- Thursday, March 5, 2009, 8:23
- Featured, Festivals
Festival of water and colors that falls between February/March is also known as “Phagu” in Nepal. An important festival of the Nepalis, Holi begins on the eighth day of the new moon in the month of Falgun and ends with the burning of the ‘Chir’, which is installed earlier, on the full moon day. This day is observed to rejoice the extermination of female ...
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- Thursday, May 1, 2008, 2:00
- Nepal On World Map
Top 10 Highest Mountains.
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- Wednesday, March 12, 2008, 2:00
- Visa and Money
Tourist Visa Rule in Nepal
(Effective from 16 July 2008)
Visa can easily be obtained from the Nepalese Embassy or Consulate office located in your region. If you have left your home country and/or you don’t have time to visit the Embassy, you can obtain visa from the following immigration offices in Nepal. Make sure to bring a few sets of your passport ...
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- Friday, November 23, 2007, 11:20
- People, Culture and Others
Ethnic Mosiac
Brahmans
Brahmans are the members of the highest social caste. Two different categories of Brahmans viz. 'Kumai Brahmans' and 'Purbiya Brahmans' are present. They only differ in their derived homeland. The 'Kumai Brahmans' are supposed to have come from the mountainous regions of Kumaon in the northern India west of Nepal. They are mainly confined in the western and central Nepal and the capital city of Kathmandu. The 'Purbiya' Brahmans derive from the eastern part of Nepal and are found scattered across the country with the greater concentration in the eastern part of Nepal and Kathmandu.
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- Friday, November 23, 2007, 11:16
- People, Culture and Others
Customs
The diversity in Nepal in terms of ethnicity again makes room for various sets of customs. Although some customs have merely been converted to habits without thought, ancient texts justify them with far-fetched reasons, sometimes making sense and sometimes not.
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- Friday, November 23, 2007, 11:13
- People, Culture and Others
Languages
Nepali is the official language of Nepal, with over 30 other languages spoken as mother-tongues in different parts of the country, and as well there are many regional dialects. Nepali is of the Indo-Aryan family of languages brought from central Asia by the Aryans about 1500 BC. The original Old Indo-Aryan language gave rise to Sanskrit from which Nepali derives.
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- Tuesday, November 20, 2007, 13:31
- People, Culture and Others
Like the other significant parts of the Nepalese heritage Astrology too links its origin to the Vedas, the major source of virtually everything (for the Hindus) written thousands of years ago. Mesh (Aries), Brish (Taurus), Mithun (Gemini), Karkat (Cancer), Simha (Leo), Kanya (Virgo), Tula (Libra), Brishchik (Scorpio), Dhanu (Sagittarius), Makar (Capricorn), Kumbha (Aquarius) and Meen (Pisces) are the 12 signs of the zodiac, and in Nepali they are called Rashi.
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- Monday, November 19, 2007, 14:32
- People, Culture and Others
Painting
Two media that reveal a lot about Nepalese culture, both past and present, are painting and sculpture. Fortunately, there are many fine and well-preserved pieces that have survived the passage of time and thus enable detailed research to be made. Looking briefly at the history of Nepalese painting, it appears that ancient icons and religious paintings entered the Valley during the Lichchhavi period. Lichchhavi inscriptions inform us that traders, monks and Brahmans as well as artists from neighbouring areas, visited Kathmandu Valley from the mid-fifth century A.D. The visitors may have brought religious icons and paintings with them, which served as models for local artists.
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- Monday, November 19, 2007, 14:26
- People, Culture and Others
Woodcarving
Besides stone sculpture another art form worth mentioning is woodcarving. No visitor to the Kathmandu Valley can go without being impressed by the numerous extremely beautiful windows, doors, temple roof-struts and other intricately carved artifacts. As wood is vulnerable to the ravages of time well preserved specimens date back only to the fourteenth century.
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- Monday, November 19, 2007, 13:48
- People, Culture and Others
Nepalese religious architecture is another art medium that is an important part of the country's cultural heritage. There are three broad styles - the pagoda style, the stupa style and the shikhara style.
Pagoda style refers to multi-roofed structures with wide eaves supported by carved wooden struts. Windows, either latticed or grilled, are usually projecting, while the roof is generally topped off by triangular spires enclosing and inverted bell of stucco or burnished gold.
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