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Hijagang

The Hijagang (Meitei pronunciation: hī-ja-gāng) is a boathouse inside the Kangla Fort in Imphal, India. It houses four traditional Meitei watercraft, including two hiyang hirens (Royal racing boats) and two tanna his (commoners' racing boats). According to Meitei religious beliefs, the hiyang hirens are used by the male ancestral deity (Meitei: Ibudhou) and female ancestral deity (Meitei: Ibendhou) and are sacred to the Meiteis, the major ethnic group of Manipur.

The construction of the Hijagang watercraft storage building started in the year 2010 and completed in the year 2013.

On 21 August 2013, with the performances of necessary religious rites and rituals by the Amaibas (Meitei for 'priests') and the Amaibis (Meitei for 'priestesses') in the early morning, the Hijagang was inaugurated by Okram Ibobi Singh, the then Chief Minister of Manipur, who was also the then President of "Kangla Fort Board".

According to RK Nimai, the then Commissioner of the Department of Arts and Culture, Government of Manipur, the two kinds of watercrafts were made from special kind of trees brought from Khamsom village in Senapati district of Manipur. The crafting processes were initiated in Khamsom in the year 2007. Later, the woods for crafting the Hiyang Hirens were brought to the Kangla on 6 June 2007, with the work of sculpturing getting commenced 2 days later. The watercrafts were made by a four-member team under the leadership of craftsman L. Thoiba. Later, the watercrafts were inaugurated on 19 February 2010 (3 years before the completion of the building construction).

The hiyang hiren are made of uningthou and the tanna hi of tairen.

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boatyard of the Kangla Fort in Imphal
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