478 Mr. Glyn on the various Classes of Population in Bareilly. 



Trade, fee. 



Seal-engravers (Mahome- 

 dans) 



Number of Houses, 

 Shops, &c. 



} 



Kanjars, a tribe of outcast 

 Hindus 



Fakirs (Mendicants) 



Bamboo-splitters (Maho- 

 medans) 



Wire-drawers 

 dans) 



3 Houses. 

 5 Sliops. 



6 Huts. 



} 



Average 



Earnings per 



Month- 



Rupees. 



4. to 5 



Remarks. 



{■ 



,2 to 3 ; often 

 much less. \ 



I 69 Mahom. \ \^ 

 ) 60 Hindus. \ ;„ 



)lii9 Houses. ) "" 



} 



4 Houses. 



(Mahome- j. ^ Houses. 



I 



- > 22 Houses. 



J- 16 Houses. 

 51 Houses. 



Kan-mail, Ear-cleaners and 

 Brusli-makers (Mahome 

 dans) 



Hindu and Mahomedan 

 Physicians 



Greengrocers (Mahome- \ 



dans) ' / 



1 

 Bhatyaras, a class of people "| 



attending strangers in \ j^j houses. 



caravanseras ( Mahome-, t 



dans) I J 



vcrageearn-i 



various; 



not specified. 



Mirasis, Men, Women, 

 and Boy-singers and M 

 sicians (Mahomedans' 



Coarse-leather Stirrup and 

 Harness-makers and V 

 ders ■ 



150 Hindus. 



Barbers ^}}}^ Mahom. 



1 268 Houses. 



n, ) 



u- y 41 H 



'"( 

 and ") 

 /en- V 



li 



6 Houses. 



Printers and Stampers(Ma- f 

 homedans) \ 



Silk-thread Dealers (Hin- \ 

 das) 7 



3 Houses 

 2 Shops, 



2 Shops. 



■■} 



3 to 4 



4 to 8 



3 to 4 



4 to 50 

 4 to 8 



4 to 5 



4 to 13 



5 to 6 



4 to 8 

 4 to 5 

 4 to 7 



A poor trade : this shows want of 

 wealth in the higher classes who 

 ought to be their customers. 



rThis class sell rope and string 

 1 made of grass, and catch snakes ; 

 '' they lead a wandering life and 



I eat the coarsest food, lizards and 

 vermin of all sorts. 



r They gain their livelihood by beg- 

 I ging ; many hold charity lands. 

 I should estimate their earnings 

 I at more than what many of the 

 '- industrious classes earn. 



'Some of these physicians hold 

 lands tax-free, granted by Go- 

 vernment ; and most have other 

 means besides their earnings by 

 medical practice. Several prac- 



L tice gratis amongst the poor. 



The SariiVs or Caravanseras are • 

 square courts, containing twen- 

 ty to forty small rooms un- 

 furnished, with the ground for a 

 floor, and more like cells than 



I apartments. Each room has its 



I, attendant Bhalyara, 



I ( They are continually hired to sing 

 ( and play at festivals, &c. 



f They make the rude harness used 

 \ for country bullock carriages. 



'In this country barbers also prac- 

 tise as surgeons ; many of them 

 are very expert in the application 

 of healing plants, but they are 

 very ignorant of the use of sur- 

 gical instruments. 



