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  2. Snake charming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snake_charming

    Snake charmer in Jaipur (India) in 2007 Snake charming is the practice of appearing to hypnotize a snake (often a cobra ) by playing and waving around an instrument called a pungi . A typical performance may also include handling the snakes or performing other seemingly dangerous acts, as well as other street performance staples, like juggling ...

  3. Kalbelia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalbelia

    They revere the cobra and advocate the non-killing of such reptiles. In the villages, if a snake inadvertently happened to enter a home, a Kalbelia would be summoned to catch the serpent and to take it away without killing it. Kalbelias have traditionally been a fringe group in the society, living in spaces outside the village where they reside.

  4. Pungi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pungi

    The pungi [3] [4] [5] is a Hindu folk music reed pipe instrument [6] that is mostly played by cobra charmers [7] in Sindh and Rajasthan. [8] The instrument is made from a dry hollowed gourd with two bamboo attachments. [9] It is also a double-reed instrument. [10] The pungi is played by Jogi in the Thar desert. [11]

  5. Ali Khan Samsudin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ali_Khan_Samsudin

    Ali Khan Samsudin, (January 3, 1958 – December 1, 2006 in Kuala Lumpur) was a snake charmer known as Malaysia's "Snake King". He earned the title after living with 400 cobras, for 12 hours a day for 40 days, in a small room in the early 1990s.

  6. List of entertainers who died during a performance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_entertainers_who...

    1 December: Ali Khan Samsudin, a snake charmer known as "Snake King" as well as "Scorpion King", died after being bitten by a king cobra during a live performance. [58] [59] [60] 2007: 3 October: M. N. Vijayan, an Indian writer, orator and academic, died of cardiac arrest during a televised interview. 2008:

  7. Indian cobra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_cobra

    The cobra is deaf to the snake charmer's pipe, but follows the visual cue of the moving pipe and it can sense the ground vibrations from the snake charmer's tapping. Sometimes, for the sake of safety, the cobra will either be venomoid or the venom will have been milked prior to the snake charmer's act. The snake charmer may then sell this venom ...

  8. Koringa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Koringa

    Renée Bernard was born in Bordeaux, France, in 1913. [1] [2] She was five feet tall and of French Indochina ancestry.[5] [6] However, her promotional materials claimed that Koringa was born in Rajisthan, India, having been orphaned at the age of three and raised by fakirs who had taught her their skills.

  9. King cobra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King_Cobra

    The king cobra has an eminent position in the mythology and folklore of India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Myanmar. [72] A ritual in Myanmar involves a king cobra and a female snake charmer. The charmer is a priestess who is usually tattooed with three pictograms and kisses the snake on the top of its head at the end of the ritual. [73]