FLEET, JOHN, FAITHFUL, 1847-1917
J. F. Fleet
(ಫ್ಲೀಟ್, ಜಾನ್, ಫೇತ್
ಫುಲ್) is one of the pioneers in
Fleet was selected for the Indian Civil Services after studying a number of subjects
in addition to Sanskrit in the
He had to tour
extensively in the western part of the country during his official tenure and he
developed a keen interest in the inscriptions of
There is an inseparable
relation between Fleet’s interest in inscriptions and his panache for reconstructing
history because of his firm conviction that inscriptions were the most reliable
sources of history relative to literature, local legends and coins. He has demonstrated
that inscriptions help in tracing the administrative practices, religious rituals
and the development of the script. Consequently, he has published more than two
hundred articles based on the inscriptions unearthed and analyzed by him. They have
succeeded eminently in adding to the pages of political history of those regions.
His articles were published in reputed journals such the Indian Antiquary and the
Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society. In fact, he was the editor of Indian Antiquary
for seven years along with R. C. Temple. His contributions for the reconstruction
of the lives of Basavanna, Ekantha
Ramayya as also the material collected by him about
the Kadamaba dynasty are of immense value.
‘Some Sanskrit,
Pali and Halakannada Inscriptions’
(1878) delineates the important contribution of the inscriptions from Karnataka
in the structuring of Indian history. ‘Dynasties of the Canarese
Districts of the Bombay Presidency’
which was first published in the Bombay Gazater
(1882) and came out later in the form a book (1895) throws light on the political
history of the Kannada kingdoms of north Karnataka such as Kadamba,
Kalachuri, Badami
Chalukya, Rashtrakuta, Hoysala,
Ratta and Yadava. He collated
and published the inscriptions of the Gupta regime in the series called Corpus Inscriptionum Indicarum. This
series itself was a brain child of Fleet.
Fleet’s knowledge
of astrology and the art of determining the time of inscriptions contributed hugely
in recognising various eras that were in vogue in ancient
India such as Shalivahana shaka,
Vikrama shaka et al.
Another unique
contribution of Fleet is his collection of ballads and folk songs. The fact that
he evinced a keen interest in the oral traditions of a language is to be appreciated.
They include ballads about individuals such as Sangolli
Rayanna and Kitturu Eeravva as also events such as Naragunda
rebellion and Badamikote rebellion. ‘Halagaliya
Bedara Laavani’ collected
by him narrates the plight of the hunter communities after the official order seeking
disarmament. The fact that Fleet published these ballads even though they contained
subversive elements is remarkable. Fleet worked as the secretary of the London Asiatic
Society even after his return to the
J.F.Fleet has thus rendered invaluable service to the cause of history and
epigraphy in Karnataka. His work in the northern regions of Karnataka can only be
comapred with the monumental work of
B.L.Rice in the princely state of