Worked With:
- Born: January 28, 1954
- Active: '80s, '90s
- Genres: Jazz
- Instrument: Piano
- Representative Albums: "Looking for a Little Bluebird", "Smile, Darn Ya, Smile", "Turk Murphy Style
| Artist: John Gill |
Worked With:
| Discography: John Gill |
| Wikipedia: Gill (clan) |
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This article may contain original research or unverified claims. Please improve the article by adding references. See the talk page for details. (July 2008) |
Recorded as Gill, Gille and Gilles, this is a surname of several possible national origins and meanings.
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Gill (Gurmukhi: ਗਿਲ), is a large Jat clan found in Punjab, India and Punjab, Pakistan. It is considered to be one of the largest Jat tribes in the 1881 British Punjab Census Gills numbered 124,172.[1] The Gill clan is mainly found in the Malwa area, and some parts of the Majha belt.
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This section may contain original research or unverified claims. Please improve the article by adding references. See the talk page for details. (July 2008) |
There are two theories relating to the origin of Gill clan.
The first one states: the name of Caspian Sea derives from Massagetae Tribe Caspii which was once known as Sea of Gillan. The Gilani surname and the Gilaki language and people from the Iranian province of Gilan, as well as the Gilzai tribe of the Pashtun in Afghanistan are all related to the Jatt Gill tribe and all share the common 'Gil' root and this theory of the origin of etymology.
The second stating: the word "Gill" is probably derived from the Punjabi Gil meaning ‘moisture’ or 'stream/lake' and also ‘prosperity’. It is possible that the meaning of the Punjabi word, a language that is an amalgam of earlier dialects such as Jatki the original language of Jatts, shares the same meaning in the same Indo-European or Indo-Iranian language that was used to name the Sea of Gillan.
Gills are currently considered one of the main aristocratic Jat clans of the Jat gotra system.
It was also stated by Sir Lepal Griffin that: "The Jat race is, for honesty, strength and courage, second to no race in the world."[2]
The Jat tribe of Gills is believed to fit under the branch of a predecessor umbrella Gill tribe that ranged from Central Asia through modern-day Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and North Western India. This tribe according to sources below is believed to have been of either Indo-Iranian origins from Central Asia, (specifically Scythian or Saka from their home on the Oxus, or possibly White Huns or Yuezhi) or a mixed Indo-Scythian and Greek tribe. The Indo-Scythian/Greek mix theory is due in part to tradition passed down through the tribe for over the last millennia as well as the timeframe in which Scythians/Yuezhi/White Huns which were competing Central Asian tribes of Indo-European descent settled in Asia and established kingdoms, such as the Indo-Scythian kingdom, and the geographical and chronological range of this settlement coinciding with Alexander the Great's invasion with his Greek army.[citation needed]
Bhim Singh Dahiya, a prominent Jat historian, traces the origin of the Gills to the Greeks. He speculates that the people of this tribe which was possibly Indo-Scythian came in the company of Alexander the Great. They settled in Kabul, Kandhar and the Punjab region. One of the sons of the legendary Greek mythical hero, Hercules was named "Gilla." It is also possible that ancestors of Gills came to Greece from Middle Asia (Scythians/Sakas) and then to what is now Pakistan, and Afghanistan. This would conform with typical Jat ancestry,[citation needed] distinguishing the Gill clan in particular as migrating/invading peoples from the Parthian Greek or Greco-Bactrian Kingdoms, which sprang up after Alexander's incursion. These would be a mix of ethnically Greek or Indo-Scythian (Indo-Iranian) peoples, whereas most Jat clans are typically descended from Indo-Scythian/Saka migrations/invasions from the north (Central Asia and Western China).[citation needed] The Shahi Dynasty of Afghanistan and the Punjab, and many of the rulers of Greco-Bactrian kingdoms post-Alexander were also from the Gill clan.[citation needed]
The Gills lived along the Satluj and Beas rivers, and further in the foothills up to Sialkot. Gills and Dhaliwals are also settled in the Jagdeo Kalan village in Majha.
Gill (and Shergill) has become a renowned surname throughout South Asia and the Punjab. There are seven villages near Banga in District Nawanshahr where SHERGILLS reside. these are Mukandpur,Jagatpur, Jhingran,Dyalpur, Bahua etc. A few villages of GILLS are there in vicinity of Khanna in punjab - Kotla Bhari, Jallowal, Jalvehra, Sidhsar, etc. there are some villages of shergills in Nurpur Bedi Block in Ropar. i.e. ABIANA,LEHARIAN,RAMPUR BELA,BHATTON ,BAINS & many more....
Most of Gills converted to Sikhism during the period of the sixth Sikh Guru, Guru Har Gobind. The Gills of this region are renound and famous for their courage, honesty and bravery. The Gills also sided with him in the "Battle of Mehraj". The descendants of Shergill, one of the eight sons of the Great Gillpal, settled in the Zira area and gave rise to the elite Shergill (i.e. Singh Gill) Jat clan of the Punjab.
The Rulers/Maharajas of the Nishanwalia Misl, Sukha Singh and Mehar Singh were Shergills. The Majithia Rulers/Maharajas of Majha were also Shergills.
Some Gills had settled in Assam in 1505 during the time of Guru Nanak Dev.
Muslim Gills are found through out the central districts of Punjab, Pakistan. According to the Census of India 1911, there were 18,390 Gills of the Muslim faith. They were concenterated in Lahore, Amritsar, Gurdaspur, Gujranwala and Sialkot districts. Muslim Gills had also became settled in the Canal colony districts of Shahpur, Lyalpur and Montgomery. Most Gills were converted in to two periods, the Majha Gills converted during the time of the Mughal Emperor Akbar in the 16th Century, while the Sialkot Gills converted during the rule of Aurangzeb.
As most Gills originated from areas in what is now Pakistan, small pockets of non-Muslim Gills who left at the time of independence can be found near the border in North Western India. Today, most Gills are settled in the Malwa and Majha regions of the state of Punjab in India. There are forty villages of Gills in the Jagraon area of Ludhiana. The famous Majithia Sirdars (families) of Amritsar district are in fact Shergills. Many have also emigrated to various countries.
Gills are found through out central Punjab, with several villages near the city of Lahore.
In the former canal colony areas of Faisalabad, Sargodha, Sahiwal and Khanewal, they form an important element in the Jat population. There are also old established communities in Gujranwala and Sialkot in the northern end of the Rachna Doab.
Sher in Persian means 'Lion' or 'Tiger'
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