Chindu (other)
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Chindu (other)
Chindu may refer to: *Chindu County, in Qinghai, China *one of the divisions of Tamil music in the '' Pancha Marapu'' See also * Chindu Bhagavatham Chindu Bhagavatam is a drama art widely performed in Telangana, India. Chindu Bhagavatam is distantly related to Kattaikkuttu, Terukkuttu, Yakshaganam type of folk theater art forms in other parts of south India. The art form has evolved over ti ..., a drama form of Telangana, India * Qindu District, in Shaanxi, China {{Disambig ...
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Chindu County
Chindu County () or Chenduo County () is a county of Qinghai, Qinghai Province, China, bordering Sichuan to the east. It is under the administration of Yushu Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture. Administrative divisions Chindu County (Chenduo County) is divided to 5 towns and 2 townships. ;Towns ;Townships * Gaduo Township () * Labu Township () Climate Chindu County has a alpine climate (Köppen climate classification ''ETH''). The average annual temperature in Chindu is . The average annual rainfall is with July as the wettest month. The temperatures are highest on average in July, at around , and lowest in January, at around . References

County-level divisions of Qinghai Yushu Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture {{Qinghai-geo-stub ...
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Pancha Marapu
''Pancha Marapu'' (Tamil: பஞ்சமரபு ''pañcamarapu'') is a 10th-century Tamil treatise on musical theory, written by Aṟivaṉār. The work is one of the ''isaittamiḻ'' texts referred to in Atiyarkkunallar's commentary on the Silappadhikaram. Although it was long believed to be lost, a manuscript was discovered in the latter half of the twentieth century, and partially published in 1973. A revised edition has since been published. The text deals with the music, musical instrument A musical instrument is a device created or adapted to make musical sounds. In principle, any object that produces sound can be considered a musical instrument—it is through purpose that the object becomes a musical instrument. A person who pl ...s and percussion instruments (''muḻavu'') of that period, and enumerates nine divisions of Tamil music, namely, ''cindu'', ''cavalai'', ''tiripatai'', ''camapātaviruttam'', ''centuṟai'', ''veṇṭuṟai'', ''peruntēvappāṇi'', ...
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Chindu Bhagavatham
Chindu Bhagavatam is a drama art widely performed in Telangana, India. Chindu Bhagavatam is distantly related to Kattaikkuttu, Terukkuttu, Yakshaganam type of folk theater art forms in other parts of south India. The art form has evolved over time from being restricted to a small sub-sect within a community to being performed all over the region and utilised by the State government. History The art goes that within the ‘Madiga’ community, a sect considered itself ‘Pedda Madiga’ (Elder Madiga) and another sect that was living on begging, performing Yakshaganas, as ‘Chinna Madigas’, (Lower Madiga). These Chindu Bhagavatas were not permitted to perform beyond their own community. A lot has changed since then. Chindu Yellamma, a respected icon from Nizamabad, was invited to perform with her troupe at Ravindra Bharathi by the erstwhile Dance Academy headed by Nataraja Ramakrishna. The academy had also published a small booklet on this art and the Chindu Bhagavatas at that ...
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