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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: KRO-LAP |
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LACCADIVE ISLANDS , a group of coral reefs and islands in the Indian Ocean, lying between 10 and 12 20' N. and 71 40' and 740 E. The name Laccadives (laksha dwipa, the " hundred thousand isles ") is that given by the people of the Malabar coast, and was probably meant to include the Maldives; they are called by the natives simply Dial, " islands," or Amendivi, from the chief
fathom
district
damp
work
pulse
rice
Population and Trade.The population in 1901 was 10,274. The people are Moplas, i.e. of mixed 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. Reading and writing are common accomplishments among the men. The chief
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 archipelago (Dfbajat) into the Divah Kuzah or Cowrie Islands (the Maldives), and the Divah Kanbar or Coir Islands (the Laccadives). (See Journ. Asia'. Soc., September 1844, p. 265). The islanders were converted to Islam by an Arab apostle named Mumba Mulyaka, whose grave at Androth still imparts a peculiar sanctity to that island. The kazee of Androth was in 1847 still a member of his family, and was said to be the twenty-second who had held the office in 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 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 suzerainty of the raja of Cannanore, and after the peace of Seringapatam
See The Fauna and Geography of the Maldive and Laccadive Archipelagoes, ed. J. Stanley Gardiner ( Cambridge 19011905); Malabar District
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