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Newar people

Newar (/nɪˈwɑːr/;[2] Newar: नेवार, endonym: Newa; Newar: नेवा, Pracalit script: 𑐣𑐾𑐰𑐵𑑅‎) or Nepami,[3] are the historical inhabitants of the Kathmandu Valley and its surrounding areas in Nepal and the creators of its historic heritage and civilisation.[4][5] Newars form a linguistic and cultural community of primarily Indo-Aryan and Tibeto-Burman ethnicities following Hinduism and Buddhism with Nepal Bhasa as their common language.[6] Newars have developed a division of labour and a sophisticated urban civilisation not seen elsewhere in the Himalayan foothills.[7] Newars have continued their age-old traditions and practices and pride themselves as the true custodians of the religion, culture and civilisation of Nepal.[8] Newars are known for their contributions to culture, art and literature, trade, agriculture and cuisine.[9] Today, they consistently rank as the most economically and socially advanced community of Nepal, according to the annual Human Development Index published by UNDP.[10] Nepal's 2011 census ranks them as the nation's sixth-largest ethnicity/community, with 1,321,933 Newars throughout the country.[11]

Newa people
A Newar woman
Total population
1,321,933[1]
(5% of Nepal population)
Regions with significant populations
Nepal (Nepal Mandala)
Languages
Nepal Bhasa, Nepali
Religion
Newar Buddhism
Related ethnic groups
Maithils; Pahadi people; other Indo-Aryan peoples; Tibeto-Burman speakers

The Kathmandu Valley and surrounding territories constituted the former Newar kingdom of the Nepal Mandala.[12][13] Unlike other common-origin ethnic or caste groups of Nepal, the Newars are regarded as an example of a nation community with a relict identity, derived from an ethnically diverse, previously existing polity.[14] Newar community within it consists of various strands of ethnic, racial, caste and religious heterogeneity, as they are the descendants of the diverse group of people that have lived in Nepal Mandala since prehistoric times. Indo-Aryan tribes like the Licchavis, Kosala, and Mallas (N) from respective Indian Mahajanapada (i.e. Licchavis of Vajji, Kosala, and Malla (I)) that arrived at different periods eventually merged with the local native population by adopting their language and customs. These tribes however retained their Vedic culture and brought with them their Sanskritic languages, social structure, Hindu religion and culture, which was assimilated with local cultures and gave rise to the current Newar civilisation.[4] Newar rule in Nepal Mandala ended with its conquest by the Gorkha Kingdom in 1768.[15][16]

Origin, etymology

The terms "Nepāl", "Newār", "Newāl" and "Nepār" are phonetically different forms of the same word, and instances of the various forms appear in texts in different times in history. Nepal is the learned (Sanskrit) form and Newar is the colloquial (Prakrit) form.[17] A Sanskrit inscription dated to 512 in Tistung, a valley to the west of Kathmandu, contains the phrase "greetings to the Nepals" indicating that the term "Nepal" was used to refer to both the country and the people.[18][19]

The term "Newar" or "Newa:" referring to "inhabitant of Nepal" appeared for the first time in an inscription dated 1654 in Kathmandu.[20] Italian Jesuit priest Ippolito Desideri (1684–1733) who traveled to Nepal in 1721 has written that the natives of Nepal are called Newars.[21] It has been suggested that "Nepal" may be a sanskritization of "Newar", or "Newar" may be a later form of "Nepal".[22] According to another explanation, the words "Newar" and "Newari" are colloquial forms arising from the mutation of P to W, and L to R.[23]

As a result of the phonological process of dropping the last consonant and lengthening the vowel, "Newā" for Newār or Newāl, and "Nepā" for Nepāl are used in ordinary speech.[24][25]

History

 
The Vajji or Vṛji Mahajanapada and Malla Mahajanapada in 600 BCE; Notable Licchavi (kingdom) and Malla (Nepal) of Nepal Mandala originated from respective ones

For about a thousand years, the Newar civilization in Central Nepal preserved a microcosm of classical North Indian culture in which Brahmanic and Buddhist elements enjoyed equal status.[26] Snellgrove and Richardson (1968) speak of 'the direct heritage of pre-Islamic India'. The Malla dynasty was noted for their patronisation of the Maithili language (the language of the Mithila region) which was afforded an equal status to that of Sanskrit in the Malla court.[27] Maithil Brahmin priests were invited to Kathmandu and many Maithil families settled in Kathmandu during Malla rule.[28] Due to influx of people from both north (Tibet) and south (Tirhut) who brought with them not only their genetic and racial diversity but also greatly moulded the dominant culture and tradition of Newars.

The different divisions of Newars had different historical developments. The common identity of Newar was formed in the Kathmandu Valley. Until the conquest of the valley by the Gorkha Kingdom in 1769,[29] all the people who had inhabited the valley at any point of time were either Newar or progenitors of Newar. So, the history of Newar correlates to the history of the Kathmandu Valley (or Nepala Mandala) prior to the establishment of the modern state of Nepal.

The earliest known history of Newar and the Kathmandu Valley blends with mythology recorded in historical chronicles. One such text, which recounts the creation of the valley, is the Swayambhu Purana. According to this Buddhist scripture, the Kathmandu Valley was a giant lake until the Bodhisattva Manjusri, with the aid of a holy sword, cut a gap in the surrounding hills and let the water out.[30] This legend is supported by geological evidence of an ancient lakebed, and it provides an explanation for the high fertility of the Kathmandu Valley soil.[31]

According to the Swayambhu Purana, Manjusri then established a city called Manjupattan (Sanskrit "Land Established by Manjusri"), now called Manjipā, and made Dharmākara its king.[32] A shrine dedicated to Manjusri is still present in Majipā. No historical documents have been found after this era till the advent of the Gopal era. A genealogy of kings is recorded in a chronicle called Gopalarajavamsavali.[33] According to this manuscript, the Gopal kings were followed by the Mahispals and the Kirats before the Licchavis entered from the south. Some claim Buddha to have visited Nepal during the reign of Kirat King Jitedasti.[34] Newar reign over the valley and their sovereignty and influence over neighboring territories ended with the conquest of the Kathmandu Valley in 1769 by the Gorkhali Shah dynasty founded by Prithvi Narayan Shah.[29][35]

Prior to the Gorkha conquest, which began with the Battle of Kirtipur in 1767, the borders of Nepal Mandala extended to Tibet in the north, the nation of the Kirata in the east, the kingdom of Makwanpur in the south[36] and the Trishuli River in the west which separated it from the kingdom of Gorkha.[37]

Economic history

 
Newar traders in Lhasa in the 1940s.

Trade, industry and agriculture have been the mainstay of the economy of the Newars. They are made up of social groups associated with hereditary professions that provide ritual and economic services. Merchants, craftsmen, artists, potters, weavers, dyers, farmers and other castes all played their part in creating a flourishing economic system. Elaborate cultural traditions which required the use of varied objects and services also fueled the economy. Towns and villages in the Kathmandu Valley specialized in producing particular products, and rich agriculture produced a surplus for export.[citation needed]

For centuries, Newar merchants have handled trade between Tibet and India as well as exporting locally manufactured products to Tibet. Rice was another major export. Porters and pack mules transported merchandise over mountain tracks that formed the old trade routes. Since the 18th century, Newars have spread out across Nepal and established trading towns dotting the mid hills. They are known as jewelry makers and shopkeepers. Today, they are engaged in modern industry, business and service sectors.[38][39]

Castes and communities

Newars forms an ethnolinguistic community distinct from all the other ethnic groups of Nepal. Newars are divided into various endogamous clans or groups on the basis of their ancient hereditary occupations, deriving its roots in the classic late-Vedic Varna model. Although first introduced in the time of the Licchavis, the present Newar caste system assumed its present shape during the medieval Malla period.

Religion

 
Temple of Pashupatinath.
 
 
Buddhist deity Manjusri

According to the 2011 Nepal Census, 87.38% of the Newars were Hindu and 10.74% were Buddhist.[40] A minority are Christian.[41]

Out of the three main cities of the Kathmandu Valley which are historically Newar, the city of Patan is the most Buddhist containing the four stupas built by Indian emperor Ashoka. Bhaktapur is primarily Hindu, while Kathmandu is a mix of both. Generally, both Hindu and Buddhist deities are worshiped and festivals are celebrated by both religious groups. However, for ritual activities, Hindu and Buddhist Newars have their own priests (Rajopadhyaya Brahmins for Hindus and Vajracharyas for Buddhists) and varying amounts of cultural differences.

Religiously, the majority of Newars can be classified as both Hindu and Buddhist. The major cults are Vajrayana Buddhism and Tantric Hinduism. The former is referred to as Buddhamarga, the latter as Sivamarga. Both creeds have been established since antiquity in the valley. Both Buddhamargi and Sivamargi Newars are Tantricists, Within the Newar community, many different esoteric Tantric cults of Buddhist, Shaiva, and Vaishnava denominations are practiced.[42] In this regard, cults of the Mother Goddesses and their consorts, the Bhairavas, are particularly important.

The most important shrines in the Valley are Swayambhu Maha Chaitya or Swayambhunath (Buddhist) and Pashupatinath (Hindu). Different castes worship different deities at different occasions, and more or less intensively. Only the higher echelons in the caste system claim to be exclusively Buddhist or Hindu. The Vajracharyas, Buddhist priests, will adamantly maintain that they are Buddhists, and so will the Bare (Shakya). Kathmandu Uray (Tuladhars, tc.) as well as the Sayamis (Manandhars) will also strongly maintain their Buddhist heritage. On the other hand, the Dyabhāju Brāhman, the Jha Brāhman, and the dominant Shresthas will maintain that they are Hindus. Further down in the caste hierarchy no distinction is made between Buddhists and Hindus, although preponderance towards Hinduism and worship of Hindu gods is much more prevalent among these castes. Hindu and Buddhist alike always worship Ganesh first in every ritual, and every locality has its local Ganesh shrine (Ganesh Than).[43]

Although Newar Buddhism (Vajrayana) had been traditionally practiced in the Kathmandu Valley,[44] Theravada Buddhism made a comeback in Nepal in the 1920s and now is a common form of Buddhism among Buddhamargi Newars.[45][46]

From the 17th century onwards, Catholic Christian missionaries of the Jesuit and Capuchin religious orders "established hospices at Kathmandu, Patan and Bhatgoan, the capitals of the three Malla Kings of Nepal who had permitted them to preach Christianity."[41] An indigenous Newar Christian community thus became established.[41] When the Mallas were overthrown by the Gurkhas, the Newar Christians took refuge in India, settling first in the city of Bettiah and then later moving eleven kilometres north to Chuhari.[41]

Language

"Nepal Bhasa" is classified as among the Sino-Tibetan languages but it has greatly derived much of its grammar, words and lexicon from the influences of southern Indo-European languages like Sanskrit, Prakrit, and Maithili. Newars are bound together by a common language and culture.[47] Their common language is Nepal Bhasa or the linguistic progenitor of that language. Nepal Bhasa is the term recognised by the government.[48]

Nepal Bhasa already existed as a spoken language during the Licchavi period and is believed to have developed from the language spoken in Nepal during the Kirati period.[49] Inscriptions in Nepal Bhasa emerged from the 12th century, the palm-leaf manuscript from Uku Bahah being the first example.[50] Nepal Bhasa developed from the 14th to the late 18th centuries as the court and state language.[51] It was used universally in stone and copper inscriptions, sacred manuscripts, official documents, journals, title deeds, correspondence and creative writing.

In 2011, there were approximately 846,000 native speakers of Nepal Bhasa.[52] Many Newar communities within Nepal also speak their own dialects of Nepal Bhasa, such as the Dolakha Newar Language.[53] Nepal Bhasa is of Tibeto-Burman origin but has been heavily influenced by Indo-Aryan languages like Sanskrit, Pali, Bengali and Maithili.

Scripts

Nepal Bhasa script is a group of scripts that developed from the Brahmi script and are used primarily to write Nepal Bhasa and Sanskrit. Among the different scripts, Ranjana, Bhujinmol, and Prachalit are the most common. Nepal script is also known as Nepal Lipi and Nepal Akhala.[54]

Nepal Bhasa scripts appeared in the 10th century. For a thousand years, it was used on stone and copper plate inscriptions, coins (Nepalese mohar), palm-leaf documents and Hindu and Buddhist manuscripts. Devanagari began to be used to write Nepal Bhasa in the beginning of the 20th century, and Nepal script has limited usage today.[55]

Literature

Nepal Bhasa is one of the five languages in the Sino-Tibetan family with an ancient literary tradition. Literature in Nepal Bhasa began as translation and commentary in prose in the 14th century AD.[56] The earliest known document in Nepal Bhasa is called "The Palmleaf from Uku Bahal" which dates from 1114 AD during the Thakuri period.[57]

Classical Nepal Bhasa literature is represented by all the three major genres—prose, poetry, and drama. Most of the writings consist of prose including chronicles, popular stories and scientific manuals. Poetry consists of love songs, ballads, work songs, and religious poetry. The earliest poems date from the 1570s. Epic poetry describing historical events and tragedies are very popular. The ballads Sitala Maju, about the expulsion of children from Kathmandu, Silu, about an ill-fated pilgrimage to Gosaikunda, and Ji Waya La Lachhi Maduni, about a luckless Tibet trader, are sung as seasonal songs.

The dramas are based on stories from the epics, and almost all of them were written during the 17th and 18th centuries.[58] Nepal Bhasa literature flourished for five centuries until 1850.[59] Since then, it suffered a period of decline due to political oppression. The period 1909–1941 is known as the Nepal Bhasa renaissance period when writers defied official censure and braved imprisonment to create literary works. Modern Nepal Bhasa literature began in the 1940s with the emergence of new genres like short stories, poems, essays, novels and plays.[60]

Politics

Newa Autonomous State

Newa Autonomous State is a proposed federal state of Nepal which establishes the historical native homeland of Newa people as a federal state.[61][62] The historical territories of Newars is called Nepal Mandala. The Newa Autonomous State mandates to reconstruct the district division and create an autonomous Newa province. It includes historically Newa residing settlements and Newa dominant zones of Kathmandu, Bhaktapur, Lalitpur, Newa towns of Dolakha, Newa settlements of Nuwakot, Newa settlements of Makwanpur, Newa settlements of Ramechhap, Newa settlements of Sindupalchok, Newa settlements of Kavre West.[63][64][65]

Dance

 
The Nyetamaru Ajima masked dance is performed at Nyeta in Kathmandu in April.

Masked dance

The Newar dance consists of sacred masked dance,[66] religious dance without the use of masks known as Dyah Pyakhan, dance performed as part of a ritual and meditation practice known as Chachaa Pyakhan (Newar: चचा प्याखं) (Charya Nritya in Sanskrit)[67] and folk dance. There are also masked dance dramas known as Daboo Pyakhan which enact religious stories to the accompaniment of music.

Dhime dance

The dance done in the tune of Dhime are Dhime dance.

Music

Traditional Newa music consists of sacred music, devotional songs, seasonal songs, ballads and folk songs.[68] One of the most well-known seasonal songs is Sitala Maju. The ballad describes the expulsion of children from Kathmandu in the early 19th century. Another seasonal song Silu is about a pilgrimage to Gosaikunda that went wrong. Ji Waya La Lachhi Maduni is a tragedy song about a newly married couple. The ballad Rajamati about unlucky lovers is widely popular. In 1908, maestro Seturam Shrestha made the first recording of the song on gramophone disc in Kolkata.

Common percussion instruments consist of the dhimay,[69] khin, naykhin and dhaa. Wind instruments include the bansuri (flute), payntah (long trumpet) and mwahali (short trumpet), chhusya, bhusya, taa (cymbals), and gongs are other popular instruments. String instruments are very rare. Newa people call their music Dhime Baja.

The musical style and musical instruments are still in use today. Musical bands accompany religious processions in which an idol of a deity is placed in a chariot or portable shrine and taken around the city. Devotional songs are known as bhajan may be sung daily in community houses. Hymn societies like Gyanmala Bhajan Khala hold regular recitals. Dapa songs are sung during hymn singing seasons at Temple squares and sacred courtyards.

Gunla Bajan musical bands parade through the streets during Gunla, the 10th month of the Nepal Sambat calendar which is a holy month for Newar Buddhists.[70] Musical performances start with an overture which is a salutation to the gods.

Seasonal songs and ballads are associated with particular seasons and festivals. Music is also played during wedding processions, life-cycle ceremonies and funeral processions.[71]

Popular traditional songs

  • Ghātu (summer music, this seasonal melody is played during Pahan Charhe festival)
  • Ji Wayā Lā Lachhi Maduni (the tragedy of a merchant)
  • Mohani (festive joy, this seasonal tune is played during Mohani festival)
  • Rājamati (about young lovers)
  • Silu (about a couple who get separated during a pilgrimage, this seasonal music is played during the monsoon)
  • Sitālā Māju (lament for children expelled from the Kathmandu Valley)
  • Swey Dhaka Swaigu Makhu (a song about love)
  • Holi ya Mela (About theholi.)
  • Wala Wala Pulu Kishi (Sung in Indra jatra)
  • Yo Sing Tyo
  • Yomari Maku
  • Dhanga maru ni bhamcha (song to complain about the laziness of daughter-in-law by man's father.)
  • Sirsaya Hegu

Religious music

Art

 
Vasudhara Mandala, by Jasaraja Jirili, Nepal, dated 1365.

The Newars are the creators of most examples of art and architecture in Nepal.[72] Traditional Newar art is basically religious art. Newar devotional paubha painting, sculpture and metal craftsmanship are world-renowned for their exquisite beauty.[73] The earliest dated paubha discovered so far is Vasudhara Mandala which was painted in 1365 AD (Nepal Sambat 485).[74] The murals on the walls of two 15th-century monasteries in the former kingdom of Mustang in the Nepal Himalaya provide illustrations of Newar works outside the Kathmandu Valley.[75] Stone sculpture, wood carving, repoussé art and metal statues of Buddhist and Hindu deities made by the lost-wax casting process[76] are specimens of Newar artistry.[77] The Peacock Window of Bhaktapur and Desay Madu Jhya of Kathmandu are known for their wood carving.

Building elements like the carved Newar window, roof struts on temples and the tympanum of temples and shrine houses exhibit traditional creativity. From as early as the seventh century, visitors have noted the skill of Newar artists and craftsmen who left their influence on the art of Tibet and China.[78] Newars introduced the lost-wax technique into Bhutan and they were commissioned to paint murals on the walls of monasteries there.[79][80] Sandpainting of mandala made during festivals and death rituals is another specialty of Newar art.

Besides exhibiting a high level of skill in the traditional religious art, Newar artists have been at the forefront of introducing Western art styles in Nepal. Raj Man Singh Chitrakar (1797–1865) is credited with starting watercolor painting in the country. Bhaju Man Chitrakar (1817–1874), Tej Bahadur Chitrakar (1898–1971) and Chandra Man Singh Maskey were other pioneer artists who introduced modern style paintings incorporating concepts of lighting and perspective.[81]

Traditional painting

Architecture

 
Miaoying Temple, an example of Newar architecture in China

There are seven UNESCO World Heritage Sites and 2,500 temples and shrines in the Kathmandu Valley that illustrate the skill and aesthetic sense of Newar artisans. Fine brickwork and woodcarving are the marks of Newar architecture.[82] Residential houses, monastic courtyards known as baha and bahi, rest houses, temples, stupas, priest houses and palaces are the various architectural structures found in the valley. Most of the chief monuments are located in the Durbar Squares of Kathmandu, Lalitpur and Bhaktapur, the old royal palace complexes built between the 12th and 18th centuries.[83]

Newa architecture consists of the pagoda, stupa, shikhara, chaitya and other styles. The valley's trademark is the multiple-roofed pagoda which may have originated in this area and spread to India, China, Indochina and Japan.[84][85] The most famous artisan who influenced stylistic developments in China and Tibet was Arniko, a Newar youth who traveled to the court of Kublai Khan in the 13th century AD.[84] He is known for building the white stupa at the Miaoying Temple in Beijing.

Settlements

Durbar squares, temple squares, sacred courtyards, stupas, open-air shrines, dance platforms, sunken water fountains, public rest houses, bazaars, multistoried houses with elaborately carved windows and compact streets are the characteristics of traditional planning. Besides the historical cities of Kathmandu, Lalitpur, Bhaktapur, Madhyapur Thimi, Chovar, Bungamati, Thankot and Kirtipur, small towns with a similar artistic heritage (like Panga in Kirtipur municipality) dot the Kathmandu Valley where almost half of the Newar population lives.[86]

Outside the valley, historical Newar settlements include Nuwakot,[87] Nala, Banepa, Dhulikhel, Panauti, Dolakha, Chitlang and Bhimphedi.[88] The Newars of Kathmandu founded Pokhara in 1752 at the invitation of the rulers of Kaski.[89] Over the last two centuries, Newars have fanned out of the Kathmandu Valley and established trade centers and settled in various parts of Nepal. Bandipur, Baglung, Silgadhi and Tansen in west Nepal and Chainpur and Bhojpur in east Nepal contain large Newar populations.

Outside Nepal, many Newars have settled in Darjeeling and Kalimpong[90] in West Bengal, Assam, Manipur and Sikkim, India.[91] In Sikkim, many Newars became Taksaris helping the former kingdom in establishing coinage system. Later they were made Thikadars or Sikkimese feudal lords with judicial and administrative powers within their respective estates.[92]

Newars have also settled in Bhutan. Colonies of expatriate Newar merchants and artisans existed in Lhasa, Shigatse and Gyantse in Tibet till the mid-1960s when the traditional trade came to an end after the Sino-Indian War.[93] In recent times, Newars have moved to different parts of Asia, Europe and America.[94][95][96]

Festivals

 
Chariot pulled in procession during Biska Jatra in Bhaktapur.

Newar religious culture is rich in ceremony and is marked by frequent festivals throughout the year.[97] Many festivals are tied to Hindu and Buddhist holidays and the harvest cycle. Street celebrations include pageants, jatras or processions in which a car or portable shrine is paraded through the streets and sacred masked dances. Other festivals are marked by family feasts and worship. The celebrations are held according to the lunar calendar, so the dates are changeable.

Mohani (Dasain) is one of the greatest annual celebrations which is observed for several days with feasts, religious services, and processions. During Swanti (Tihar), Newars celebrate New Year's Day of Nepal Sambat by doing Mha Puja, a ritual in which our own body is worshipped, which is believed to purifies and strengthens one spiritually for the coming year. Similarly, Bhai Tika is also done during Swanti. It is a ritual observed to worship and respect a woman's brothers, with or without blood relation. Another major festival is Sā Pāru when people who have lost a family member in the past year dress up as cows and saints, and parade through town, following a specific route. In some cases, a real cow may also be a part of the parade. People give such participants money, food and other gifts as a donation. Usually, children are the participants of the parade.

In Kathmandu, the biggest street festival is Yenya (Indra Jatra) when three cars bearing the living goddess Kumari and two other child gods are pulled through the streets and masked dance performances are held. The two godchildren are Ganesh and Bhairav. Another major celebration is Pahan Charhe when portable shrines bearing images of mother goddesses are paraded through Kathmandu. During the festival of Jana Baha Dyah Jatra, a temple car with an image of Karunamaya is drawn through central Kathmandu for three days. A similar procession is held in Lalitpur known as Bunga Dyah Jatra[98] which continues for a month and climaxes with Bhoto Jatra, the display of the sacred vest.[99] The biggest outdoor celebration in Bhaktapur is Biska Jatra (Bisket Jatra) which is marked by chariot processions and lasts for nine days.[100] Sithi Nakha is another big festival when worship is offered and natural water sources are cleaned.[101] In addition, all Newar towns and villages have their particular festival which is celebrated by holding a chariot or palanquin procession.

Paanch Chare is one of the many occasions or festivals celebrated by the Newa community, natives from Kathmandu Valley, Nepal. This is celebrated on the Chaturdasi (Pisach Chaturdashi) day according to new lunar calendar on the month of Chaitra.

And also the longest jatra of Nepal Rato Machindra Nath Janka is celebrated by Newars mostly on Patan. This Jatra is 1 month long and contains various celebration

Clothing

 
A Newar woman wearing parsi, circa 1860–1900

Western wear is the norm as in urban areas in the rest of the country. Traditionally men wear tapuli (cap), long shirt (tapālan) and trousers (suruwā), also called Daura-Suruwal. Woman wear cheeparsi (sari) and gaa (long length shawl) while younger girls wear ankle-length gowns (bhāntānlan). Ritual dresses consist of pleated gowns, coats and a variety of headresses. Jyapu women have a distinctive sari called Hāku Patāsi which is a black sari with distinctive red border. Jyapu men also have a distinctive version of the tapālan suruwā. Similarly, a shawl (gā) is worn by men and women. Traditionally, Newar women wear a shoe made out of red cloth, Kapa lakaan. It is decorated with glitters and colorful beads (potya). One of the major parts of Newar dress ups is bracelets (chūra) and mala(necklaces).

Cuisine

Meals can be classified into three main categories: the daily meal, the afternoon snack and festival food. The daily meal consists of boiled rice, lentil soup, vegetable curry, relish and Meat are served. The snack generally consists of beaten rice, roasted and curried soybeans, curried potato and roasted meat mixed with spices.

Food is also an important part of the ritual and religious life of the Newars, and the dishes served during festivals and feasts have symbolic significance.[102] Different sets of ritual dishes are placed in a circle around the staple Bawji (rice flakes or Flattened) to represent and honour different sets of deities depending on the festival or life-cycle ceremony.[103]

Kwāti (क्वाति soup of different beans), kachilā (कचिला spiced minced meat), chhoyalā (छोयला water buffalo meat marinated in spices and grilled over the flames of dried wheat stalks), pukālā (पुकाला fried meat), wo (वः lentil cake), paun kwā (पाउँक्वा sour soup), swan pukā (स्वँपुका stuffed lungs), syen (स्येँ fried liver), mye (म्ये boiled and fried tongue), sapu mhichā (सःपू म्हिचा leaf tripe stuffed with bone marrow), sanyā khunā (सन्या खुना jellied fish soup) and takhā (तःखा jellied meat) are some of the popular festival foods. Dessert consists of dhau (धौ yogurt), sisābusā (सिसाबुसा fruits) and mari (मरि sweets). Thwon (थ्वँ rice beer) and aylā (अयला local alcohol) are the common alcoholic liquors that Newars make at home.

Traditionally, at meals, festivals and gatherings, Newars sit on long mats in rows. Typically, the sitting arrangement is hierarchical with the eldest sitting at the top and the youngest at the end. Newar cuisine makes use of mustard oil and a host of spices such as cumin, sesame seeds, turmeric, garlic, ginger, mint, bay leaves, cloves, cinnamon, pepper, chilli and mustard seeds. Food is served in laptya (लप्त्य plates made of special leaves, held together by sticks). Similarly, any soups are served in botā (बोटा bowls made of leaves). Liquors are served in Salinchā (सलिंचाः bowls made of clay) and Kholchā (खोल्चाः small metal bowls).

Newar people are much innovative in terms of cuisine. They have a tradition to prepare various foods according to the festivals. Some of the popular cuisines that are prepared with the festivals are:

 
One of the popular sweet, "Yomari"

Life-cycle ceremonies

 
Mandala made on the third day after death as part of death rituals among Buddhist Newars

Elaborate ceremonies chronicle the life cycle of a Newar from birth till death.[104][105] Newars consider life-cycle rituals as a preparation for death and the life after it. Hindus and Buddhists alike perform the "Sorha Sanskaar Karma" or the 16 sacred rites of passage, unavoidable in a Hindu person's life. The 16 rites have been shortened to 10 and called "10 Karma Sanskar" (Newar: दश कर्म संस्कार). These include important events of a person's life like "Jatakarma" (Newar: जातकर्म) (Childbirth), "Namakaran" (Newar: नामकरण) (Naming the child), "Annapraasan" (Newar: अन्नप्राशन) (First rice feeding ceremony), "Chudakarma" or "Kaeta Puja" (first hair shaving and loin cloth ceremony), "Vivaaha" (Newar: विवाह) (Wedding), among others.

Once such important rite of passage ceremony among the male Newars is performing the loin-cloth and head-shaving ceremony called Chudākarma (Newar: चुडाकर्म) followed by the Bratabandha or Kaeta Puja (Newar: काएत पूजा) which is traditionally performed for boys aged five to thirteen according to the religious affiliation Newars identify with.[106]

In this ceremony, Buddhist Newars – Gubhāju-Baré (Bajracharya-Shakya), Urāy, Jyapu and few artisan castes like Chitrakār – perform their Pravrajyā (Sanskrit: प्रवराज्या) ceremony by mimicking Gautama Buddha's ascetic and medicant lifestyle and the steps to attain monkhood and nirvana where the boy stays in a Buddhist monastery, Vihara, for three days, living the life of a monk and abandoning all material pleasures. On the fourth day, he disrobes and returns to his family and henceforth becomes a householder Buddhist for the rest of his life.[107] The Buddhist priestly clan Gubhāju-Baré (Bajracharya and Shakya) go through an additional initiation ceremony called Bare Chuyegu (becoming a Baré) while Bajracharya boys are further required to go through Acharyabhisheka (Sanskrit: आचार्याभिषेक) which is a Tantric initiation rite that qualifies a Bajracharya to perform as a purohita.[108]

Hindu Newars perform the male initiation ceremony called Kaeta Puja as a ritual observance of the brahmachārya – the first stage in the traditional four stages of life. During the ritual, the young boy renounces family and lineage for the celibate religious life. His head is fully shaved except a tuft in the top, he must don yellow/orange robes of the mendicant, he must beg rice from his relatives and prepare to wander out into the world. Having this symbolically fulfilled the ascetic ideal, he can be called back by his family to assume the life of a householder and his eventual duty as a husband and a father. Twice-born (Brahmin and Kshatriya) Newars – Rajopādhyāyas and Chatharīyas – additionally perform the Upanayana initiation where the boy receives his sacred thread (Sanskrit: यज्ञोपवीत) and the secret Vedic mantras – RV.3.62.10 (Gāyatrī mantra) for Brahmins and RV.1.35.2 (Shiva mantra) for Chatharīyas.[109] The boy is then fully inducted into his caste status as a Dvija with the obligation to observe henceforth all commensal rules and other caste obligations(Newar: कर्म चलेको).[107]

  • Macha Janku

This is the rice feeding ceremony, "Annapraasan" (Newar: अन्नप्राशन). It is performed at the age of six or eight months for boys and at the age of five or seven months for girls.

For a female child, Ihi (Ehee)(Newar: ईहि) short for Ihipaa (Eheepā)(Newar: ईहिपा) (Marriage) is performed between the ages of five to nine. It is a ceremony in which pre-adolescent girls are "married" to the bael fruit (wood apple), which is a symbol of the god Vishnu. It is believed that if the girl's husband dies later in her life, she is not considered a widow because she is married to Vishnu, and so already has a husband that is believed to be still alive.

  • Bahra

Girls have yet another ceremonial ritual called Bahra Chuyegu(Newar: बराह चुयेगु) when a girl approaches puberty. This is done in her odd number year like 7,9 or 11 before menstruation. She is kept in a room for 12 days hidden and is ceremonially married to the sun god Surya.

Jankwa or Janku is an old-age ceremony which is conducted when a person reaches the age of 77 years, seven months, seven days, seven hours, seven minutes, seven-quarter.[45] Three further Janku ceremonies are performed at similar auspicious milestones at age 83, 88 and 99. The first Janwa is called "Bhimratharohan", the second "Chandraratharohan", the third "Devaratharohan", and the fourth "Divyaratharohan". After the second Jankwa, the person is accorded deified status.

  • Vivaaha (Wedding)

The next ceremony common to both men and women is marriage. The Newar custom, similar to that of Hindus, is that the bride almost always leaves home at marriage and moves into her husband's home and adopts her husband's family name as her own. Cross-cousin and parallel-cousin marriage is forbidden. Marriage is usually arranged by parents who use a gobetween(lamee). Marriage by elopement is popular in some peripheral villages.

  • The Sagan ceremony where auspicious food items are presented is an important part of life-cycle rituals.
  • All Newars, except the Laakumi and Jogi caste, cremate their dead. The Jogis bury their dead. As part of the funeral, offerings are made to the spirit of the deceased, the crow and the dog. The crow and the dog represent ancestors and the god of death. Subsequently, offerings and rituals are conducted four, seven, eight, 13 and 45 days following death and monthly for a year and then annually.[106]
  • Buddhist Newars also make a mandala (sand painting) depicting the Buddha on the third day after death which is preserved for four days.

Newa Games

The games which had been played by prasanga people from their ancient time can be classified as Newa games.

Kana kana picha (Blindfold game), Piyah (a game played with stone by pushing stone within the marks drawn in the ground), Gatti ( another game played with stone by hand), pasa are some games played by Newar people since ancient time.[citation needed]

The Kirantas settled in different places of Nepal, especially in the eastern Himalayas in the seventh century B.C. They were brave. They attacked Kathmandu during the reign of King Bhuwan Singh and defeated him. They founded the Kiranti rule in the Kathmandu Valley. Yalambar was the first Kiranti King. The seventh Kiranti King, Jitedasit and the fourteenth King, Sthunko were very famous. During the rule of Jitedasti, Gautam Buddha Visited Nepal. During the rule of Sthunko, Indian Emperor Ashok visited Kathmandu.

About 32 kings of Kirant dynasty continued their rule in the valley. During that period, Nepal made great progress. Trade and industry developed. Wool, wood and herbs were sent from Nepal to other countries. Nepali blandets were very famous in pataliputra (patina). Kautily, an Indian economist, has written this. The laws were very strict. There were justice courts in the country. The kirantas worshipped kiranteshwar Mahadev, serpents and trees. They made stupas and chaityas. They had their own culture. They made several settlements like matatirtha, Shankhmul, Thankot, Khopung, Kurpasi, Sanga, Tenkhu etc. these settlements still exist with a little change in their names.

Lichchhavi kings, After the downfall of the Kiranti rule, Som dynasty came into power. Only five kings of this dynasty ruled over Nepal. Bhaskerverma was the last king. After that, Lichchhavi rule began in Nepal. The Lichchhavis had come to Nepal from India.

Notable Newar people

Gallery

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Bista, Dor Bahadur (2004). People of Nepal. Kathmandu: Ratna Pustak Bhandar.
  • Encyclopædia Britannica (2011). Newar.
  • Kayastha, Chhatra Bahadur (2003). Nepal Sanskriti: Samanyajnan. Nepal Sanskriti. ISBN 99933-34-84-7.
  • Toffin, Gérard, "Newar Society", Kathmandu, Socia Science Baha/Himal Books, 2009.
  • Löwdin, Per (2002) [1986]. "Food, Ritual and Society: A Study of Social Structure and Food Symbolism among the Newars". Archived from the original (Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Cultural Anthropology, University of Uppsala, Sweden) on 30 June 2012. Retrieved 17 November 2013.
  • Scofield, John. Kathmandu's Remarkable Newars, in National Geographic, February 1979.
  • Vajracharya, Gautama V. Elements of Newar Buddhist Art:Circle of Bliss – a review article.

External links

  • (ज्वजलपा डट कम)
  • An authentic source of information on Madhyapur Thimi, a rich Newar town
  • Importance Of Wine In Newar Culture[dead link]
  • Journal of Newar Studies
  • Newah Organization of America
  • Newah Site Pasa Puchah Guthi, United Kingdom
  • Chitrakars
  • Newars, new and old French scholar Gérard Toffin's work on Newars
  • Newar Society: City, Village and Periphery. By Gérard Toffin's book review

newar, people, newar, redirects, here, other, uses, newar, disambiguation, newar, ɑːr, newar, endonym, newa, newar, pracalit, script, 𑐣, 𑐰, nepami, historical, inhabitants, kathmandu, valley, surrounding, areas, nepal, creators, historic, heritage, civilisatio. Newar redirects here For other uses see Newar disambiguation Newar n ɪ ˈ w ɑːr 2 Newar न व र endonym Newa Newar न व Pracalit script 𑐣 𑐰 or Nepami 3 are the historical inhabitants of the Kathmandu Valley and its surrounding areas in Nepal and the creators of its historic heritage and civilisation 4 5 Newars form a linguistic and cultural community of primarily Indo Aryan and Tibeto Burman ethnicities following Hinduism and Buddhism with Nepal Bhasa as their common language 6 Newars have developed a division of labour and a sophisticated urban civilisation not seen elsewhere in the Himalayan foothills 7 Newars have continued their age old traditions and practices and pride themselves as the true custodians of the religion culture and civilisation of Nepal 8 Newars are known for their contributions to culture art and literature trade agriculture and cuisine 9 Today they consistently rank as the most economically and socially advanced community of Nepal according to the annual Human Development Index published by UNDP 10 Nepal s 2011 census ranks them as the nation s sixth largest ethnicity community with 1 321 933 Newars throughout the country 11 Newa peopleA Newar womanTotal population1 321 933 1 5 of Nepal population Regions with significant populationsNepal Nepal Mandala LanguagesNepal Bhasa NepaliReligionNewar BuddhismRelated ethnic groupsMaithils Pahadi people other Indo Aryan peoples Tibeto Burman speakersThe Kathmandu Valley and surrounding territories constituted the former Newar kingdom of the Nepal Mandala 12 13 Unlike other common origin ethnic or caste groups of Nepal the Newars are regarded as an example of a nation community with a relict identity derived from an ethnically diverse previously existing polity 14 Newar community within it consists of various strands of ethnic racial caste and religious heterogeneity as they are the descendants of the diverse group of people that have lived in Nepal Mandala since prehistoric times Indo Aryan tribes like the Licchavis Kosala and Mallas N from respective Indian Mahajanapada i e Licchavis of Vajji Kosala and Malla I that arrived at different periods eventually merged with the local native population by adopting their language and customs These tribes however retained their Vedic culture and brought with them their Sanskritic languages social structure Hindu religion and culture which was assimilated with local cultures and gave rise to the current Newar civilisation 4 Newar rule in Nepal Mandala ended with its conquest by the Gorkha Kingdom in 1768 15 16 Contents 1 Origin etymology 2 History 3 Economic history 4 Castes and communities 5 Religion 6 Language 7 Scripts 8 Literature 9 Politics 9 1 Newa Autonomous State 10 Dance 10 1 Masked dance 10 2 Dhime dance 11 Music 11 1 Popular traditional songs 11 2 Religious music 12 Art 12 1 Traditional painting 13 Architecture 14 Settlements 15 Festivals 16 Clothing 17 Cuisine 18 Life cycle ceremonies 19 Newa Games 20 Notable Newar people 21 Gallery 22 See also 23 References 24 Further reading 25 External linksOrigin etymology EditThe terms Nepal Newar Newal and Nepar are phonetically different forms of the same word and instances of the various forms appear in texts in different times in history Nepal is the learned Sanskrit form and Newar is the colloquial Prakrit form 17 A Sanskrit inscription dated to 512 in Tistung a valley to the west of Kathmandu contains the phrase greetings to the Nepals indicating that the term Nepal was used to refer to both the country and the people 18 19 The term Newar or Newa referring to inhabitant of Nepal appeared for the first time in an inscription dated 1654 in Kathmandu 20 Italian Jesuit priest Ippolito Desideri 1684 1733 who traveled to Nepal in 1721 has written that the natives of Nepal are called Newars 21 It has been suggested that Nepal may be a sanskritization of Newar or Newar may be a later form of Nepal 22 According to another explanation the words Newar and Newari are colloquial forms arising from the mutation of P to W and L to R 23 As a result of the phonological process of dropping the last consonant and lengthening the vowel Newa for Newar or Newal and Nepa for Nepal are used in ordinary speech 24 25 History Edit The Vajji or Vṛji Mahajanapada and Malla Mahajanapada in 600 BCE Notable Licchavi kingdom and Malla Nepal of Nepal Mandala originated from respective ones For about a thousand years the Newar civilization in Central Nepal preserved a microcosm of classical North Indian culture in which Brahmanic and Buddhist elements enjoyed equal status 26 Snellgrove and Richardson 1968 speak of the direct heritage of pre Islamic India The Malla dynasty was noted for their patronisation of the Maithili language the language of the Mithila region which was afforded an equal status to that of Sanskrit in the Malla court 27 Maithil Brahmin priests were invited to Kathmandu and many Maithil families settled in Kathmandu during Malla rule 28 Due to influx of people from both north Tibet and south Tirhut who brought with them not only their genetic and racial diversity but also greatly moulded the dominant culture and tradition of Newars The different divisions of Newars had different historical developments The common identity of Newar was formed in the Kathmandu Valley Until the conquest of the valley by the Gorkha Kingdom in 1769 29 all the people who had inhabited the valley at any point of time were either Newar or progenitors of Newar So the history of Newar correlates to the history of the Kathmandu Valley or Nepala Mandala prior to the establishment of the modern state of Nepal The earliest known history of Newar and the Kathmandu Valley blends with mythology recorded in historical chronicles One such text which recounts the creation of the valley is the Swayambhu Purana According to this Buddhist scripture the Kathmandu Valley was a giant lake until the Bodhisattva Manjusri with the aid of a holy sword cut a gap in the surrounding hills and let the water out 30 This legend is supported by geological evidence of an ancient lakebed and it provides an explanation for the high fertility of the Kathmandu Valley soil 31 According to the Swayambhu Purana Manjusri then established a city called Manjupattan Sanskrit Land Established by Manjusri now called Manjipa and made Dharmakara its king 32 A shrine dedicated to Manjusri is still present in Majipa No historical documents have been found after this era till the advent of the Gopal era A genealogy of kings is recorded in a chronicle called Gopalarajavamsavali 33 According to this manuscript the Gopal kings were followed by the Mahispals and the Kirats before the Licchavis entered from the south Some claim Buddha to have visited Nepal during the reign of Kirat King Jitedasti 34 Newar reign over the valley and their sovereignty and influence over neighboring territories ended with the conquest of the Kathmandu Valley in 1769 by the Gorkhali Shah dynasty founded by Prithvi Narayan Shah 29 35 Prior to the Gorkha conquest which began with the Battle of Kirtipur in 1767 the borders of Nepal Mandala extended to Tibet in the north the nation of the Kirata in the east the kingdom of Makwanpur in the south 36 and the Trishuli River in the west which separated it from the kingdom of Gorkha 37 Economic history Edit Newar traders in Lhasa in the 1940s Trade industry and agriculture have been the mainstay of the economy of the Newars They are made up of social groups associated with hereditary professions that provide ritual and economic services Merchants craftsmen artists potters weavers dyers farmers and other castes all played their part in creating a flourishing economic system Elaborate cultural traditions which required the use of varied objects and services also fueled the economy Towns and villages in the Kathmandu Valley specialized in producing particular products and rich agriculture produced a surplus for export citation needed For centuries Newar merchants have handled trade between Tibet and India as well as exporting locally manufactured products to Tibet Rice was another major export Porters and pack mules transported merchandise over mountain tracks that formed the old trade routes Since the 18th century Newars have spread out across Nepal and established trading towns dotting the mid hills They are known as jewelry makers and shopkeepers Today they are engaged in modern industry business and service sectors 38 39 Castes and communities EditMain article Newa sub communities Newars forms an ethnolinguistic community distinct from all the other ethnic groups of Nepal Newars are divided into various endogamous clans or groups on the basis of their ancient hereditary occupations deriving its roots in the classic late Vedic Varna model Although first introduced in the time of the Licchavis the present Newar caste system assumed its present shape during the medieval Malla period Artisan castes Ritually pure occupational castes Sat Shudra Balami field workers and farmers Bha Karanjit death ritual specialists Chipa Ranjitkar dyers Duhim Putwar Dali carriers Gathu Malakar Mali gardeners Khusa Tandukar palanquin bearers farmers Pahari Nagarkoti farmers from Valley outskirts Kau Nakarmi blacksmiths Nau Napit barbers Pun Chitrakar painters Sayami Manandhar oilpressers etc Shakya Descendants of Lord Buddha s Shakya clan Buddhist temple priests and also traditionally goldsmiths Brahmin The two main groups are Kanyakubja Brahmin or Rajopadhyaya Dyabhaju Brahman who are purohits for Hindu Newars and temple priests of important national shrines like Changu Narayan Temple Taleju Bhawani Kumbheshwar Temple among others and Maithil Brahmin Jha Baje who are mostly temple priests of smaller Hindu shrines Chyame Chamaha Traditionally fishermen sweepers A Scheduled Caste Dhobi Traditionally washermen A Scheduled Caste Dyahla Pode Traditionally temple cleaners fishermen sweepers A Scheduled Caste Gubhaju Bajracharya Buddhist purohits and temple priests of Kathmandu s various Buddhist shrines Jyapu Traditionally farmers majority of Newar population inside Kathmandu Valley Also includes Suwal Basukala etc Bhaktapur Hindu Jyapus Kumha Prajapati potterers and clay workers Awale brickmakers Sapu descendants of Gopal dynasty etc Jogi Kapali Newar caste A caste associated as being descendants of the Kanphata Yogi sect Also traditionally tailors musicians plays Mwaali baja Previously a Scheduled Caste Chathariya Sreṣṭha Kshatriya aristocratic bloc which includes Malla descendants their numerous Hindu courtier clans Pradhan and Pradhananga chief ministers and army chiefs Amatya ministers Maskay courtiers Hada Mathema etc and Kshatriya status specialists like Joshi astrologers Vaidya Ayurvedic practitioners Rajbhandari royal treasurers Rajvanshi landed gentry Karmacharya Tantric priests Kayastha scribes among others Kulu Dom Traditionally leather workers A Scheduled Caste Naye Khadgi Shahi Traditionally butchers and musicians Previously a Scheduled Caste Panchthariya Sreṣṭha Chief Hindu trader and administrative class including Shrestha administrators and traders Rajkarnikar or Halwai Traditional confectioners and sweetmakers Kathmandu Halwais are Buddhist whereas Lalitpur Halwais are Hindu Shilpakar Wood carvers Tamrakar Trader and merchant group from Lalitpur traditionally involved as coppersmiths Uraya Udas Chief Buddhist trader merchant and artisan group including Tuladhar and Bania merchants Kansakar bronzesmiths Sthapit Kasthakar architects carpenters etc Religion Edit Temple of Pashupatinath Statue of Vairochana Buddha on the Swayambhu Stupa Buddhist deity Manjusri Main articles Newar Buddhism Newar Hinduism and Roman Catholic Diocese of Bettiah According to the 2011 Nepal Census 87 38 of the Newars were Hindu and 10 74 were Buddhist 40 A minority are Christian 41 Out of the three main cities of the Kathmandu Valley which are historically Newar the city of Patan is the most Buddhist containing the four stupas built by Indian emperor Ashoka Bhaktapur is primarily Hindu while Kathmandu is a mix of both Generally both Hindu and Buddhist deities are worshiped and festivals are celebrated by both religious groups However for ritual activities Hindu and Buddhist Newars have their own priests Rajopadhyaya Brahmins for Hindus and Vajracharyas for Buddhists and varying amounts of cultural differences Religiously the majority of Newars can be classified as both Hindu and Buddhist The major cults are Vajrayana Buddhism and Tantric Hinduism The former is referred to as Buddhamarga the latter as Sivamarga Both creeds have been established since antiquity in the valley Both Buddhamargi and Sivamargi Newars are Tantricists Within the Newar community many different esoteric Tantric cults of Buddhist Shaiva and Vaishnava denominations are practiced 42 In this regard cults of the Mother Goddesses and their consorts the Bhairavas are particularly important The most important shrines in the Valley are Swayambhu Maha Chaitya or Swayambhunath Buddhist and Pashupatinath Hindu Different castes worship different deities at different occasions and more or less intensively Only the higher echelons in the caste system claim to be exclusively Buddhist or Hindu The Vajracharyas Buddhist priests will adamantly maintain that they are Buddhists and so will the Bare Shakya Kathmandu Uray Tuladhars tc as well as the Sayamis Manandhars will also strongly maintain their Buddhist heritage On the other hand the Dyabhaju Brahman the Jha Brahman and the dominant Shresthas will maintain that they are Hindus Further down in the caste hierarchy no distinction is made between Buddhists and Hindus although preponderance towards Hinduism and worship of Hindu gods is much more prevalent among these castes Hindu and Buddhist alike always worship Ganesh first in every ritual and every locality has its local Ganesh shrine Ganesh Than 43 Although Newar Buddhism Vajrayana had been traditionally practiced in the Kathmandu Valley 44 Theravada Buddhism made a comeback in Nepal in the 1920s and now is a common form of Buddhism among Buddhamargi Newars 45 46 From the 17th century onwards Catholic Christian missionaries of the Jesuit and Capuchin religious orders established hospices at Kathmandu Patan and Bhatgoan the capitals of the three Malla Kings of Nepal who had permitted them to preach Christianity 41 An indigenous Newar Christian community thus became established 41 When the Mallas were overthrown by the Gurkhas the Newar Christians took refuge in India settling first in the city of Bettiah and then later moving eleven kilometres north to Chuhari 41 Language EditMain article Nepal Bhasa Nepal Bhasa is classified as among the Sino Tibetan languages but it has greatly derived much of its grammar words and lexicon from the influences of southern Indo European languages like Sanskrit Prakrit and Maithili Newars are bound together by a common language and culture 47 Their common language is Nepal Bhasa or the linguistic progenitor of that language Nepal Bhasa is the term recognised by the government 48 Nepal Bhasa already existed as a spoken language during the Licchavi period and is believed to have developed from the language spoken in Nepal during the Kirati period 49 Inscriptions in Nepal Bhasa emerged from the 12th century the palm leaf manuscript from Uku Bahah being the first example 50 Nepal Bhasa developed from the 14th to the late 18th centuries as the court and state language 51 It was used universally in stone and copper inscriptions sacred manuscripts official documents journals title deeds correspondence and creative writing In 2011 there were approximately 846 000 native speakers of Nepal Bhasa 52 Many Newar communities within Nepal also speak their own dialects of Nepal Bhasa such as the Dolakha Newar Language 53 Nepal Bhasa is of Tibeto Burman origin but has been heavily influenced by Indo Aryan languages like Sanskrit Pali Bengali and Maithili Scripts EditMain article Nepal alphabets Nepal Bhasa script is a group of scripts that developed from the Brahmi script and are used primarily to write Nepal Bhasa and Sanskrit Among the different scripts Ranjana Bhujinmol and Prachalit are the most common Nepal script is also known as Nepal Lipi and Nepal Akhala 54 Nepal Bhasa scripts appeared in the 10th century For a thousand years it was used on stone and copper plate inscriptions coins Nepalese mohar palm leaf documents and Hindu and Buddhist manuscripts Devanagari began to be used to write Nepal Bhasa in the beginning of the 20th century and Nepal script has limited usage today 55 Literature EditMain article Nepal Bhasa literature Nepal Bhasa is one of the five languages in the Sino Tibetan family with an ancient literary tradition Literature in Nepal Bhasa began as translation and commentary in prose in the 14th century AD 56 The earliest known document in Nepal Bhasa is called The Palmleaf from Uku Bahal which dates from 1114 AD during the Thakuri period 57 Classical Nepal Bhasa literature is represented by all the three major genres prose poetry and drama Most of the writings consist of prose including chronicles popular stories and scientific manuals Poetry consists of love songs ballads work songs and religious poetry The earliest poems date from the 1570s Epic poetry describing historical events and tragedies are very popular The ballads Sitala Maju about the expulsion of children from Kathmandu Silu about an ill fated pilgrimage to Gosaikunda and Ji Waya La Lachhi Maduni about a luckless Tibet trader are sung as seasonal songs The dramas are based on stories from the epics and almost all of them were written during the 17th and 18th centuries 58 Nepal Bhasa literature flourished for five centuries until 1850 59 Since then it suffered a period of decline due to political oppression The period 1909 1941 is known as the Nepal Bhasa renaissance period when writers defied official censure and braved imprisonment to create literary works Modern Nepal Bhasa literature began in the 1940s with the emergence of new genres like short stories poems essays novels and plays 60 Politics EditNewa Autonomous State Edit Newa Autonomous State is a proposed federal state of Nepal which establishes the historical native homeland of Newa people as a federal state 61 62 The historical territories of Newars is called Nepal Mandala The Newa Autonomous State mandates to reconstruct the district division and create an autonomous Newa province It includes historically Newa residing settlements and Newa dominant zones of Kathmandu Bhaktapur Lalitpur Newa towns of Dolakha Newa settlements of Nuwakot Newa settlements of Makwanpur Newa settlements of Ramechhap Newa settlements of Sindupalchok Newa settlements of Kavre West 63 64 65 Dance Edit The Nyetamaru Ajima masked dance is performed at Nyeta in Kathmandu in April Main article Newa dance See also Kumha Pyakhan dance Masked dance Edit The Newar dance consists of sacred masked dance 66 religious dance without the use of masks known as Dyah Pyakhan dance performed as part of a ritual and meditation practice known as Chachaa Pyakhan Newar चच प य ख Charya Nritya in Sanskrit 67 and folk dance There are also masked dance dramas known as Daboo Pyakhan which enact religious stories to the accompaniment of music Dhime dance Edit The dance done in the tune of Dhime are Dhime dance Music EditMain article Newa music Traditional Newa music consists of sacred music devotional songs seasonal songs ballads and folk songs 68 One of the most well known seasonal songs is Sitala Maju The ballad describes the expulsion of children from Kathmandu in the early 19th century Another seasonal song Silu is about a pilgrimage to Gosaikunda that went wrong Ji Waya La Lachhi Maduni is a tragedy song about a newly married couple The ballad Rajamati about unlucky lovers is widely popular In 1908 maestro Seturam Shrestha made the first recording of the song on gramophone disc in Kolkata Common percussion instruments consist of the dhimay 69 khin naykhin and dhaa Wind instruments include the bansuri flute payntah long trumpet and mwahali short trumpet chhusya bhusya taa cymbals and gongs are other popular instruments String instruments are very rare Newa people call their music Dhime Baja The musical style and musical instruments are still in use today Musical bands accompany religious processions in which an idol of a deity is placed in a chariot or portable shrine and taken around the city Devotional songs are known as bhajan may be sung daily in community houses Hymn societies like Gyanmala Bhajan Khala hold regular recitals Dapa songs are sung during hymn singing seasons at Temple squares and sacred courtyards Gunla Bajan musical bands parade through the streets during Gunla the 10th month of the Nepal Sambat calendar which is a holy month for Newar Buddhists 70 Musical performances start with an overture which is a salutation to the gods Seasonal songs and ballads are associated with particular seasons and festivals Music is also played during wedding processions life cycle ceremonies and funeral processions 71 Popular traditional songs Edit Ghatu summer music this seasonal melody is played during Pahan Charhe festival Ji Waya La Lachhi Maduni the tragedy of a merchant Mohani festive joy this seasonal tune is played during Mohani festival Rajamati about young lovers Silu about a couple who get separated during a pilgrimage this seasonal music is played during the monsoon Sitala Maju lament for children expelled from the Kathmandu Valley Swey Dhaka Swaigu Makhu a song about love Holi ya Mela About theholi Wala Wala Pulu Kishi Sung in Indra jatra Yo Sing Tyo Yomari Maku Dhanga maru ni bhamcha song to complain about the laziness of daughter in law by man s father Sirsaya HeguReligious music Edit Gunla Bajan Malshree dhun Dapha Bhajan Mye kasaArt Edit Vasudhara Mandala by Jasaraja Jirili Nepal dated 1365 Main article Newa art The Newars are the creators of most examples of art and architecture in Nepal 72 Traditional Newar art is basically religious art Newar devotional paubha painting sculpture and metal craftsmanship are world renowned for their exquisite beauty 73 The earliest dated paubha discovered so far is Vasudhara Mandala which was painted in 1365 AD Nepal Sambat 485 74 The murals on the walls of two 15th century monasteries in the former kingdom of Mustang in the Nepal Himalaya provide illustrations of Newar works outside the Kathmandu Valley 75 Stone sculpture wood carving repousse art and metal statues of Buddhist and Hindu deities made by the lost wax casting process 76 are specimens of Newar artistry 77 The Peacock Window of Bhaktapur and Desay Madu Jhya of Kathmandu are known for their wood carving Building elements like the carved Newar window roof struts on temples and the tympanum of temples and shrine houses exhibit traditional creativity From as early as the seventh century visitors have noted the skill of Newar artists and craftsmen who left their influence on the art of Tibet and China 78 Newars introduced the lost wax technique into Bhutan and they were commissioned to paint murals on the walls of monasteries there 79 80 Sandpainting of mandala made during festivals and death rituals is another specialty of Newar art Besides exhibiting a high level of skill in the traditional religious art Newar artists have been at the forefront of introducing Western art styles in Nepal Raj Man Singh Chitrakar 1797 1865 is credited with starting watercolor painting in the country Bhaju Man Chitrakar 1817 1874 Tej Bahadur Chitrakar 1898 1971 and Chandra Man Singh Maskey were other pioneer artists who introduced modern style paintings incorporating concepts of lighting and perspective 81 Traditional painting Edit Paubha ThankaArchitecture Edit Kathmandu Durbar Square Miaoying Temple an example of Newar architecture in China Main article Newa architecture There are seven UNESCO World Heritage Sites and 2 500 temples and shrines in the Kathmandu Valley that illustrate the skill and aesthetic sense of Newar artisans Fine brickwork and woodcarving are the marks of Newar architecture 82 Residential houses monastic courtyards known as baha and bahi rest houses temples stupas priest houses and palaces are the various architectural structures found in the valley Most of the chief monuments are located in the Durbar Squares of Kathmandu Lalitpur and Bhaktapur the old royal palace complexes built between the 12th and 18th centuries 83 Newa architecture consists of the pagoda stupa shikhara chaitya and other styles The valley s trademark is the multiple roofed pagoda which may have originated in this area and spread to India China Indochina and Japan 84 85 The most famous artisan who influenced stylistic developments in China and Tibet was Arniko a Newar youth who traveled to the court of Kublai Khan in the 13th century AD 84 He is known for building the white stupa at the Miaoying Temple in Beijing Settlements EditDurbar squares temple squares sacred courtyards stupas open air shrines dance platforms sunken water fountains public rest houses bazaars multistoried houses with elaborately carved windows and compact streets are the characteristics of traditional planning Besides the historical cities of Kathmandu Lalitpur Bhaktapur Madhyapur Thimi Chovar Bungamati Thankot and Kirtipur small towns with a similar artistic heritage like Panga in Kirtipur municipality dot the Kathmandu Valley where almost half of the Newar population lives 86 Outside the valley historical Newar settlements include Nuwakot 87 Nala Banepa Dhulikhel Panauti Dolakha Chitlang and Bhimphedi 88 The Newars of Kathmandu founded Pokhara in 1752 at the invitation of the rulers of Kaski 89 Over the last two centuries Newars have fanned out of the Kathmandu Valley and established trade centers and settled in various parts of Nepal Bandipur Baglung Silgadhi and Tansen in west Nepal and Chainpur and Bhojpur in east Nepal contain large Newar populations Outside Nepal many Newars have settled in Darjeeling and Kalimpong 90 in West Bengal Assam Manipur and Sikkim India 91 In Sikkim many Newars became Taksaris helping the former kingdom in establishing coinage system Later they were made Thikadars or Sikkimese feudal lords with judicial and administrative powers within their respective estates 92 Newars have also settled in Bhutan Colonies of expatriate Newar merchants and artisans existed in Lhasa Shigatse and Gyantse in Tibet till the mid 1960s when the traditional trade came to an end after the Sino Indian War 93 In recent times Newars have moved to different parts of Asia Europe and America 94 95 96 Festivals Edit Chariot pulled in procession during Biska Jatra in Bhaktapur Newar religious culture is rich in ceremony and is marked by frequent festivals throughout the year 97 Many festivals are tied to Hindu and Buddhist holidays and the harvest cycle Street celebrations include pageants jatras or processions in which a car or portable shrine is paraded through the streets and sacred masked dances Other festivals are marked by family feasts and worship The celebrations are held according to the lunar calendar so the dates are changeable Mohani Dasain is one of the greatest annual celebrations which is observed for several days with feasts religious services and processions During Swanti Tihar Newars celebrate New Year s Day of Nepal Sambat by doing Mha Puja a ritual in which our own body is worshipped which is believed to purifies and strengthens one spiritually for the coming year Similarly Bhai Tika is also done during Swanti It is a ritual observed to worship and respect a woman s brothers with or without blood relation Another major festival is Sa Paru when people who have lost a family member in the past year dress up as cows and saints and parade through town following a specific route In some cases a real cow may also be a part of the parade People give such participants money food and other gifts as a donation Usually children are the participants of the parade In Kathmandu the biggest street festival is Yenya Indra Jatra when three cars bearing the living goddess Kumari and two other child gods are pulled through the streets and masked dance performances are held The two godchildren are Ganesh and Bhairav Another major celebration is Pahan Charhe when portable shrines bearing images of mother goddesses are paraded through Kathmandu During the festival of Jana Baha Dyah Jatra a temple car with an image of Karunamaya is drawn through central Kathmandu for three days A similar procession is held in Lalitpur known as Bunga Dyah Jatra 98 which continues for a month and climaxes with Bhoto Jatra the display of the sacred vest 99 The biggest outdoor celebration in Bhaktapur is Biska Jatra Bisket Jatra which is marked by chariot processions and lasts for nine days 100 Sithi Nakha is another big festival when worship is offered and natural water sources are cleaned 101 In addition all Newar towns and villages have their particular festival which is celebrated by holding a chariot or palanquin procession Paanch Chare is one of the many occasions or festivals celebrated by the Newa community natives from Kathmandu Valley Nepal This is celebrated on the Chaturdasi Pisach Chaturdashi day according to new lunar calendar on the month of Chaitra And also the longest jatra of Nepal Rato Machindra Nath Janka is celebrated by Newars mostly on Patan This Jatra is 1 month long and contains various celebrationClothing Edit A Newar woman wearing parsi circa 1860 1900 Main article Traditional Newar clothing Western wear is the norm as in urban areas in the rest of the country Traditionally men wear tapuli cap long shirt tapalan and trousers suruwa also called Daura Suruwal Woman wear cheeparsi sari and gaa long length shawl while younger girls wear ankle length gowns bhantanlan Ritual dresses consist of pleated gowns coats and a variety of headresses Jyapu women have a distinctive sari called Haku Patasi which is a black sari with distinctive red border Jyapu men also have a distinctive version of the tapalan suruwa Similarly a shawl ga is worn by men and women Traditionally Newar women wear a shoe made out of red cloth Kapa lakaan It is decorated with glitters and colorful beads potya One of the major parts of Newar dress ups is bracelets chura and mala necklaces Cuisine EditMain article Newa Cuisine Meals can be classified into three main categories the daily meal the afternoon snack and festival food The daily meal consists of boiled rice lentil soup vegetable curry relish and Meat are served The snack generally consists of beaten rice roasted and curried soybeans curried potato and roasted meat mixed with spices Food is also an important part of the ritual and religious life of the Newars and the dishes served during festivals and feasts have symbolic significance 102 Different sets of ritual dishes are placed in a circle around the staple Bawji rice flakes or Flattened to represent and honour different sets of deities depending on the festival or life cycle ceremony 103 Kwati क व त soup of different beans kachila कच ल spiced minced meat chhoyala छ यल water buffalo meat marinated in spices and grilled over the flames of dried wheat stalks pukala प क ल fried meat wo व lentil cake paun kwa प उ क व sour soup swan puka स व प क stuffed lungs syen स य fried liver mye म य boiled and fried tongue sapu mhicha स प म ह च leaf tripe stuffed with bone marrow sanya khuna सन य ख न jellied fish soup and takha त ख jellied meat are some of the popular festival foods Dessert consists of dhau ध yogurt sisabusa स स ब स fruits and mari मर sweets Thwon थ व rice beer and ayla अयल local alcohol are the common alcoholic liquors that Newars make at home Traditionally at meals festivals and gatherings Newars sit on long mats in rows Typically the sitting arrangement is hierarchical with the eldest sitting at the top and the youngest at the end Newar cuisine makes use of mustard oil and a host of spices such as cumin sesame seeds turmeric garlic ginger mint bay leaves cloves cinnamon pepper chilli and mustard seeds Food is served in laptya लप त य plates made of special leaves held together by sticks Similarly any soups are served in bota ब ट bowls made of leaves Liquors are served in Salincha सल च bowls made of clay and Kholcha ख ल च small metal bowls Newar people are much innovative in terms of cuisine They have a tradition to prepare various foods according to the festivals Some of the popular cuisines that are prepared with the festivals are One of the popular sweet Yomari Life cycle ceremonies Edit Mandala made on the third day after death as part of death rituals among Buddhist Newars Elaborate ceremonies chronicle the life cycle of a Newar from birth till death 104 105 Newars consider life cycle rituals as a preparation for death and the life after it Hindus and Buddhists alike perform the Sorha Sanskaar Karma or the 16 sacred rites of passage unavoidable in a Hindu person s life The 16 rites have been shortened to 10 and called 10 Karma Sanskar Newar दश कर म स स क र These include important events of a person s life like Jatakarma Newar ज तकर म Childbirth Namakaran Newar न मकरण Naming the child Annapraasan Newar अन नप र शन First rice feeding ceremony Chudakarma or Kaeta Puja first hair shaving and loin cloth ceremony Vivaaha Newar व व ह Wedding among others Chudakarma ceremony and Bare Chuyegu AcharyabhishekaorBratabandha Upanayana Once such important rite of passage ceremony among the male Newars is performing the loin cloth and head shaving ceremony called Chudakarma Newar च ड कर म followed by the Bratabandha or Kaeta Puja Newar क एत प ज which is traditionally performed for boys aged five to thirteen according to the religious affiliation Newars identify with 106 In this ceremony Buddhist Newars Gubhaju Bare Bajracharya Shakya Uray Jyapu and few artisan castes like Chitrakar perform their Pravrajya Sanskrit प रवर ज य ceremony by mimicking Gautama Buddha s ascetic and medicant lifestyle and the steps to attain monkhood and nirvana where the boy stays in a Buddhist monastery Vihara for three days living the life of a monk and abandoning all material pleasures On the fourth day he disrobes and returns to his family and henceforth becomes a householder Buddhist for the rest of his life 107 The Buddhist priestly clan Gubhaju Bare Bajracharya and Shakya go through an additional initiation ceremony called Bare Chuyegu becoming a Bare while Bajracharya boys are further required to go through Acharyabhisheka Sanskrit आच र य भ ष क which is a Tantric initiation rite that qualifies a Bajracharya to perform as a purohita 108 Hindu Newars perform the male initiation ceremony called Kaeta Puja as a ritual observance of the brahmacharya the first stage in the traditional four stages of life During the ritual the young boy renounces family and lineage for the celibate religious life His head is fully shaved except a tuft in the top he must don yellow orange robes of the mendicant he must beg rice from his relatives and prepare to wander out into the world Having this symbolically fulfilled the ascetic ideal he can be called back by his family to assume the life of a householder and his eventual duty as a husband and a father Twice born Brahmin and Kshatriya Newars Rajopadhyayas and Chathariyas additionally perform the Upanayana initiation where the boy receives his sacred thread Sanskrit यज ञ पव त and the secret Vedic mantras RV 3 62 10 Gayatri mantra for Brahmins and RV 1 35 2 Shiva mantra for Chathariyas 109 The boy is then fully inducted into his caste status as a Dvija with the obligation to observe henceforth all commensal rules and other caste obligations Newar कर म चल क 107 Macha JankuThis is the rice feeding ceremony Annapraasan Newar अन नप र शन It is performed at the age of six or eight months for boys and at the age of five or seven months for girls Ihi ceremonyFurther information Ihi For a female child Ihi Ehee Newar ईह short for Ihipaa Eheepa Newar ईह प Marriage is performed between the ages of five to nine It is a ceremony in which pre adolescent girls are married to the bael fruit wood apple which is a symbol of the god Vishnu It is believed that if the girl s husband dies later in her life she is not considered a widow because she is married to Vishnu and so already has a husband that is believed to be still alive BahraFurther information Bahra ceremony Girls have yet another ceremonial ritual called Bahra Chuyegu Newar बर ह च य ग when a girl approaches puberty This is done in her odd number year like 7 9 or 11 before menstruation She is kept in a room for 12 days hidden and is ceremonially married to the sun god Surya JankwaJankwa or Janku is an old age ceremony which is conducted when a person reaches the age of 77 years seven months seven days seven hours seven minutes seven quarter 45 Three further Janku ceremonies are performed at similar auspicious milestones at age 83 88 and 99 The first Janwa is called Bhimratharohan the second Chandraratharohan the third Devaratharohan and the fourth Divyaratharohan After the second Jankwa the person is accorded deified status Vivaaha Wedding The next ceremony common to both men and women is marriage The Newar custom similar to that of Hindus is that the bride almost always leaves home at marriage and moves into her husband s home and adopts her husband s family name as her own Cross cousin and parallel cousin marriage is forbidden Marriage is usually arranged by parents who use a gobetween lamee Marriage by elopement is popular in some peripheral villages The Sagan ceremony where auspicious food items are presented is an important part of life cycle rituals All Newars except the Laakumi and Jogi caste cremate their dead The Jogis bury their dead As part of the funeral offerings are made to the spirit of the deceased the crow and the dog The crow and the dog represent ancestors and the god of death Subsequently offerings and rituals are conducted four seven eight 13 and 45 days following death and monthly for a year and then annually 106 Buddhist Newars also make a mandala sand painting depicting the Buddha on the third day after death which is preserved for four days Newa Games EditThe games which had been played by prasanga people from their ancient time can be classified as Newa games Kana kana picha Blindfold game Piyah a game played with stone by pushing stone within the marks drawn in the ground Gatti another game played with stone by hand pasa are some games played by Newar people since ancient time citation needed The Kirantas settled in different places of Nepal especially in the eastern Himalayas in the seventh century B C They were brave They attacked Kathmandu during the reign of King Bhuwan Singh and defeated him They founded the Kiranti rule in the Kathmandu Valley Yalambar was the first Kiranti King The seventh Kiranti King Jitedasit and the fourteenth King Sthunko were very famous During the rule of Jitedasti Gautam Buddha Visited Nepal During the rule of Sthunko Indian Emperor Ashok visited Kathmandu About 32 kings of Kirant dynasty continued their rule in the valley During that period Nepal made great progress Trade and industry developed Wool wood and herbs were sent from Nepal to other countries Nepali blandets were very famous in pataliputra patina Kautily an Indian economist has written this The laws were very strict There were justice courts in the country The kirantas worshipped kiranteshwar Mahadev serpents and trees They made stupas and chaityas They had their own culture They made several settlements like matatirtha Shankhmul Thankot Khopung Kurpasi Sanga Tenkhu etc these settlements still exist with a little change in their names Lichchhavi kings After the downfall of the Kiranti rule Som dynasty came into power Only five kings of this dynasty ruled over Nepal Bhaskerverma was the last king After that Lichchhavi rule began in Nepal The Lichchhavis had come to Nepal from India Notable Newar people EditSankhadhar Sakhwa 879 AD philanthropist related to Nepal Sambat Jogbir Sthapit 1838 1926 Architect and designer of Narayanhiti Royal Palace Dharma Man Tuladhar 1862 1938 Philanthropic trader who sponsored for the renovation of Swayambhunath and Kindo Baha Bhaju Ratna Kansakar 1882 1956 Prominent trader and philanthropist Pushpa Sundar Tuladhar 1885 1935 Prominent merchant and philanthropist Yogbir Singh Kansakar 1885 1942 Poet and one of the Four Pillars of Nepal Bhasa Nhuchhe Ratna Tuladhar 1888 1950 Democracy activist and martyr Dhammalok Mahasthavir 1890 1966 who worked to revive Nepali Theravada Buddhism in the 1930s and 1940s Shukra Raj Shastri 1894 1941 Freedom fighter and martyr Dharmachari Guruma 1898 1978 Founder of the first nunnery in Nepal Pragyananda Mahasthavir 1900 1993 First Patriarch of Theravada Order in Nepal Mandas Tuladhar 1900 1975 Pioneer publisher and renowned for ancient hymns collection Ashapatti Tamrakar 1904 1942 Pioneer optician and herbalist Kashiraj Pradhan 1905 1990 Pro democracy leader in erstwhile Kingdom of Sikkim Triratna Man Tuladhar 1905 1986 President of the Nepalese Chamber of Commerce Chittadhar Hridaya 1906 1982 Prominent poet aka Kavi Keshari or Chittadhar Tuladhar Vidyabati Kansakar 1906 1976 Pioneer nurse and was awarded Order of Gorkha Dakshina Bahu Dharma Bhakta Mathema 1908 1941 Freedom fighter and martyr Moti Laxmi Upasika 1909 1997 poet and first short story writer Daya Bir Singh Kansakar 1911 2001 Social worker and founder of Paropakar Organization Bhakta Bir Singh Tuladhar 1912 1989 Merchant and sponsor of Samyak festival in 1952 Siddhicharan Shrestha 1912 1992 Poet aka Yug Kavi Aniruddha Mahathera 1915 2003 Patriarch of Theravada Order 1998 2003 Dharma Ratna Yami 1915 1975 Freedom fighter and social reformer Ganesh Man Singh 1915 1997 Freedom fighter and leader Prem Bahadur Kansakar 1918 1991 Writer and founder of Asa Archives Kul Ratna Tuladhar 1918 1984 First chief engineer of Nepal s Public Works Department Lupau Ratna Tuladhar 1918 1993 Pioneer of Nepalese public transport and writer Gangalal Shrestha 1919 1941 Freedom fighter and martyr Purna Kaji Tamrakar 1920 2009 Trader and author Karuna Ratna Tuladhar 1920 2008 Pioneer of Nepalese public transport and proprietor of Nepal Transport Service Satya Mohan Joshi 1920 2022 Scholar of history and culture Pushpa Ratna Sagar 1922 2011 Merchant grammarian lexicographer and pioneer pressman Pratek Man Tuladhar 1924 1991 Trader and philatelist Pushpa Lal Shrestha 1924 1978 Founder of Communist Party of Nepal Sahana Pradhan 1927 2014 Leader of CPN ML Ex Deputy PM Tara Devi Tuladhar 1931 2012 Dedicated social worker and first female blood donor Hari Prasad Pradhan Former Chief Justice of Nepal Narayan Gopal 1939 1990 Singer aka Swar Samrat Padma Ratna Tuladhar 1940 2018 Politician and human rights activist Marich Man Singh Shrestha 1942 2013 Former Prime Minister Tara Bir Singh Tuladhar b 1943 artist and music composer Prem Man Chitrakar 1944 2020 Artist and poet Tara Devi 1945 2006 Singer aka Swar Samragi Baikuntha Manandhar b 1951 Fastest Runner who competed at four consecutive Olympic Games from 1976 to 1988 Nirgun Sthapit 1968 1990 Democracy fighter Martyr during 1990 People s Movement Sujan Chitrakar b 1974 Academic Program Coordinator Assistant Professor in Kathmandu University Phatteman Rajbhandari Singer Nahakul Pradhan the pro democracy leader in the erstwhile kingdom of Sikkim Prem Dhoj Pradhan 1938 2021 singer Ganga Prasad Pradhan main translator of the Nepali Bible Madan Krishna Shrestha b 1950 Actor Shiv Shrestha Actor Kumar Pradhan Historian Shree Krishna Shrestha 19 April 1967 10 August 2014 Actor Durga Lal Shrestha b July 1935 The People s Poet of Nepal Bhasa and Nepali Poornima Shrestha b 6 September 1960 Bollywood film playback singer Narayan Man Bijukchhe b 9 March 1939 writer Member of the Legislature Parliament of Nepal Binod Pradhan Cinematographer Adrian Pradhan Vocalist and Drummer 1974 AD Namrata Shrestha famous Nepali actress Ashishma Nakarmi famous Nepali actress Karna Shakya environmentalist conservationist hotel entrepreneur writer and philanthropist Aashirman DS Joshi Actor Ayushman Joshi Actor Sanju Pradhan Football Player Jharana Bajracharya Miss Nepal 1997 Usha Khadgi Miss Nepal 2000 Payal Shakya Miss Nepal 2004 Sadichha Shrestha b 23 November 1991 Miss Nepal World 2010 Sahana Bajracharya Miss Nepal Earth 2010 Malina Joshi Miss Nepal World 2011 Sarina Maskey Miss Nepal International 2011 Shristi Shrestha Miss Nepal World 2012 amp Miss World 2012 Top 20 finalist Ishani Shrestha Miss Nepal World 2013 amp Miss World 2013 Beauty With A Purpose Top 10 finalist Prinsha Shrestha Miss Nepal Earth 2014 Sonie Rajbhandari Miss Nepal International 2014 Evana Manandhar Miss Nepal 2015 Asmi Shrestha Miss Nepal 2016 Ronali Amatya Miss Nepal International 2018 Anushka Shrestha Miss Nepal World 2019 amp Miss World 2019 Beauty With A Purpose Miss Multimedia Top 12 finalist Priyanka Rani Joshi Miss Nepal 2022 Nitesh R Pradhan Journalist amp singer Ashish Pradhan Football player Gautama V Vajracharya Sanskrit scholar and art historian Asmi ShresthaGallery Edit Nyatapola Temple in Bhaktapur Statue in Lalitpur Swayambhunath in Kathmandu The world famous Golden Gate of BhaktapurSee also EditLhasa Newar trans Himalayan traders Newa Rastriya Mukti Morcha Nepal Yalamber Kirat King who went to Mahabharat Yela Lalitpur Khopa Bhaktapur Ye Kathmandu Kippu Kipoo Kirtipur Taksari NewarsReferences Edit Sharma Man Mohan 1978 Census of Nepal x l XX axk XMMx 2011 Newar Random House Webster s Unabridged Dictionary Mrigendra Lal Singh Nepami An Idol of Yalambar 2016 a b von Furer Haimendorf Christoph 1956 Elements of Newar Social Structure Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 86 2 15 38 doi 10 2307 2843991 JSTOR 2843991 Page 15 Basnet Rajdip Rai Niraj Tamang Rakesh Awasthi Nagendra Prasad Pradhan Isha Parajuli Pawan Kashyap Deepak Reddy Alla Govardhan Chaubey Gyaneshwer Das Manandhar Krishna Shrestha Tilak Ram Thangaraj Kumarasamy 15 October 2022 The matrilineal ancestry of Nepali populations Human Genetics 142 2 167 180 doi 10 1007 s00439 022 02488 z ISSN 0340 6717 PMID 36242641 S2CID 252904281 Levy Robert I 1991 Nepal the Kathmandu Valley and Some History Mesocosm Hinduism and the Organization of a Traditional Newar City in Nepal University of California Press p 34 Retrieved 22 May 2011 Gellner David N 1986 Language Caste Religion and Territory Newar Identity Ancient and Modern European Journal of Sociology Retrieved 2 May 2011 Tree Isabella Living Goddesses of Nepal nationalgeographic com National Geographic Lieberman Marcia R 9 April 1995 The Artistry of the Newars The New York Times Retrieved 11 July 2014 Nepal Human Development Report 2014 Beyond Geography Unlocking Human Potential Kathmandu Nepal Government of Nepal National Planning Commission 2014 ISBN 978 9937 8874 0 3 Major highlights PDF Central Bureau of Statistics 2013 Archived from the original PDF on 17 July 2013 Retrieved 24 May 2013 Page 4 Slusser Mary 1982 Nepal Mandala A Cultural Study of the Kathmandu Valley Princeton University ISBN 978 0 691 03128 6 Page vii Lawoti Mahendra 2007 Contentious Politics and Democratization in Nepal SAGE Publications India p 247 ISBN 978 8132101543 Granthavali v 1 11 pb vol 5 Hazari Prasad khe Rajkamal Prakashan Pvt Ltd 1 January 2007 p 279 Waller Derek J 2004 The Pundits British Exploration Of Tibet And Central Asia University Press of Kentucky p 171 ISBN 978 0813191003 Lewis Todd T Tuladhar Subarna Man 2009 Sugata Saurabha An Epic Poem from Nepal on the Life of the Buddha by Chittadhar Hridaya Oxford University Press p 5 ISBN 978 0199712014 Malla Kamal P Nepala Archaeology of the Word PDF Archived from the original on 22 March 2012 Retrieved 5 May 2011 Page 7 Malla Kamal P Nepala Archaeology of the Word PDF Archived from the original on 22 March 2012 Retrieved 5 May 2011 Page 1 Majupuria Trilok Chandra Majupuria Indra 1979 Glimpses of Nepal Maha Devi p 8 Retrieved 2 December 2013 The Newars Archived from the original on 17 April 2015 Retrieved 5 May 2011 Desideri Ippolito and Sweet Michael Jay 2010 Mission to Tibet The Extraordinary Eighteenth Century Account of Father Ippolito Desideri S J Wisdom Publications ISBN 978 0861716760 Page 463 Turner Ralph L 1931 A Comparative and Etymological Dictionary of the Nepali Language London Routledge and Kegan Paul Archived from the original on 14 July 2012 Retrieved 8 May 2011 Page 353 Hodgson Brian H 1874 Essays on the Languages Literature and Religion of Nepal and Tibet London Trubner amp Co Retrieved 8 May 2011 Page 51 Shakya Daya R 1998 1999 In Naming a Language PDF Newah Vijnana Portland Oregon International Newah Bhasha Seva Samiti 2 40 Retrieved 2 December 2013 Joshi Sundar Krishna 2003 Nepal Bhasa Vyakarana Nepal Bhasa Grammar in Nepali Kathmandu Royal Nepal Academy p 26 George Campbell Compendium of the World s Languages Ladakhi to Zuni Volume 2 Ayyappappanikkar Akademi Sahitya January 1999 Medieval Indian literature an anthology Volume 3 p 69 ISBN 9788126007882 Retrieved 19 February 2017 Gellner D Pfaff Czarnecka J Whelpton J 6 December 2012 Nationalism and Ethnicity in a Hindu Kingdom The Politics and Culture of p 243 ISBN 9781136649561 Retrieved 19 February 2017 a b Giuseppe Father 1799 Account of the Kingdom of Nepal Asiatick Researches London Vernor and Hood Retrieved 29 May 2011 Pages 320 322 History Kathmandu Metropolitan City Retrieved 18 May 2011 Dixit Kunda 6 August 2010 The lake that was once Kathmandu Nepali Times Retrieved 27 April 2011 Sanskrit स क ष प त स वयम भ प र ण र ज न द रम न बज र च र य Vajracharya Dhanavajra and Malla Kamal P 1985 The Gopalarajavamsavali Franz Steiner Verlag Wiesbaden GmbH Shakya Kedar 1998 Status of Newar Buddhist Culture Retrieved 1 May 2011 Vergati Anne July 1982 Social Consequences of Marrying Visnu Narayana Primary Marriage among the Newars of Kathmandu Valley Contributions to Indian Sociology Retrieved 2 June 2011 Page 271 Giuseppe Father 1799 Account of the Kingdom of Nepal Asiatick Researches London Vernor and Hood Retrieved 29 May 2011 Page 308 Kirkpatrick Colonel 1811 An Account of the Kingdom of Nepaul London William Miller Retrieved 29 May 2011 Page 123 Hamilton Francis Buchanan 1819 An Account of the Kingdom of Nepal and of the Territories Annexed to this Dominion by the House of Gorkha Edinburgh A Constable p 232 Retrieved 7 December 2013 Lewis Todd T Buddhism Himalayan Trade and Newar Merchants Buddhist Himalaya A Journal of Nagarjuna Institute of Exact Methods Retrieved 5 December 2013 Population Monograph of Nepal PDF Archived from the original PDF on 18 September 2017 Retrieved 17 May 2020 a b c d John Jose Kalapura 2000 Proceedings of the Indian History Congress Vol 61 Indian History Congress p 1016 Dyczkowski Mark Goddess Kubjika and Her Immense Depth The Trika Shaivism of Kashmir Retrieved 7 September 2018 At the Indo Tibetan Interface http web comhem se u18515267 CHAPTERII htm ftn49 Archived 17 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine Novak Charles M 1992 A Portrait of Buddhism in Licchavi Nepal Buddhist Himalaya A Journal of Nagarjuna Institute of Exact Methods Nagarjuna Institute of Exact Methods 4 1 2 Retrieved 20 March 2014 a b Vergati Anne 2009 Image and Rituals in Newar Buddhism Societe Europeenne pour l Etude des Civilisations de l Himalaya et de l Asie Centrale Retrieved 30 May 2011 Diwasa Tulasi Bandhu Chura Mani Nepal Bhim 2007 The Intangible Cultural Heritage of Nepal Future Directions PDF UNESCO Kathmandu Series of Monographs and Working Papers No 14 UNESCO Kathmandu Office Retrieved 4 May 2011 Page 7 Malla Kamal P 1981 Linguistic Archaeology of the Nepal Valley A Preliminary Report Kailash Journal of Himalayan Studies Ratna Pustak Bhandar Retrieved 4 May 2011 Volume 8 Number 1 and 2 Page 18 It s Nepal Bhasa The Rising Nepal 9 September 1995 Tuladhar Prem Shanti 2000 Nepal Bhasa Sahityaya Itihas The History of Nepalbhasa Literature Kathmandu Nepal Bhasa Academy ISBN 99933 56 00 X Pages 19 20 Malla Kamal P The Earliest Dated Document in Nepal Bhasa The Palmleaf from Uku Bahah NS 234 AD 1114 Kailash Archived from the original PDF on 8 January 2016 Retrieved 9 February 2012 Pages 15 25 Lienhard Siegfried 1992 Songs of Nepal An Anthology of Nevar Folksongs and Hymns New Delhi Motilal Banarsidas ISBN 81 208 0963 7 Page 3 Population Classified by First Language Spoken PDF UNESCO Kathmandu Series of Monographs and Working Papers No 14 UNESCO Kathmandu Office 2007 Retrieved 4 May 2011 Page 48 Genetti Carol 2007 A Grammar or Dolakha Newar Berlin Walter de Gruyter GmbH amp Co ISBN 978 3 11 019303 9 Page 11 Lienhard Siegfried 1992 Songs of Nepal An Anthology of Nevar Folksongs and Hymns New Delhi Motilal Banarsidas ISBN 81 208 0963 7 Page 2 Tuladhar Prem Shanti 2000 Nepal Bhasa Sahityaya Itihas The History of Nepalbhasa Literature Kathmandu Nepal Bhasa Academy ISBN 99933 56 00 X Pages 14 and 306 Classical Nepal Bhasa Literature PDF Retrieved 3 May 2011 Malla Kamal P The Earliest Dated Document in Nepal Bhasa The Palmleaf from Uku Bahah NS 234 AD 1114 Kailash Archived from the original PDF on 8 January 2016 Retrieved 3 May 2011 Pages 15 25 Prajapati Subhash Ram 2006 Pulangu Nepal Bhasa Natak Ya Sangeet Pakshya newatech ISBN 979 9994699925 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint ignored ISBN errors link Lienhard Siegfried 1992 Songs of Nepal An Anthology of Nevar Folksongs and Hymns New Delhi Motilal Banarsidas ISBN 81 208 0963 7 Page 1 Lienhard Siegfried 1992 Songs of Nepal An Anthology of Nevar Folksongs and Hymns New Delhi Motilal Banarsidas ISBN 81 208 0963 7 Page 4 Newars assert Newa Autonomous State Himalayan Times Nepal govt urged to give autonomy to Newa state The Daily Star Restructure Districts of Nepal Newars assert Newa Autonomous State The Himalayan Times The need of Newa Autonomous State The demand of Newa Autonomous State also means to re structure the districts The territory of the State would consist every historical Newa settlement spread East to Dapcha Panauti Dhulikhel etc spread north to Tibet and the Newa towns of Dolakha the Bajrabarahi Kulekhani Tistung and Chitlang of Makawanpur district Nuwakot district up to the Trishuli Sangu Khusi Villages like Tauthali and other Newa villages of Sindupalchok Prajapati Subhash Ram ed 2006 The Masked Dances of Nepal Mandal Thimi Madhyapur Art Council ISBN 99946 707 0 0 Charya Nritya and Charya Giti Dance Mandal Foundation for Sacred Buddhist Arts of Nepal Retrieved 28 April 2011 Lienhard Siegfried 1992 Songs of Nepal An Anthology of Nevar Folksongs and Hymns New Delhi Motilal Banarsidas ISBN 81 208 0963 7 Page 9 Wegner Gert Matthias 1986 The Dhimaybaja of Bhaktapur Studies in Newar Drumming I Wiesbaden Franz Steiner Nepal Research Center Publications No 12 ISBN 3 515 04623 2 Vajracharya Madansen 1998 Lokabaja in Newar Buddhist Culture Retrieved 9 February 2011 Grandin Ingemar 1989 Music and Media in Local Life Music Practice in a Newar Neighbourhood in Nepal Linkoping University ISBN 978 91 7870 480 4 Page 67 Pal Pratapaditya 1985 Art of Nepal A Catalogue of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art Collection University of California Press p 16 ISBN 978 0520054073 Retrieved 28 March 2014 American University May 1964 Sculpture Painting and Handicrafts Area Handbook for Nepal with Sikkim and Bhutan Washington D C U S Government Printing Office Retrieved 28 April 2011 Page 105 The Stuart Cary Welch Collection Sotheby s Retrieved 3 June 2011 History Tibetan Buddhist Wall Paintings 2003 Retrieved 28 March 2014 Newar Casters of Nepal The Huntington Photographic Archive of Buddhist and Related Art at The Ohio State University Archived from the original on 14 June 2011 Retrieved 2 June 2011 Bangdel Lain S 1989 Stolen Images of Nepal Kathmandu Royal Nepal Academy Page 22 Lieberman Marcia R 9 April 1995 The Artistry of the Newars The New York Times Retrieved 18 May 2011 Pommaret Francoise 1994 Bhutan Hong Kong Twin Age ISBN 978 962 217 341 5 Page 80 Alberge Dalya 2 January 2011 Bhutan s Endangered Temple Art Treasures The Observer Retrieved 18 May 2011 van der Heide Susanne Traditional Art In Upheaval The Development Of Modern Contemporary Art In Nepal Arts of Nepal Retrieved 15 December 2013 Architectural jewels lost in haphazard urbanisation The Himalayan Times 27 January 2012 Retrieved 30 January 2012 Kathmandu Valley Long Description United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization Retrieved 15 May 2011 a b American University May 1964 Architecture Area Handbook for Nepal with Sikkim and Bhutan Washington D C U S Government Printing Office Retrieved 28 April 2011 Pages 105 106 Hutt Michael et al 1994 Nepal A Guide to the Art and Architecture of the Kathmandu Valley Kiscadale Publications ISBN 1 870838 76 9 Page 50 Caste Ethnicity Population Government of Nepal National Planning Commission Secretariat Central Bureau of Statistics Archived from the original on 13 April 2011 Retrieved 8 May 2011 Pages 92 97 Hamilton Francis Buchanan 1819 An Account of the Kingdom of Nepal and of the Territories Annexed to this Dominion by the House of Gorkha Edinburgh A Constable Retrieved 27 May 2011 Page 194 Oliphant Laurence 1852 A Journey to Katmandu London John Murray Retrieved 19 May 2011 Chapter VI Vinding Michael 1998 The Thakali A Himalayan ethnography Serindia Publications p 362 ISBN 978 0906026502 Hilker D S Kansakar 2005 Syamukapu The Lhasa Newars of Kalimpong and Kathmandu Kathmandu Vajra Publications ISBN 99946 644 6 8 Newars in Sikkim Archived from the original on 20 April 2011 Retrieved 29 April 2011 Naqvi Syed Shuja Ali 30 November 2017 Ritual and Identity in the Diaspora The Newars in Sikkim International Journal of Information Systems and Engineering 5 2 1 12 doi 10 24924 ijise 2017 04 v5 iss2 1 12 ISSN 2289 7615 Tuladhar Kamal Ratna 2011 Caravan to Lhasa A Merchant of Kathmandu in Traditional Tibet Kathmandu Lijala amp Tisa ISBN 99946 58 91 3 Page 112 Newa International Forum Japan Retrieved 8 May 2011 Pasa Puchah Guthi UK Retrieved 8 May 2011 Newah Organization of America Archived from the original on 28 April 2011 Retrieved 8 May 2011 Anderson Mary M 1971 The Festivals of Nepal Allen and Unwin ISBN 978 0 04 394001 3 Vajracharya Munindraratna 1998 Karunamaya Jatra in Newar Buddhist Culture Retrieved 20 May 2011 Bhoto Jatra Retrieved 22 May 2011 Levy Robert I 1991 Biska The Solar New Year Festival Mesocosm Hinduism and the Organization of a Traditional Newar City in Nepal University of California Press Retrieved 22 May 2011 Manandhar Asmita 3 June 2011 Sithi Nakha The Newar Environment Festival Republica Retrieved 3 June 2011 Page 14 Lowdin Per July 2002 Food Ritual and Society A Study of Social Structure and Food Symbolism among the Newars Archived from the original on 30 June 2012 Retrieved 1 May 2011 Doctoral dissertation Department of Cultural Anthropology University of Uppsala Sweden Tuladhar Tara Devi 2011 Thaybhu A Description of Feast Materials Kathmandu Chhusingsyar ISBN 978 9937 2 3219 7 Shrestha Bal Gopal July 2006 The Svanti Festival Victory over Death and the Renewal of the Ritual Cycle in Nepal PDF Contributions to Nepalese Studies CNAS TU 33 2 206 221 Retrieved 8 December 2013 Lewis Todd T A Modern Newar Guide for Vajrayana Life Cycle Rites Archived from the original on 12 December 2013 Retrieved 8 December 2013 a b Pradhan Rajendra 1996 Sacrifice Regeneration and Gifts Mortuary Rituals among Hindu Newars of Kathmandu PDF CNAS Journal Retrieved 23 May 2011 a b Fisher James F 1978 Himalayan Anthropology The Indo Tibetan Interface Great Britain Mouton Publishers p 123 ISBN 90 279 7700 3 Bajracharya Ratnakaji 1993 Traditions of Newar Buddhist Culture Retrieved 23 May 2011 ROSPATT ALEXANDER VON 2005 The Transformation of the Monastic Ordination pravrajya a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Further reading EditBista Dor Bahadur 2004 People of Nepal Kathmandu Ratna Pustak Bhandar Encyclopaedia Britannica 2011 Newar Kayastha Chhatra Bahadur 2003 Nepal Sanskriti Samanyajnan Nepal Sanskriti ISBN 99933 34 84 7 Toffin Gerard Newar Society Kathmandu Socia Science Baha Himal Books 2009 Lowdin Per 2002 1986 Food Ritual and Society A Study of Social Structure and Food Symbolism among the Newars Archived from the original Ph D dissertation Department of Cultural Anthropology University of Uppsala Sweden on 30 June 2012 Retrieved 17 November 2013 Scofield John Kathmandu s Remarkable Newars in National Geographic February 1979 Vajracharya Gautama V Elements of Newar Buddhist Art Circle of Bliss a review article External links EditA Window to Newar Culture ज वजलप डट कम Nepal Ethnographic Museum Art of Newar Buddhism Rashtriya Janajati Bikas Samiti An authentic source of information on Madhyapur Thimi a rich Newar town Importance Of Wine In Newar Culture dead link Journal of Newar Studies Newa Bigyan Journal of Newar Studies Newah Organization of America Newah Site Pasa Puchah Guthi United Kingdom Amar Chitrakar Chitrakars Newars new and old French scholar Gerard Toffin s work on Newars Newar Society City Village and Periphery By Gerard Toffin s book review Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Newar people amp oldid 1143201545, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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