Brill’s Encyclopedia of the Religions of the Indigenous People of South Asia Online

Get access Subject: Asian Studies


Edited by:
Marine Carrin (Editor-in-Chief), University of Toulouse Jean Jaurès, and Michel Boivin, Centre for South Asian Studies (CNRS-EHESS), Gérard Toffin, Centre d’Études Himalayennes, Paul Hockings, University of Illinois at Chicago, Raphaël Rousseleau, Université de Lausanne, Tanka Subba, North-Eastern Hill University, Harald Tambs-Lyche, University of de Picardie-Jules Verne (Section Editors)

Help us improve our service

Brill’s Encyclopedia of the Religions of the Indigenous People of South Asia strives to reflect the diversity of indigenous cultures of South Asia with its many language groups and religious traditions. Shaped by their own mythologies, these tribal religions differ in form and content from Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, Islam, Sikhism, and Christianity, though variants of the latter traditions have been adopted by some indigenous people. Religion is taken in a broad sense and includes aspects of morality, symbolism, identity formation, environmental concerns, and art. Far from being simple survivals of an earlier stage, these religions often show remarkable capacity for adaptation and change. The approach is contemporary rather than a reconstruction of an anterior state, though it does not overlook relevant historical processes.

More information: Brill.com

Tamang

(8 151 mots)

Auteur(s): Steinmann, Brigitte
The Tamang (Tāmāṅg; other names: Lama, Bhote-Lama, Murmi, Ishang, Yolma, Sain, Kagate, Gyuba, Kaike, Shyarpa, Lhopa, Ghale-Bhote, and Bhotiya) number 1,539,830 million in Nepal and constitute 5.8% of the total population according to the 2011 census, thus making them the third largest autochthonous ethnic group in Nepal. They live mainly in the area extending from the Buri Gaṇḍakī River, westward of the Kathmandu valley, to the Dudh Kośī River in the east, and from a line of Himalayan summits, m…
Date: 2021-11-10

Tangsa

(6 000 mots)

Auteur(s): Barkataki-Ruscheweyh, Meenaxi
Tangsa (also known as Tase, Tangshang, Heimi, and Hewe), literally “Children of the Hills,” is an umbrella term adopted by Indian administrators after Independence in order to broadly categorize about 35 different trans-Patkai tribes, arguably related to the Naga, who came to India from Myanmar over the Patkai Hills in the past few centuries but were too small individually to merit attention. These tribes are further divided into clans and phratries; some groups have elected village chiefs, wher…
Date: 2021-11-10