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This excellent book presents history, culture, oral tradition, tribal history, their migration, the regional archaeological findings, anthropological findings, economy, religions ranging Shamanism to Theravada and Mahayana Buddhism propagated here by Padmasambhava during the eighth century AD. The book is the veritable motherbode of information.
This Book Should Prove To Be Of Interest To Students And Researchers Of The Social And Economic History Of The Tribal Societies Especially Of Arunachal Pradesh.
The Title 'Periodisation of History: Arunchal Pradesh written by P. K. Nayak' was published in the year 2017. The ISBN number 9789351282198 is assigned to the Hardcover version of this title. This book has total of pp. 196 (Pages). The publisher of this title is Kalpaz Publications. This Book is in English. The subject of this book is North East Studies, ABOUT THE BOOK: - Periodisation in history has been the attempt to categorise historical time into discrete blocks. Historians broadly periodis
The book consists 27 research papers on religious culture of Arunachal Pradesh including tribal culture with emphasis on spirits and deities, sacred specialists, and sacred rituals etc. The Theravada and Mahayana Buddhism as practised by some Arunachali tribes are presented in a historical setting along with Brahminical culture in the foothills. This is the first such study of religious history of Arunachal Pradesh and their interaction with the people of Assam, Tibet and Myanmar through the ages.
Origins and migration are core elements in the histories, identities and stories of Tibeto-Burman-speaking populations in the extended eastern Himalayas. These essays explore theories of explaining origins and migration, methods for studying them and expressions of them in local cultures.
Relates To The Journey Of Arunachal Pradesh From Past To The Present - Supported By Facts And Figures. 11 Chapters Highlighting Major Issues - Covering Wildlife, Tribal Ethos, Social-Political Structure, Agriculture, Social Dynamics - Bori Society - Hill Miris - Arunachal Pradesh In Transition. Annexure - Bibliography - Index.
A first of its kind, this book brings together the writings of women from Arunachal Pradesh in Northeast India. Home to many different tribes and scores of languages and dialects, once known as a ‘frontier’ state, Arunachal Pradesh began to see major change after it opened up to tourism and once the Indian State introduced Hindi as its official language. In this volume, Mamang Dai, one of Arunachal’s best known writers, brings together new and established voices on subjects as varied as identity, home, belonging, language, Shamanism, folk culture, orality and more. Much of what has been handed down orally, through festivals, epic narratives, the performance of rituals by Shamans and rhapsodists, revered as guardians of collective and tribal memory, is captured here in the words of young poets and writers, as well as artists and illustrators, as they trace their heritage, listen to stories and render them in newer forms of expression.
The four works included in this collection have enjoyed a rather chequered career. They originally formed the second volume of the doctoral thesis Michael Aris submitted in 1978 to the University of London. They have been included because of their value as crucial source material on the formative era of Bhutanese history, as they cover the entire period leading to the full emergence of the Bhutanese theocracy. Their relative brevity as compared with the other major works relevant to this period further suggested the convenience of including them as a group of inter-related 'minor' texts. While the first two works in this collection have never before been available to modern scholars, and are indeed hardly known even in Bhutan, the next two (which include a text translated from Portuguese) have been partially known from the works of John Claude White (Sikkim and Bhutan-Twenty-one years on the North-East Frontier 1887-1908, London) and C. Wessels (Early Jesuit Travelers in Central Asia, The Hague 1924.