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  2. Lepcha people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lepcha_people

    In Sikkim, Lepchas are known to use over 370 species of animals, fungi, and plants. [17] According to the Nepal Census of 2001, out of the 3,660 Lepcha in Nepal, 88.80% were Buddhists and 7.62% were Hindus. Many Lepchas in the Hills of Sikkim, Darjeeling and Kalimpong are Christians. [18] [4]

  3. Indigenous peoples of Sikkim - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indigenous_peoples_of_Sikkim

    Lepchas are generally considered to be the first people, indigenous to Sikkim, while the major ethnic communities are mostly communities that function as tribal entities or ethnolinguistic groups with their own historical inception surrounding Sikkim and origins beyond the former Himalayan Kingdom.

  4. History of Sikkim - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Sikkim

    Lepchas are generally considered to be the first people, Indigenous to Sikkim also includes Darjeeling. The establishment of the Buddhist kingdom under the Chogyal in the 17th century was followed by British rule in Sikkim and thereafter inclusion in India as an official state of the nation post- independence.

  5. Lepcha language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lepcha_language

    Lepcha language, or Róng language (Lepcha: ᰛᰩᰵᰛᰧᰵᰶ ‎; Róng ríng), is a Himalayish language spoken by the Lepcha people in Sikkim, India and parts of West Bengal, Nepal, and Bhutan. Despite spirited attempts to preserve the language, Lepcha has already effectively been lost everywhere in favour of Nepali.

  6. Kabi Lungchok - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kabi_Lungchok

    The historicity of the site is attributed to the fact that the Lepchas, the ethnic tribals of Sikkim and Bhutias (ethnic Bhot), the immigrants from southern Bhot who settled down in Sikkim from the 14th century onwards, ceremonially signed a "Treaty of Blood Brotherhood" with religious fervour. Stone pillars mark the location where the treaty ...

  7. Sikkimese people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sikkimese_people

    Christians in Sikkim are mostly descendants of Lepcha people who were converted by British missionaries in the late 19th century and constitute around 10 per cent of the population. As of 2014, the Evangelical Presbyterian Church of Sikkim is the largest Christian denomination in Sikkim. [22]

  8. Bhutia-Lepcha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bhutia-Lepcha

    The Sikkim Bhutia Lepcha Apex Committee (SIBLAC) is a group striving for the political rights of ethnic groups of Sikkimese, Bhutia-Lepcha (BL) and Nepalis of Sikkimese origin. [8] In addition to the reservation for the BL in the Legislative Assembly of Sikkim, they argue for reservation in local body (panchayat) elections as well.

  9. Gaeboo Achyok - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaeboo_Achyok

    [3] [4] [5] In 1642, the royal house of Chogyals was founded in Western Sikkim, [a] ostensibly as an alliance between Lepchas and these immigrants. [7] Around the same time, the Bhutanese state was getting unified under Ngawang Namgyal and would enter into a protracted conflict with an expansionist Tibet — the first war was fought in late ...