Dolpo

Dolpo
डोल्पोདོལ་པོ
Dolpo is located in Karnali Province
Dolpo
Dolpo
Dolpo is located in Nepal
Dolpo
Dolpo
Coordinates: 28°50′N 83°15′E / 28.833°N 83.250°E / 28.833; 83.250
CountryNepal
ProvinceKarnali Province
DistrictDolpa District
Local people in meeting in Dolpo
Yak caravan near Saldang in the northern part of Dolpo.

Dolpo (Standard Tibetan: དོལ་པོ ) is a high-altitude culturally Tibetan region in the upper part of the Dolpa District of western Nepal, bordered in the north by China.[1]: 1–3  Part of the region lies in Shey Phoksundo National Park. The sparse, agro-pastoral population, known as Dolpo or Dolpopa in standard Tibetan and Dhol-wa in the local dialect, is connected to the rest of Nepal via Jufal airport, which can be reached in three days by horse.[2][1]: 1, 11, 27  As the 2011 census, the population of Dolpo is estimated to be 36,700 with the majority of these people following Buddhism as their major religion. [3]

The Dolpo are generally adherents of Bon, a religion whose origins predate Buddhism but whose modern form is officially accepted as a fifth school of Tibetan Buddhism. The remote region has preserved its Tibetan culture in relatively pure form, making it attractive to Westerners. Dolpa was the location for the 1999 Oscar-nominated film Himalaya and more recently for the German documentary Dolpo Tulku.

In spite of the near inaccessibility of the region and tourism restrictions for the more remote parts, Dolpa is a popular destination for trekking tourism.

  1. ^ a b Bauer 2004.
  2. ^ Phurwa Gurung, Ken Bauer (2022). Infrastructures of change: Development among pastoralists in Dolpo, Nepal (1990–2020). Routledge Handbook of Highland Asia. ISBN 9780429345746.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  3. ^ Hiking, Adventure Treks. "Dolpo". Dolpo.