Population
62,000,000 in India (2003) (Source
Census Of 24 Districts Of Mithila).
Population total both countries 78,191,900.
Region Northern Bihar, from Muzaffarpur on the west, past the Kosi on the
east to western Purnia District, to the districts of Munger and Bhagalpur in
the south, and the Himalayan foothills on the north. Cultural and linguistic
center are the towns of Madhubani and Darbhanga.
Janakpur also important culturally and religiously. And also spoken aboard
by Maithli people.
Classification Indo-European, Indo-Iranian,
Indo-Aryan, Eastern zone, Bihari. Comments:- Caste variation more
than geographic
variation in dialects. Functional intelligibility among all
dialects, including those in Nepal. Closest to Magahi. Brahmin and
non-Brahmin dialects average 91% lexical
similarity. Hindi, Nepali, English, Bhojpuri, Bengali used mainly for business or social interaction outside the
home by men or working women with various degrees of proficiency from
marketing only to fluency. In cities some may use Hindi, Nepali, or English
in the home. Used in home, village, town, or cities with other Maithili
speakers. Spoken by Brahmin and other high caste or educated Hindus, who
influence the culture and language, and other castes.
There is a Maithili Academy. Linguistics and literature are taught at the
L.N. Mithila University in Darbhanga , Patna University and Janakpur Campus
of Tribhuvan University.
Language attitudes are influenced by caste, ranging from superiority to
resentment. Non-Brahmin speech viewed as inferior.
Also spoken in: Nepal Language name MAITHILI Population 2,191,900 (1998
census), 11.85% of the population (1998). Comments:-
More caste variation than geographical. Intelligibility good among all,
including in India. Second languages used by men or working women mostly
only for business, social interaction outside the home. In cities some may
use Hindi, Nepali, or English even at home and with other Maithili. Bhojpuri
or Bengali are used with friends from those groups.
Bilingual ability varies greatly, from being limited to using them for
trade, to being highly fluent. Maithili used in home, village, towns, cities
with other Maithili. All ages. Spoken by a wide variety of castes, both
'high' and 'low'. Brahmin speech considered to be standard. Brahmins
consider themselves superior, varying from friendly to domineering. Others
vary toward Brahmins from friendly to resentment
MAITHILI LITERATURE
It is a fact that scholars in Mithila used Sanskrit for their literary work
and Maithili was the language of the common folk (Abahatta). The earliest
work in Maithili appears to be Varn Ratnakar by Jyotirishwar Thakur dated
about 1224 AD.
The Medieval age of Maithili appears to be during Karnat Dynasty when the
names of the following scholars got prominance: Gangesh, Padmanabh,
Chandeshwar, Vireshwar, Vidyapati, Vachaspati, Pakshadhar, Ayachi, Udayan,
Shankar etc.
Vidyapati is said to have lived in the period 1350 to 1450. Vidyapati,
though a Sanskrit scholar, wrote innumerable poems(songs) relating to Bhakti
and Shringar in Maithili. Though equally accepted in Bengal and Mithila, his
songs are the soul of Mithila and no celebration is complete without his
songs. It will not be an exagerration to say that his songs have survived in
the throats of Maithil women folk.
Theatrical writings in Medieval age are not less important. The following
need mention: Umapati: (Parijat Haran), Jyotireeshwar: (Dhurt Samagam),
Vidyapati: (Goraksha Vijay, Mani Manjari), Ramapati: (Rukmini Haran), Lal: (Gauri
Swayambar), Manbodh: (Krishna Janma)
Modern Maithili Literature has been blessed with the contribution of the
following scholars: Parmeshwar Jha, Sitaram Jha, Kabishekhar Badrinath Jha,
Murali Jha, Surendranath Jha Suman, Kashikant Mishra Madhup, Chandranath
Mishra Amar, Kanchinath Jha Kiran, Prof. Hari Mohan Jha, Ishnath Jha,
Brajkishore Verma Manipadma, Baidyanath Mishra Yatri (Nagarjuna), Sudhanshu
Shekhar Choudhary, Upendra Nath Jha Vyas, Prof. Radha Kant Jha,
Mahamahopadhyay Umesh Mishra, Dr. JayKant Mishra, Prof. Krishna Kant Mishra,
Kumar Ganganand Singh, Dr. Ramanath Jha, Prof. Tantra Nath Jha, Dr. Laxman
Jha Dr. Subhadra Jha, Achutanand Dutt, Bhola Lal Das, Baidyanath Jha,
Yoganand Jha, Narendra Das, Rajeshwar Jha, Arsi Prasad Singh, Prof.
Buddhidhari Singh Ramakar and many more.
Maithili, though included in VIIIth schedule of the Indian Constitution, was
accepted by Sahitya Academy and since its inclusion has won awards almost
every year. A number of academy awards have been won for translation from
other languages.
Composed by Nagendra Jha
Khelubhai@mithilalive.com
Send your feedback at
info@mithilalive.com