Abstract:
About one-fifth of the total population of India speak languages belonging to the
Munda and Dravidian families. These forms of speech have been called by anthropologists
the languages of the Dravida race.
If we exclude the north-eastern districts from consideration, the population of the
Indian peninsula can be said to represent two distinct anthrd- Dravida race. A L
pological types—the Aryan and the Dravidian. The latter
has been described as follows by Mr. Risley :—
‘ In the Dravidian type the form of the head usually inclines to be dolichocephalic,
but all other characters present a marked contrast to the Aryan. The-nose
is thick and broad, and the formula expressing its proportionate dimensions
is higher than in any known race, except the Negro. The facial angle is
comparatively low; the lips are thick; the face wide and fleshy; the features
coarse and irregular. The average stature ranges in a long series of tribes*
from 156-2 to 162’1 centimeters; the figure is squat, and the limbs sturdy.
The colour of the skin, varies from very dark brown to a shade closely
approaching black . . . The typical Dravidian . . . has a nose as broad
in proportion to its length as the Negro.’ The hair is curly, and in this respect the Dravidians differ from the Australians, with
whom they agree in several other characteristics.
The Dravidian .race is not found outside India. It has already been remarked that
the Australians share many of the characteristics of the Distribution of the race.
Dravidians. Anthropologists, nevertheless, fconsider them to
be a distinct race. The various Mon-Khmer tribes and the Sakeis of Malacca agree with
the Dravidians in having a dolichocephalic head, a dark colour of the skin, and curly
hair. They are not, however, considered to be identical with them. Archaeologists are of opinion that the various stone implements which are found from
Chota Nagpur on the west to the Malayan peninsula on the east are often so similar in
kind that they appear to'be the work of one and the same race. Attention has also been
drawn to analogous customs found all over the same area, and to other coincidences. It
will be mentioned later on that philological reasons can likewise be adduced to support the
supposition of a common substratum in the population of parts of Nearer India, Farther
India, and elsewhere. We cannot decide whether the Dravidian race is directly descended
from that old substratum. At all events, the race is commonly considered to be that of
the aborigines of India, or, at least, of Southern India.