Long before the mountain kingdom known today as Bhutan had a name, people were already living there. Archaeological evidence and ancient chronicles point to human settlement in the eastern Himalayas as far back as 2000 B.C.E. — and possibly earlier. The story of who those first settlers were, how they lived, and what they built is still being pieced together, but what is clear is this: human beings found a way to thrive at the roof of the world.
What the evidence shows
- Himalayan settlement: Structural remains found in Bhutan suggest the region was inhabited by at least 2000 B.C.E., making it among the earlier documented human presences in the eastern Himalayan arc.
- Monpa people: Scholars believe early inhabitants included the Monpa, a Tibeto-Burman people who practiced a shamanistic religion focused on nature worship and the interplay of spiritual forces — a tradition that predates and later merged with Buddhism.
- Ancient place names: The region was known as Lhomon or Monyul — “land of the southern darkness” — a name recorded in Bhutanese and Tibetan chronicles suggesting organized cultural identity centuries before written history began.
A land shaped by its terrain
The eastern Himalayas are not an obvious place to build a civilization. The valleys are fertile, but the mountains are steep, the passes are treacherous, and the climate can be brutal. Yet the people who first settled what is now Bhutan turned these conditions into advantages.
Sheltered valleys became centers of agriculture. Rivers provided water and routes for trade. The mountains themselves served as natural fortifications against outside powers — a geographic fact that would define Bhutanese history for millennia.
The earliest known inhabitants, likely ancestral to the Monpa, organized their societies around nature-based spiritual practices. They were neither Tibetan nor Mongol in origin — those migrations came later. These were mountain peoples with their own cosmologies, governance structures, and relationships with the land.
The Monyul period and what came before
Historians identify a period known as Monyul, thought to have existed roughly between 100 C.E. and 600 C.E., as one of the earliest recognizable political formations in the region. But human presence long precedes it.
The state of Lhomon described in ancient chronicles was, at its core, an acknowledgment that people had been there long enough to name their home, to tell stories about it, and to record those stories across generations. Before that naming, before those chronicles, there were already fires burning in the valleys.
Traditional Bhutanese and Tibetan texts refer to the region as Lhomon Tsendenjong — the “southern Mon sandalwood country” — and Lhomon Khazhi — the “southern Mon country of four approaches.” These names suggest not just settlement but a sense of orientation, of knowing the land well enough to describe how one enters it.
When Buddhism arrived and what it found
The arrival of Tibetan Buddhism in the 7th century C.E. is often treated as the beginning of Bhutanese history. Tibetan king Songtsän Gampo, who reigned from 627 to 649 C.E., reportedly built 108 temples across the Himalayan region, including several in what is now Bhutan — at Bumthang, Paro, Haa, and Lhuentse.
But Buddhism did not arrive in an empty land. It encountered a living tradition — the Bon-influenced shamanic practices of the Monpa and related peoples. Rather than erasing those traditions, Buddhism absorbed many of them. The result was a distinctly Himalayan form of Buddhist practice that still shapes Bhutanese culture today.
This layering of traditions is itself a kind of evidence. You don’t absorb a religious tradition that doesn’t exist. The fact that early Bhutanese Buddhism incorporated so many pre-Buddhist elements tells us something about the depth and vitality of what was already there.
Lasting impact
The settlement of the Bhutan Himalayas established one of the world’s most enduring and distinctively self-governed civilizations. Bhutan is notable for never having been colonized or occupied by an outside power — a record that stretches back at least a thousand years and arguably much longer.
The valleys settled by those earliest inhabitants became the same valleys where dzongs — fortress-monasteries — were later built. The trade routes those first peoples walked became corridors for the spread of Buddhism across the broader Himalayan world. The spiritual relationship with nature that the Monpa practiced was not erased; it became woven into the fabric of one of the world’s most ecologically conscious nations.
Bhutan today protects over 50% of its land as forest cover, enshrined in its constitution. The concept of Gross National Happiness — the governing philosophy introduced by King Jigme Singye Wangchuck — draws explicitly on the idea that well-being cannot be reduced to economic metrics alone. That idea has deep roots in the same mountain culture that predates written records.
The country’s early settlers also demonstrate something broader: that human beings have been finding ways to inhabit and sustain life in even the most challenging environments for thousands of years, adapting with creativity and care rather than simply extracting and moving on.
Blindspots and limits
The honest truth is that the early history of Bhutan is, in the Wikipedia entry’s own words, “steeped in mythology and remains obscure.” The 2000 B.C.E. date comes from structural remains whose interpretation is still debated, and no written records survive from the pre-Buddhist period. Much of what we know about the Monpa and the Monyul period comes filtered through later Buddhist chronicles, which were written with their own interpretive purposes. The voices of the earliest settlers — their own accounts of who they were and what they built — are almost entirely lost.
The claimed connection to the Indus Valley Civilization in the original framing of this article is not supported by the available evidence; the source material identifies the early inhabitants as ancestral Monpa peoples of Tibeto-Burman origin, not Indus Valley migrants.
Read more
For more on this story, see: History of Bhutan — Wikipedia
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Indigenous communities secure land rights for 160 million hectares
- Ghana establishes a marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- The Good News for Humankind archive on prehistory
About this article
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