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Myagdi District (Nepali: म्याग्दी जिल्ला Listen ⓘ), a part of Gandaki Province, is one of the seventy-seven districts of Nepal.The district, with Beni as its district headquarters, covers an area of 2,297 km 2 (887 sq mi), had a population of 114,447 in 2001 and 113,641 in 2011.
Meanwhile, the non-combatant activists of the entire West-Central Command were deployed for logistics. In the weeks leading up to the attack, people from the surrounding villages of Baglung and Myagdi districts were warned not to venture into Beni, and check-posts were established to monitor and control the movement of people. Around 1,700 ...
Devisthan, Myagdi; Devisthan, Parbat This page was last edited on 28 December 2019, at 06:56 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ...
Maruni is a Nepalese folk dance of the Magar community. [1] It is popular in Nepalese diasporic communities of India (Darjeeling, Assam, Sikkim) Nepal, Bhutan and Myanmar.It is one of the oldest and most famous dance of the Nepalese community residing in these regions, originally danced as part of Dashain and Tihar festival.
Singa is a market center in Beni Municipality in Myagdi District in the Dhaulagiri Zone of western-central Nepal. The former village development committee was annexed to form the new municipality on May 18, 2014. [1] [2] At the time of the 1991 Nepal census it had a population of 2666 people living in 555 individual households. [3]
Myagdi 1 (constituency) N. Narchyang; R. Raghuganga Rural Municipality This page was last edited on 18 October 2020, at 07:09 (UTC). Text is available under the ...
Arthunge was a village development committee in Myagdi District in the Dhawalagiri Zone of western-central Nepal. At the time of the 1991 Nepal census it had a population of 4,166 people living in 919 individual households. [1]
Sintoo Sati Sheng ruled in a very despotic manner, and the Bhutia conspired to assassinate him. Sheng's queen took revenge and poisoned 1,000 Bhutia people at a place now called Tong Song Fong, meaning "where a thousand were murdered". The Bhutia later drove the Magars out, forcing them to again migrate further south.