Yao people

(Redirected from Zao people)

The Yao people (simplified Chinese: 瑶族; traditional Chinese: 瑤族; pinyin: Yáozú) or Dao (Vietnamese: người Dao) is a classification for various ethnic minorities in China and Vietnam. Their majority branch is also known as Mien. They are one of the 56 officially recognized ethnic groups in China and reside in the mountainous southwest and south of the country. They also form one of the 54 ethnic groups officially recognized by Vietnam. They numbered 2,796,003 in the 2010 Chinese census and 891,151 in the 2019 Vietnamese census. An estimated 60,000 Yao of the Iu Mien branch reside in the United States, mostly in the Western coastal states.[1]

Yao people
瑶族
A Yao woman, Tiantouzhai, Longji Terraces, China, November 2010
Total population
3,500,000+
Regions with significant populations
 China: 2,796,003 (2010)
 Vietnam: 891,151 (2019)[1]
Languages
Mienic languages, Bunu, Pa-Hng, Lakkja, Mandarin Chinese, Shaozhou Tuhua, Badong Yao, Yeheni, Vietnamese, English
Religion
Predominantly Yao folk religion, minority Buddhism
Yao people
Chinese name
Chinese瑶族
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinYáo zú
IPA[jǎʊ tsǔ]
Wu
Romanizationyau zoh
Hakka
RomanizationYâu-tshu̍k
Yue: Cantonese
Yale Romanizationyìuh juhk
Jyutpingjiu4 zuk6
Southern Min
Hokkien POJIâu-cho̍k
Teochew Peng'imIêu-tsôk
Eastern Min
Fuzhou BUCIèu-cŭk
Vietnamese name
Vietnamese alphabetngười Dao
Hán-Nôm𠊛猺

History

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China

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Li Tao, a general of Yao ethnicity in the People's Liberation Army

The origins of the Yao can be traced back two millennia to Hunan around the Dongting Lake region. According to a Yao tale, the Chinese Emperor Gao Xin was saved from an enemy chieftain by his faithful dog, Pan Hu. As a reward, Pan Hu was turned into a man and given the emperor's daughter in marriage. The descendants of the two became the Yao people. This tale was used as a basis for their connection to the Mo Yao, a group of highlanders who were exempt from forced labour during the Tang dynasty (618-907).[2] Between 200 BCE and 900 CE, the Yao migrated into mountainous areas to the south of the Yangtze River.[3]

The Yao were conquered by the Han Chinese between the 900s and 1200s.[4] However they were covered under a loose reign system known as the Jimi system or Tusi. The local chieftains collected tribute and taxes from their own people and paid taxes to the emperor.[2]

During the Ming and Qing dynasties, rule over the Yao was tightened. Ming and Qing authorities sent in their own bureaucrats to directly collect taxes, supplanting the role of the Yao chieftains.[5] The Yao and Miao people were among the rebels during the Miao Rebellions against the Ming dynasty during the 1370s and 1449. Conflict drove the Yao further south into the highlands between Hunan and Guizhou to the north and Guangdong and Guangxi to the south, and stretching into Eastern Yunnan. Some left for Southeast Asia.[4][6]

Around 1890, the Guangdong government started taking action against Yao in Northwestern Guangdong.[7]

After the Mao Zedong's Communist Party won the civil war in the late 1940s, the Yao benefited greatly from the ideology of equality and were able to access education, becoming part of the regional and national elite. They were often recruited as specialists to assist with the ethnic identification program within the framework of a large unified China.[5]

Laotian Civil War

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During the Laotian Civil War, the Yao tribes of Laos had a good relationship with U.S. forces and were dubbed to be an "efficient friendly force". They fought in favour of the (South Vietnamese) government against the communists.[8] This relationship caused the new communist Laotian government to target Yao tribal groups once the war was over. This triggered further immigration into Thailand, where the tribes would be put into camps along the Thailand-Laos border.

Immigration to the United States

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After obtaining refugee status from the Thai government, and with the help of the United Nations, many Yao people were able to obtain sponsorship into the United States (although many remain in Thailand). Most of the Yao who have immigrated to the United States have settled along the Western part of the US, mainly in central and northern California such as Visalia, Oakland, Oroville, Redding, Richmond, Sacramento, but also in parts of Oregon like Portland, Salem, and Beaverton as well as the state of Washington in Seattle and Renton. See Mien American for those identified as Mien.

Culture, society, and economy

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A Yao child with traditional dress in Guangxi
 
A red Yao woman in Vietnam

Yao society is traditionally patrilineal, with sons inheriting from their fathers. The Yao follow patrilocal residence.[9] Polygyny was allowed until it was banned in China in the 1950s. Adoption was common among the wealthy [10]

The Yao people have been farmers for over a thousand years, mostly rice cultivation through plowing, although a few practice slash-and-burn agriculture. Where the Yao live nearby forested regions, they also engage in hunting.[9]

During the Southern Song (1127–1279), an imperial Chinese observer, Zhou Qufei, described the Yao as wearing distinctive fine blue clothing produced using indigo.[11]

The Yao celebrate their Pan Wang (King Pan) festival annually on the sixteenth day of the tenth lunar month. The festival celebrates the mythical original story of the Yao people, and has evolved "into a happy holiday for the Yao to celebrate a good harvest and worship their ancestors."[12]

Religion

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Simulate a ritual of the Red Yao people in Yên Bái province -Vietnam Museum of Ethnology, Vietnam

The description of Yao religion is similar to the definition of Chinese folk religion as described by Arthur Wolf and Steve Sangren.[13] Like the Han, the Yao engage in patrilineal ancestor worship, celebrate lunar new year, and recognize a set a 18 gods and goddesses, mostly of Han Chinese origin. The Yao had shaman priests as part of their community who engaged in activity such as exorcism, spiritual communication, and divination using chicken bones or bamboo sticks.[10]

Taoism has historically been important to the Yao.[14] Jinag Yingliang, in a 1948 study, argued that Yao religion was characterized by (1) a process of Han Chinese-influenced Daoisation (Chinese: 道教化; pinyin: Dàojiào huà); (2) the endurance of pre-Daoist folk religion; and (3) some Buddhist beliefs.

Scholar Zhang Youjun takes issue with claims of "strong Buddhist influence" on the Yao, arguing that "although Yao ritual texts contain Buddhist expression, the Yao do not believe in Buddhism at all. They are resolutely Taoist."[13]

Groups and languages

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A Yao stilt house in Vietnam

There are several distinct groups within the Yao nationality, and they speak several different languages, The Iu Mien comprise 70% of the Yao population.[citation needed]

In addition to China, Yao also live in northern Vietnam (where they are called Dao), northern Laos, and Myanmar. There are around 60,000 Yao in northern Thailand, where they are one of the six main hill tribes. The lowland-living Lanten of Laos, who speak Kim Mun, and the highland-living Iu Mien of Laos are two different Yao groups. There are also many Iu Mien Americans, mainly refugees from the highlands of Laos. The Iu Mien do not call themselves "Yao". Not all "Yao" are Iu Mien. A group of 61,000 people on Hainan speak the Yao language Kim Mun; 139,000 speakers of Kim Mun live in other parts of China (Yunnan and Guangxi), and 174,500 live in Laos and Vietnam.[20]

The Bunu people call themselves Nuox [no13], Buod nuox [po43 no13], Dungb nuox [tuŋ33no13], or their official name Yaof zuf [ʑau21su21]. Only 258,000 of the 439,000 people categorised as Bunu in the 1982 census speak Bunu; 100,000 speak the Tai–Kadai Zhuang languages, and 181,000 speak Chinese and the Tai–Kadai Bouyei language.[citation needed]

Mao (2004)

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Mao Zongwu (2004:7-8)[21] gives a detailed list of various Yao endonyms (i.e., self-designated names) and the Chinese names of various groups and clans associated with them. Endonyms are written in the International Phonetic Alphabet with numerical Chao tones.

  • Autonym mjen31 or ju31 mjen31 优勉: Pangu Yao 盘古瑶, Pan Yao 盘瑶, Panhu Yao 盘瓠瑶, Trans-Mountain / Guoshan Yao 过山瑶, Large-Board / Daban Yao 大板瑶, Small-Board / Xiaoban Yao 小板瑶, Board / Ban Yao 板瑶, Top-Board / Dingban Yao 顶板瑶, Sharp-Headed / Jiantou Yao 尖头瑶, Level-Headed / Pingtou Yao 平头瑶, Red-Head / Hongtou Yao 红头瑶, Arrow-Pole / Jian'gan Yao 箭杆瑶, Cattle-Horn Yao / Niujiao 牛角瑶, Tu Yao 土瑶 (in Hezhou, Guangxi), Native / Bendi Yao 本地瑶, Flowery / Hua Yao 花瑶 (in Yangshuo County, Guangxi), Ao Yao 坳瑶, Zheng Yao 正瑶, Liang Yao 粮瑶
  • Autonym kim33 mun33 金门 or kem53 di35 mun21 甘迪门: Blue-Indigo / Landian Yao 蓝靛瑶, Shanzi Yao 山子瑶, Flowery-Headed / Huatou Yao 花头瑶, Sand / Sha Yao 沙瑶, Level-Headed / Pingtou Yao 平头瑶, Bazi Yao 坝子瑶
  • Autonym bjau31 mɔn31 标曼 or ɕi31 mun31 史门: Min Yao 民瑶, "Four Great" Min Yao 四大民瑶
  • Autonym bjau31 min31 标敏 or tɕau44 koŋ55 meŋ55 交公勉: East Mountain / Dongshan Yao 东山瑶 (in Quanzhou County, Guangxi), Dog-Headed / Goutou Yao 狗头瑶
  • Autonym dzau53 min53 藻勉: Bapai Yao 八排瑶
  • Autonym ju21 ŋjɛn25 优念, pjoŋ31 toa53 jeu31 炳多优, or ʂan33 tɕai33 珊介: Red Yao 红瑶 (in Longsheng Various Nationalities Autonomous County, Guangxi), Plains / Pingdi Yao 平地瑶
  • Autonym pu53 nu25 布努: Beilou Yao 背篓瑶, Beilong Yao 背陇瑶, West Mountain / Xishan Yao 西山瑶, East Mountain Yao / Dongshan 东山瑶 (in Bama Yao Autonomous County, Guangxi), Tudi Yao 土地瑶, Tu Yao 土瑶 (in Pingguo County and Mashan County, Guangxi), Mountain / Shan Yao 山瑶, Man Yao 蛮瑶, East Valley / Dongnong Yao 东弄瑶, West Valley / Xinong Yao 西弄瑶, Fan Yao 反瑶, Anding Yao 安定瑶, White Yao 白瑶, Black Yao 黑瑶, Black-Trouser / Heiku Yao 黑裤瑶, Long-Shirt / Changshan Yao 长衫瑶
  • Autonym nau35 klau42 瑙格劳 or pou22 nou12 包诺: Siting Yao 四亭瑶, Situan Yao 四团瑶
  • Autonym kjɔŋ33 nai33 炯奈: Hualan Yao 花蓝瑶
  • Autonym pa31 ŋ̊ŋ35 巴哼: Dog Yao 狗瑶, Eight-Surname / Baxing Yao 八姓瑶, Red Yao 红瑶 (in Liping and Congjiang Counties of Guizhou; Rongshui Miao Autonomous County and Longsheng Various Nationalities Autonomous County of Guangxi), Wood Yao 木瑶
  • Autonym m̥n33 nai33 唔奈: Flowery Yao 花瑶 (in Longhui, Dongkou, Chenxi, and Xupu County and the Tongdao Dong Autonomous County of Hunan)
  • Autonym ʑou13 nɔ13 优诺: Red Yao 红瑶
  • Autonym lak25 kja25 拉珈: Tea Mountain / Chashan Yao 茶山瑶

Plains Yao

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Groups considered to be "Plains Yao" (Pingdi Yao 平地瑶) include:[citation needed]

  • Autonym Bingduoyou 炳多尤 (Pingdi Yao 平地瑶, Dainaijiang 代奈江): in Jianghua Yao Autonomous County 江华 of Hunan; Gongcheng 恭城, Fuchuan 富川, Zhongshan 钟山, and Lingui 临桂 counties of Guangxi
  • Autonym Yeheni 爷贺尼 (Pingdi Yao 平地瑶): in Jianghua Yao Autonomous County 江华, Hunan (Jianghua County Gazetteer). The Yeheni speak a divergent Chinese dialect. It is spoken in Taoxu Town 涛圩镇 and Helukou Town 河路口镇 in Jianghua County, Hunan.[22]
  • Autonym Younian 优念 (Pinghua-speaking Red Yao 平话红瑶; ʑou13 ȵen13): in Longsheng 龙胜 and Guanyang 灌阳 counties of Guangxi. According to Chen Qiguang (2013:30),[23] the ʑəu21 ȵien21 number about 10,000 speakers in Sishui 泗水, Madi 马堤, Mengshan 孟山, Jiangliu 江柳, and other locations of Longsheng County.
  • Autonym Shanjie 珊介 (Shanzi Yao 山仔瑶): in Fangcheng 防城, Guangxi
  • Autonym Youjia 优嘉 (Yaojia 瑶家): in Guanyang County 灌阳, Guangxi
  • Jingdong Yao 景东县瑶族 (autonym: Lewu people 乐舞人): Jingdong County 景东彝族自治县, Yunnan. According to the Jingdong County Gazetteer (1994:519), ethnic Yao numbered 3,889 individuals in 1990, and lived mainly in Chaqing 岔箐[24] and Dasongshu 大松树[25] of Taizhong 太忠乡.

Vietnam

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Tim Doling (2010:82-83) lists the following Yao (spelled Dao in the Vietnamese alphabet) subgroups in northern Vietnam.[26]

  • Mienic groups
    • Iu Mien: Black Dao of Dien Bien and Lai Chau; Red Dao of southern Lao Cai, Yen Bai, and Son La
    • Kim Mien: Dao Tà Pán 大板瑶 (Dao Đại Bản, Dao Coóc Ngáng,[27] Dao Sừng[28]) of Ha Giang, Cao Bang, and Yen Bai; Red Dao of northern and eastern Lao Cai; Hongtou Red Dao 红头瑶 in northern Lai Chau
    • Kiem Mien: Red Dao of Sa Pa
    • Kam Mien: Coin Dao of Ha Giang, Cao Bang, Tuyen Quang, Thai Nguyen, and Bac Can
    • Kem Mien: Coin Dao of Hoa Binh and Son La
    • Quần Chẹt Mien: Hoa Binh, Son La, Tuyen Quang, Bac Can (also called the Dao Nga Hoàng, Dao Sơn Đầu[28])
    • Lô Gang Mien: Dao Lô Gang and Dao Đầu Trọc of Ha Giang, Cao Bang, Lang Son, and Mong Cai
  • Kim Mun groups
    • Kim Mun: Dao Làn Tiển 蓝靛瑶 (including the Dao Tuyển, Dao Áo Dài, and Dao Đầu Bằng)
    • Kim Meun: Dao Quần Trắng 白裤瑶 and Dao Thanh Y 青衣瑶

According to Doling (2010), only Kim Mun, Kim Mien, and Lô Gang may be found outside Vietnam.

Nguyen (2004:14-15, 128) lists Đại Bản, Tiểu Bản, Khố Bạch, and Làn Tiẻn as the 4 primary subdivisions of ethnic Yao in Vietnam.[29]

  • Đại Bản
    • Dao Đỏ (Hùng Thầu Dào, Dao Coóc Ngáng, Dao Quý Lâm): located in Yen Bai, Lao Cai, Lai Chau, Tuyen Quang, Ha Giang, Cao Bang, Bac Kan, Thai Nguyen
    • Dao Quần Chẹt (Dao Sơn Đầu, Dao Tam Đảo, Dao Nga Hoàng): located in Hoa Binh, Ha Tay, Phu Tho, Vinh Yen, Son La, Yen Bai
    • Dao Thanh Phán (Dao Coóc Mùn, Dao Đội Ván, Dao Lô Gang, Dao Dụ Kiùn, Dao Thêu): located in Tuyen Quang, Bac Kan, Thai Nguyen, Lang Son, Quang Ninh, Bac Giang
  • Tiểu Bản
    • Dao Tiền (Dao Đeo Tiền): located in Hoa Binh, Phu Tho, Son La, Tuyen Quang, Cao Bang, Bac Kan
  • Khố Bạch
    • Dao Quần Trắng: located in Yen Bai, Lao Cai, Tuyen Quang, Ha Giang (known as Dao Họ in Yen Bai, Lao Cai)
  • Làn Tiẻn
    • Dao Thanh Y: located in Tuyen Quang, Bac Giang, Quang Ninh
    • Dao Áo Dài (Dao Tuyển, Dao Chàm, Dao Slán Chỉ): located in Yen Bai, Lao Cai, Tuyen Quang, Ha Giang, Bac Kan

Distribution

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Yao peoples are distributed primarily in the provinces Hunan, Guangdong, Guangxi, Guizhou, and Yunnan of China. Ethnic Yao are also found in Vietnam, Laos, and Thailand.

In China

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Distribution of ethnic Yao population in China, based on 2000 Chinese Census.
 
Yao autonomous prefectures and counties in China.

By county

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County-level distribution of the Yao, 2000 Chinese Census

(Only counties or county equivalents with more than 0.1% of county population are shown.)

County/City Yao % Yao Total
Hunan Province 1.11 704,564 63,274,173
Dongkou County 1.55 11,639 752,581
Xinning County 2.59 14,438 557,120
Chenzhou City 1.63 70,513 4,324,812
Beihu District 1.25 3,921 314,477
Rucheng County 15.45 52,955 342,861
Zixing City 1.22 4,284 351,581
Yongzhou City 9.57 513,831 5,367,106
Shuangpai County 4.90 7,916 161,510
Dao County 5.92 36,938 624,199
Jiangyong County 62.39 147,164 235,893
Ningyuan County 2.16 15,943 738,259
Lanshan County 5.29 17,608 332,937
Xintian County 1.82 6,541 358,831
Jianghua Yao Autonomous County 61.87 270,889 437,835
Huaihua City 1.55 71,952 4,639,738
Zhongfang County 1.33 3,147 236,675
Chenxi County 6.77 32,405 478,708
Xupu County 3.18 25,398 798,983
Hongjiang City 1.47 7,137 485,061
Guangdong Province 0.24 202,667 85,225,007
Shaoguan City 1.13 31,042 2,735,433
Shixing County 2.00 4,115 205,684
Ruyuan Yao Autonomous County 10.75 19,121 177,894
Longmen County 2.51 6,726 267,949
Qingyuan City 3.05 96,043 3,146,713
Lianshan Zhuang and Yao Autonomous County 14.33 14,195 99,070
Liannan Yao Autonomous County 52.29 69,968 133,814
Lianzhou City 1.31 5,366 409,360
Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region 3.36 1,471,946 43,854,538
Xincheng District 1.30 5,560 426,346
Chengbei District 1.50 5,901 392,726
Shijiao District 1.15 2,949 256,730
Guilin City 8.15 375,902 4,614,670
Xiufeng District 1.63 2,050 125,924
Diecai District 1.72 2,312 134,401
Xiangshan District 1.42 3,527 249,135
Qixing District 1.76 4,003 227,278
Lingui County 3.53 14,957 424,182
Lingchuan County 3.20 10,169 318,036
Quanzhou County 4.29 27,984 652,963
Xing'an County 2.35 8,317 353,920
Yongfu County 3.48 8,202 235,368
Guanyang County 7.77 17,971 231,288
Longsheng Various Nationalities Autonomous County 17.56 28,237 160,796
Ziyuan County 3.19 5,014 156,946
Pingle County 14.08 55,553 394,575
Lipu County 7.48 25,893 346,169
Gongcheng Yao Autonomous County 58.60 158,937 271,216
Wuzhou City 1.15 32,021 2,796,087
Mengshan County 12.02 22,587 187,918
Fangchenggang City 4.63 34,074 735,952
Gangkou District 1.37 1,462 106,403
Fangcheng District 6.59 20,840 316,111
Shangsi County 4.22 8,666 205,307
Dongxing City 2.87 3,106 108,131
Guigang City 1.86 71,063 3,827,945
Pingnan County 6.29 66,391 1,055,782
Nanning City 1.43 68,975 4,839,536
Shanglin County 6.50 24,697 379,986
Mashan County 8.48 33,873 399,439
Liuzhou City 3.57 125,839 3,522,322
Heshan City 1.87 2,452 131,249
Luzhai County 2.01 8,424 418,665
Laibin County 1.25 10,475 839,790
Rong'an County 1.88 5,313 283,029
Sanjiang Dong Autonomous County 3.88 11,798 304,149
Rongshui Miao Autonomous County 6.48 27,560 425,608
Jinxiu Yao Autonomous County 37.45 50,532 134,934
Xincheng County 2.05 7,051 343,556
Hezhou Prefecture 12.49 241,822 1,936,849
Hezhou City 4.84 41,130 850,023
Zhaoping County 4.46 15,746 353,298
Zhongshan County 8.75 40241 460021
Fuchuan Yao Autonomous County 52.91 144,705 273,507
Baise Prefecture 3.82 127,351 3,332,096
Baise City 3.29 11,211 340,483
Tiandong County 4.63 16,674 360,123
Pingguo County 4.16 16,344 392,800
Debao County 1.84 5,085 276,335
Napo County 2.74 4,661 170,158
Lingyun County 21.05 36,954 175,573
Leye County 1.97 2,857 144,816
Tianlin County 11.64 27,559 236,799
Xilin County 3.54 4,934 139,282
Hechi Prefecture 9.93 349,819 3,523,693
Hechi City 2.31 7,355 318,348
Yizhou City 5.54 30,436 549,434
Luocheng Mulao Autonomous County 1.21 3,903 322,116
Huanjiang Maonan Autonomous County 5.36 17,807 332,067
Nandan County 9.18 29,284 318,844
Tian'e County 2.44 3,461 141,649
Fengshan County 7.71 12,714 164,807
Donglan County 4.29 10,581 246,715
Bama Yao Autonomous County 17.24 37,706 218,724
Du'an Yao Autonomous County 21.66 117,609 543,019
Dahua Yao Autonomous County 21.46 78,963 367,970
Guizhou Province 0.13 44,392 35,247,695
Liping County 1.10 5,046 458,533
Rongjiang County 1.70 5,101 300,369
Congjiang County 2.04 6,158 301,513
Majiang County 3.35 6,807 203,481
Libo County 3.45 5,915 171,366
Yunnan Province 0.45 190,610 42,360,089
Honghe Hani and Yi Autonomous Prefecture 1.86 76,947 4,130,463
Yuanyang County 2.18 7,922 362,950
Jinping Miao, Yao, and Dai Autonomous County 12.00 37,937 316,171
Lüchun County 3.46 6,968 201,256
Hekou Yao Autonomous County 22.10 21,097 95,451
Wenshan Zhuang and Miao Autonomous Prefecture 2.50 81,774 3,268,553
Malipo County 7.06 18,926 267,986
Guangnan County 2.16 15,781 730,376
Funing County 10.35 39,646 382,913
Jingdong Yi Autonomous County 1.15 4,063 352,089
Jiangcheng Hani and Yi Autonomous County 3.94 3,946 100,243
Xishuangbanna Dai Autonomous Prefecture 1.88 18,679 993,397
Mengla County 6.77 15,944 235,657

Guizhou

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The Yao of Guizhou are found in the following locations (Guizhou Province Gazetteer 贵州志 2002).[30]

  • Libo County: townships of Yaoshan 瑶山, Yaolu 瑶麓, and Yao'ai 瑶埃
  • Shiqian County (2,522 people): 9 Yao villages including Leijiatun 雷家屯 and Wurongguan 乌荣关 of Beita Township 北塔乡, and Shuiwei Village of Huaqiao Township 花桥乡水尾村
  • Wangmo County: the 4 villages of Shangyoumai 上油迈, Xiaoyoumai 下油迈, Xinzhai 新寨, and Jiaxian 加现 in Youmai Township 油迈瑶族乡
  • Majiang County: 23 Yao villages in Longshan Township 龙山乡, including Heba 河坝 (with 6,474 people)
  • Liping County
    • Shunhua Township 顺化瑶族乡 (1,316 people in 1992): Gongcun 贡村, Gaoka 高卡, Yibuwan 已补晚, Yishu 已树; Gaozizhai of Gaoshu Village 高抒村高仔寨
    • Leidong Township 雷洞瑶族水族乡 (1,576 people in 1992): Jinchengzhai 金城寨 and Yibizhai 已毕寨 of Jincheng Village 金城村, Sanshanzhai of Xilao Village 戏劳村三山寨; Cenpangzhai 岑胖寨, Nongbozhai 弄播寨, Yunnanzhai 云南寨
  • Congjiang County: 2 subgroups of Red Yao 红瑶 and Pan Yao 盘瑶
    • Red Yao 红瑶
      • Cuili Township 翠里瑶族壮族乡: Gaomang 高忙, Xinzhai 新寨, Shujiawan 舒家湾, Wucai 乌菜, Jiage 架格, Baiyanchong 白岩冲, Raojia 饶家
      • Jiabang Township 加榜乡: Dazhou 达州村
    • Pan Yao 盘瑶
      • Xishan Township 西山镇: Cengang 岑杠, Gaojiao 高脚, Qiuka 秋卡
      • Douli Township 斗里乡: Dengmian 登面, Changka 长卡, Gaoliu 高柳, Beitong 碑痛
      • Xiutang Township 秀塘壮族乡: Dage 打格, Yusha 雨沙, Jiujia 九甲, Baidao 摆倒, Wubu 乌布, Xilin 细林
      • Zaibian Township 宰便镇: Zezhui 怎追
      • Xiajiang Township 下江镇: Huanglang 黄郎
      • Yongli Township 拥里乡: Dashan 大山, Laozhai 老寨, Gangbian 刚边, Huangnijing 黄泥井
      • Donglang Township 东郎乡: Baidui 摆堆
  • Rongjiang County
    • Tashi Township 塔石瑶族水族乡 (2,979 people): Zedong 怎东村, Zaiyong 宰勇村, Dangxiang 党相村, Tashi 塔石村, Dangdiao 党调村, Zeba 怎贝村, Qiaoyang 乔央村.
    • Pingjiang Township 平江乡: Jijiaoba 鸡脚坝, Balu 巴鲁
    • Pingyong Township 平永镇: Sanbuqiao 三步桥, Qiaohai 乔亥
    • Sanjiang Township 三江乡: Wuhong 乌洪
    • Liangwang Township 两汪乡: Cen'ao 岑熬
    • Pingyou Township 平尤乡: Shuangxikou 双溪口, Bakai 八开
  • Leishan County
    • Dadi Township 达地镇: Longtanggou 龙塘沟, Paisong 排松, Pingzhai 平寨, Laozhai 老寨, Beilue 背略, Pangjia 庞家, Jieli 皆力, Gaolue 高略, Tongwu 同乌, Yeliao 也辽, Xiaowu 小巫, Baimizhai 白米寨, Hebian 河边
    • Liuwu Township 柳乌乡: Liuwu 柳乌
    • Qiaosang Township 乔桑乡: Xiagaojian 下高枧
    • Gulu Township 固鲁乡: Nanping 南屏
  • Danzhai County: Pailu 排路, Yangwu 杨武, Jiapei 加配
  • Jianhe County: Zhandi Village, Taiyong Township 太拥乡展迪村
  • Sandu County: Wuxia 巫不, Pu'an 普安, Jiaxiong 甲雄, Shangjiang 上江, Niuchang 牛场
  • Luodian County: Ankang 安抗 of Luotuo 罗妥; Naji 纳吉, Nakao 纳考, Nanao 纳闹, Luoyang 罗羊, Longping 龙坪, Bianyang 边阳 of Fengting 风亭
  • Ziyun County (297 people): Tangguan Village, Maoping Township 茅坪塘贯村
  • Guanling County (189 people)

The Yao of Guizhou have various autonyms, such as:[30]

  • toŋ55 mo55 (董蒙), in Yaoshan 瑶山, Libo County. The Buyi people call them ʑou21.
  • nu55 hou33 (努侯), in Yaolu 瑶麓, Libo County. The Shui people call them miou35 lo55.
  • tuŋ33 muŋ33 (东蒙), in Yao'ai 瑶埃, Libo County. The Buyi people call them ʑou21.
  • maŋ55 (满), in Youmai 油迈, Wangmo County.
  • ʑoŋ21 min21 (容棉), in Rongjiang, Leishan, Danzhai, Jianhe, Congjiang, and Sandu Counties.

Hunan

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The Jianghua Yao Autonomous County is the only Yao-designated autonomous county in Hunan. Some subgroups of ethnic Yao in Hunan include:[31]

  • Pan Yao 盘瑶 (Mian 勉): in Jianghua, Chenxian, Lanshan, Ningyuan, Daoxian, Guiyang, Lingling, Chengbu, Chenxi, Xinning; speak a Mienic language.
  • Guoshan Yao 过山瑶: in Jianghua, Lanshan, Ningyuan; speak a Mienic language.
  • Huajiao Yao 花脚瑶 (Wunai 唔奈): in Longhui, Tongdao, Xupu, Chenxi; speak a Hmongic language.
  • Badong Yao 八峒瑶 (Batong Yao 八垌瑶): in Xinning. The Badong Yao speak an endangered Sinitic language. It is spoken in the villages of Huangyandong 黄岩峒, Malindong 麻林峒, and Dazhendong 大圳峒 in Huangjin Ethnic Yao Township 黄金瑶族乡, Xinning County.[32]
  • Pingdi Yao 平地瑶 (Bingduoyou 炳多尤): in Jianghua, Jiangyong, and speak a Chinese dialect.
  • Qixing Yao 七姓瑶: in Chenxi, and speak a Chinese dialect.

The Hunan Province Gazetteer (1997) gives the following autonyms for various peoples classified by the Chinese government as Yao.

  • ju21 mien21 尤棉: in much of Xiangxi Prefecture
  • tom21pen21 ju21 董本尤: in Xintian County, Yizhang County, Changning County
  • ku21goŋ55 ju21 谷岗尤: in Lanshan County, Jianghua County
  • thou21 ju21 土尤
  • dzau21 min21 藻敏: in Shuangpai County, Dao County, Ningyuan County
  • Donglixiao 洞里销: in Xinning County; also called Bunu 布努, Donglixiao 峒里俏, or Dong Yao 峒瑶 (Xinning County Gazetteer 2009). Their language is called Donghua 峒话.[33][34][35]
  • mm21 nai33 唔奈: in Longhui County, Xupu County
  • piŋ21 toa52 jeu21 炳多尤 (also called Dainaijiang 代奈江): in Jianghua County, Jiangyong County

Tan Xiaoping (2012)[36] also gives the following autonyms for Yao subgroups of Jiangyong County.

  • mjəŋ31
  • jəu31 mjən31 优勉
  • i31 mjəŋ31 壹勉
  • iou231 ȵie231 优尼
  • piu42tau42 iou42 炳多优

The Yao of Shaoyang Prefecture are found in the following locations (Shaoyang Prefecture Gazetteer 1997). Population statistics are from 1990.

  • Xinning County (12,756 Yao persons): Malin 麻林乡, Huangjin 黄金乡, Jingwei 靖位乡 (in Yuanshui 源水瑶族村)
  • Dongkou County (8,473 Yao persons): Naxi 𦰡溪乡 (那溪乡), Changtang 长塘乡, Dawu 大屋乡; Yuexi 月溪, Zhaping 渣坪, Tongshan 桐山
  • Longhui County (6,151 Yao persons): Huxingshan 虎形山乡, Mao'ao 茅坳乡, Xiaoshajiang 小沙江镇, Qingshan 青山, Matangshan 麻塘山
  • Chengbu County (2,276 Yao persons): Lanrong 兰蓉, Qingyuan 清源, Dayang 大阳, Tingping 汀坪, Pengdong 蓬洞, Yangmei 杨梅
  • Suining County (1,641 Yao persons): Jinta 金趿, Shuikou 水口

The Shaoyang Prefecture Gazetteer (1997) reports that the Yao of Shaoyang Prefecture, Hunan speak the following languages.

The following population statistics of ethnic Yao in Hunan are from the 1990 Chinese census, as given in the Hunan Province Gazetteer (1997).

Population of
ethnic Yao in Hunan
County Population (1990)
Jianghua 210,944
Jiangyong 62,647
Dao 26,771
Ningyuan 16,361
Lanshan 16,123
Shuangpai 7,206
Xintian 6,295
Qiyang 3,209
Chenxi 26,132
Xupu 13,989
Qianyang 3,264
Huaihua 2,066
Tongdao 1,657
Xinning 12,756
Dongkou 8,473
Longhui 6,151
Chenzhou 5,872
Yizhang 4,145
Zixing 3,999
Guiyang 2,323
Changning 1,085
Total 460,667

Written languages

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After 1982, the Guangxi Nationality Institute and the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences together created a new Yao writing system which was unified with the research results of the Yao-American scholar Yuēsè Hòu (Traditional Chinese: 約瑟·候/Simplified Chinese: 约瑟·候). The writing system was finalized in 1984 in Ruyuan County (乳源瑤族自治縣), Guangdong, which included Chinese professors Pan Chengqian (盤承乾/盘承乾), Deng Fanggui (鄧方貴/邓方贵), Liu Baoyuan (劉保元/刘保元), Su Defu (蘇德富/苏德富) and Yauz Mengh Borngh; Chinese government officials; Mien Americans Sengfo Chao (Zhao Fuming), Kao Chiem Chao (Zhao Youcai), and Chua Meng Chao; David T. Lee.

American linguist Herbert C. Purnell developed a curriculum and workshop presentations on language learning in East and Southeast Asia, as well as Yao Seng Deng from Thailand. The US delegation took the new writing system to the Iu Mien community in the United States where it was adopted with a vote of 78 to 7 by a conference of Mien American community leaders.[6] This writing system based on the Latin alphabet was designed to be pan-dialectal; it distinguishes 30 syllable initials, 121 syllable finals and eight tones.

For an example of how the unified alphabet is used to write Iu Mien, a common Yao language, see Iu Mien language.

There is a separate written standard for Bunu, since it is from the Hmong/Miao side, rather than the Mien/Yao side, of the Miao–Yao language family.

Some people think that a variety of Yao is, or was, written in Nüshu, an indigenous script in Southern part of Hunan Province in China. But this connection between Yao language and Nüshu is disputed, because Nüshu more likely recorded local Chinese dialect which might be also known by Yao people in Hunan.

Officially, illiteracy and semi-literacy among the Yao in China still stood at 40.6% in 2002.[37]

See also

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References

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  •   This article incorporates text from The Chinese times, Volume 4, a publication from 1890, now in the public domain in the United States.
  1. ^ a b Census 01/04/2019. p. 44. General Directorate for Statistics of Vietnam, 19/12/2019. accessdate 1/09/2020.
  2. ^ a b West 2009, p. 903.
  3. ^ Theobald, Ulrich. "Man 蠻". www.chinaknowledge.de. Retrieved 2019-09-14.
  4. ^ a b Minahan 2016, p. 463.
  5. ^ a b West 2009, p. 904.
  6. ^ Wiens, Herold Jacob (1967). Han Chinese expansion in South China. Shoe String Press. p. 276.
  7. ^ The Chinese times, Volume 4. TIENTSIN: THE TIENTSIN PRINTING CO. 1890. p. 24.
  8. ^ "Independent Lens . DEATH OF A SHAMAN . The Mien". PBS. Archived from the original on 14 February 2018. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
  9. ^ a b "Yao" in Ethnohistorical Dictionary of China (ed. James Stuart Olson: Greenwood Press, 1998), p. 374.
  10. ^ a b West 2009, p. 905.
  11. ^ Sean Marsh, Imperial China and Its Southern Neighbours ( eds. Victor H. Mair & Liam Kelley: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2015), p. 96.
  12. ^ Liming Wei, Chinese Festivals (Cambridge University Press, 2011), pp. 106-07.
  13. ^ a b Litzinger, Ralph A. (2000). Other Chinas: The Yao and the Politics of National Belonging. Duke University Press. pp. 289–90. ISBN 0-8223-2549-7.
  14. ^ Deborah A. Sommer, "Taoism and the Arts" in The Oxford Handbook of Religion and the Arts (ed. Frank Burch Brown: Oxford University Press, 2014), p. 384.
  15. ^ [1] Archived November 15, 2001, at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ [2] Archived February 10, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  17. ^ [3] Archived November 15, 2001, at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ [4] Archived November 27, 2001, at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ [5] Archived November 27, 2001, at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ "Kim Mun". ethnologue.com. Archived from the original on 3 February 2013. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
  21. ^ 毛宗武 / Mao Zongwu. 2004. 瑤族勉语方言研究 / Yao zu Mian yu fang yan yan jiu [A Study of Mien Dialects]. Beijing: Publishing House of Minority Nationalities.
  22. ^ "江华瑶族自治县的汉语方言和民族语言分布,欢迎补充!!!【江华县吧】_百度贴吧". Archived from the original on 2017-03-14. Retrieved 2017-03-13.
  23. ^ Chen, Qiguang [陈其光] (2013). Miao and Yao language [苗瑶语文]. Beijing: China Minzu University Press.
  24. ^ "景东彝族自治县太忠乡岔箐村委会". Archived from the original on 2013-12-30. Retrieved 2013-12-30.
  25. ^ "景东彝族自治县太忠乡大松树村委会". Archived from the original on 2013-12-30. Retrieved 2013-12-30.
  26. ^ Doling, Tim. 2010. Mountains and Ethnic Minorities: North West Việt Nam. Thế Giới Publishers.
  27. ^ Chảo Văn Lâm. 2013. Thơ ca hôn lễ: người Dao Đỏ ở Lào Cai. Hà Nội: Nhà xuất bản văn hóa thông tin.
  28. ^ a b Nguyễn Mạnh Hùng. 2013. Lễ cưới người Dao Nga Hoàng. Hà Nội: Nhà xuất bản văn hóa thông tin.
  29. ^ PGS. TS. Nguyễn Khắc Tụng, TS. Nguyễn Anh Cường. 2004. Trang phục cổ truyền của người Dao ở Việt Nam. Hà Nội: Nhà xuất bản khoa học xã hội [viện khoa học xã hội Việt Nam].
  30. ^ a b Guizhou Province Gazetteer: Ethnic Gazetteer [贵州省志. 民族志] (2002). Guiyang: Guizhou Ethnic Publishing House [貴州民族出版社].
  31. ^ 湖南瑶族社会历史调查 (2009)
  32. ^ Lei Biying; Zheng Linguang [雷碧英; 郑林光; 新宁县民族宗教事务局; 新宁县黄金瑶族乡中心学校]. 2012. Badong Yao language [八峒瑶语]. Xinning: Xinning County Ethnic and Religious Affairs Bureau [新宁县民族宗教事务局].
  33. ^ 道客巴巴 (7 June 2012). "新宁县瑶族乡濒危方言峒话调查". www.doc88.com. Archived from the original on 3 May 2018. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
  34. ^ 吴萍 (3 May 2018). "湖南新宁瑶族"峒话"音系". 现代语文:下旬.语言研究 (10). Archived from the original on 31 July 2013. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
  35. ^ 许阳; 胡萍 (3 May 2018). "新宁县瑶族乡峒话的语音系统". 文教资料 (32). Archived from the original on 30 July 2013. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
  36. ^ Tan Xiaoping [谭晓平]. 2012. Language contact and evolution: the Mien language of the Yao people of Jiangyong County, southern Hunan 语言接触与语言演变: 湘南瑶族江永勉语个案研究. Wuhan: Central China Normal University Press [华中师范大学出版社]. ISBN 978-7-5622-5409-6
  37. ^ "您访问的页面丢失了 - 中国红河网 - 官方网站". www.hh.cn. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 3 May 2018.

Sources

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  • AsiaHarvest.org: Ethnic group profiles of China
  • Forbes, Andrew, and Henley, David, 'Chiang Mai's Hill Peoples' in: Ancient Chiang Mai Volume 3. Chiang Mai, Cognoscenti Books, 2012. ASIN: B006IN1RNW
  • Máo Zōngwǔ 毛宗武: Yáozú Miǎnyǔ fāngyán yánjiū 瑶族勉语方言研究 (Studies in Mien dialects of the Miao nationality; Běijīng 北京,Publishing House of Minority Nationalities 2004), ISBN 7-105-06669-5.
  • Méng Cháojí 蒙朝吉: Hàn-Yáo cídiǎn - Bùnǔyǔ 汉瑶词典——布努语 (Chinese-Yao Dictionary - Bunu; Chéngdū 成都, Sìchuān mínzú chūbǎnshè 四川民族出版社 1996), ISBN 7-5409-1745-8.
  • Minahan, Encyclopedia of Stateless Nations (2016), Greenwood {{citation}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  • Barker, Judith C., and Saechao, Kaochoy. "A Household Survey of Older Iu-Mien Refugees in Rural California." Journal of Cross-Cultural Gerontology 12.2 (1997): 121–143.
  • Barker, Judith C. & Saechao, Kaochoy. (2000). A demographic survey of Iu-Mien in West Coast States of the U.S., 1993. Journal of Immigrant Health, 2:1, 31–42.
  • Phan Ngọc Khuê. 2003. Lễ cấp sắc của người Dao Lô Gang ở Lạng Sơn. Hà Nội: Nhà xuất bản văn hóa thông tin.
  • West, Barbara A. (2009), Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Asia and Oceania

Films

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