enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Filipino styles and honorifics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filipino_styles_and_honorifics

    Datu (Baybayin: ᜇᜆᜓ) is the title for chiefs, sovereign princes, and monarchs [19] in the Visayas [20] and Mindanao [21] regions of the Philippines. Together with lakan , apo (central and northern Luzon), [22] sultan, and rajah, they are titles used for native royalty, and are still used frequently in Mindanao, Sulu and Palawan.

  3. Dance forms of Tamil Nadu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dance_forms_of_Tamil_Nadu

    While archeological evidence points to hominids inhabiting the Tamil Nadu region nearly 400 millennia ago, it has been inhabited by modern humans for at least 3,800 years. [1] [2] [3] Tamilakam was the region consisting of the southern part of the Indian Subcontinent including the present day state of Tamil Nadu and was inhabited by the ancient Tamil people. [4]

  4. Bharatanatyam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bharatanatyam

    Historical references to dance are found in the Tamil epics Silappatikaram (c. 2nd century CE [30]) and Manimegalai (c. 6th century). [ 10 ] [ 11 ] The ancient text Silappatikaram , includes a story of a dancing girl named Madhavi; it describes the dance training regimen called Arangatrau Kathai of Madhavi in verses 113 through 159. [ 30 ]

  5. Precolonial barangay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precolonial_barangay

    The most glaring difference would be that the modern entity represents a geographical entity, the pre-colonial barangays represented loyalty to a particular head (datu). Even during the early days of Spanish rule, it was not unusual for people living beside each other to actually belong to different barangays.

  6. Dance in India - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dance_in_India

    Dance in India include classical (above), semiclassical, folk and tribal. Dance in India comprises numerous styles of dances, generally classified as classical or folk. [1] As with other aspects of Indian culture, different forms of dances originated in different parts of India, developed according to the local traditions and also imbibed elements from other parts of the country.

  7. Lakan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lakan

    "Naturales" (natives) depicted in the Boxer Codex, specifically marked and identified as Tagalogs.. In early Philippine history, the rank of lakan denoted a "paramount ruler" (or more specifically, "paramount datu") of one of the large coastal barangays (known as a "bayan") on the central and southern regions of the island of Luzon.

  8. Talk:Datu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Datu

    This diversity is due to the differences in historical experiences of peoples, their culture and collective psychology, etc. The Datu's had also their specific contexts, which differ from island to island in this Archipelago (those in Luzon as compared to those in the Visyas and Mindanao). I cannot recall any culture that calls its monarch ...

  9. Maginoo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maginoo

    The chief minister or privy counselor of the datu was known as the atubang sa datu (literally "facing the datu"). The steward who collected and recorded tributes and taxes and dispensed them among the household and dependents of the datu was known as the paragahin. The paragahin was also responsible for organizing public feasts and communal work.