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3N Kathmandu / 2N Pokhara / 1N Nagarkot
Day 01 : Kathmandu – Arrival : On Arrival, Meet Our Representative At The Kathmandu Airport & Transfer To Hotel. Check-In At The Hotel. Overnight Stay In Kathmandu.
Day 02 : Kathmandu Sightseeing : After Breakfast Meet At The Hotel Lobby For Your Half Day Kathmandu City Sightseeing – 1st Half Day Visit Pashupatinath , Boudhnath . Evening Free For Personal Activities. Overnight Stay In Kathmandu.
Day 03 : Kathmandu Sightseeing : After Breakfast Meet At The Hotel Lobby For Your Kathmandu City Sightseeing – 1st Half Day Visit Patan City . Evening Free For Personal Activities. Overnight Stay In Kathmandu.
Day 04 : Kathmandu – Pokhara ( 200 Km – 6 Hours ) : After Breakfast Meet At The Hotel Lobby and Proceed For Pokhara , Enjoy A Five Hours Beautiful Drive To Pokhara . Arrive At Pokhara And Check-In At Hotel. Evening Free For Personal Activities or One Can Go For Boat Ride in Fewa Lake or Shopping on the Lake Side on own. Overnight Stay In Pokhara. ( Optional - River Rafting and Manokamana Cable Car Ride On the Way )
Day 05 : Pokhara Sightseeing : After Breakfast Meet At The Hotel Lobby For Your Half Day Pokhara City Sightseeing - Visit Bindyabasini temple, Seti river, Devi’s Fall, Gupteshowre Mahadev and Fewa Lake . Rest Of The Day Free For Personal Activities. Overnight Stay In Pokhara.
Day 06 : Pokhara – Nagarkot ( 238 Kms. / 7 Hrs.) : After Breakfast Meet At The Hotel Lobby and Proceed to Nagarkot . Arrive At Nagarkot And Check-In At Hotel. Enjoy Sunset From Hotel . Overnight Stay In Nagarkot .
Day 07 : Kathmandu – Departure : Early Morning Wakeup Call For Sunrise View From Hotel . After Breakfast Transfer To Kathmandu International Airport
Cost Includes
Kathmandu Sightseeing
Pokhara Sightseeing
Extra –
Exclusions :
Terms and Conditions :
Hotel details will be send as per your requirement. Please send Whats App , Mail or Call us.
i.e. Standard / Deluxe / Super Deluxe / 3 Star / 4 Star / 5 Star, etc.
Pricing will be send as per your selection of hotels.
i.e. Standard / Deluxe / Super Deluxe / 3 Star / 4 Star / 5 Star, etc.
The history of Nepal is intertwined with the history of the broader Indian subcontinent and the surrounding regions, comprising the areas of South Asia and East Asia.
Nepal is a multi-ethnic, multiracial, multicultural, multi-religious, and multilingual country. The most spoken language is Nepali followed by several other ethnic languages.
The Kingdom of Nepal was established in 1768 and started a campaign of unifying all of Nepal that would form modern territories of Nepal. Some former territories had been lost due to the kingdom having participated in the Sino-Nepalese War which ended in both victory and loses, ultimately accepting as a tribute state of Qing dynasty of China from 1792 to 1865.[1] The Anglo-Nepalese War ended in British victory and ceded some Nepalese territory. In a historical vote for the election of the constituent assembly, the Nepalese parliament voted to abolish the monarchy in June 2006. Nepal became a federal republic on 28 May 2008 and was formally renamed the 'Federal Democratic Republic of Nepal' ending the 200-year-old reign of the Shah monarchs.
Toponymy
In a Licchavi-era inscription found in Tistung, the local people have been addressed as the 'Nepals'. Experts are of the opinion that some or all of the inhabitants of Nepal in the ancient period were likely called 'Nepals', which meant that the word 'Nepal' was used to refer to both the land and its population. These Nepals are considered the progenitors of modern-day Newars. The terms 'Nepal' and 'Newar' are variations of the same term. Other variants found in medieval texts are 'Nepar' and 'Newal'.The derivation of the word Nepal is also the subject of a number of other theories:The Sanskrit word Nepalaya means "at the foot of the mountains" or "abode at the foot"; Nepal may be derived from this.The Tibetan word Niyampal means "holy land". Nepal may be derived from it.Some inhabitants of northern Nepal came from Tibet, where they herded sheep and produced wool. In Tibetan, ne means "wool" and pal means "house". Thus, Nepal is "house of wool".
A popular theory is that Lepcha people used the words ne ("holy") and pal ("cave") and thus Nepal to describe a "holy cave".
According to Buddhist legend, the deity Manjusri drained the water from Nagadaha (a mythical lake that is believed to have filled the Kathmandu valley). The valley became inhabitable and was ruled by Bhumigupta, a cow-herder, who took advice from a sage named "Ne". Pāla means "protector" or "taking care", so Nepal reflected the name of the sage who took care of the place, according to Nepali scholar Rishikesh Shaha.
Prehistory : Prehistoric sites of palaeolithic, mesolithic and neolithic origins have been discovered in the Siwalik hills of Dang district. The earliest inhabitants of modern Nepal and adjoining areas are believed to be people from the Indus Valley Civilisation. It is possible that the Dravidian people whose history predates the onset of the bronze age in the Indian subcontinent (around 3300 BC) inhabited the area before the arrival of other ethnic groups like the Tibeto-Burmans and Indo-Aryans from across the border. Tharus, Tibeto-Burmans who mixed heavily with Indians in the southern regions, are natives of the cental Terai region of Nepal.The first documented tribes in Nepal are the Kirat people, who arrived into Nepal from Tibet roughly 4000 to 4500 years ago and moved into the Kathmandu valley and southern parts of Nepal, before being made to retreat elsewhere by the invading Licchavais from India who ruled the Kathmandu valley in modern-day southern parts of Nepal.Other ethnic groups of Indo-Aryan origin later migrated to southern part of Nepal from Indo-Gangetic Plain of northern India.
Another possibility for the first people to have inhabited Nepal are the Kusunda people. According to Hogdson (1847), the earliest inhabitants of Nepal were perhaps the Kusunda people, probably of proto-Australoid origin.Stella Kramrisch ( 1964 ) mentions a substratum of a race of Pre - Dravidians and Dravidians , who were in Nepal even before the Newars , who formed the majority of the ancient inhabitants of the valley of Kathmandu.