An indepth exploration of Tamang clan history, mapping their origins from the four root families of Wuijhang, Tibet, to the hills of Nepal. Learn about the Rui (clan) system, the concepts of ancestral Bapsa, the societal divisions of Bara Jat and Atharah Jaat, and the cultural endurance of Tamang Buddhist and shamanic traditions.
Did you know the very name "Tamang" means "horse warrior" and that the ancestors of this community provided cavalry to the Tibetan emperor Songtsen Gampo in the seventh century CE?
The Tamang are the single largest indigenous ethnic community among Nepal's 59 recognized indigenous nationalities with over 1.5 million people according to census data, scattered across the high hills that encircle the Kathmandu Valley and extending into Darjeeling, Sikkim, Bhutan, and beyond. They are also, by many measures, the least culturally assimilated of Nepal's indigenous communities the group that, despite centuries of political marginalization, maintained their distinct language, ritual system, and clan identity with remarkable tenacity.
In Bamsawali's "Clan Journey" series, we explore the deep architecture of Nepal's indigenous communities. This journey is about the Tamang — their clan system (the Rui), their social divisions (Bara Jat and Atharah Jaat), their origins in Wuijhang Tibet, and the living traditions they carry in their Damphu drums and Tamang Selo songs.
One thing should be said carefully at the beginning. Tamang oral traditions vary significantly by region and community. This article draws on ethnographic research, oral histories, and academic sources to present the most widely recorded accounts, always with respect for the complexity and diversity of Tamang tradition.
Let us begin.
The name Tamang is itself a historical document. In Tibetan, ta means "horse" and mang (or mag) means "soldier" or "warrior" making Tamang literally the "horse warriors." This is not a folk etymology; it reflects a documented historical reality.
Historical accounts record that Tamang cavalry units served the Tibetan emperor Songtsen Gampo (617–650 CE), the great unifier of the Tibetan plateau and the patron who introduced Buddhism to Tibet. One account records that King Anshuvarma of Nepal, hearing of the Tamangs' fearsome reputation as horsemen, sought their alliance. He gave his daughter Bhrikuti to the Tamang confederation — the same Bhrikuti who later married Songtsen Gampo and became a queen of Tibet, playing a significant role in the introduction of Buddhism to the Tibetan royal court.
This story places the Tamang at the intersection of two of the most important civilizations in Himalayan history: the ancient Nepal kingdoms and the Tibetan empire. Long before Nepal was unified, the Tamang were already actors in a geopolitical world that stretched from Kathmandu to Lhasa.
The Tamang homeland encircles the Kathmandu Valley like a ring of high hills Rasuwa, Nuwakot, Dolakha,Sindhupalchowk, Dhading, Kavrepalanchowk, Makwanpur, and surrounding districts. These are the traditional Tamang territories, from which young men have migrated to cities and armies for generations, but to which communities have maintained deep cultural roots.
The Tamang trace their origins to four founding families from Wuijhang a place in Tibet from which, according to oral tradition, the ancestors of the entire Tamang community descended.
The anthropologist N.J. Allen, drawing on Tamang oral traditions, recorded that these four founding families were:
From these four root families, over generations of migration, settlement, and social development, the entire Tamang clan tree grew. The migration from Wuijhang into the Nepal hills is remembered as a founding journey a story of departure from a Tibetan homeland and arrival in the world of high forests and river valleys that became Tamang territory.
This Tibetan origin is linguistically confirmed. The Tamang language belongs to the Tibeto-Burman family, closely related to Tibetan, and the Tamang script is derived directly from Tibetan script. The cosmological vocabulary, the ritual language, and the musical tradition all carry unmistakable Tibetan roots.
The Tamang word for clan is Rui. Every Tamang person belongs to a Rui, inherited patrilineally from father to children. The Rui is not just a social grouping it is a complete identity package that determines:
Bapsa is one of the most beautiful concepts in Tamang social life. Each Rui has its own Bapsa its "place of belonging" distributed across the hills surrounding Kathmandu and beyond. These Bapsas represent the original settlement of each clan's founding ancestors. A Moktan family from Rasuwa and a Moktan family from Sindhupalchowk share the same Rui and therefore the same Bapsa identity, even if they have not lived near each other for generations. The Bapsa is the invisible thread that connects dispersed families back to their common origin.
Like the Gurung, Tamang society is organized around a hierarchical distinction between two large clan groups:
Traditional social law prohibited marriage between Bara Jat and Atharah Jaat a horizontal boundary cutting across the entire community. Within each division, individual clans remain exogamous (you cannot marry within your own Rui), and you cannot marry across the Bara/Atharah divide.
This created a very precise social geometry: you must marry someone from outside your Rui, but within your Jaat division. In practice, in urban settings and diaspora communities, these rules have weakened considerably. But in traditional Tamang villages, awareness of one's Jaat identity remains important.
The origins of this hierarchy like the Gurung Char/Sorah are debated. Some scholars argue it reflects genuine differences in the antiquity and prestige of different clan lines. Others suggest it was influenced by contact with Hindu hierarchical frameworks during the period of Gorkhali and later Rana political domination. The Tamang were among the communities most severely disadvantaged under the old Muluki Ain (legal code) of 1854, which placed them in a lower legal category despite their cultural richness.
The Tamang have over 100 documented sub-clans, many of which use "Tamang" as a shared surname. Scholar D.B. Bista recorded 25 primary clans in his foundational work; later researchers have identified far more. Among the most prominent:
The Lama clan is the ancient priestly clan so central to Tamang spiritual life that all Tamangs are sometimes collectively addressed as "Lama" by outsiders. This Lama is distinct from the Buddhist honorific "lama" (teacher/monk), though the Tamang Lama clan's ritual role in Buddhist ceremony has created considerable overlap in practice.
The Lama clan predates the spread of Buddhism into the Tamang hills and was originally associated with ancestor worship, nature spirits, and shamanic ritual. As Buddhism became the dominant religion among the Tamang (today around 90% of Tamang identify as Buddhist), the Lama clan's role expanded to encompass Buddhist ceremony as well. A Tamang Lama priest conducting a death ceremony may draw on both pre-Buddhist shamanic texts and Tibetan Buddhist liturgy within the same ritual context.
The Lama clan has resided in Nepal since antiquity possibly since before the Tamang migration from Wuijhang, making it one of the oldest continuous priestly lineages in the Himalayan world.
One of the four founding lineages from Wuijhang. The Moktan clan has a strong presence across the central hills Nuwakot, Sindhupalchowk, Kavrepalanchowk and in diaspora communities in Darjeeling, Sikkim, and beyond. The Moktans are historically associated with trade routes and governance roles in traditional Tamang polities. Their name appears in some of the oldest Tamang oral texts as one of the original "four families."
Another of the four original Wuijhang lineages, the Ghising clan has historical associations with leadership and political prominence. In more recent history, Man Bahadur Ghising born into this clan founded the Gorkhaland National Liberation Front in West Bengal, leading a decades-long political movement for a separate Gorkhaland state. The political prominence of the Ghising name in modern South Asian politics is a testament to the continued vitality of Tamang clan identity beyond Nepal's borders.
Traced to the Yonjon founding family of Wuijhang. The Hyolmo (also Yolmo) are a closely related sub-group of the Tamang whose homeland is the Helambu region north of Kathmandu deeply Buddhist, with distinct ritual traditions that blend Tibetan and indigenous Tamang elements. The Hyolmo maintain their own distinct cultural identity while sharing the Tamang Rui system and genealogical framework.
The fourth of the founding families from Wuijhang. The Bal lineage is one of the root ancestral lines from which later Tamang sub-clans branched. In oral tradition, the Bal family is remembered as one of the original "four families" who made the founding migration from Tibet.
Many Tamang families use "Tamang" itself as a clan surname. These clans form a complex web within the broader Tamang clan system, with lineages concentrated in specific geographic areas and maintaining distinct internal identities.
Approximately 90% of Tamang people are Buddhist — the highest proportion of any major ethnic community in Nepal. But Tamang Buddhism is not identical to either Tibetan Buddhism or the Theravada tradition found in the lowlands. It is a distinctly Tamang synthesis: deeply influenced by Tibetan Vajrayana Buddhism, but infused with pre-Buddhist animist elements that reflect the ancient shamanic traditions of the Tamang homeland.
The Jhankri (shaman) tradition coexists alongside Buddhist practice in many Tamang communities. Jhankris from specific clans conduct healing ceremonies, communicate with ancestral spirits, and maintain ritual relationships with the natural world that predate Buddhism's arrival in the hills by centuries.
The Tamang script (Sambhota, derived from Tibetan) is used in religious texts and is taught in some schools and cultural organizations. Tamang language belongs to the Tibeto-Burman family and has several regional dialects.
Among all of the Tamang's living cultural traditions, Tamang Selo is perhaps the most beloved. Selo means "Tibetan melody" but Tamang Selo has evolved into something entirely its own: a song tradition that carries clan histories, love stories, social commentary, satire, and deep sorrow in its verses.
A Tamang Selo song is rarely a simple entertainment. It is a form of oral literature — encoding the names of places, the memories of ancestors, the experience of migration, and the emotional world of a community that has often lived at the margins of power. When a Tamang grandmother sings Selo to her grandchildren, she is transmitting genealogical memory in the most beautiful possible form.
The Damphu — the small round drum covered in goat skin that accompanies Tamang Selo — is the sonic signature of the Tamang world. Its rhythm underpins virtually every significant community gathering, from weddings to harvest festivals to the great communal dances of Tamang ceremonial life.
The Tamang have an extraordinary history of cultural survival under adverse political conditions.
Under the Muluki Ain of 1854 the legal code that formalized social hierarchy in unified Nepal — the Tamang were placed in a category that denied them full legal standing and subjected them to various discriminatory restrictions. They were prohibited from serving in the army for a period, denied access to state patronage, and systematically disadvantaged in land rights and taxation.
Yet despite these pressures or perhaps because of them the Tamang maintained their language, their ritual system, their clan identity, and their cultural distinctiveness to a remarkable degree. Scholars sometimes describe the Tamang as the "least Khas-ized" of all Nepali ethnic groups meaning their indigenous traditions survived with less erosion than those of many neighboring communities. This resilience is itself a form of political statement.
Since the democratic changes of the 1990s and particularly after the 2006 peace agreement, the Tamang community has been asserting its rights to cultural recognition, indigenous land rights, and political representation with increasing vigor. Tamang intellectuals, cultural organizations, and political leaders are playing significant roles in the ongoing process of reimagining Nepal as a multiethnic, multilingual federal republic.
Every Tamang child who grows up knowing their Rui, their Bapsa, and the story of the four founding families of Wuijhang carries with them a connection to a civilization that stretches back to the Tibetan plateau more than a thousand years ago. Every family that maintains the practice of Jhankri ceremony or teaches Tamang Selo to the next generation is keeping alive a tradition that cannot be replaced once it is lost.
At Bamsawali, we believe that preserving these genealogical and clan histories is among the most important contributions we can make to cultural heritage. Digital family trees that record Rui membership, ancestral Bapsas, and migration histories help future generations growing up in Kathmandu, Darjeeling, Hong Kong, or London remain connected to the living roots of their identity.
Share this article with your family. Ask your elders: which Rui do we belong to? What is our Bapsa? Do we belong to Bara Jat or Atharah Jaat? The answers connect you to a world that existed long before Nepal's modern borders.
Your Rui carries a story. Let us write it together.
The word Tamang derives from the Tibetan ta (horse) and mang (warrior/soldier), meaning "horse warriors." This reflects the historical role of Tamang cavalry in Tibetan and Nepali military history.
Rui is the Tamang word for clan the fundamental unit of social identity, passed patrilineally from father to children. Your Rui determines who you can marry, your ritual role in ceremonies, and your connection to an ancestral homeland called Bapsa.
Bara Jat (twelve clans) is the higher-status group; Atharah Jaat (eighteen clans) is the broader, lower-status group. Traditional social law prohibited marriage between the two divisions, though this rule has weakened in modern urban settings.
According to oral tradition, the Tamang trace their origins to four founding families from Wuijhang in Tibet: Bal, Yonjon, Moktan, and Ghising. These four became the root of the entire Tamang clan tree.
The Hyolmo (also Yolmo) are a sub-group of the Tamang whose traditional homeland is the Helambu region north of Kathmandu. They share the Tamang Rui system and genealogical framework but have developed a distinct cultural identity deeply shaped by Tibetan Buddhism.
आफ्नो वंशावली र पारिवारिक इतिहासलाई सजिलै व्यवस्थापन गर्नुहोस्। अहिले नै वेटिङ लिस्टमा सामेल हुनुहोस्।