In Indian tradition, the ravanahatha is believed to have originated among the
Hela people of
Lanka during the time of the legendary king
Ravana, after whom the instrument is supposedly named. The Hela people, however, had only settled in Sri Lanka around 500 BCE, and had not found any trace of an earlier civilization, only groups of tribals whom they called 'yakshas'. According to legend, Ravana used the ravanahatha in his devotions to the
Hindu God
Shiva. In the Hindu
Ramayana epic, after the war between
Rama and Ravana,
Hanuman returned to North India with a ravanahatha. The ravanahatha is particularly popular among street musicians in
Rajasthan, North India. Throughout the history of
Medieval India, the kings were patrons of music; this helped in increased popularity of the ravanhatha among royal families. In
Rajasthan and
Gujarat, it was the first musical instrument to be learned by princes. The
Sangit tradition of Rajasthan further helped in popularizing
ravanhatta among women. Some sources suggest that between the seventh and tenth centuries AD, Arab traders brought the ravanastron from India to the Near East, where it provided the basic model for the Arab
rebab, and other early ancestors of the violin family. == Modern use ==