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Dang District, Nepal

Dang District (Nepali: दाङ जिल्ला, [daŋ]) is the district of Lumbini Province located in the Inner Terai of midwestern Nepal. Deukhuri valley of the district is the capital of the province and is the second largest valley of Asia surrounded by Sivalik Hills and Mahabharata Range.[2] The district headquarter Ghorahi is the seventh largest city and the largest sub-metropolitan city of Nepal. Tulsipur sub-metropolitan city, the second largest city of Dang, is a major transportation hub with an extensive road and air networks. The district covers an area of 2,955 km2 and has a population of 548,141 (2011 census).[1]

Dang District
दाङ जिल्ला
World's largest Trishula (trident) at Pandaveshwor Temple in Dang District
Location of Dang (dark yellow) in Lumbini Province
CountryNepal
ProvinceLumbini Province
Established17 May 1951
Admin HQ.Ghorahi
Government
 • TypeCoordination committee
 • BodyDCC, Dāng Deukhuri
Area
 • Total2,955 km2 (1,141 sq mi)
Population
 (2011)[1]
 • Total548,141
 • Density190/km2 (480/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+05:45 (NPT)
Main Language(s)Nepali, Tharu

Coordinates: 28°0′N 82°16′E / 28.000°N 82.267°E / 28.000; 82.267 (Deukhuri and Dang Valleys)

Dang district has been archeologically studied extensively since the 20th century due to the discoveries of ancient fossils of apes and early humans.[3][4] The district is considered the center of Sanskrit language in Nepal and is home to Nepal's second oldest university, Nepal Sanskrit University which is the only Sanskrit university of the country as well as Rapti Academy of Health Sciences (RAHS),[5] the state-owned medical college of Lumbini Province with the Prime Minister of Nepal as the Chancellor.[6] There are numerous temples and gumbas in Dang Deukhuri district with puranic legendary connections to Mahābhārata, Shaivism, Shaktism & Gorakhnath making it one of the richest cultural sites of the country.[7]

History and prehistory

Prehistory

Archeologists consider the Churiya range very ancient with the existence of Sivapithecus (syn:Ramapithecus), a link between man and ape. The pre-historic study of Dang valley has been carried out by Tribhuvan University since 1966, including the geological study of the Valley by Robert M. West from the American Museum of Natural History and the Department of Mines of then His Majesty's Government of Nepal from 1976, as well as the paleolithic study of Dang by University of Erlangen-Nuremberg (Fredrich-Alexander-Universität) of Germany in 1984, among others.[8] According to these concurrent researches, Dang valley was a lake approximately 2.5 to 1 million years ago.[3]

During 1984–86, German researcher Gudrun Corvinus studied the miocene-pliocene stratigraphy and geology of Dang valley researching on the pleistocene holocene period of ancient human settlements. She studied the exposed section of the road being constructed between Koilabas and the Dang Valley running through Deukhuri. Hand axes and other artifacts dated to early Paleolithic (1.8 million to 100,000 years ago) have been found in alluvial deposits along the Babai River in Dang Valley. Archeologists classify these as Acheulean, i.e. 'second-generation' toolmaking that succeeds the very oldest Olduwan.

 
Paleolithic artifacts (1.8 million to 100,000 years ago) site of Babai River in Dang Valley

There are more numerous less ancient archeological sites dating to the Upper Paleolithic/Late Pleistocene (about 50,000 to 10,000 years ago). These are also along the Babai, as well as in Deukhuri Valley (Rapti River) adjacent and south of Dang Valley.[4][9] Archeologists classify these as Acheulean, i.e. 'second-generation' toolmaking that succeeds the very oldest Olduwan.

Tharus

Since ancient times, Dang valley is considered to have been inhabited by the indigenous Tharu people, albeit the exact timing of origin is still a matter of archeological research [8] Researchers consider that the valley was a growing center of Tharu civilisation.[10] In the current times, Tharu people comprise one of the prominent indigenous ethnic communities of Nepal, and the Tharus inhabiting Dang valley are called Dangaura Tharus who have been able to retain their highly rich unique traditional culture.

Medieval and Modern History

 
Dang was annexed on 1760 AD by King Prithvi Narayan Shah

Evidence show that when the Khasa Kingdom was in existence in western Nepal, Dang was virtually under their political domination. One of the document of Punya Malla mentions that the valley was awarded to Jayakar Pundit as a virta in 1336 AD.[8] From 1350 AD onwards, Meghraj Singh Chauhan of Chauhan dynasty is recorded to have been the king of the region as per the records in the Yogi Ratna Nath's Chaughera monastery of Dang valley, the third-in-line of Yogi Gorakhnath.The temple held a strong spiritual importance over the rulers of the valley, even after the change of power to new dynasties as such the internal activities of the temple were almost entirely unaffected for hundreds of years. Nevills Gazetteer of Bahreich (1922:124) mentions that in 1485 AD, Dangdun was in the possession of Udat Singh. Evidence shows that the last independent king Nawal Singh Chauhan ruled from Chaughera of Dang until 1760 AD as the House of Tulsipur which ruled one of the largest Taluqs of Oudh, India, which then included the Dang and Deukhuri Valleys.The town shares its name with another Tulsipur in Dang Deukhuri District, Nepal (c.65k North); the two towns are linked historically by having the same ruler.[11]

In 1760 AD, Gorkhali King Prithvi Narayan Shah annexed the valley into the expanding Gorkha Kingdom. Three years later, Dang (except Tulsipur lands south of the Siwalik Hills) was given as a dowry to the King of Salyan in 1763 AD for the marriage of King Prithvi Narayan Shah's daughter.[12] Around 1808 AD, Dang valley was finally annexed into the Kingdom of Nepal when Salyan state merged with the Unified Nepal of Shah kings.

Since Dang was somewhat higher, hotter, better-drained and therefore less malarial than most Inner Terai valleys in Nepal, it was settled to some extent by Shah and Rana courtiers and other Nepalese. Deukhuri was more of a Tharu enclave until DDT was introduced to control the disease-bearing Anopheles mosquito in the 1950s. Before the construction of Rapti Bridge, Koilabas of Dang Valley was a major trading post with India which was slowly abandoned later.[13] Koilabas has remnants of Persian Mughal Empire- style architecture visible in its ruins even now. Long time ago, Dang used to be the capital of Rapti Zone.

Administration

The district consists of two sub-metropolitan cities and eight municipalities, out of which one is an urban municipality and seven are rural municipalities.The administrative regions are as follows:[14]

Geography and Climate

This district consists of the larger easterly and upstream portions of the parallel Inner Terai valleys of Dang and Deukhuri, plus enclosing ranges of hills and mountains. Downstream, both valleys cross into Banke District.[15][16]

 
Surrounding hills of Ghorahi, Dang Valley

To the south, the district borders Uttar Pradesh, a state in India, Nepal's neighboring country—specifically the Balarampur and Shravasti districts of Awadh. Because the international border follows the southern edge of the outermost Siwalik foothills called the Dudhwa Range, there is no Outer Terai extending onto the main Ganges Plain inside this district. The permeable geology of the Siwaliks does not support moisture retention or soil development, so they are covered with unproductive scrub forest.

 
Nepal's second longest bridge over Rapti river in Dang district

The Dudhwas rise steeply to a crest at about 700 meters, then slope more gradually into the Deukhuri Valley, down to 250 meters elevation at the Rapti River. The Dudhwas extend more than 100 km, causing the Rapti to detour west around them before turning southeast down the main trend of the plains into India. Deukhuri's climate is nearly tropical and it is well watered by the river, as well as possessing abundant groundwater. North of Deukhuri Valley, the Dang Range rises as high as 1,000 meters with passes at about 700 meters. The Dang Valley lies north of these hills, drained by the Babai River tributary to the Ghaghara (Karnali). Valley elevations range from 600 meters along the Babai with alluvial slopes gradually rising northward to 700 meters along the base of the Mahabharat Range. The district then extends upslope to the crest of the Mahabharats at 1,500 to 1,700 meters elevation. The bordering districts to the north are Pyuthan, Rolpa, and Salyan. The Rapti River of Western Nepal traverses through most of the lower Dang valley. It flows beneath the Churia range first on the northern side of the hills and then leaves the hills on the southern side.[17] Nepal's second-longest bridge over Rapti river in Dang district connects Sisahaniya of Rapti Rural Municipality with Mahadeva of Gadawa Rural Municipality in the district.[18]

Climate zone[19] Elevation Range % of Area
Lower Tropical below 300 meters (1,000 ft) 18.1%
Upper Tropical 300 to 1,000 meters
1,000 to 3,300 ft.
69.9%
Subtropical 1,000 to 2,000 meters
3,300 to 6,600 ft.
12.0%

Demographics

The dry and agriculturally unproductive Dudhwa range creates a buffer zone between the divergent cultures of the plains of Uttar Pradesh and the Inner Terai. Deukhuri was severely malarial before the late 1950s when DDT came into use to suppress mosquitos so that Tharu people who had evolved resistance managed to live in isolation from other cultures of the plains to the south and the hills to the north. Although road development further reduced Deukhuri's isolation by the 1980s, the valley retains some of its Garden of Eden charm with its lazy river, thick jungle alternating with rice paddies, surrounding hills in the middle distance and unique peoples.

 
A Tharu woman in native cultural attire

Dang Valley is higher, less tropical, drier and less malarial than Deukhuri. Despite poorer soil and more seasonal streamflow, its healthier climate made it more attractive to settlers from outside even before the introduction of DDT. Since the early 1990s activist groups have been attempting to eradicate the practice of child indentured servitude among the Tharu, many of whom sold young daughters to wealthy families in urban areas.[20] This region has a plurality of people of the Tharu ethnicity. The steep, virtually uninhabited southern slopes of the Mahabharat Range are another cultural buffer zone between traditional Tharu lands and the culturally distinct Middle Hills where Nepali is the dominant language, the homeland of dangi Chhetris. The Kumal (potter) ethnic group is also semi-indigenous.[citation needed]

At the time of the 2011 Nepal census, Dang District had a population of 552,583.

As their first language, 66.6% spoke Nepali, 28.3% Tharu, 1.9% Awadhi, 0.9% Kham, 0.9% Magar, 0.5% Hindi, 0.4% Urdu, 0.1% Bhojpuri, 0.1% Maithili, 0.1% Newar and 0.1% other languages as their first language.[21]

Ethnicity/caste: 29.7% were Tharu, 24.8% Chhetri, 13.6% Magar, 10.3% Hill Brahmin, 6.4% Kami, 2.7% Damai/Dholi, 2.3% Sanyasi/Dasnami, 1.9% Sarki, 1.5% Kumal, 1.5% Yadav, 1.2% Thakuri, 0.9% Musalman, 0.8% Newar, 0.3% Badi, 0.3% other Dalit, 0.3% Gurung, 0.3% Halwai, 0.1% Bote, 0.1% Chamar/Harijan/Ram, 0.1% Gaine, 0.1% Kathabaniyan, 0.1% Majhi, 0.1% Tamang, 0.1% other Terai and 0.1% others.[22]

Religion: 96.5% were Hindu, 1.3% Christian, 1.2% Buddhist, 0.9% Muslim, 0.1% Prakriti and 0.1% others.[23]

Literacy: 70.1% could read and write, 2.0% could only read and 27.8% could neither read nor write.[24]

Population by Census 1971-2011

[25][26]

Education

 
Dang district is considered the center of Sanskrit language education in Nepal

The district has become an emerging educational hub of Nepal in recent years with rise in number of schools, child development centers, resource centers and campuses. New initiatives taken by the rural municipalities and sub-metropolitan cities of the district have aimed at improving the quality of the education - most notably - making of the English language medium compulsory. Ghorahi Sub-Metropolitan City has also initiated to make the pre-primary level fully English medium.[27]

Educational Institutes in Dang District[28]
Medium of Education Unit (Numbers)
Schools 602 (public:424 and private:178)
Child Development Centers 703 (public:117 and private:586)
Campus 31
University 1
Gurkul schools 3
Resource centers 15

Nepal Sanskrit University (formerly Mahendra Sanskrit University)

 
Nepal Sanskrit University in Dang is Nepal's second-oldest University

Nepal Sanskrit University act was enacted by King Birendra in the advice and consent of Rastriya Panchayat in 1986 "to manage Sanskrit education in Nepal up to the highest mark and to study, research, protect and promote the special achievements received from Sanskrit education in various sectors as per the demand of time and to develop Nepal as a centre of knowledge and inspiration in Sanskrit education upon abiding by the traditional dharma, moral values, propriety and good behavior". As per this, Mahendra Sanskrit University (later renamed Nepal Sanskrit University) was established in Dang which at the time of its commencement was the second university of the country after Tribhuvan University.[29]

Currently, the university offers Intermediate (Uttar Madhyama), Bachelor (Shastri), Bachelor of Education, Masters (Acharya) and Doctoral courses in classical and modern subjects. It offers intermediate in Ayurveda, Bachelors Of Ayurvedic Medicine And Surgery [BAMS] and condensed courses for Ayurvedacharya, as well as yoga training.

Rapti Academy of Health Sciences (RAHS)

Legislature-Parliament unanimously endorsed the ‘Rapti Health Science Academy Bill, 2074’ on 10 October 2017 as per the government's decision to open one state-owned medical college in each province of Nepal. Currently, Rapti Academy of Health Sciences (RAHS) serves as the only state-owned medical college of Lumbini Province with the Prime Minister of Nepal as the Chancellor. In addition to normal medical procedures, the state hold entity is providing Intensive Care Units (ICU), Neonatal Intensive Care Units (NICU) as well as Pediatric Intensive Care Units (PICU).[30]

Cultural Heritage

Dang valley has a rich cultural heritage with a cultural combination of an older Tharu civilisation and mix of Hinduism. There are numerous temples and gumbas in Dang Deukhuri district with puranic legendary connections to Mahābhārata, Shaivism, Shaktism & Gorakhnath making it one of the richest cultural sites of the country.[7]

 
Ambikeshwari Temple is a Shaktipeeth in Dang district

Major heritage sites in Dang Deukhuri District include:[7]

Cultural Sites

Ambikeshwari Temple is one of the spiritually important Hindu temple located in Dang district. The temple also known as ‘Maiko Than’ (Mother's Place) and is situated to the north of Ghorahi 3.5 kilometers away on bank of Katuwa Khola. The temple is also a Shaktipeetha, supposed to have emerged due to the falling of right ear of Satidevi according to the Swasthani Purana of Hinduism. This temple is the most popular Shaktipeeth of Dang valley.

Ratnanath (Gorakhnath) Mandir, Chaughera is in Chaughera of Ghorahi sub-metropolitan city. It is one of the major tourist and spiritual place of the Dang District. The temple is the namesake of Yogi Ratna Nath, third-in-line of Yogi Gorakhnath.

The temple held a strong spiritual importance over the rulers of the valley since older times,[12] even after the change of power to new dynasties as such the internal activities of the temple were almost entirely unaffected for hundreds of years.

 
World's largest trident (Trishul) believed to be where five Pandavas brother prayed to Shiva in Dang
 
Baraha Temple Area in Dang

The legend of the origin of the monastery is tied to the rulers of the valley, as the narration tells us of a king who went hunting in the jungle where he saw a beautiful deer and shot an arrow. The wounded deer went deep into the forest, and the king followed it. Then suddenly, in the middle of the forest, he met a radiant ascetic, seated in a deep state of meditation with arrow in front of him. The king understood his mistake and apologized. The Siddha forgave him and granted him a boon through yogic power to reign over the Dang Valley. The yogi was Ratannath, the disciple of Yogi Gorakhnath and he took the arrow and gave it to the king, saying "as long as you keep the arrow, you will keep your kingdom firm." The king then started to worship Ratannath, and since then the king's lineage continued the worship and kept the arrow for six months. The other six months the Yogis worshipped the arrow and the king had to give them half of the revenue that he got from his kingdom" (summarized from Narharinath 2022: 516)[12]

Dharapani Temple is situated in the Dharna municipality-01 of the district at the base of chure range, south of Babai river about 9 kilometer drive from the center of Ghorahi. The temple is believed to have been in the ancient site where the five Pandavas brother sat and chanted prayers to Shiva during their journey to Uttarapantha (Himalayas).

The temple has the world's largest Trishula and is one of the major tourist destination of the valley. In recent years, the temple has become an important visiting site for Hindu devotees as well as for prominent personalities such as the President of Nepal, police chiefs, chief justices and ministers.[31]

 
Barakune Daha

Barhakune Daha (Baraha Chhetra), also known as Baraha Chhetra, is situated 3 km North from Ghorahi sub-metropolitan city. The region is dedicated to the Hindu God Vishnu and is widely worshipped during Makar Sankranti festival. The name comes from a pond around the temple which has twelve "bara" (in Nepali) corners.

Chameri cave is situated at the slopes of the Mahabharat range and is also known locally as "Siddha" cave thought to have been used by saints for penance in the valley. There has also been archeological interest in the cave due to the possibility of it being used by pre-historic humans. The cave is 4 storey tall with a spacious ground hall which can accommodate almost a thousand people in its space. Chameri cave holds archeological importance and various preliminary observations are being carried out or further research.

Other Prominent Sites

Jakhera Lake meaning "rain-water collection" is a lake located at Lamai Municipality-5 of Dang, about 35 kilometers far from Ghorahi and two temples dedicated to Ganesh and Siddeswor Mahadev around the lake. The lake is a major tourist attraction in the district and also provides spot for picnic and sight-seeing.

The lake lies in the base of Chure hills and is 6 feet deep with a span of 12 hectares.

Further prominent sites of the valley include:[7]

  • Sawarikot
  • Ghordaura
  • Chhilli kot, Chhilli Kot Gupha, Chameri Gupha
  • Devikot
  • Hanuman Temple
  • Kalimai Temple, Kalika Temple
  • Kulpani Mandir
  • Malika Temple, Mulkot Cave
  • Ram Janaki Temple
  • Sirasthan, Srigaun Temple, Sukaura Mound
  • Bagar Baba mandir, Rihar
  • Taptakunda Shivalaya, Mamisauri mandir, Rihar
  • Shiva Mandir, Dhankhola
  • Shiva Cave, Dhankhola
  • Mata Malmala Devi, Malmala, Gadawa-1
  • Tuhi valley
  • Suikot Temple
  • Devisthan Mandir [Pawannagar, Bhamake]
  • Kalika mandir
  • Jakhera Tal Temple

Transportation

 
Nepal's second longest bridge, Rapti bridge, in Dang district

East West Highway —the main east–west highway across Nepal— follows Deukhuri Valley, passing Kalakate and Bhalubang bazar at the upper end and Lamahi downstream. From Bhalubang, branch roads lead up the Rapti River into Pyuthan and Rolpa Districts. From Lamahi there are roads north across the Dang Range to Ghorahi, and south over the Dudhwas to Koilabas, which used to be an international trade centre earlier. The East West highway which passes through the Lamahi joints the Banke district leading Kohalpur. Roads from Ghorahi lead to Rolpa district and the Swargadwari pilgrimage site. From Tulsipur a motorable road goes north into Salyan District. Nepal's second-longest bridge over Rapti river in Dang district connects Sisahaniya of Rapti Rural Municipality with Mahadeva of Gadawa Rural Municipality in the district.[18]

At Tarigaun, Dang Airport (IATA: DNP, ICAO: VNDG) has daily scheduled connection to Kathmandu in Nepal.[32]

Airlines Destinations Refs.
Nepal Airlines Kathmandu [32]
 
Nepal Airlines serves Dang district with daily operation

Former Village Development Committees

Prior to the restructuring of the district, Dang District consisted of the following municipalities and Village development committees:[citation needed]

 
VDCs and Municipalities (blue) in Dang-Deukhuri

Maps

  • Ministry of Federal Affairs and Local Development[33] has downloadable district maps based on a detailed and comprehensive GIS database:
  1. VDC boundaries
  2. Land use
  3. Rivers, streams, ponds
  4. Motor roads and foot trails
  • Besides the United Nations/Nepal map of districts and VDCs shown above, their Map Centre[34] has a downloadable PDF version adding municipalities, roads and water detail.[35]
  • From 1992 to 2002 a definitive series of large scale topographic maps were surveyed and published through a joint project by Government of Nepal Survey Department[36] and Finland's Ministry for Foreign Affairs contracting through the FinnMap consulting firm.[37] Japan International Cooperation Agency[38] substituted for FinnMap mainly in Lumbini Zone with one sheet showing the easternmost part of Dang-Deukhuri.
Topographic sheets at 1:25,000 scale covering 7.5 minutes latitude and longitude map the Terai and Middle Mountains including all of this district. JPG scans can be downloaded here:[39]
These sheets cover Dang Deukhuri District:
  1. 2782 1B Amiliya (2005)
  2. 2782 1D Sunpathari Naka (1997)
  3. 2782 2A Rihar (1998)
  4. 2782 2B Satbariya (1998)
  5. 2782 2C, 6A Jangrahawa Mahatiniya (1998)
  6. 2782 2D Bela (1998)
  7. 2782 3A Atthaise (1998)
  8. 2782 3B Hasipur (1998)
  9. 2782 3C Lamahi (2005)
  10. 2782 3D Lalmatiya (2005)
  11. 2782 4A Bangesal (1997)
  12. 2782 4C Bhaluban (1997)
  13. 2782 6B Siriya Naka (1998)
  14. 2782 7A Koilabas (2005)
  15. 2782 7B Jawabairath (1999)
  16. 2882 9D Shitalpati (1998)
  17. 2882 13A Hamsapur (1998)
  18. 2882 13B Panchakule (1998)
  19. 2882 13C Bairiya Kusum (2005)
  20. 2882 13D Hekuli (1998)
  21. 2882 14A Tulsipur (1999)
  22. 2882 14B Dubrin (1999)
  23. 2882 14C Bijauri (1999)
  24. 2882 14D Ghorahi (1998)
  25. 2882 15A Holeri (1999)
  26. 2882 15C Bach Pokhara (1998)
  27. 2882 15D Swargadwari (1999)
  28. (JICA) 097-11 Shiwagadhi (1993)

References

  1. ^ a b (PDF). Central Bureau of Statistics. Government of Nepal. November 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 18, 2013.
  2. ^ "घोराही उप-महानगरपालिकाको संक्षिप्त परिचय | घोराही उप-महानगरपालिका, नगर कार्यपालिकाको कार्यालय". ghorahimun.gov.np (in Nepali). Retrieved 2020-12-07.
  3. ^ a b Pandey, R.N. (1987). Paleo environment & pre-history of Nepal. Cnas:Tribhuvan University, Vol 14 N/2. p. 116.
  4. ^ a b Corvinus, G. (1989). "A handaxe assemblage from western Nepal" (PDF). Quartär (International Yearbook for Ice Age and Stone Age Research). 39/40: 155–173. Retrieved December 8, 2013.
  5. ^ "Rapti Academy of Health Sciences". RAHS. Retrieved 2020-12-07.
  6. ^ "About Rapti Academy of Health Sciences". RAHS. Retrieved 2020-12-07.
  7. ^ a b c d Bhandari, B. (1997). Inventory of heritage sites in Nepal. Kathmandu: IUCN Nepal.
  8. ^ a b c Sharma, Dilli Raj. Archeological Remains of the Dang Valley. University of Cambridge : Digital Himalaya. pp. 9–10.
  9. ^ Chauthan, P. R. (2003). . Assemblage (7). Archived from the original on January 4, 2012. Retrieved December 8, 2013.
  10. ^ K.C., Ganga ( PhD) (2019). "Maghi- the festival among the tharus". Patan Pragya (Volume: 5 Number: 1 Sept. 2019). 5 (1): 84–94.
  11. ^ "House of Tulsipur". sites.google.com. Retrieved 2020-12-08.
  12. ^ a b c Bouillier, Veronique (January 1993). The Nepalese State and Gorakhnathi Yogis: the Case of the Former Kingdoms of the Dang Valley: 18th 19th centuries. Cnas Journal volume 20, Number 1.
  13. ^ Gill, Peter (2016-11-19). "Koilabas: a town left behind". The Record. Retrieved 2020-12-12.
  14. ^ "स्थानिय तह" (in Nepali). Ministry of Federal Affairs and General Administration. Retrieved 1 October 2018.
  15. ^ "Government hospitals in Dang without ambulance". My Republica. Retrieved 26 July 2019.
  16. ^ "Tharu's Maghi festival to be held in Dang". The Himalayan Times. 29 December 2018. Retrieved 26 July 2019.
  17. ^ "BirdLife Data Zone". datazone.birdlife.org. Retrieved 2021-04-05.
  18. ^ a b Sen, Sandeep (2019-10-30). "Nepal's second longest bridge construction completes". The Himalayan Times. Retrieved 2021-04-05.
  19. ^ The Map of Potential Vegetation of Nepal - a forestry/agroecological/biodiversity classification system (PDF), Forest & Landscape Development and Environment Series 2-2005 and CFC-TIS Document Series No.110., 2005, ISBN 87-7903-210-9, retrieved November 22, 2013
  20. ^ Desperate plight of Nepal 'slave girls' BBC News, 2 March 2007
  21. ^ NepalMap Language [1]
  22. ^ NepalMap Caste [2]
  23. ^ NepalMap Religion [3]
  24. ^ NepalMap Literacy [4]
  25. ^ # "Districts of Nepal". Statoids. Gwillim Law. Retrieved January 23, 2014.
  26. ^ # (PDF). Kathmandu, Nepal: Government of Nepal, Central Bureau of Statistics. January 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 18, 2013. Retrieved January 23, 2014.
  27. ^ "Education situation improving in Dang". Edusanjal. Retrieved 2021-02-26.
  28. ^ Statistics, Central Bureau. "Details of municipalities and VDCs of Dang: Profile 2074 BS". Central Bureau of Statistics: 154.
  29. ^ Nepal Sanskrit University Act, 2043 English. Law Commission Nepal. 1986.
  30. ^ "Rapti Academy of Health Sciences". RAHS. Retrieved 2021-02-26.
  31. ^ Basnet, Devendra. "Trishul turns Dang temple into tourist spot". My City. Retrieved 2020-12-12.
  32. ^ a b "FLIGHT SYNOPSIS". Nepal airlines. 3 April 2021. from the original on 2015-11-21.
  33. ^ "Ministry of Federal Affairs and Local Development". Government of Nepal. Retrieved February 21, 2014.
  34. ^ "Map Centre". United Nations, Nepal Information Platform. Retrieved February 4, 2014.
  35. ^ "Dang District" (PDF) (Map). Retrieved Jan 31, 2014. {{cite map}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)[dead link]
  36. ^ . Archived from the original on February 22, 2014. Retrieved February 4, 2014.
  37. ^ (PDF). FinnMap. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 22, 2014. Retrieved February 4, 2014.
  38. ^ "Japan International Cooperation Agency". Retrieved February 4, 2014.
  39. ^ "Nepal-Topo Maps". PAHAR Mountains of Central Asia Digital Dataset. Retrieved Jan 31, 2014.

External links

  • "Districts of Nepal". Statoids.

dang, district, nepal, dang, district, nepali, daŋ, district, lumbini, province, located, inner, terai, midwestern, nepal, deukhuri, valley, district, capital, province, second, largest, valley, asia, surrounded, sivalik, hills, mahabharata, range, district, h. Dang District Nepali द ङ ज ल ल daŋ is the district of Lumbini Province located in the Inner Terai of midwestern Nepal Deukhuri valley of the district is the capital of the province and is the second largest valley of Asia surrounded by Sivalik Hills and Mahabharata Range 2 The district headquarter Ghorahi is the seventh largest city and the largest sub metropolitan city of Nepal Tulsipur sub metropolitan city the second largest city of Dang is a major transportation hub with an extensive road and air networks The district covers an area of 2 955 km2 and has a population of 548 141 2011 census 1 Dang District द ङ ज ल ल DistrictWorld s largest Trishula trident at Pandaveshwor Temple in Dang DistrictLocation of Dang dark yellow in Lumbini ProvinceCountryNepalProvinceLumbini ProvinceEstablished17 May 1951Admin HQ GhorahiGovernment TypeCoordination committee BodyDCC Dang DeukhuriArea Total2 955 km2 1 141 sq mi Population 2011 1 Total548 141 Density190 km2 480 sq mi Time zoneUTC 05 45 NPT Main Language s Nepali TharuCoordinates 28 0 N 82 16 E 28 000 N 82 267 E 28 000 82 267 Deukhuri and Dang Valleys Dang district has been archeologically studied extensively since the 20th century due to the discoveries of ancient fossils of apes and early humans 3 4 The district is considered the center of Sanskrit language in Nepal and is home to Nepal s second oldest university Nepal Sanskrit University which is the only Sanskrit university of the country as well as Rapti Academy of Health Sciences RAHS 5 the state owned medical college of Lumbini Province with the Prime Minister of Nepal as the Chancellor 6 There are numerous temples and gumbas in Dang Deukhuri district with puranic legendary connections to Mahabharata Shaivism Shaktism amp Gorakhnath making it one of the richest cultural sites of the country 7 Contents 1 History and prehistory 1 1 Prehistory 1 2 Tharus 1 3 Medieval and Modern History 2 Administration 3 Geography and Climate 4 Demographics 4 1 Population by Census 1971 2011 5 Education 6 Cultural Heritage 6 1 Cultural Sites 6 2 Other Prominent Sites 7 Transportation 8 Former Village Development Committees 9 Maps 10 References 11 External linksHistory and prehistory EditPrehistory Edit Archeologists consider the Churiya range very ancient with the existence of Sivapithecus syn Ramapithecus a link between man and ape The pre historic study of Dang valley has been carried out by Tribhuvan University since 1966 including the geological study of the Valley by Robert M West from the American Museum of Natural History and the Department of Mines of then His Majesty s Government of Nepal from 1976 as well as the paleolithic study of Dang by University of Erlangen Nuremberg Fredrich Alexander Universitat of Germany in 1984 among others 8 According to these concurrent researches Dang valley was a lake approximately 2 5 to 1 million years ago 3 During 1984 86 German researcher Gudrun Corvinus studied the miocene pliocene stratigraphy and geology of Dang valley researching on the pleistocene holocene period of ancient human settlements She studied the exposed section of the road being constructed between Koilabas and the Dang Valley running through Deukhuri Hand axes and other artifacts dated to early Paleolithic 1 8 million to 100 000 years ago have been found in alluvial deposits along the Babai River in Dang Valley Archeologists classify these as Acheulean i e second generation toolmaking that succeeds the very oldest Olduwan Paleolithic artifacts 1 8 million to 100 000 years ago site of Babai River in Dang Valley There are more numerous less ancient archeological sites dating to the Upper Paleolithic Late Pleistocene about 50 000 to 10 000 years ago These are also along the Babai as well as in Deukhuri Valley Rapti River adjacent and south of Dang Valley 4 9 Archeologists classify these as Acheulean i e second generation toolmaking that succeeds the very oldest Olduwan Tharus Edit Since ancient times Dang valley is considered to have been inhabited by the indigenous Tharu people albeit the exact timing of origin is still a matter of archeological research 8 Researchers consider that the valley was a growing center of Tharu civilisation 10 In the current times Tharu people comprise one of the prominent indigenous ethnic communities of Nepal and the Tharus inhabiting Dang valley are called Dangaura Tharus who have been able to retain their highly rich unique traditional culture Medieval and Modern History Edit Dang was annexed on 1760 AD by King Prithvi Narayan Shah Evidence show that when the Khasa Kingdom was in existence in western Nepal Dang was virtually under their political domination One of the document of Punya Malla mentions that the valley was awarded to Jayakar Pundit as a virta in 1336 AD 8 From 1350 AD onwards Meghraj Singh Chauhan of Chauhan dynasty is recorded to have been the king of the region as per the records in the Yogi Ratna Nath s Chaughera monastery of Dang valley the third in line of Yogi Gorakhnath The temple held a strong spiritual importance over the rulers of the valley even after the change of power to new dynasties as such the internal activities of the temple were almost entirely unaffected for hundreds of years Nevills Gazetteer of Bahreich 1922 124 mentions that in 1485 AD Dangdun was in the possession of Udat Singh Evidence shows that the last independent king Nawal Singh Chauhan ruled from Chaughera of Dang until 1760 AD as the House of Tulsipur which ruled one of the largest Taluqs of Oudh India which then included the Dang and Deukhuri Valleys The town shares its name with another Tulsipur in Dang Deukhuri District Nepal c 65k North the two towns are linked historically by having the same ruler 11 In 1760 AD Gorkhali King Prithvi Narayan Shah annexed the valley into the expanding Gorkha Kingdom Three years later Dang except Tulsipur lands south of the Siwalik Hills was given as a dowry to the King of Salyan in 1763 AD for the marriage of King Prithvi Narayan Shah s daughter 12 Around 1808 AD Dang valley was finally annexed into the Kingdom of Nepal when Salyan state merged with the Unified Nepal of Shah kings Since Dang was somewhat higher hotter better drained and therefore less malarial than most Inner Terai valleys in Nepal it was settled to some extent by Shah and Rana courtiers and other Nepalese Deukhuri was more of a Tharu enclave until DDT was introduced to control the disease bearing Anopheles mosquito in the 1950s Before the construction of Rapti Bridge Koilabas of Dang Valley was a major trading post with India which was slowly abandoned later 13 Koilabas has remnants of Persian Mughal Empire style architecture visible in its ruins even now Long time ago Dang used to be the capital of Rapti Zone Administration EditThe district consists of two sub metropolitan cities and eight municipalities out of which one is an urban municipality and seven are rural municipalities The administrative regions are as follows 14 Ghorahi Sub Metropolitan City Tulsipur Sub Metropolitan City Lamahi Municipality Gadhawa Rural Municipality Rajpur Rural Municipality Shantinagar Rural Municipality Rapti Rural Municipality Banglachuli Rural Municipality Dangisharan Rural Municipality Babai Rural MunicipalityGeography and Climate EditThis district consists of the larger easterly and upstream portions of the parallel Inner Terai valleys of Dang and Deukhuri plus enclosing ranges of hills and mountains Downstream both valleys cross into Banke District 15 16 Surrounding hills of Ghorahi Dang Valley To the south the district borders Uttar Pradesh a state in India Nepal s neighboring country specifically the Balarampur and Shravasti districts of Awadh Because the international border follows the southern edge of the outermost Siwalik foothills called the Dudhwa Range there is no Outer Terai extending onto the main Ganges Plain inside this district The permeable geology of the Siwaliks does not support moisture retention or soil development so they are covered with unproductive scrub forest Nepal s second longest bridge over Rapti river in Dang district The Dudhwas rise steeply to a crest at about 700 meters then slope more gradually into the Deukhuri Valley down to 250 meters elevation at the Rapti River The Dudhwas extend more than 100 km causing the Rapti to detour west around them before turning southeast down the main trend of the plains into India Deukhuri s climate is nearly tropical and it is well watered by the river as well as possessing abundant groundwater North of Deukhuri Valley the Dang Range rises as high as 1 000 meters with passes at about 700 meters The Dang Valley lies north of these hills drained by the Babai River tributary to the Ghaghara Karnali Valley elevations range from 600 meters along the Babai with alluvial slopes gradually rising northward to 700 meters along the base of the Mahabharat Range The district then extends upslope to the crest of the Mahabharats at 1 500 to 1 700 meters elevation The bordering districts to the north are Pyuthan Rolpa and Salyan The Rapti River of Western Nepal traverses through most of the lower Dang valley It flows beneath the Churia range first on the northern side of the hills and then leaves the hills on the southern side 17 Nepal s second longest bridge over Rapti river in Dang district connects Sisahaniya of Rapti Rural Municipality with Mahadeva of Gadawa Rural Municipality in the district 18 Climate zone 19 Elevation Range of AreaLower Tropical below 300 meters 1 000 ft 18 1 Upper Tropical 300 to 1 000 meters1 000 to 3 300 ft 69 9 Subtropical 1 000 to 2 000 meters3 300 to 6 600 ft 12 0 Demographics EditThe dry and agriculturally unproductive Dudhwa range creates a buffer zone between the divergent cultures of the plains of Uttar Pradesh and the Inner Terai Deukhuri was severely malarial before the late 1950s when DDT came into use to suppress mosquitos so that Tharu people who had evolved resistance managed to live in isolation from other cultures of the plains to the south and the hills to the north Although road development further reduced Deukhuri s isolation by the 1980s the valley retains some of its Garden of Eden charm with its lazy river thick jungle alternating with rice paddies surrounding hills in the middle distance and unique peoples A Tharu woman in native cultural attire Dang Valley is higher less tropical drier and less malarial than Deukhuri Despite poorer soil and more seasonal streamflow its healthier climate made it more attractive to settlers from outside even before the introduction of DDT Since the early 1990s activist groups have been attempting to eradicate the practice of child indentured servitude among the Tharu many of whom sold young daughters to wealthy families in urban areas 20 This region has a plurality of people of the Tharu ethnicity The steep virtually uninhabited southern slopes of the Mahabharat Range are another cultural buffer zone between traditional Tharu lands and the culturally distinct Middle Hills where Nepali is the dominant language the homeland of dangi Chhetris The Kumal potter ethnic group is also semi indigenous citation needed At the time of the 2011 Nepal census Dang District had a population of 552 583 As their first language 66 6 spoke Nepali 28 3 Tharu 1 9 Awadhi 0 9 Kham 0 9 Magar 0 5 Hindi 0 4 Urdu 0 1 Bhojpuri 0 1 Maithili 0 1 Newar and 0 1 other languages as their first language 21 Ethnicity caste 29 7 were Tharu 24 8 Chhetri 13 6 Magar 10 3 Hill Brahmin 6 4 Kami 2 7 Damai Dholi 2 3 Sanyasi Dasnami 1 9 Sarki 1 5 Kumal 1 5 Yadav 1 2 Thakuri 0 9 Musalman 0 8 Newar 0 3 Badi 0 3 other Dalit 0 3 Gurung 0 3 Halwai 0 1 Bote 0 1 Chamar Harijan Ram 0 1 Gaine 0 1 Kathabaniyan 0 1 Majhi 0 1 Tamang 0 1 other Terai and 0 1 others 22 Religion 96 5 were Hindu 1 3 Christian 1 2 Buddhist 0 9 Muslim 0 1 Prakriti and 0 1 others 23 Literacy 70 1 could read and write 2 0 could only read and 27 8 could neither read nor write 24 Population by Census 1971 2011 Edit 25 26 Education Edit Dang district is considered the center of Sanskrit language education in Nepal The district has become an emerging educational hub of Nepal in recent years with rise in number of schools child development centers resource centers and campuses New initiatives taken by the rural municipalities and sub metropolitan cities of the district have aimed at improving the quality of the education most notably making of the English language medium compulsory Ghorahi Sub Metropolitan City has also initiated to make the pre primary level fully English medium 27 Educational Institutes in Dang District 28 Medium of Education Unit Numbers Schools 602 public 424 and private 178 Child Development Centers 703 public 117 and private 586 Campus 31University 1Gurkul schools 3Resource centers 15Nepal Sanskrit University formerly Mahendra Sanskrit University Nepal Sanskrit University in Dang is Nepal s second oldest University Nepal Sanskrit University act was enacted by King Birendra in the advice and consent of Rastriya Panchayat in 1986 to manage Sanskrit education in Nepal up to the highest mark and to study research protect and promote the special achievements received from Sanskrit education in various sectors as per the demand of time and to develop Nepal as a centre of knowledge and inspiration in Sanskrit education upon abiding by the traditional dharma moral values propriety and good behavior As per this Mahendra Sanskrit University later renamed Nepal Sanskrit University was established in Dang which at the time of its commencement was the second university of the country after Tribhuvan University 29 Currently the university offers Intermediate Uttar Madhyama Bachelor Shastri Bachelor of Education Masters Acharya and Doctoral courses in classical and modern subjects It offers intermediate in Ayurveda Bachelors Of Ayurvedic Medicine And Surgery BAMS and condensed courses for Ayurvedacharya as well as yoga training Rapti Academy of Health Sciences RAHS Legislature Parliament unanimously endorsed the Rapti Health Science Academy Bill 2074 on 10 October 2017 as per the government s decision to open one state owned medical college in each province of Nepal Currently Rapti Academy of Health Sciences RAHS serves as the only state owned medical college of Lumbini Province with the Prime Minister of Nepal as the Chancellor In addition to normal medical procedures the state hold entity is providing Intensive Care Units ICU Neonatal Intensive Care Units NICU as well as Pediatric Intensive Care Units PICU 30 Cultural Heritage EditDang valley has a rich cultural heritage with a cultural combination of an older Tharu civilisation and mix of Hinduism There are numerous temples and gumbas in Dang Deukhuri district with puranic legendary connections to Mahabharata Shaivism Shaktism amp Gorakhnath making it one of the richest cultural sites of the country 7 Ambikeshwari Temple is a Shaktipeeth in Dang districtMajor heritage sites in Dang Deukhuri District include 7 Cultural Sites Edit Ambikeshwari Temple is one of the spiritually important Hindu temple located in Dang district The temple also known as Maiko Than Mother s Place and is situated to the north of Ghorahi 3 5 kilometers away on bank of Katuwa Khola The temple is also a Shaktipeetha supposed to have emerged due to the falling of right ear of Satidevi according to the Swasthani Purana of Hinduism This temple is the most popular Shaktipeeth of Dang valley Ratnanath Gorakhnath Mandir Chaughera is in Chaughera of Ghorahi sub metropolitan city It is one of the major tourist and spiritual place of the Dang District The temple is the namesake of Yogi Ratna Nath third in line of Yogi Gorakhnath The temple held a strong spiritual importance over the rulers of the valley since older times 12 even after the change of power to new dynasties as such the internal activities of the temple were almost entirely unaffected for hundreds of years World s largest trident Trishul believed to be where five Pandavas brother prayed to Shiva in Dang Baraha Temple Area in Dang The legend of the origin of the monastery is tied to the rulers of the valley as the narration tells us of a king who went hunting in the jungle where he saw a beautiful deer and shot an arrow The wounded deer went deep into the forest and the king followed it Then suddenly in the middle of the forest he met a radiant ascetic seated in a deep state of meditation with arrow in front of him The king understood his mistake and apologized The Siddha forgave him and granted him a boon through yogic power to reign over the Dang Valley The yogi was Ratannath the disciple of Yogi Gorakhnath and he took the arrow and gave it to the king saying as long as you keep the arrow you will keep your kingdom firm The king then started to worship Ratannath and since then the king s lineage continued the worship and kept the arrow for six months The other six months the Yogis worshipped the arrow and the king had to give them half of the revenue that he got from his kingdom summarized from Narharinath 2022 516 12 Dharapani Temple is situated in the Dharna municipality 01 of the district at the base of chure range south of Babai river about 9 kilometer drive from the center of Ghorahi The temple is believed to have been in the ancient site where the five Pandavas brother sat and chanted prayers to Shiva during their journey to Uttarapantha Himalayas The temple has the world s largest Trishula and is one of the major tourist destination of the valley In recent years the temple has become an important visiting site for Hindu devotees as well as for prominent personalities such as the President of Nepal police chiefs chief justices and ministers 31 Barakune Daha Barhakune Daha Baraha Chhetra also known as Baraha Chhetra is situated 3 km North from Ghorahi sub metropolitan city The region is dedicated to the Hindu God Vishnu and is widely worshipped during Makar Sankranti festival The name comes from a pond around the temple which has twelve bara in Nepali corners Chameri cave is situated at the slopes of the Mahabharat range and is also known locally as Siddha cave thought to have been used by saints for penance in the valley There has also been archeological interest in the cave due to the possibility of it being used by pre historic humans The cave is 4 storey tall with a spacious ground hall which can accommodate almost a thousand people in its space Chameri cave holds archeological importance and various preliminary observations are being carried out or further research Other Prominent Sites Edit Jakhera Lake meaning rain water collection is a lake located at Lamai Municipality 5 of Dang about 35 kilometers far from Ghorahi and two temples dedicated to Ganesh and Siddeswor Mahadev around the lake The lake is a major tourist attraction in the district and also provides spot for picnic and sight seeing The lake lies in the base of Chure hills and is 6 feet deep with a span of 12 hectares Further prominent sites of the valley include 7 Sawarikot Ghordaura Chhilli kot Chhilli Kot Gupha Chameri Gupha Devikot Hanuman Temple Kalimai Temple Kalika Temple Kulpani Mandir Malika Temple Mulkot Cave Ram Janaki Temple Sirasthan Srigaun Temple Sukaura Mound Bagar Baba mandir Rihar Taptakunda Shivalaya Mamisauri mandir Rihar Shiva Mandir Dhankhola Shiva Cave Dhankhola Mata Malmala Devi Malmala Gadawa 1 Tuhi valley Suikot Temple Devisthan Mandir Pawannagar Bhamake Kalika mandir Jakhera Tal TempleTransportation Edit Nepal s second longest bridge Rapti bridge in Dang district East West Highway the main east west highway across Nepal follows Deukhuri Valley passing Kalakate and Bhalubang bazar at the upper end and Lamahi downstream From Bhalubang branch roads lead up the Rapti River into Pyuthan and Rolpa Districts From Lamahi there are roads north across the Dang Range to Ghorahi and south over the Dudhwas to Koilabas which used to be an international trade centre earlier The East West highway which passes through the Lamahi joints the Banke district leading Kohalpur Roads from Ghorahi lead to Rolpa district and the Swargadwari pilgrimage site From Tulsipur a motorable road goes north into Salyan District Nepal s second longest bridge over Rapti river in Dang district connects Sisahaniya of Rapti Rural Municipality with Mahadeva of Gadawa Rural Municipality in the district 18 At Tarigaun Dang Airport IATA DNP ICAO VNDG has daily scheduled connection to Kathmandu in Nepal 32 Airlines Destinations Refs Nepal Airlines Kathmandu 32 Nepal Airlines serves Dang district with daily operationFormer Village Development Committees EditPrior to the restructuring of the district Dang District consisted of the following municipalities and Village development committees citation needed VDCs and Municipalities blue in Dang Deukhuri Amritpur Baghmare Bela Bijauri Chailahi Dhanauri Dharna Dhikpur Diruwa Gangapraspur Gobardiya Halwar Hansipur Hapur Hekuli Kabhre Koilabas Lalmitiya Laxmipur Loharpani Manpur Narayanpur Panchakule Pawan Nagar Phulbari Purandhara Rampur Saidha Satbariya Saudiyar Shreegaun Sisahaniya Sonpur Syuja Tarigaun UrahariMaps EditMinistry of Federal Affairs and Local Development 33 has downloadable district maps based on a detailed and comprehensive GIS database VDC boundaries Land use Rivers streams ponds Motor roads and foot trailsBesides the United Nations Nepal map of districts and VDCs shown above their Map Centre 34 has a downloadable PDF version adding municipalities roads and water detail 35 From 1992 to 2002 a definitive series of large scale topographic maps were surveyed and published through a joint project by Government of Nepal Survey Department 36 and Finland s Ministry for Foreign Affairs contracting through the FinnMap consulting firm 37 Japan International Cooperation Agency 38 substituted for FinnMap mainly in Lumbini Zone with one sheet showing the easternmost part of Dang Deukhuri Topographic sheets at 1 25 000 scale covering 7 5 minutes latitude and longitude map the Terai and Middle Mountains including all of this district JPG scans can be downloaded here 39 These sheets cover Dang Deukhuri District 2782 1B Amiliya 2005 2782 1D Sunpathari Naka 1997 2782 2A Rihar 1998 2782 2B Satbariya 1998 2782 2C 6A Jangrahawa Mahatiniya 1998 2782 2D Bela 1998 2782 3A Atthaise 1998 2782 3B Hasipur 1998 2782 3C Lamahi 2005 2782 3D Lalmatiya 2005 2782 4A Bangesal 1997 2782 4C Bhaluban 1997 2782 6B Siriya Naka 1998 2782 7A Koilabas 2005 2782 7B Jawabairath 1999 2882 9D Shitalpati 1998 2882 13A Hamsapur 1998 2882 13B Panchakule 1998 2882 13C Bairiya Kusum 2005 2882 13D Hekuli 1998 2882 14A Tulsipur 1999 2882 14B Dubrin 1999 2882 14C Bijauri 1999 2882 14D Ghorahi 1998 2882 15A Holeri 1999 2882 15C Bach Pokhara 1998 2882 15D Swargadwari 1999 JICA 097 11 Shiwagadhi 1993 References Edit a b National Population and Housing Census 2011 National Report PDF Central Bureau of Statistics Government of Nepal November 2012 Archived from the original PDF on April 18 2013 घ र ह उप मह नगरप ल क क स क ष प त पर चय घ र ह उप मह नगरप ल क नगर क र यप ल क क क र य लय ghorahimun gov np in Nepali Retrieved 2020 12 07 a b Pandey R N 1987 Paleo environment amp pre history of Nepal Cnas Tribhuvan University Vol 14 N 2 p 116 a b Corvinus G 1989 A handaxe assemblage from western Nepal PDF Quartar International Yearbook for Ice Age and Stone Age Research 39 40 155 173 Retrieved December 8 2013 Rapti Academy of Health Sciences RAHS Retrieved 2020 12 07 About Rapti Academy of Health Sciences RAHS Retrieved 2020 12 07 a b c d Bhandari B 1997 Inventory of heritage sites in Nepal Kathmandu IUCN Nepal a b c Sharma Dilli Raj Archeological Remains of the Dang Valley University of Cambridge Digital Himalaya pp 9 10 Chauthan P R 2003 An Overview of the Siwalik Acheulian amp Reconsidering Its Chronological Relationship with the Soanian A Theoretical Perspective Assemblage 7 Archived from the original on January 4 2012 Retrieved December 8 2013 K C Ganga PhD 2019 Maghi the festival among the tharus Patan Pragya Volume 5 Number 1 Sept 2019 5 1 84 94 House of Tulsipur sites google com Retrieved 2020 12 08 a b c Bouillier Veronique January 1993 The Nepalese State and Gorakhnathi Yogis the Case of the Former Kingdoms of the Dang Valley 18th 19th centuries Cnas Journal volume 20 Number 1 Gill Peter 2016 11 19 Koilabas a town left behind The Record Retrieved 2020 12 12 स थ न य तह in Nepali Ministry of Federal Affairs and General Administration Retrieved 1 October 2018 Government hospitals in Dang without ambulance My Republica Retrieved 26 July 2019 Tharu s Maghi festival to be held in Dang The Himalayan Times 29 December 2018 Retrieved 26 July 2019 BirdLife Data Zone datazone birdlife org Retrieved 2021 04 05 a b Sen Sandeep 2019 10 30 Nepal s second longest bridge construction completes The Himalayan Times Retrieved 2021 04 05 The Map of Potential Vegetation of Nepal a forestry agroecological biodiversity classification system PDF Forest amp Landscape Development and Environment Series 2 2005 and CFC TIS Document Series No 110 2005 ISBN 87 7903 210 9 retrieved November 22 2013 Desperate plight of Nepal slave girls BBC News 2 March 2007 NepalMap Language 1 NepalMap Caste 2 NepalMap Religion 3 NepalMap Literacy 4 Districts of Nepal Statoids Gwillim Law Retrieved January 23 2014 National Population and Housing Census 2011 Volume 3 PDF Kathmandu Nepal Government of Nepal Central Bureau of Statistics January 2014 Archived from the original PDF on April 18 2013 Retrieved January 23 2014 Education situation improving in Dang Edusanjal Retrieved 2021 02 26 Statistics Central Bureau Details of municipalities and VDCs of Dang Profile 2074 BS Central Bureau of Statistics 154 Nepal Sanskrit University Act 2043 English Law Commission Nepal 1986 Rapti Academy of Health Sciences RAHS Retrieved 2021 02 26 Basnet Devendra Trishul turns Dang temple into tourist spot My City Retrieved 2020 12 12 a b FLIGHT SYNOPSIS Nepal airlines 3 April 2021 Archived from the original on 2015 11 21 Ministry of Federal Affairs and Local Development Government of Nepal Retrieved February 21 2014 Map Centre United Nations Nepal Information Platform Retrieved February 4 2014 Dang District PDF Map Retrieved Jan 31 2014 a href Template Cite map html title Template Cite map cite map a Missing or empty title help dead link Government of Nepal Survey Department Archived from the original on February 22 2014 Retrieved February 4 2014 Land Administration amp Management Mapping Surveying and Aerial Photography Major Reference Projects PDF FinnMap Archived from the original PDF on February 22 2014 Retrieved February 4 2014 Japan International Cooperation Agency Retrieved February 4 2014 Nepal Topo Maps PAHAR Mountains of Central Asia Digital Dataset Retrieved Jan 31 2014 External links Edit Districts of Nepal Statoids Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dang Deukhuri District 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