enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Tibetans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tibetans

    Tibetan folk opera, known as lhamo, is a combination of dances, chants and songs. The repertoire is drawn from Buddhist stories and Tibetan history. [49] Tibetan opera was founded in the fourteenth century by Thang Tong Gyalpo, a lama and a bridge-builder. Gyalpo and seven girls he recruited organized the first performance to raise funds for ...

  3. Golok people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golok_people

    Golok camp (photo taken at the 1938–1939 German expedition to Tibet) A Golok nomad in Lhasa A Golok woman, 1938. The Golok or Ngolok (Tibetan: མགོ་ལོག; Chinese: 果洛; pinyin: guǒluò) peoples live in Golog Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Qinghai, China around the upper reaches of the Yellow River (Wylie: dmar chu) and the sacred mountain Amne Machin (Wylie: rma rgyal spom ra).

  4. Tibetan name - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tibetan_name

    Tibetan nomads (drokpa) also use clan names; in farming communities, they are now rare and may be replaced by household name. Tibetan culture is patrilineal; descent is claimed from the four ancient clans that are said to have originally inhabited Ancient Tibet: Se, Rmu, Stong and Ldong.

  5. Nomad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nomad

    Tents of Pashtun nomads in Badghis Province, Afghanistan. They migrate from region to region depending on the season. Pala nomads living in Western Tibet have a diet that is unusual in that they consume very few vegetables and no fruit. The main staple of their diet is tsampa and they drink Tibetan style butter tea. Pala will eat heartier foods ...

  6. Changtang - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Changtang

    Changtang hamlets were established when many Tibetan nomads, mostly from western Tibet, fled and settled down in the adjoining places of Ladakh. There are more than 3,500 Tibetan refugees residing in the Changtang region who depend primarily on livestock, with agriculture being their secondary occupation.

  7. Amdo Tibetan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amdo_Tibetan

    Amdo Tibetan (Tibetan script: ཨ་མདོའི་སྐད་, Wylie: A-mdo’i skad, Lhasa dialect: [ámtokɛ́ʔ]; also called Am kä) is the Tibetic language spoken in Amdo (now mostly in Qinghai, some in Ngawa and Gannan). It has two varieties, the farmer dialects and the nomad dialects.

  8. Tibetan Plateau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tibetan_Plateau

    Photos of Tibetan nomads "Roof of the Earth" Offers Clues About How Our Planet Was Shaped; Contemporary lifestyle and language learning center from Tibet lhasa, the official language of Tibetan. podcast. Tibetan History-The true history of any region cannot be fully understood without knowing the basic characteristics of a region and of its ...

  9. Jigme Phuntsok - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jigme_Phuntsok

    His family were Tibetan nomads. At the age of five [1] he was recognized "as a reincarnation of Lerab Lingpa (las rab gling pa, 1856-1926). Known also as Nyala Sogyel (nyag bla bsod rgyal) and Terton Sogyel (gter ston bsod rgyal), Lerab Lingpa was an eclectic and highly influential tantric visionary from the eastern Tibetan area of Nyarong ...