India: The Divine Dance of Life and Death
India has a long, rich history of language, music, and dance integrated into its belief systems, rituals, and performance practices. India’s people are racially diverse, consisting of three general types who developed from the merging of indigenous populations and recurring waves of incoming northerner between 4000 and 2500 B.C. There groups of people included the Caucasoid, in the northern regions of India and Aryan descent-light-skinned, with long, narrow noses; the Mongoloid, from the eastern realm, at the foothills of the Himalaya Mountains (Manipur is in this region) – with round faces, broad noses, and eye set typical of East Asian peoples; and the Veddoid, or proto-Australoid, from the middle and southern regions-with curly hair, dark skin, round faces with broadened, flat noses, and low foreheads, similar to today’s Australian Aborigines.
India: The Divine Dance of Life and DeathIndia has a long, rich history of language, music, and dance integrated into its belief systems, rituals, and performance practices. India’s people are racially diverse, consisting of three general types who developed from the merging of indigenous populations and recurring waves of incoming northerner between 4000 and 2500 B.C. There groups of people included the Caucasoid, in the northern regions of India and Aryan descent-light-skinned, with long, narrow noses; the Mongoloid, from the eastern realm, at the foothills of the Himalaya Mountains (Manipur is in this region) – with round faces, broad noses, and eye set typical of East Asian peoples; and the Veddoid, or proto-Australoid, from the middle and southern regions-with curly hair, dark skin, round faces with broadened, flat noses, and low foreheads, similar to today’s Australian Aborigines.
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