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The Tripuri calendar is the traditional calendar used by the Tripuri people, especially in the context of Tripuri irredentism. Its era, the "Twipra Era", "Tripura Era" or ''Tripurabda'' is set at 15 April AD 590, significantly just ahead (by three years) of the ''Bangabda'' or Bengali Era. But this is not for the indigenous Tripuri, they had its own calendar as "Tring" which is set on 21st Dec. Historically, the Tripura Era was prevalent in all official matters of the princely state of Tippera under the British Raj. Tradition holds that the era marks the conquest of Bengal by the 118th Tripuri king in the ''Rajmala'' chronicle, Hamtor Fa (also ''Jujaru Fa'' or ''Himti'' or ''Birraj''). In historical reality, however, the Tripuri era, just as the Bengali era, is an adoption of the Mughal ''Fasli'' era introduced by emperor Akbar in 1563. Its use in Tripura (Twipra) can be traced to the 163th king in Tripuri reckoning, ''Govindamanikya'' (fl. 1660), and the characteristic shift by three years is first recorded under his successor, ''Chhatramanikya'' in 1663/4, who can thus be considered to have introduced the "Tripuri calendar". With the accession of Tripura to the Republic of India in 1949, official use of the Tripuri calendar was discontinued. There have long been calls to revive the Tripuri calendar in Tripuri nationalism. In 1991, the Tripuri era was first cited in the State Government calendar and diaries. In 2001, the Tripura Tribal Areas Autonomous District Council (TTAADC) authorities organized a three-day "Tring festival", which concluded at the TTAADC headquarters Khumulwng in West Tripura. ==References== *D. C.Sircar, ''Some Epigraohical Records Of The Mediaeval Period From Eastern India'', Abhinav Publications, 1979, (93f. ) 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Tripuri calendar」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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