Neolithic tools found in the Kathmandu Valley …

Years: 2637BCE - 910BCE

Neolithic tools found in the Kathmandu Valley indicate that people were living in the Himalayan region in the distant past, although their culture and artifacts are only slowly being explored.

Written references to this region appear only by the first millennium BCE.

During this period, political or social groupings in Nepal become known in north India.

The Mahabharata and other legendary Indian histories mention the Kiratas, who, as the Kirat people, still inhabit eastern Nepal in 1991.

Some legendary sources from the Kathmandu Valley also describe the Kiratas as early rulers there, taking over from earlier Gopals or Abhiras, both of whom may have been cowherding tribes.

These sources agree that an original population, probably of Tibeto-Burman ethnicity, lived in Nepal twenty-five hundred years ago, inhabiting small settlements with a relatively low degree of political centralization.

Monumental changes occur when groups of tribes calling themselves the Arya migrate into northwest India between 2000 BCE and 1500 BCE.

By the first millennium BCE, their culture has spread throughout northern India.

Their many small kingdoms are constantly at war amid the dynamic religious and cultural environment of early Hinduism.

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