न्हु दँया भिन्तुना ११३४ II नेपाल सम्वत् ११४३ II Newari New Year 1143

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  • Опубликовано: 17 ноя 2024
  • What is Nepal Sambat ?
    Nepal Sambat is celebrated by the Newari community in Kathmandu, Nepal, it is celebrated on the day of Mha Pooja fourth day of Tihar. It is said that on this day, a newar business man Shanka Dhar Sakhwa paid all the debt on behalf of the people of Kathmandu Valley, so the newar started celebrating it as a new life for them. So every year they started celebrating it as a new year.
    About Nepal Sambat:
    Nepal Sambat, also spelled as Nepala Sambata, (Nepali: नेपाल सम्वत्) is the lunisolar calendar used by the Newari people of Nepal. The Calendar era began on 20 October 879 AD, with 1142 in Nepal Sambat corresponding to the year 2021-2022 AD. Nepal Sambat appeared on coins, stone and copper plate inscriptions, royal decrees, chronicles, Hindu and Buddhist manuscripts, legal documents and correspondence. Nepal Sambat is declared a national calendar in Nepal, is used mostly by the Newar community whilst Bikram Sambat (B.S) also remains a dominant calendar throughout the country.
    Establishment of Nepal Sambat:
    The name Nepal Sambat was used for the calendar for the first time in Nepal Sambat 148 (1028 AD). The Nepal Sambat epoch corresponds to 879 AD, which commemorates the payment of all the debts of the Nepali people by a merchant named Sankhadhar Sakhwa in popular legend. According to the legend, an astrologer from Bhaktapur predicted that the sand at the confluence Bhacha Khushi and Bishnumati River in Kathmandu would transform into gold at a certain moment, so the king sent a team of workers to Kathmandu to collect sand from the spot at the special hour. A local merchant named Sankhadhar Sakhwa saw them resting with their baskets of sand at a traveler's shelter at Maru near Durbar Square before returning to Bhaktapur. Believing that the sand to be unusual if the workers were gathering it, he convinced them to give it to him instead. The next day, Sakhwa discovered his sand had turned to gold, while the king of Bhaktapur was left with a pile of ordinary sand which his porters had dug up after the auspicious hour had passed. Sankhadhar used the gold to repay the debts of the Nepali people.

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  • @Timelesstrack37
    @Timelesstrack37 2 года назад

    Yeta pani xa hai bhintuna ko video
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