The Nagas are divided into variousNaga ethnic groups whose numbers and populations are unclear. They each speak distinctNaga languages often unintelligible to the others, but all are loosely connected to each other.
The present day Naga people have historically been referred to by many names, like "Noga" or "Naka" by the inhabitants of theAhom kingdom in what is now considered asAssam which means "people with pierced ears",[5] "Hao" byMeitei people ofImphal Valley[6] and "Nakas" byBurmese of what is now considered asMyanmar.[7] However, over time "Naga" became the commonly accepted nomenclature, and was also used by the British. According to the Burma Gazetteer, the term 'Naga' is of doubtful origin and is used to describe hill tribes that occupy the country between theChins in the south andKachins (Singphos) in the Northeast.[8]
According to the Burmese chroniclesTagung Yazawin, the firstChaopha ofMongkawng Samlongpha (1150–1201 CE) with the main town inMogaung captured Naga country in the early 1200s. In the chronicle Naga country is named as "Khang Se".[10]
According to the History ofHsenwi state chronicle and Mengguo Zhanbi, in 1318,Si Kefa, the ruler of Mongmao appointed his brother Sanlongfa as the general and led an army of 90,000 to attack the king of Mong WehsaliLong ( Assam). In the end, he designed a plan to make Mong Wehsali Long surrender and pay tribute every 3 years. Hkum Sam Long accepted the terms made by the ministers of Mong Wehsali Long and marched back toMongmao.[11][12]
The Naga people love colour, as is evident in the shawls designed and woven by women, and in the headgear that both sexes design. Clothing patterns are traditional to each group, and the cloths are woven by the women. They use beads in variety, profusion and complexity in their jewellery, along with a wide range of materials including glass, shell, stone, teeth or tusk, claws, horns, metal, bone, wood, seeds, hair, and fibre.[14]
According to Dr.Verrier Elwin, these groups made all the goods they used, as was once common in many traditional societies:
they have made their own cloth, their own hats and rain-coats; they have prepared their own medicines, their own cooking-vessels, their own substitutes for crockery.[15]
Craftwork includes the making of baskets, weaving of cloth, wood carving, pottery, metalwork, jewellery-making and bead-work.
Weaving of colourful woolen and cotton shawls is a central activity for women of all Nagas. One of the common features of Naga shawls is that three pieces are woven separately and stitched together. Weaving is an intricate and time consuming work and each shawl takes at least a few days to complete. Designs for shawls and wraparound garments (commonly calledmekhala) are different for men and women.
Among many groups the design of the shawl denotes the social status of the wearer. Some of the more known shawls includeTsüngkotepsü andRongsü of the Aos;Sütam, Ethasü, Longpensü of the Lothas;Süpong of the Sangtams,Rongkhim andTsüngrem Khim of the Yimkhiungs; and the AngamiLohe shawls with thick embroidered animal motifs.
Naga jewellery is an equally important part of identity, with the entire community wearing similar bead jewellery, specifically the necklace.[16]
The Indian Chamber of Commerce has filed an application seeking registration of traditional Naga shawls made in Nagaland with the Geographical Registry of India forGeographical Indication.[17]
Folk songs and dances are essential ingredients of the traditional Naga culture. The oral tradition is kept alive through the media of folk tales and songs. Naga folk songs are both romantic and historical, with songs narrating entire stories of famous ancestors and incidents. Seasonal songs describe activities done in a particular agricultural cycle. The early Western missionaries opposed the use of folk songs by Naga Christians as they were perceived to be associated with spirit worship, war, and immorality. As a result, translated versions of Western hymns were introduced, leading to the slow disappearance of indigenous music from the Naga hills.[18]
Folk dances of the Nagas are mostly performed in groups in synchronised fashion, by both men and women, depending on the type of dance. Dances are usually performed at festivals and religious occasions. War dances are performed mostly by men and are athletic and martial in style. All dances are accompanied by songs and war cries by the dancers. Indigenous musical instruments made and used by the people aretati, bamboo mouth organs, bamboo flutes, trumpets, drums made of cattle skin and log drums.[19]
Traditionally, the Nagas practised animism, venerating natural elements such as the sun, moon, trees, and stones. They believed in a Supreme Being and various lesser spirits associated with nature, conducting rituals and sacrifices to appease these entities. This deep connection to nature was central to their worldview and daily life.[20]
In the mid-19th century, Christian missionaries, particularly from the American Baptist denomination, introduced Christianity to the Naga hills. The Nagas embraced the new faith, leading to a significant religious transformation. Today, Christianity is the predominant religion among the Naga people, with over 87% identifying as Christians, making Nagaland one of the three Christian-majority states in India.[21][22]
While Christianity dominates, remnants of traditional beliefs persist, especially in cultural practices and festivals. Some Nagas integrate indigenous rituals with Christian practices, reflecting a syncretic approach to spirituality. Additionally, there are small minorities practising other religions (such as Buddhism),[23] but they constitute a very limited portion of the population. In Myanmar, the term "Naga" holds significance in Buddhist mythology, referring to serpent-like beings often depicted in religious art and architecture.[24]
The various Naga groups have their own distinct festivals. To promote inter-group interaction, the Government of Nagaland has organised the annualHornbill Festival since 2000. Another inter-ethnic festival isLui Ngai Ni. The group-specific festivals include:[25]
The word Naga originated as anexonym.[26] Today, it covers a number of ethnic groups that reside in Nagaland, Manipur, Assam and Arunachal Pradesh states of India, and also in Myanmar.
Before the arrival of the British, the term "Naga" was used byAssamese to refer to certain isolated ethnic groups. The British adopted this term for a number of ethnic groups in the surrounding area, based on loose linguistic and cultural associations. The number of groups classified as "Naga" grew significantly in the 20th century: as of December 2015, 89 groups are classified as Naga by the various sources. This expansion in the "Naga" identity has been due to a number of factors including the quest for upward mobility in the society of Nagaland, and the desire to establish a common purpose of resistance against dominance by other groups. In this way, the "Naga" identity has not always been fixed.[27]
Nagas population are spread across all Northeast Indian States except Tripura and are listed asscheduled tribes in 6 Northeastern States: Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram and Nagaland.[28]
Anāl andMoyon are mainly found inTamu township on the south and a fewSomra Nagas are also found in and around Tamu bordering toLayshi jurisdiction.Makury,Para and Somra tribes are mainly found in Layshi township. Makury Nagas and a few Somra Nagas are also found inHomalin township.Lahe is highly populated byKonyak,Nokko,Lainong andMakury tribes.Nanyun on the north is the home ofTangshang tribe which comprises more than 54 sub-dialect groups.Homlin township is highly populated by the considered lost tribes (Red Shans). ButKukis,Burmese,Chinese andIndians are also found there.Hkamti township is populated altogether by all the Naga tribes majority and with a number of Burmese,Shans, Chinese and Indians.Tanai in Kachin state of Myanmar is inhabited by theTangshang Nagas among theKachin people.
Nagas have more language diversity than any other ethnic group or states in India. Naga people speak over 89 languages and dialects, mostly unintelligible with each other. However, there are many similarities among the languages spoken by them. The diversity of languages and traditions of the Nagas results most likely from the multiple cultural absorptions that occurred during their successive migrations. According to legend, before settling in the region, these groups moved over vast zones, and in the process, some clans were absorbed into one or more other groups. Therefore, until recent times, absorptions were a source of many interclan conflicts.[30]
In 1967, the Nagaland Assembly proclaimed English as the official language of Nagaland and it is the medium for education in Nagaland. Other than English,Nagamese, a creole language form of theAssamese language, is a widely spoken language. Every community has its own mother tongue but communicates with other communities in either Nagamese orEnglish. However, English is the predominant spoken and written language in Nagaland. Hindi is also taught along with English in most schools and most Nagas prefer to use Hindi to communicate with the migrant workers of the state, that primarily comes from Bihar, UP and Madhya Pradesh. Since 2022, Hindi in Northeastern India has been taught in school until class 10.[31]
^"Hso Hkan Hpa (Sikefa) ordered an army of nine hundred' thousand,men to march against Mong WehsaliLong (Assam) under the commandof his brother Hkun Sam Long (this is the Sam-Suns pha of Eliasand ths ministers Tao Hso Han Kaiand Tao Hso Yen. When they reach. Wehsali Long, some cowherdsreported the arrival of the army from Kawsampi, the country of whiteblossoms and larse leaves and theministers submitted withoutresistance and promised to makeannual payment of twenty - fiveponies, seven elephants, twenty-four vi;s of gold, and- two hundred viss of silver every three years. Hkum Sam Long accepted these terms and commenced his march back. Thetwo other generals, Tao Hso Yenand Tao Hso Han Kai, sent onmessengers to Hso Hkan Hpa with a story that Hkun Sall Long had obtained the easysubmission of Wehsali Long byconspiring with the king of thatplace to dethrone Hso Hkan Hpa.The Sawbwa believed the story andsent poisoned food to his brother,which Hkun Sam Long ate at MongKong (Mogaung)"(Scott 1967:18)
^"The recently discovered Yan-aung-myin pagoda inscription at ' 'Themaunggan, south of Pinya (Obverse, line 8, 762 s.), claims that in 1400 CE the rule of the king extended beyond the Kandu (Kadu) and the Ponlon amri yols ("Palaungs who grow tails"), to the "heretic kingdoms of the Naked Nagas on the borders of Khamti Khun lcyviw (?),"(Luce & Htway 1976:174)
^Ao, Ayinla Shilu.Naga Tribal Adornment: Signatures of Status and Self (The Bead Society of Greater Washington. September 2003)ISBN0-9725066-2-4
^"Naga shawls in for geographical registration", AndhraNews.net, 7 April 2008
^Shikhu, Inato Yekheto.A Re-discovery and Re-building of Naga Cultural Values: An Analytical Approach with Special Reference to Maori as a Colonized and Minority Group of People in New Zealand (Daya Books, 2007), p. 210
^Mongro, Kajen & Ao, A Lanunungsang.Naga Cultural Attires and Musical Instruments (Concept Publishing Company, 1999),ISBN81-7022-793-3
Luce, G.H; Htway, Tin (1976), "A 15th Century Inscription and Library at Pagán, Burma",Malalasekera Commemoration Volume. Colombo: The Malalasekera Commemoration Volume Editorial Committee, Dept of Pali and Buddhist Studies, University of Ceylon, pp. 203–256
Gogoi, Padmeswar (1956).The political expansion of the Mao Shans.
Drouyer, A. Isabel, Drouyer René, " THE NAGAS: MEMORIES OF HEADHUNTERS- Indo-Burmese Borderlands vol.1"; White Lotus, 2016,ISBN978-2-9545112-2-1.
Wettstein, Marion. 2014.Naga Textiles: Design, Technique, Meaning and Effect of a Local Craft Tradition in Northeast India. Arnoldsche, Stuttgart 2014,ISBN978-3-89790-419-4.
Shongzan, Mayaso, "A Portrait of the Tangkhul Nagas"; Exodus, 2013,ISBN978-81-929139-0-2.
Stirn, Aglaja & Peter van Ham.The Hidden world of the Naga: Living Traditions in Northeast India. London: Prestel.
Oppitz, Michael, Thomas Kaiser, Alban von Stockhausen & Marion Wettstein. 2008.Naga Identities: Changing Local Cultures in the Northeast of India. Gent: Snoeck Publishers.
Kunz, Richard & Vibha Joshi. 2008.Naga – A Forgotten Mountain Region Rediscovered. Basel: Merian.