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  2. Gho - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gho

    Bhutanese boys wearing gho at a festival in Punakha, November 2006 Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck, Druk Gyalpo of Bhutan, wearing a gho and royal saffron kabney. The gho or g'ô (Dzongkha: བགོ་, Dzongkha pronunciation:) [1] is the traditional and national dress for men in Bhutan.

  3. Driglam namzha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Driglam_namzha

    The Driglam Namzha (Dzongkha: སྒྲིག་ལམ་རྣམ་གཞག་; Wylie: sgrig lam rnam gzhag) is the official code of etiquette and dress code of Bhutan. It governs how citizens should dress in public as well as how they should behave in formal settings. It also regulates a number of cultural assets such as art and architecture.

  4. Kabney - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kabney

    The use of gho and kabney is encouraged in Bhutan as a part of driglam namzha (or driklam namzhak), the official code of etiquette and dress code of Bhutan. Gho is compulsory for schoolboys and government officials. [1] [2] The female traditional dress is called kira; a rachu is worn over the traditional dress kira. [1] [3]

  5. Culture of Bhutan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Bhutan

    The policies imposed the Druk dress code, religious practices, and language use on all Bhutanese regardless of prior practices. These changes negatively impacted the Lhotsampa people, because they did not wear the same traditional dress, practice the same religion, or speak the same language as the northern Bhutanese.

  6. Bhutanese art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bhutanese_art

    Embroidery, School of Traditional Arts. Textiles. Bhutanese textiles are a unique art form inspired by nature made in the form of clothing, crafts and different types of pots in eye-catching blend of colour, texture, pattern and composition. This art form is witnessed all over Bhutan and in Thimphu in the daily life of its people.

  7. Kira (Bhutan) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kira_(Bhutan)

    Bhutanese girls wearing kira and toego Bhutanese women wearing kiras. The kira (Dzongkha: དཀྱི་ར་, དཀྱིས་རས་, romanized: dkyi-ra, dkyis-ras) [1] is the national dress for women in Bhutan. It is an ankle-length dress consisting of a rectangular piece of woven fabric.

  8. Layap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Layap

    The government encourages pride among Bhutan's tribal groups, and cites them as an example of humans successfully living in harmony with nature. [14] In traditional Layap culture, casual sex is commonplace and accepted among both males and females, unmarried and married.

  9. Toego - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toego

    Bhutanese women wearing kira with tego. A toego or tego (Dzongkha: སྟོད་གོ་, Wylie: stod go; also romanised tögo) is a long-sleeved, short jacket-like garment worn over a kira by women in Bhutan.