Most of what has been written about the Limbu people was written by outsiders.
This is an attempt to change that.
The Yakthung -- known to the world as the Limbu -- are the original inhabitants of Limbuwan, a defined territory spanning eastern Nepal, Sikkim, and the Darjeeling hills. They had their own kings, their own governance system, their own sacred land rights, and their own oral tradition stretching back over a thousand years. That tradition survives. But it is at risk.
Tracing the Yakthung is a practical guide for anyone who wants to understand where their Limbu family comes from. Whether you are a diaspora Limbu in the UK, Hong Kong, Australia, or the Gulf, a researcher, an academic, or simply someone who sat with an elder and realized how much was about to be forgotten -- this book is for you.
What you will find inside:
The difference between Yakthung and Limbu -- and why it matters
The full territorial history of Limbuwan and its nine districts
The 10 Thum and 29 Thum governance systems explained
Key Limbu kings including King Sirijunga Hang and Te-ongsi Sirijunga Xin Thebe -- the man who was killed for teaching his people to read
The 1774 Treaty of Salt and Water -- what was promised and what was taken
How the Kipat communal land system worked and how it was abolished
Clan identity -- how it works, how to find yours, and what it means
Clan-to-territory mapping across Taplejung, Panchthar, Ilam, Terhathum and beyond
How to trace your own lineage through elders and oral tradition -- with specific questions to ask
The Limbu diaspora today -- UK, Hong Kong, Gulf, Australia
The Sirijonga script -- from suppression to PhD level at Sikkim University
A full glossary, clan reference table, and recommended sources
This book does not pretend the gaps don't exist.
The written record on Limbu history is thin -- not because our history is thin, but because the systems that created written records were rarely interested in preserving it. Where sources are strong, this guide is specific. Where the record is incomplete, it says so honestly. Oral tradition is treated as the legitimate historical source it has always been.