Swayambhunath Complex Kathmandu Nepal
Zhongdian Songzanlin Monastery
Young Buddha Statue in Dali, Yunnan
Lhasa monks debating inside the Sera Monastery
Stupa at the Namtso Lake Tibet
Yak bull nearby the Namtso Lake Tibet
Lhasa and the Potala
Lhasa Norbulingka Summer Palace
Budhanilkantha Lying Vishnu Nepal
Dakshin Kali
Munich Hauptzollamt in sunset mood
At an intersection on the Sukhumvit Road in Bangko…
Qianxun Pagoda in Dali Yunnan
The Holy Kailash in Tibet
Praying in the Cao Đài Holy See (church) in Tây Ni…
Inside the Cao Dai Church in Tây Ninh
Bình Thuận Dunes, Vietnam
Fishing net at the Thu Bon River side
Barkhor Square in front of the Jokhang Monastery
Bangkok in China Town
Bangkok, Chinese New Year 2007
Market-woman steering her boat on the Hậu Giang ri…
Silhouettes of temples on Bali
Bodnath Kathmandu Nepal is one of Tibetan souls
Batur Volcano Bali Indonesia
Marines from USA catching a Nāga snake
See also...
+9999 photos no limits, no restrictions, no conditions
+9999 photos no limits, no restrictions, no conditions
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
- Photo replaced on 08 Aug 2017
-
1 306 visits
Patan Nepal
Beautiful typical dressed Newa girl in front of Mul Chowk buidling.
The Newa (Nepal Bhasa:नेवाः Newa or Newah, Old Nepal Bhasa:नेवार Newar, नेवाल Newal) are the indigenous people of Nepal's Kathmandu Valley. Newars are a linguistic community with multiple ethnicity/race and faith, bound together by a common language. The term Newar applies roughly to the descendants of citizens of Medieval Nepal (consisting of Kathmandu valley as the capital and the territory ever changing with farest extent being Gandaki river to west and Koshi river to the east, Tibet to north and Terai in south). Their common language being Nepal Bhasa ("Newari" according to Statistics Nepal) or the languages progenitor of Nepal Bhasa. According to Nepal’s 2001 census, the 1,245,232 Newar in the country are the nation's sixth largest ethnic group, representing 5.48% of the population. Nepal Bhasa is of Tibeto-Burman origin (but heavily influenced by Indo-Aryan languages like Sanskrit, Pali, Bengali and Maithili). Nepal Bhasa also contains Austro-Asiatic words and phrases. In 2001 the language is spoken by 825,458 Nepalese as their mother tongue.
The Newa (Nepal Bhasa:नेवाः Newa or Newah, Old Nepal Bhasa:नेवार Newar, नेवाल Newal) are the indigenous people of Nepal's Kathmandu Valley. Newars are a linguistic community with multiple ethnicity/race and faith, bound together by a common language. The term Newar applies roughly to the descendants of citizens of Medieval Nepal (consisting of Kathmandu valley as the capital and the territory ever changing with farest extent being Gandaki river to west and Koshi river to the east, Tibet to north and Terai in south). Their common language being Nepal Bhasa ("Newari" according to Statistics Nepal) or the languages progenitor of Nepal Bhasa. According to Nepal’s 2001 census, the 1,245,232 Newar in the country are the nation's sixth largest ethnic group, representing 5.48% of the population. Nepal Bhasa is of Tibeto-Burman origin (but heavily influenced by Indo-Aryan languages like Sanskrit, Pali, Bengali and Maithili). Nepal Bhasa also contains Austro-Asiatic words and phrases. In 2001 the language is spoken by 825,458 Nepalese as their mother tongue.
(deleted account) has particularly liked this photo
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2024
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.