Page:Castes and Tribes of Southern India, Volume 2.djvu/365

Rh srādh (memorial service for the dead) and other ceremonies.  Hathinentu Manayavaru (eighteen house). — A sub-division of Dēvānga.  Hatti (hut or hamlet). — An exogamous sept of Kāppilliyan and Kuruba.  Hattikankana (cotton wrist-thread). — A sub-division of Kurubas, who tie a cotton thread round the wrist at the marriage ceremony.  '''Heggade. —''' The Heggades are summed up, in the Madras Census Report, 1901, as being a class of Canarese cultivators and cattle-breeders. Concerning the Heggades of South Canara, Mr. H. A. Stuart writes* that they "are classified as shepherds, but the present occupation of the majority of them is cultivation. Their social position is said to be somewhat inferior to that of the Bants. They employ Brāhmins as their priests. In their ceremonies, the rich follow, closely the Brahminical customs. On the second day of their marriage, a pretence of stealing a jewel from the person of the bride is made. The bridegroom makes away with the jewel before dawn, and in the evening the bride's party proceeds to the house where the bridegroom is to be found. The owner of the house is told that a theft has occurred in the bride's house and is asked whether the thief has taken shelter in his house. A negative answer is given, but the bride's party conducts a regular search. In the meanwhile a boy is dressed to represent the bridegroom. The searching party mistake this boy for the bridegroom, arrest him, and produce him before the audience as the culprit. This disguised bridegroom, who is proclaimed to be the thief, throws his mask at the bride, when it is found to 