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'Wambule' (
Nepali: वाम्बुले ''Vāmbule'') is the language of the Wambule Rai, one of the
Kiranti (Nep. किरान्ती) tribes of eastern
Nepal. Wambule is spoken by more than 5,000 people living around the confluence of the
Sunkosi (Nep. सुनकोसी) and
Dudhkosi (Nep. दूधकोसी) rivers near
Kui-Bhir Hill. The Wambule-speaking area comprises the southernmost part of
Okhaldhunga district, the westernmost part of
Khotang district, the northernmost part of
Udaypur district, and the northeasternmost part of
Sindhuli district.
Some others names by which the Wambule language is also known from the literature are 'Chouras'ya' , 'Chourase' and 'Umbule'. The Wambule use several native and Nepali names to designate their language, such as 'Vāmbucaurās Rāḍuyor', 'Caurāsiā', 'Ombule', 'Umbule' and 'Vāmbule'. The language most closely related to Wambule is the western neighbour
Jero.
The mythological past
According to the ''Wambule legend'', there was no earth at the beginning of time. There was only a single aqueous orb. The gods called in the help of seven suns to dry up the aqueous orb. After stones had become visible, termites made a mound of mud. Then insects, seedlings and birds were created. After the creation of the earth, the gods thought of creating the primordial living being. They created a human made of gold. When they tried to make it say things, the human could not utter a single sentence. The gods made many attempts and used different kinds of golden metals, but all these creatures failed to speak. In the end, the gods created a human made of a mixture of bird’s dung and ashes. This human was able to speak, but it spoke so badly that the gods became angry and cursed it by inflicting mortality upon it and its kind. The Wambule say that the proof that a human is made of dung and ashes is given by the bad odour emitted by rubbing one’s body.
The historical past
According to Gaṇeś Rāī, the Wambule tribe is named after one of their kings called ''Vāṅbu'', who is also commonly known as Vāṅbāhāṅg ‘king Vāṅbā’. His subjects were known as Vāmbule and his domain was called Vāmdyāl or Vām Dyāl (Vām Village). Candra Bahādur Rāī also claims that the tribe is named after Waŋbu, one of the tribe’s most important hwaŋpo ‘king’. This king, or rather chief, is said to rule over an area comprising the southern part of the present-day district of Okhalḍhuṅgā some time prior to the unification of Nepal under Pṛthvī Nārāyaṇ Śāh, King of Gorkhā, and his successors.
External links
★
Home site of the Wambule Society of Nepal (वाम्बुले राई समाज, नेपाल)
★
Jean Robert Opgenort on Wambule
★
Himalayan Languages Project on Wambule
★
Ethnologue report on Wambule
References
★ Opgenort, Jean Robert Matheus Leonard. 2002. ''The Wāmbule Language'' (xxix + 615 = 644 pp., 39 illus.). Amsterdam: Jean Robert Opgenort. ISBN 90 807158 1 6 – 2002. [The author’s doctoral dissertation, Leiden University, 6 June 2002].
★ Opgenort, Jean Robert Matheus Leonard. 2004. ''A Grammar of Wambule. Grammar, Lexicon, Texts and Cultural Survey of a Kiranti Tribe of Eastern Nepal''. Brill's Tibetan Studies Library. Languages of the Greater Himalayan Region, 2. Leiden: Koninklijke Brill. ISBN 90 04 13831 5 - 2004.
★ Opgenort, Jean Robert Matheus Leonard. In press. ‘About Chaurasia’, in ''Linguistics of the Himalayas and Beyond''. Roland Bielmeier, Felix Haller, eds. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
★ Rāī, Avināth. VS 2057. ''Vāmbule Rāī Śabdakoś''. Lalitpur: Vāmbule Samāj Nepāl.