cowrie Islands (the Maldives), and the Divah Kanbar or Coir Islands (the Laccadives) . (See Journ .
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Asia' .
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Soc., September 1844, p . 265) . The islanders were converted to
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Islam by an Arab apostle named Mumba Mulyaka, whose
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grave at Androth still imparts a
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peculiar sanctity to that island .

The kazee of Androth was in 1847 still a member of his

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family, and was said to be the twenty-second who had held the office in
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direct line from the saint . This gives colour to the tradition that the conversion took place about 1250 . It is also further corroborated by the story given by the
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Ibn Batuta of the conversion of the Maldives, which occurred, as he heard, four generations (say one hundred and twenty years) before his visit to these islands in 1342 . The Portuguese discovered the Laccadives in May 1498, and built forts upon them, but about 1545 the natives rose upon their oppressors . The islands subsequently became a
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suzerainty of the
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raja of Cannanore, and after the peace of Seringapatam, 1792 the southern group was permitted to remain under the management of the native chief at a yearly tribute . This was often in arrear, and on this account these islands were sequestrated by the
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British government in 1877 . See The
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Fauna and Geography of the Maldive and Laccadive Archipelagoes, ed . J . Stanley Gardiner (Cambridge 1901–1905); Malabar District Gazetteer (
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Madras, 1908) ; G . Pereira, " As Ilhas de Dyve " (Boletim da Soc . Geog., Lisbon, 1898–1899) gives details
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relating to the Laccadives from the 16th-century MS.
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volume De insulis et peregrinatione lusitanorum in the
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National Library, Lisbon .

End of Article: LACCADIVE ISLANDS
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SIR JAMES [Giacomo] LACAITA (1813-1895)
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LACCOLITE (Gr. XhKKOS, cistern, XLOos, stone)

Additional information and Comments

these historical informations are really interesting for me, because i am a Maldivian and i really wanted know about these islands. And i am willing to visit Laccadive islands atleast once in my life time.
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