FACTS ABOUT NEPAL
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FACTS ABOUT NEPAL
1.
Nepal is officially known as the “Federal
Democratic Republic of Nepal”
2.
Kathmandu is the capital city of Nepal.
3.
The total population of Nepal is 32,111,344.
4.
The natives of Nepal are called Nepalese.
5.
The Nepalese rupee (NPR) is official
currency of Nepal.
6.
Nepal shares a border with China and
India.
7.
The official language of Nepal is Nepali.
8.
Nepal’s ancient history began in the
Kathmandu Valley and over the centuries its boundaries grew to include tracts
of what today are neighboring countries such as India and China. It prospered
as a crossroad resting place for two trade routes. As such, it became a
cultural mixing pot.
9.
The Sakya royal family’s Prince
Siddhartha Gautama was born in the 6th century BC near
Lumbini, today considered a sacred sight. He grew to embark on a path of
contemplative thought and meditation that led him to enlightenment as the
Buddha.
10.
Nepal experienced a ‘dark age’ of which
little is known from the late 600s until 1200. Both Tibet and Kashmir invaded
the country in the 700s but its strategic location ensured the kingdom’s
survival and growth. The credit for founding Kathmandu goes to King Gunakamadeva
in approximately the 10th century.
11.
During the 9th century a new lunar
calendar, the Bikram Sambhat, was introduced that is still used today. It is
approximately 67 years, eight and a half months ahead of the Gregorian calendar
Americans use. On it Nepal’s New Year is in mid-April.
12.
The age of the Malla kings was a golden
one architecturally. The 15th century architect Arniko traveled to Lhasa and
Beijing with the design for the pagoda, and forever changed the look of Asia’s
religious temples. A 1255 earthquake killed a third of Nepal’s population
during the reign of the Mallas as well.
13.
Through all its history of border
expansion and contraction, Nepal has never been colonized and ruled by
foreigners. Therefore, Nepal celebrates no Independence Day.
14.
Nepal’s renowned Gurkha soldiers always
successfully protected their country. Their motto is, “Better to die than be a
coward.” The British wereso impressed with their fighting ability during the
Indian wars; they have been an integral salaried part of the British Army since
1815.
15.
Nepal’s ignominious defeat by the
Chinese during an expansion attempt ended with the 1816 “Sugauli Treaty”, which
established Nepal’s current boundaries. In humiliation Nepal cut itself off
from all foreign contact for more than one hundred years. They reopened their
borders in 1951.
16.
After struggling from a constitutional
monarchy with a multiparty democracy to Maoist extremists to Royal
assassinations to the present day, Nepal presently is led by an elected
president and parliament.
17.
The three major river systems of the
Asian continent (the Ganga- Brahmaputra, the Yangtze, and the Indus) all have
the Himalayas as their beginning source. That’s because the Himalayas are the
world’s third largest depository of snow and ice (after the two polar regions),
with around 15,000 glaciers containing about 3,000 cubic miles of water.
18.
The most mountainous part of Nepal in
the north contains eight of the earth’s ten tallest mountains, including its
most famous, Mount Everest. Mount Everest stands above all others at 8,848
meters (5.5 miles) above sea level. It is called Sagarmatha (“Forehead of the
Sky”) by the Sherpas.
19.
Many explorers and climbers were killed
during their attempts to climb to the top of the peak before someone was
successful. On May 29, 1953, British explorer Sir Edmund Hillary and his guide
Tenzing Norgay were the first to ever reach the summit of Mount Everest and
thus permanently entered the history books.
20.
Twenty five years later, Reinhold
Messner of Italy and Peter Habeler of Austria became the first to reach the
summit without using supplemental oxygen, quite a feat in that thin atmosphere.
Messner climbed Everest again in 1980.
21.
The Himalayas are home to the highest
lake on earth (Tilicho at 4,800 meters/3 miles) and the deepest lake on earth
(Shey Phoksundo). They are also home to eight of the top ten tallest mountains
on earth in addition to Mount Everest. The zone around it is the Sagarmantha
National Park, established in 1976 as a protected area.
22.
The Himalayan peak furthest east is
Nameha Barwa and the one furthest west is Nanga Parbat.
23.
Nepal is geologically alive. The Indo
Australian plate under Nepal is still moving and will travel 1,500 kilometers
(932 miles) into Asia in the next 10 million years.
24.
Nepal’s variation in altitudes is
extreme. It boasts the highest valley in the world (Arun) as well as the
deepest gorge (Kaligandaki), with altitudes ranging from a scant 59 meters to
Everest’s world topping 8,848 meters. Chitwan is the world’s tallest grassland.
25.
With the variation in altitudes comes a
variation in climates. Traveling from the south to the north, in a span of only
100 kilometers you will go from a hot tropical conditions to bone chilling
arctic-level cold.
26.
Nepal’s Kaligandaki River is older than
the Himalayas and is the major ecological dividing line between the western and
eastern Himalayas.
27.
In Nepal grow 5,980 flowering plant
species including two percent of the world’s orchids (more than 360 species),
six percent of the world’s rhododendron species (and it’s Nepal’s national
flower), and 250 species endemic to Nepal (and not found growing anywhere else
on earth).This is one of the reasons Nepal is known as the Amazon of Asia.
28.
With almost 870 different species of
birds, Nepal has more than the continents of North Africa and Europe combined.
They are home to eight percent of the bird species of the world.
29.
Nepal is also home to over 650 different
species of butterflies as well as the world’s largest moth (the Atlas moth) and
some of its largest wild honeybees.
30.
Nepal’s endangered species include the
beautiful snow leopard, the red panda, and the one horned rhino.
31.
Nepal has never experienced any ethnic
or religious clashes and riots. No blood has ever been spilled in the name of
religion in the country. Instead, they are home to over 80 ethnic groups and
their people speak 123 different languages.
32.
The last Hindu country in the world,
Nepal was declared secular by its parliament in 2006. It still has the world’s
highest proportion of Hindus today among its people. Cows are considered sacred
and it is illegal to kill one in Nepal; it is their national animal as well.
33.
Nepal has four properties inscribed on
the World Heritage List. Two are cultural: Kathmandu Valley (1979) and Lumbini,
the Birthplace of the Lord Buddha (1997); and two are natural: Chitwan National
Park (1984) and Sagarmatha National Park (1979).
34.
Nepal’s national flag is the only one in
the world that isn’t a rectangle or a square. It has two triangles; the top
with a moon and the bottom with a sun. The triangles represent not only the
Himalayas but Nepal’s two major religions-Hinduism and Buddhism. Though the
current design was made in 1962, the basic design has been used for over 2,000
years in the country.
35.
A popular and quickly made food dish is
the Momo. They are flour and water dumplings filled with a variety of
ingredients: meat, chicken, and/or vegetables (either fried or steamed) that
are delicious and served with a dipping sauce.
36.
The national dish is Dal-bhat-tarkari,
which means dal (lentils), bhat (rice), and a tarkari (vegetable). Many Nepali
families eat it daily. A typical meal could be a green salad (cucumber and
carrot), rice, mustard greens, potatoes, chicken gravy, ghee, black lentils and
mutton curry.
37.
The Elephant polo game was originated in
Meghauli, Nepal. Nepal’s Tiger Tops is elephant polo’s headquarters and the
site of the World Elephant Polo Championships.
38.
Touching anything with your feet is considered
offensive in Nepal. Never step over a person or any of another person’s body
parts. The left hand must not be used for eating in Nepal. The Nepali also considers
the head to be sacred, so don’t touch anyone else’s.
39.
Mostly from the mountainous eastern part
of Nepal, the Sherpas are an ethnic group frequently employed as porters for
mountain expeditions as, due to their upbringing and genetics, they don’t
suffer the effects of altitude. Today it has become common to call all porters
Sherpas.
40.
Mount Everest has become a major source
of revenue from foreign sources for the Nepalese Government, through special
permits for climbers to the business the base camps bring in.
41.
Half the population of Nepal survives on
around one dollar per person per day, as Nepal is one of the poorest countries
in the world.
42.
Lumbini International Airport was
developed to promote tourism in the area of Buddha’s birthplace. Many Buddhist
monks from China, Tibet and Japan travel here annually.
43.
Pashupati Temple is visited by many
Indian neighbors and is a great prospect for its economic and religious value.
The temple complex itself is a grand and splendid vision for visitors, with its
ponds, various temples and wandering monkeys.
44.
Nepal’s national airline lacks enough
planes to fly to any airports out of Asia. Flying into Nepal is very expensive.
45.
Nepal excels as an arena for adventure
and extreme sport tourism. Choices include paragliding, bungee jumping, high
altitude marathons, and mountain biking, white-water rafting, kayaking and, of
course, mountaineering.
46.
Although Nepal has fresh water rivers
and over 6,000 lakes generating hydro-electric power, the demand is so much
greater than production that everyone must live without electricity for a large
part of every day. The “load shedding” on average currently is 8.28 hour daily.
Worse, winter is the season when demand rises to its highest level while
supplies fall to their lowest.
47.
With all that fresh water available,
water supply for the towns is problematic. The infrastructure can produce
around 180 million liters a day in Kathmandu while the average demand is over
350 million liters daily. Generally water is only supplied for two and a half
hours a day on four days a week. People commonly have their own reserve tanks
in which to store water for times of shortages.
48.
The people of Nepal are conservative in
this developing country and public displays of affection are not only
discouraged, they are illegal. Kissing in public will get you arrested.
49.
Conservation efforts are not only
increasing the population of endangered animals; they are saving them for
increased tourism and business for this developing nation. Of Nepal’s total
landmass, more than 19 percent is Protected Area or National Park today. Nepal
has saved the Blackbuck, increased the tiger and one horned rhino populations,
and brought back the Gharial and wild buffalo populations to viable numbers.
50.
The Nepalese government returns half of
all income from tourism to the communities located near wildlife reserves.
51.
The Yeti is said to live and has been
spotted in the Himalayas in Nepal. It is a mysterious creature akin to North
America’s Big Foot and has been reported by many who have hiked secluded paths
in these mountains. Sir Edmund Hillary himself led a 1958 expedition to find
the Yeti, with no success.
52.
The Karnali River is Nepal’s longest.
53.
Nepal has one of the largest
concentrations of Royal Bengal Tigers (after Bangladesh and India) and the
second largest one of one-horned rhinos on earth. West Nepal is home to the
largest herd of Swamp deer on earth.
54.
One of the world’s best habitats for
beautiful endangered Snow Leopards is in Nepal.
55.
Turn a map of Nepal clockwise 90 degrees
and it is literally the same as Portugal’s map. Remember that fact for pop
quizzes and trivia contests.
56.
The 2015 Nepal earthquake occurred on
11:56 am local time on April 25th. It had a magnitude of 7.9 and was of violent
intensity. Its epicenter was at Barpak, east of Kathmandu, and its hypocenter
was at a shallow depth of around eight kilometers (five miles).
57.
The earthquake killed more than 8,800
people and injured more than 21,000. Nearly 3.5 million people were left homeless.
There were 58 fatalities in surrounding countries. The quake triggered
avalanches on Mount Everest that killed 21 and injured at least 120 more.
58.
After the earthquake in Nepal on 25
April 2015, some parts of the city of Kathmandu were vertically lifted by about
three feet which caused severe damage to different buildings in the city. Among
them was the UNESCO-recognized historic Dharahara Tower which was reduced to
rubble, trapping at least 50 people beneath it.
59.
Aftershocks continued at 15 to 20 minute
intervals immediately after the original quake. An aftershock measuring 6.6
occurred one hour after it. The following day one reached a 6.7 magnitude and
the risk of landslides continued throughout both days. There were 38
aftershocks in those days with a magnitude of 4.5 or greater.
60.
Seven UNESCO World Heritage sites in the
Kathmandu Valley saw centuries-old building destroyed. These included buildings
at the Pata Durbar Square, the Kathmandu Square, the Bhaktapur Durbar Square,
the Boudhanath stupa, the Swayambhunath Stupa, and the change Narayan.
61.
With an epicenter between Kathmandu and
Mt. Everest, a major aftershock struck Nepal on May 12th at 12:50 local time,
killing 200 and injuring over 2,500 more people. At that time, over 6,000
people were still being treated for injuring from the first quake and
aftershocks.
62.
Geologists had known and warned of the
possibility of a major earthquake for decades. One government official scoffed
and said it couldn’t happen because Nepal had already had an earthquake.
63.
The USGS determined the cause of the
earthquake to be a release of built-up stress or a sudden thrust along a major
fault line where the Indian Plate is diving slowly beneath the Eurasian Plate.
In only 30 seconds, Kathmandu shifted three meters (ten feet) to the south.
64.
Nepal has suffered long range,
continuing disasters from this initial physical one. The drop off in tourism,
debt burdens, disease, drains on the health care system, crimes like human
trafficking, and damage from the following monsoon season are some examples. In
the chaos of the aftermath, homeless women, girls and child were kidnapped by
human traffickers and efforts are underway to eradicate the practice.
65.
The international community sent an
outpouring of aid and assistance in the days, weeks and months following the
disaster. In all 57 countries, three international aid agencies and numerous
private charities stepped up to help.
66.
Before it was Kathmandu, the city was
Kantipur, meaning “City of Glory”.
67.
In ancient times the Kathmandu Valley
was actually a huge lake full of floating lotuses. Geologists have
scientifically proven this is true.
68.
Kathmandu today is known as the world’s
living cultural museum. It was given UNESCO World Heritage Site status
in 1979 for consisting of around 130 significant pilgrimage and monument sites.
69.
Kathmandu is home to more than half of
Nepal’s population.
70.
The name of this city comes from the
Kaasthanmandap temple built in 1596. Located in what was the Basantapur Durbar
Square, it is also known as Maru Satal.
71.
The Newari were the original inhabitants
of the Kathmandu Valley. They are considered to be the direct descendants of
the racial and ethnic group who have resided for two millennia here in the
valley.
72.
Kathmandu was in the center of the
historic trade route between India and Tibet. This caused a fusion of
architecture, religions, artists and traditions in Kathmandu and created its
great diversity.
73.
Kathmandu is chosen as the back drop of
many movies and TV series because of its beautiful ancient monuments and
temples. It is not unusual to see some celebrity around the city of Kathmandu.
74.
Freak Street is a street in Kathmandu
famous for the large number of hippies residing here in the 1960s and 1970s.
Here you could come to see the freaks doing drugs and smoking cannabis.
75.
Kathmandu’s motto is ‘Unity in
Diversity’.
76.
Nepal Exports:
clothing, pulses, carpets, textiles, juice and jute goods.
77.
Nepal Imports:
petroleum products, machinery and equipment, gold, electrical goods and
medicine.
78.
The internet country code for Nepal is .np.
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