Jump to content

Chalise

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chalise
चालिसे
Pronunciation/t͡ʃɑːliːse/
LanguageNepali, Sanskrit, Burmese, Dzongkha, Doteli
Origin
LanguageKhas
MeaningDerived from Nepali chalis (“forty”)
Region of originNepal
Other names
Derivatives
  • Chalise K.C.
  • Chalise Sharma

Chalise[a] is a surname of Khas people of South Asia, found among high-caste Hindus such as Hill Brahmin and Hill Kshatriya in Nepal.[1] The surname is also found among Nepalese diaspora communities in countries such as Bhutan (Lhotshampa people), India (Indian Gorkha), Myanmar (Burmese Gurkhas), and elsewhere around the world.

The Chalise surname belongs to the Vasishtha clan, one of the Saptarishi in Hinduism.[2][3] Historically, the Chalise served as courtiers, royal priests, advisers, scholars, and astrologers in the Baise and Chaubisi kingdoms, as well as in the Kingdom of Gorkha and the Kingdom of Nepal.[citation needed]

Etymology

[edit]

According to legend, the surname originated after some Bhattarai priests completed forty (chalis in Nepali) chapters of ritual worship (Puja) without dropping a single drop of water from their palm. They were then honored with the title Chalise.[4][5]

Family traditions

[edit]

The Chalise people traditionally worship Aadho/Adi Masto[b] as their family deity (Kuldevata).[citation needed] The worship traditionally includes animal sacrifices of black and white goats or sheep.[6]

Notable people

[edit]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Nepali: चालिसे
  2. ^ Nepali: आधो मष्टो or आदि मष्टो

References

[edit]
  1. ^ nepalfederalismdebate (2018-06-24). "Master list of ALL Nepali Surnames/Clans". Nepal Federalism Debate. Retrieved 2026-05-18.
  2. ^ dgautamd (2018-08-27). "गोत्र र थर – List of Gotra and Thari". गौतम बंशावली (in Nepali). Retrieved 2026-05-17.
  3. ^ "List of Gotra and Thari". 2013-01-05. Retrieved 2026-05-18.
  4. ^ "Chalise - definition - Encyclo". www.encyclo.co.uk. Retrieved 2026-05-18.
  5. ^ "Chalise Surname Origin, Meaning & Last Name History". forebears.io. Retrieved 2026-05-18.
  6. ^ Lamsal, Basanta (2024-07-23). "Masto Culture: The Ancestral Deity of Kshatriyas". www.nepalholiday.com. Retrieved 2026-05-17.