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  2. Magars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magars

    Magar people celebrates major festival like "Chhaigo" as Lhosar which is considered as the New Year for Magar community according to the Naagchi Sambat. Magar people also observe festivals like Chaiti, Rungma, Keja, Yacha etc. These festivals are based on the Tibetan Buddhism and the Bon culture.

  3. Category:Magar people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Magar_people

    This category is about Magar people, ethnic group native to Nepal, also known as Magars. Pages in category "Magar people" This category contains only the following page.

  4. Magarat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magarat

    Magars are martial people who first established their kingdom in present-day western Nepal. They were animistic and shamanic in their religious practices. The Kham Magar of the upper Karnali basin and their brethren of the mid-hills of Nepal had a flourishing kingdom. Archaeological proof of their existence can be found in the western mid-hills ...

  5. Kham Magar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kham_Magar

    Despite adversity, the Magar people retained a robust oral history and a sense of past greatness, which created grievances and made them receptive to the Maobadi (Maoist) movement that opposed the Shah Dynasty regime in the 1996-2006 Nepalese Civil War and even the multiparty democracy that the Shahs had toyed with.

  6. Magar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magar

    Magar may refer to: Magar people, of Nepal and India Kham Magar, Northern Magars of Nepal; Magar language, their Sino-Tibetan language Magar Kham language, a Tibeto-Burman language of the Kham Magar; Khagendra Thapa Magar, the shortest man in the world (as of 2012) Magar, the Catholicos of All Armenians from 1885 to 1891

  7. Magar language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magar_language

    Magar Dhut (Nepali: मगर ढुट, Nepali:) is a Sino-Tibetan language spoken mainly in Nepal, southern Bhutan, and in Darjeeling, Assam and Sikkim, India, by the Magar people. It is divided into two groups (Eastern and Western) and further dialect divisions give distinct tribal identity. [3] In Nepal 810,000 people speak the language.

  8. Magar People - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magar_(Maharashtra)

    The Magar, also spelled as Mangar, Monger, and Mongar, are the third largest ethnolinguistic groups of Nepal, indigenous to Western Nepal and representing 7.12% of Nepal's total population according to the 2011 Nepal census.

  9. Thapa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thapa

    The original home of the Magar people is Nepal and more population are around Gulmi, Argha, Khanchi, and Palpa Rukum Rolpa Piuthan. [22] This bit of country was divided into twelve districts known as Barha Magarat (Confederation of Twelve Magar district) During the medieval period (17 century), the large area from Dhading to Sikkim was called ...