Also known as Tirhut, Mithilanchal, Tirabhukti
ethno-linguistic region of India and Nepal
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Mithila (IAST: Mithilā), also known as Tirhut, Tirabhukti and Mithilanchal, is a geographical and cultural region of the Indian subcontinent bounded by the Mahananda River in the east, the Ganges in the south, the Gandaki River in the west and by the foothills of the Himalayas in the north. It comprises certain parts of Bihar and Jharkhand states of India and adjoining districts of the Koshi Province, Bagmati Pradesh and Madhesh Province of Nepal. The native language in Mithila is Maithili, and its speakers are referred to as Maithils.
Mithila is commonly used to refer to the Videha Kingdom, as well as to the modern-day territories that fall within the ancient boundaries of Videha. Until the 20th century, Mithila was still ruled in part by the Raj Darbhanga. In Buddhist annals, it is also known as Miyulu. According to the document of Archeological Geography of Ganga Plains, the Balirajgarh fort in the Madhubani district is regarded as the capital of ancient Mithila. In the present time, there is a ruins of ancient large fort dating back to 300 BCE - 200 BCE.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).