Bumthang District

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Bumthang District (Dzongkha: བུམ་ཐང་རྫོང་ཁག།; Wylie: Bum-thang rzong-khag) is one of the 20 dzongkhag (districts) comprising Bhutan. It contains numerous temples and Buddhist sacred sites. The district is divided into four village blocks (or gewogs),<ref name="Chiwogs in Bumthang">Template:Cite web</ref> each corresponding to a major glacial valley: Choekor, Tang, Ura, and Chhume. The latter valley is also called Bumthang, lending its name to the whole district.

Bumthang directly translates as "beautiful field" – thang means field or flat place, and bum is said be an abbreviation of either bumpa (a vessel for holy water, thus describing the shape and nature of the valley), or simply bum ("girl", indicating this is the valley of beautiful girls). The name is saidTemplate:By whom to have arisen after the construction of Jambay Lhakhang.

Administrative divisions

Bumthang District is divided into four village blocks (or gewogs):<ref name="Chiwogs in Bumthang" />

Economy

Kurje Lhakhang, Jakar
Kurje Lhakhang, Jakar
File:Tam ext1.jpg
Tamshing Lhakhang, Jakar

Bumthang's primary agricultural products are wheat, buckwheat, dairy, honey, apples, potatoes, rice, and wool. Bumthang is also nationally famous for its textiles, such as yathra<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and mathra weaving.Template:Better source needed

Languages

East Bodish languages are primarily spoken in Bumthang District.<ref name="Donohue2021">Template:Cite journal</ref>

The language spoken in the Bumthang district is known as Bumthangkha. It is a Tibeto-Burman language mutually intelligible with Khengkha and closely related to Dzongkha, the national language of Bhutan. Bumthangkha is partially comprehensible to speakers of Dzongkha, which originated in valleys to the west of Bumthang. Each of the four valleys of Bumthang has its own dialect, and the remnants of the Kheng kingdom, near and in Zhemgang District to the south, speak Khengkha. Historically, Bhumthangkha and its speakers have had close contact with speakers of Kurtöpkha to the east, Nupbikha to the west, and Khengkha to the south, to the extent that they may be considered part of a wider collection of "Bumthang languages".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=EEL>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=vanDriem2007>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=SIL1>Template:Cite web</ref>

Brokkat, an endangered<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Southern Bodish language, is spoken by about 300 people in the village of Dhur in Bumthang Valley. The language is a remnant of pastoral yakherd communities.<ref name=SIL2>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=vanDriem93>Template:Cite web</ref>

The map of Bumthang District's village blocks

Environment

Most of Bumthang District is part of Bhutan's extensive protected areas network. The northern two-thirds of the district (the gewogs of Chhoekhor and Tang) belong to Wangchuck Centennial Park, buffered by pockets of biological corridors. Southern Bumthang (the gewogs of Chhumig and Ura) is part of another protected area, Thrumshingla National Park.<ref name=BTF1>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="Chiwogs in Bumthang" /> Bumthang has a large migratory population of black-necked cranes, which hold cultural significance.

Landmarks

Notable towns

Bumthang also contains several notable towns:

Annual Jakar Tshechus:

  • Mid October (every year)

Climate

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See also

References

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