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[[File:PancheBaaja.jpg|thumb|200px|right|The C-shaped narsinga is part of the [[Panche baja]] instruments.]]
[[File:PancheBaaja.jpg|thumb|200px|right|The C-shaped narsinga is part of the [[Panche baja]] instruments.]]


==Ramsingha==

The ramsinga is a pronunciation specific to India. It uses four pipes of very thin metal which fit one within the other. It is mentioned in [[Emilio Salgari]]'s works such as ''[[The Mystery of the Black Jungle]]'' (1895), where it is associated with the [[thugee]] cult.
The ramsinga is a pronunciation specific to India. It uses four pipes of very thin metal which fit one within the other. It is mentioned in [[Emilio Salgari]]'s works such as ''[[The Mystery of the Black Jungle]]'' (1895), where it is associated with the [[thugee]] cult.



Revision as of 17:46, 8 March 2021

Ransingha, an S-shaped horn.

The ransinga, ransingha or ramsinga is a type of primitive trumpet made of copper or copper alloys, used in both India and Nepal. The instrument is made of two metal curves, joined together to form an "S" shape.[1] It may also be reassembled to form a crescent.[2]

It is part of a group of curved-tube instruments that include the ransingha, the narsinga and the sringa. It may also be related to the laawaa and Tibetan dungchen, both straight tubular copper horns.

The C-shaped narsinga is part of the Panche baja instruments.

Ramsingha

The ramsinga is a pronunciation specific to India. It uses four pipes of very thin metal which fit one within the other. It is mentioned in Emilio Salgari's works such as The Mystery of the Black Jungle (1895), where it is associated with the thugee cult.

In Chapter 62 of Foucault's Pendulum (1988) the Ramsinga is also mentioned, being played by a devotee of a druidic sect .

The Ramsinga, as depicted in the book Les Hindoûs, by the Flemish artist Frans Balthazar Solvyns (Volume II)
The Ramsinga, as depicted in the book Les Hindoûs (Volume II), by the Flemish artist Frans Balthazar Solvyns

See also

References

  1. ^ Manorma Sharma (1 January 1998). Tribal melodies of Himachal Pradesh: Lahaul Valley. APH Publishing. pp. 64–. ISBN 978-81-7024-942-9. Retrieved 24 March 2012.
  2. ^ Nikolova, Ivanka; Davey, Laura; Dean, Geoffrey, eds. (2000). The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Musical Instruments. Cologne: Könemann Verlagsgesellschaft mbH. p. 94.