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Karbi people

"Related ethnic groups" needing confirmationEthnic groups in Northeast IndiaEthnic groups in South AsiaKarbi Anglong districtScheduled Tribes of Arunachal Pradesh
Scheduled Tribes of AssamScheduled Tribes of MeghalayaScheduled Tribes of NagalandSino-Tibetan-speaking peopleSocial groups of AssamTribes of Arunachal PradeshTribes of AssamUse Indian English from October 2018
Traditional Karbi Ornaments
Traditional Karbi Ornaments

The Karbis or Mikir are one of the major ethnic community in Northeast India. They are mostly concentrated in the hill districts of Karbi Anglong and West Karbi Anglong of Assam.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Karbi people (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Karbi people
Triester Straße, Gemeinde Vösendorf

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.3311 ° E 44.3764 °
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Address

Wiener Tierschutzverein

Triester Straße 8
2331 Gemeinde Vösendorf
Niederösterreich, Österreich
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Traditional Karbi Ornaments
Traditional Karbi Ornaments
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Saint Sarkis Monastery of Ushi
Saint Sarkis Monastery of Ushi

Saint Sarkis Monastery (Armenian: Սուրբ Սարգիս Վանք or Ուշի Վանք; also Surp Sarkis Vank) is a large monastic complex, 45 by 54 metres (148 by 177 ft) just outside the village of Ushi in the Aragatsotn Province of Armenia. It sits at the far side of what was once a settlement site from the 3rd - 1st millennia BC. The monastery is a well known pilgrimage site, and was one of the centers of spiritual education in Armenia. Many fine examples of early Armenian architecture from various periods can be seen around the complex. The monastery is known to have had a brief visit during September 1734 by Abraham Kretatsi during the time while he was serving the Catholicos Abraham II while on his pilgrimage to a number of monasteries at the Catholicos' request. The Catholicos had said to him, "I have not traveled anywhere for a long time and my heart is very heavy." In Kretratsi's writings he says that: "Two or three days after savoring this spiritual and corporal happiness, we went to the church of Saint Sarkis in Ushi. While we were there, Hakobyan, the melik of Yerevan, who had been summoned at the Catholicos, arrived. A horseman arrived from Tbilisi the same day. He brought the news, as well as an official letter to inform us, that Isak Pasha, has, without any reason, had ordered the strangling of Ashichal Bek, the melik of our people the Armenians in Tbilisi. He had kept his corpse hanging on the city gate until he received 50,000 kurush which he had permitted he body to be buried."