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The Buisu [13] is the new year festival [14] of Tripuri/Tripura People in India and Bangladesh. This Festival is the traditional New Year's Day which falls on 13 or 14 April. The Buisu Festival begins with Hari Buisu [15] which is the first day. In Hari Buisu Tripuri People clean up their houses and decorate their houses with different flowers.
The lineage in Tripuri is called sandai or bosong. Most Tripuri groups or sub-groups are named after an animal or bird. All the sub-groups of Tripuri lineage are patriarchal. Because the members of a lineage are related, their behavior pattern is also similar to a certain extent. The adopted son bears the lineage identity of the foster parents.
The other group of people in order of decreasing population were Chakma (6.5%), Halam (4.8%), Mog (3.1%), Munda, Kuki tribes and Garo Hajong. [1] Bengali is the most spoken language, due to the dominance of Bengali people in the state. Kokborok (Tripuri/Tiprakok) is a common language among Tripuris and lingua franca in Tripura. Several other ...
Before Tripura's merger with the Union of India, majority of the population composed of Tripuri people. [ 30 ] : 9 Ethnic strife between the indigenous Tripuri tribe and the predominantly immigrant Bengali community led to scattered violence, [ 35 ] and an insurgency spanning decades, including occasional massacres such as the 1980 Mandai ...
Buisu is the new year festival of Tripuri People of Tripura state in India and Bangladesh. [1] [2] [3] [4]The word buisu has been derived from the Tripuri language Tripuri root word bisi [5] which means a year.
People of the Tripuri ethnic group who may or may not reside in the Indian state of Tripura. Subcategories. ... People from Tripura (3 C, 34 P) T. Tripuri (1 C, 2 P)
The princely state of Tripura existed outside British India, in a subsidiary alliance with it, and was a self-governing area known as Hill Tippera, the present-day state of Tripura. However, the kings retained an estate known as Tippera district of the British Bengal Presidency or Chakla Roshanbad, which after the partition of India became part ...
The Tripuri Royal Family belonged to the Tripuri ethnic group, from the Debbarma clan. Originally the term "Tripur Kshatriya" was used to denote the Tripuri ethnic group only, but in due time, the Maharajah included the remaining three ethnic groups as well, in an attempt to foster a sense of kinship among his people. [1]