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The term Kuldevi refers, in broad terms within the Hindu religious and cultural milieu, to a family or clan goddess who is venerated as the tutelary deity of a particular lineage, household, or community grouping. The word is composed of kul, meaning family, lineage or clan, and devi, meaning goddess. A corresponding masculine form, Kuldev, is also encountered in many traditions. The concept appears across several regional, linguistic, and caste contexts in the Indian subcontinent, although the manner of worship, the specific goddess identified as the Kuldevi, the rites associated with her, and the social meaning of her veneration vary considerably.
This draft is intended as a starting point for editors who will research, verify, and rewrite the article for IndiaWiki. It deliberately avoids naming particular goddesses as the Kuldevi of any specific clan, citing particular shrines, or asserting particular ritual practices, because such associations are highly localised and require careful sourcing. Editors are encouraged to consult standard reference works on Hindu religious practice, regional ethnographies, and peer-reviewed scholarship before introducing concrete examples. The aim of the final article should be a balanced, descriptive overview rather than a devotional or community-specific account.
The veneration of family or clan deities is a long-standing feature of religious life in many parts of South Asia, and is not unique to any single sect or region. In Hindu contexts, the Kuldevi is generally understood to be a goddess to whom a particular kinship group traces a special, often ancestral, relationship of patronage and protection. The relationship is typically inherited rather than chosen, and is associated with rites that are performed at significant moments in the family's life cycle, such as births, weddings, and the establishment of new households.
The literature on this subject draws on several overlapping bodies of material, including Puranic and Tantric texts that describe goddesses and their localised forms, regional bardic and genealogical traditions, ethnographic studies of caste and community, and temple records. The relationship between a goddess venerated more widely and a goddess understood specifically as a Kuldevi is itself a subject of scholarly discussion, since the same deity may be a pan-regional figure for some devotees and a clan-specific patron for others. Editors should treat any specific historical or textual claim about origins with caution and verify it against reliable secondary sources rather than community oral tradition alone.
Within the lived practice of many Hindu families, the Kuldevi occupies a distinctive position alongside the ishta-devata (chosen personal deity) and the grama-devata (village deity). Her worship is often described as obligatory in the sense that important family rituals are considered incomplete without her invocation, while the choice of an ishta-devata is more individual. The Kuldevi is therefore frequently invoked as a marker of continuity across generations, and pilgrimages to her principal shrine are sometimes undertaken to mark milestones in the family's life.
The significance of the Kuldevi is also social and cultural, not only religious. Identification with a particular Kuldevi can serve as one of several markers of clan or sub-caste belonging, and may be referenced in genealogical records, marriage negotiations, and community histories. In some regions and communities, the worship of the Kuldevi is connected with broader traditions of Shakti veneration, while in others it is integrated with Vaishnava or Shaiva household practice. Editors should describe these patterns in general terms and refrain from making categorical claims about any single community without appropriate citation.
The following list is intended as a checklist of areas where the draft article should be researched and supported with reliable references before publication. None of these points should be filled in from memory or general impression.
Editors may consider organising the published article along the following lines, adjusting in line with available sources:
This draft has been prepared without naming any specific goddess as the Kuldevi of a specific clan, without citing particular temples, and without giving statistics, dates, or named individuals. These omissions are deliberate. The Kuldevi tradition is intimately tied to community identity, and inaccurate associations or careless generalisations can cause both factual error and offence. Editors are therefore requested to:
Once the article has been built up from properly sourced material, this scaffolding should be removed and replaced with substantive prose.
To be added by editors. Suggested categories of source to consult include scholarly encyclopaedias of Hinduism, peer-reviewed journal articles on goddess worship and family religion in South Asia, regional ethnographic studies, and reliable reference works on Indian religious terminology. Community publications and devotional literature may be cited where appropriate, but should be clearly identified as such and balanced with independent scholarship.