The Yao people () or Dao () is a classification for various ethnic minorities in China and Vietnam. Their majority branch is also known as Mien. They originated in the areas around Changsha, which today is the capital of Hunan province. They speak a branch of the Hmong-Mien family of languages and share a strong genetic connection to the Hmong peoples. They are believed to have diverged from the Hmong around 5,800 years ago.
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 3,309,341 in the 2020 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.
History
China
Origin myth
The origins of the Yao or Iu-mienh 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 (618âÂÂ907). Between 200 BCE and 900 CE, the Yao migrated into mountainous areas to the south of the Yangtze River.
Historical records
As the Yao lacked their own written language until recently, much of what is known about their ancient history comes from ancient Han Chinese sources. In the Book of the Later Han Dynasty (25âÂÂ225 AD), they are described as "liking five-colored clothes", "going barefoot" and being "colorfully dressed".
Conquest
The Yao or Iu-mienh were conquered by the Han Chinese between the 10th and 13th centuries. 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.
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. 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.
Around 1890, the Guangdong government started taking action against Yao in Northwestern Guangdong.
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.
Laotian Civil War
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. 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
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
Yao society is traditionally patrilineal, with sons inheriting from their fathers. The Yao follow patrilocal residence. Polygyny was allowed until it was banned in China in the 1950s. Adoption was common among the wealthy.
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.
During the Southern Song (1127âÂÂ1279), an imperial Chinese observer, Zhou Qufei, described the Yao as wearing distinctive fine blue clothing produced using indigo.
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."
Religion
The description of Yao religion is similar to the definition of Chinese folk religion as described by Arthur Wolf and Steve Sangren. 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.
Taoism has historically been important to the Yao. Jinag Yingliang, in a 1948 study, argued that Yao religion was characterized by (1) a process of Han Chinese-influenced Daoisation (); (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."
Groups and languages
There are several distinct groups within the Yao nationality, and they speak several different languages, The Iu Mien comprise 70% of the Yao population.
- HmongâÂÂMien languages
- The Mien speak Mienic languages (), including:
- MianâÂÂJin languages
- Iu Mien, 2,172,000 speakers (1,699,750 in China, 350,000 in Vietnam, 40,000 in Thailand, 20,250 in Laos, 60,000 in the United States, 2,000 in France)
- Kim Mun (also known as Lanten), more than 300,000 Yao people
- Biao Mon, 20,000 speakers
- Dzao Min, 60,000 speakers
- Biao Min, 43,000 speakers
- Hmongic languages
- Bunu languages
- Pa-Hng
- Younuo
- Kiong Nai
- Lakkja language (a TaiâÂÂKadai language)
- Chinese
- about 500,000 Yao speak Chinese dialects
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.
The Bunu people call themselves Nuox , Buod nuox , Dungb nuox , or their official name Yaof zuf . Only 258,000 of the 439,000 people categorised as Bunu in the 1982 census speak Bunu; 100,000 speak the TaiâÂÂKadai Zhuang languages, and 181,000 speak Chinese and the TaiâÂÂKadai Bouyei language.
Mao (2004)
Mao Zongwu (2004:7âÂÂ8) 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 ' å or ä¼ÂÃ¥ÂÂ: Pangu Yao çÂÂå¤ç¶, Pan Yao çÂÂç¶, Panhu Yao çÂÂç ç¶, Trans-Mountain / Guoshan Yao è¿Âå±±ç¶, Large-Board / Daban Yao 大æÂ¿ç¶, Small-Board / Xiaoban Yao å°ÂæÂ¿ç¶, Board / Ban Yao æÂ¿ç¶, Top-Board / Dingban Yao é¡¶æÂ¿ç¶, Sharp-Headed / Jiantou Yao å°Â头ç¶, Level-Headed / Pingtou Yao 平头ç¶, Red-Head / Hongtou Yao 红头ç¶, Arrow-Pole / Jian'gan Yao ç®ÂæÂÂç¶, Cattle-Horn Yao / Niujiao çÂÂè§Âç¶, Tu Yao Ã¥ÂÂç¶ (in Hezhou, Guangxi), Native / Bendi Yao æÂŒÂ°ç¶, Flowery / Hua Yao è±ç¶ (in Yangshuo County, Guangxi), Ao Yao å³ç¶, Zheng Yao æÂ£ç¶, Liang Yao ç²®ç¶
- Autonym éÂÂé¨ or ' çÂÂ迪é¨: Blue-Indigo / Landian Yao èÂÂéÂÂç¶, Shanzi Yao å±±åÂÂç¶, Flowery-Headed / Huatou Yao è±头ç¶, Sand / Sha Yao æ²Âç¶, Level-Headed / Pingtou Yao 平头ç¶, Bazi Yao Ã¥ÂÂÃ¥ÂÂç¶
- Autonym ' æ ÂæÂ¼ or ' å²é¨: Min Yao æ°Âç¶, "Four Great" Min Yao Ã¥ÂÂ大æ°Âç¶
- Autonym æ ÂæÂ or ' 交åÂ
ŒÂÂ: East Mountain / Dongshan Yao ä¸Âå±±ç¶ (in Quanzhou County, Guangxi), Dog-Headed / Goutou Yao çÂÂ头ç¶
- Autonym èÂȌÂÂ: Bapai Yao Ã¥Â
«æÂÂç¶
- Autonym ' ä¼Â念, ' ç³å¤Âä¼Â, or çÂÂä»Â: Red Yao 红ç¶ (in Longsheng Various Nationalities Autonomous County, Guangxi), Plains / Pingdi Yao å¹³å°ç¶
- Autonym å¸Âåª: Beilou Yao èÂÂç¯Âç¶, Beilong Yao èÂÂéÂÂç¶, West Mountain / Xishan Yao 西山ç¶, East Mountain Yao / Dongshan ä¸Âå±±ç¶ (in Bama Yao Autonomous County, Guangxi), Tudi Yao Ã¥ÂÂå°ç¶, Tu Yao Ã¥ÂÂç¶ (in Pingguo County and Mashan County, Guangxi), Mountain / Shan Yao å±±ç¶, Man Yao è®ç¶, East Valley / Dongnong Yao ä¸Âå¼Âç¶, West Valley / Xinong Yao 西å¼Âç¶, Fan Yao Ã¥ÂÂç¶, Anding Yao å®Âå®Âç¶, White Yao ç½ç¶, Black Yao é»Âç¶, Black-Trouser / Heiku Yao é»Â裤ç¶, Long-Shirt / Changshan Yao é¿衫ç¶
- Autonym çÂÂæ ¼å³ or Ã¥ÂÂ
诺: Siting Yao Ã¥ÂÂäºÂç¶, Situan Yao Ã¥ÂÂå¢ç¶
- Autonym ç¯å¥Â: Hualan Yao è±èÂÂç¶
- Autonym å·´å¼: Dog Yao çÂÂç¶, Eight-Surname / Baxing Yao Ã¥Â
«å§Âç¶, Red Yao 红ç¶ (in Liping and Congjiang Counties of Guizhou; Rongshui Miao Autonomous County and Longsheng Various Nationalities Autonomous County of Guangxi), Wood Yao æÂ¨ç¶
- Autonym Ã¥ÂÂå¥Â: Flowery Yao è±ç¶ (in Longhui, Dongkou, Chenxi, and Xupu County and the Tongdao Dong Autonomous County of Hunan)
- Autonym ä¼Â诺: Red Yao 红ç¶
- Autonym æÂÂçÂÂ: Tea Mountain / Chashan Yao è¶山ç¶
Plains Yao
Groups considered to be "Plains Yao" (Pingdi Yao å¹³å°ç¶) include:
- Autonym Bingduoyou ç³å¤Âå°¤ (Pingdi Yao å¹³å°ç¶, Dainaijiang 代å¥Âæ±Â): in Jianghua Yao Autonomous County æ±Âå of Hunan; Gongcheng æÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ, Fuchuan å¯Âå·Â, Zhongshan éÂÂå±±, and Lingui 临桠counties of Guangxi
- Autonym Yeheni ç·贺尼 (Pingdi Yao å¹³å°ç¶): in Jianghua Yao Autonomous County æ±ÂÃ¥ÂÂ, Hunan (Jianghua County Gazetteer). The Yeheni speak a divergent Chinese dialect. It is spoken in Taoxu Town æ¶Âå©é and Helukou Town 河路å£é in Jianghua County, Hunan.
- Autonym Younian ä¼Â念 (Pinghua-speaking Red Yao å¹³è¯Â红ç¶; '): in Longsheng é¾Âè and Guanyang çÂÂé³ counties of Guangxi. According to Chen Qiguang (2013:30), the ' number about 10,000 speakers in Sishui æ³Âæ°´, Madi 马堤, Mengshan Ã¥ÂÂå±±, Jiangliu æ±ÂæÂ³, and other locations of Longsheng County.
- Autonym Shanjie çÂÂä» (Shanzi Yao å±±ä»Âç¶): in Fangcheng é²åÂÂ, Guangxi
- Autonym Youjia ä¼Âå (Yaojia ç¶家): in Guanyang County çÂÂé³, Guangxi
- Jingdong Yao æÂ¯ä¸Âå¿ç¶æÂ (autonym: Lewu people ä¹ÂèÂÂ人): Jingdong County æÂ¯ä¸Âå½ÂæÂÂèª治å¿, Yunnan. According to the Jingdong County Gazetteer (1994:519), ethnic Yao numbered 3,889 individuals in 1990, and lived mainly in Chaqing å²Âç® and Dasongshu 大æÂ¾æ  of Taizhong 太忠乡.
Vietnam
Tim Doling (2010:82âÂÂ83) lists the following Yao (spelled Dao in the Vietnamese alphabet) subgroups in northern Vietnam.
- 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 TàPán 大æÂ¿ç¶ (Dao ÃÂại Bản, Dao Coóc Ngáng, Dao Sừng) of Ha Giang, Cao Bang, and Yen Bai; Red Dao of northern and eastern Lao Cai; Hongtou Red Dao 红头ç¶ 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 Sán ÃÂầu)
- Lô Gang Mien: Dao Lô Gang and Dao ÃÂầu Trá»Âc of Ha Giang, Cao Bang, Lang Son, and Mong Cai
- Kim Mun groups
- Kim Mun: Dao Làn Tiá»Ân èÂÂéÂÂç¶ (including the Dao Tuyá»Ân, Dao ÃÂo Dài, and Dao ÃÂầu Bằng)
- Kim Meun: Dao Quần Trắng ç½裤ç¶ and Dao Thanh Y éÂÂè¡£ç¶
According to Doling (2010), only Kim Mun, Kim Mien, and Lô Gang may be found outside Vietnam.
Nguyen (2004:14âÂÂ15, 128) lists ÃÂại Bản, Tiá»Âu Bản, Khá» Bạch, and Làn Tiẻn as the 4 primary subdivisions of ethnic Yao in Vietnam.
- ÃÂại Bản
- Dao ÃÂá» (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 Sán ÃÂầu, Dao Tam ÃÂảo, Dao Nga Hoàng): located in Hoa Binh, Ha Tay, Phu Tho, Vinh Yen, Son La, Yen Bai
- Dao Thanh Phán (Dao Coóc Mùn, Dao ÃÂá»Âi Ván, Dao Lô Gang, Dao Dụ Kiùn, Dao Thêu): located in Tuyen Quang, Bac Kan, Thai Nguyen, Lang Son, Quang Ninh, Bac Giang
- Tiá»Âu Bản
- Dao Tiá»Ân (Dao ÃÂeo Tiá»Ân): located in Hoa Binh, Phu Tho, Son La, Tuyen Quang, Cao Bang, Bac Kan
- KhỠBạch
- Dao Quần Trắng: located in Yen Bai, Lao Cai, Tuyen Quang, Ha Giang (known as Dao HỠin Yen Bai, Lao Cai)
- Làn Tiẻn
- Dao Thanh Y: located in Tuyen Quang, Bac Giang, Quang Ninh
- Dao ÃÂo Dài (Dao Tuyá»Ân, Dao Chàm, Dao Slán Chá»Â): located in Yen Bai, Lao Cai, Tuyen Quang, Ha Giang, Bac Kan
Distribution
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
The Census of 2020 recorded 3,309,341 Yao in China.
Provincial Distribution of the Yao, from the 2020 census:
By county
County-level distribution of the Yao, 2000 Chinese Census
(Only counties or county equivalents with more than 0.1% of county population are shown.)
Guizhou
The Yao of Guizhou are found in the following locations (Guizhou Province Gazetteer è´µå·Âå¿ 2002).
- Libo County: townships of Yaoshan ç¶山, Yaolu ç¶éºÂ, and Yao'ai ç¶åÂÂ
- Shiqian County (2,522 people): 9 Yao villages including Leijiatun é·家屯 and Wurongguan ä¹Âè£åÂ
³ of Beita Township Ã¥ÂÂå¡Â乡, and Shuiwei Village of Huaqiao Township è±桥乡水尾æÂÂ
- Wangmo County: the 4 villages of Shangyoumai ä¸Âæ²¹è¿Â, Xiaoyoumai ä¸Âæ²¹è¿Â, Xinzhai æÂ°å¯¨, and Jiaxian å ç° in Youmai Township æ²¹è¿Âç¶æÂÂ乡
- Majiang County: 23 Yao villages in Longshan Township é¾Â山乡, including Heba æ²³å (with 6,474 people)
- Liping County
- Shunhua Township 顺åÂÂç¶æÂÂ乡 (1,316 people in 1992): Gongcun è´¡æÂÂ, Gaoka é«Âå¡, Yibuwan 已补æÂÂ, Yishu å·²æ Â; Gaozizhai of Gaoshu Village é«ÂæÂÂæÂÂé«Âä»Â寨
- Leidong Township é·æ´Âç¶æÂÂæ°´æÂÂ乡 (1,576 people in 1992): Jinchengzhai éÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ寨 and Yibizhai å·²æ¯Â寨 of Jincheng Village éÂÂÃ¥ÂÂæÂÂ, Sanshanzhai of Xilao Village æÂÂ峿ÂÂä¸Â山寨; Cenpangzhai å²ÂèÂÂ寨, Nongbozhai å¼ÂæÂÂ寨, Yunnanzhai äºÂÃ¥ÂÂ寨
- Congjiang County: 2 subgroups of Red Yao 红ç¶ and Pan Yao çÂÂç¶
- Red Yao 红ç¶
- Cuili Township ç¿ éÂÂç¶æÂÂ壮æÂÂ乡: Gaomang é«Âå¿Â, Xinzhai æÂ°å¯¨, Shujiawan èÂÂå®¶æ¹¾, Wucai ä¹ÂèÂÂ, Jiage æÂ¶æ ¼, Baiyanchong ç½岩å², Raojia 饶家
- Jiabang Township å æ¦Â乡: Dazhou è¾¾å·ÂæÂÂ
- Pan Yao çÂÂç¶
- Xishan Township 西山éÂÂ: Cengang å²ÂæÂ , Gaojiao é«ÂèÂÂ, Qiuka ç§Âå¡
- Douli Township æÂÂéÂÂ乡: Dengmian çÂȎ¢, Changka é¿å¡, Gaoliu é«ÂæÂ³, Beitong ç¢ÂçÂÂ
- Xiutang Township ç§Âå¡Â壮æÂÂ乡: Dage æÂÂæ ¼, Yusha 鍿²Â, Jiujia ä¹Âç², Baidao æÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ, Wubu ä¹Âå¸Â, Xilin ç»ÂæÂÂ
- Zaibian Township 宰便éÂÂ: Zezhui æÂÂ追
- Xiajiang Township ä¸Âæ±ÂéÂÂ: Huanglang é»ÂéÂÂ
- Yongli Township æÂ¥éÂÂ乡: Dashan 大山, Laozhai èÂÂ寨, Gangbian Ã¥ÂÂè¾¹, Huangnijing é»Âæ³¥äºÂ
- Donglang Township ä¸ÂéÂÂ乡: Baidui æÂÂå Â
- Rongjiang County
- Tashi Township å¡Âç³ç¶æÂÂæ°´æÂÂ乡 (2,979 people): Zedong æÂÂä¸ÂæÂÂ, Zaiyong å®°åÂÂæÂÂ, Dangxiang Ã¥Â
Âç¸æÂÂ, Tashi å¡Âç³æÂÂ, Dangdiao Ã¥Â
Âè°ÂæÂÂ, Zeba æÂÂè´ÂæÂÂ, Qiaoyang ä¹Â央æÂÂ.
- Pingjiang Township å¹³æ±Â乡: Jijiaoba 鸡èÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ, Balu å·´é²Â
- Pingyong Township 平永éÂÂ: Sanbuqiao ä¸ÂæÂ¥æ¡¥, Qiaohai ä¹Â亥
- Sanjiang Township ä¸Âæ±Â乡: Wuhong ä¹Âæ´ª
- Liangwang Township 两汪乡: Cen'ao å²Âç¬
- Pingyou Township 平尤乡: Shuangxikou Ã¥ÂÂ溪å£, Bakai Ã¥Â
«å¼Â
- Leishan County
- Dadi Township è¾¾å°éÂÂ: Longtanggou é¾Âå¡Âæ²Â, Paisong æÂÂæÂ¾, Pingzhai 平寨, Laozhai èÂÂ寨, Beilue èÂÂçÂÂ¥, Pangjia åºÂå®¶, Jieli çÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ, Gaolue é«ÂçÂÂ¥, Tongwu Ã¥ÂÂä¹Â, Yeliao ä¹Âè¾½, Xiaowu å°Âå·«, Baimizhai ç½米寨, Hebian 河边
- Liuwu Township æÂ³ä¹Â乡: Liuwu æÂ³ä¹Â
- Qiaosang Township ä¹Âæ¡Â乡: Xiagaojian ä¸Âé«ÂæÂ§
- Gulu Township åºé²Â乡: Nanping Ã¥ÂÂå±Â
- Danzhai County: Pailu æÂÂè·¯, Yangwu æÂ¨æÂ¦, Jiapei å éÂ
Â
- Jianhe County: Zhandi Village, Taiyong Township 太æÂ¥ä¹¡å±Â迪æÂÂ
- Sandu County: Wuxia å·«ä¸Â, Pu'an æÂ®å®Â, Jiaxiong ç²éÂÂ, Shangjiang ä¸Âæ±Â, Niuchang çÂÂåº
- Luodian County: Ankang å®ÂæÂ of Luotuo ç½Â妥; Naji 纳åÂÂ, Nakao 纳èÂÂ, Nanao 纳é¹, Luoyang ç½Âç¾Â, Longping é¾Âåª, Bianyang è¾¹é³ of Fengting é£ÂäºÂ
- Ziyun County (297 people): Tangguan Village, Maoping Township èÂÂ
åªå¡Âè´¯æÂÂ
- Guanling County (189 people)
The Yao of Guizhou have various autonyms, such as:
- ' (è£èÂÂ), in Yaoshan ç¶山, Libo County. The Buyi people call them '.
- ' (åª侯), in Yaolu ç¶éºÂ, Libo County. The Shui people call them '.
- ' (ä¸ÂèÂÂ), in Yao'ai ç¶åÂÂ, Libo County. The Buyi people call them '.
- ' (满), in Youmai æ²¹è¿Â, Wangmo County.
- ' (容æ£Â), in Rongjiang, Leishan, Danzhai, Jianhe, Congjiang, and Sandu Counties.
Hunan
The Jianghua Yao Autonomous County is the only Yao-designated autonomous county in Hunan. Some subgroups of ethnic Yao in Hunan include:
- Pan Yao çÂÂç¶ (Mian Ã¥ÂÂ): in Jianghua, Chenxian, Lanshan, Ningyuan, Daoxian, Guiyang, Lingling, Chengbu, Chenxi, Xinning; speak a Mienic language.
- Guoshan Yao è¿Âå±±ç¶: in Jianghua, Lanshan, Ningyuan; speak a Mienic language.
- Huajiao Yao è±èÂÂç¶ (Wunai Ã¥ÂÂå¥Â): in Longhui, Tongdao, Xupu, Chenxi; speak a Hmongic language.
- Badong Yao Ã¥Â
«å³Âç¶ (Batong Yao Ã¥Â
«åÂÂç¶): in Xinning. The Badong Yao speak an endangered Sinitic language. It is spoken in the villages of Huangyandong é»Â岩å³Â, Malindong 麻æÂÂå³Â, and Dazhendong 大å³峠in Huangjin Ethnic Yao Township é»ÂéÂÂç¶æÂÂ乡, Xinning County.
- Pingdi Yao å¹³å°ç¶ (Bingduoyou ç³å¤Âå°¤): in Jianghua, Jiangyong, and speak a Chinese dialect.
- Qixing Yao ä¸Âå§Âç¶: 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.
- ' å°¤æ£Â: in much of Xiangxi Prefecture
- ' è£æÂ¬å°¤: in Xintian County, Yizhang County, Changning County
- ' è°·å²Âå°¤: in Lanshan County, Jianghua County
- ' Ã¥ÂÂå°¤
- ' èÂȾÂÂ: in Shuangpai County, Dao County, Ningyuan County
- Donglixiao æ´ÂéÂÂéÂÂ: in Xinning County; also called Bunu å¸Âåª, Donglixiao å³ÂéÂÂä¿Â, or Dong Yao å³Âç¶ (Xinning County Gazetteer 2009). Their language is called Donghua å³Âè¯Â.
- ' Ã¥ÂÂå¥Â: in Longhui County, Xupu County
- ' ç³å¤Âå°¤ (also called Dainaijiang 代å¥Âæ±Â): in Jianghua County, Jiangyong County
Tan Xiaoping (2012) also gives the following autonyms for Yao subgroups of Jiangyong County.
- ' Ã¥ÂÂ
- ' ä¼ÂÃ¥ÂÂ
- ' 壹åÂÂ
- ' ä¼Âå°¼
- ' ç³å¤Âä¼Â
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æÂÂ乡, Huangjin é»ÂéÂÂ乡, Jingwei éÂÂä½Â乡 (in Yuanshui æºÂæ°´ç¶æÂÂæÂÂ)
- Dongkou County (8,473 Yao persons): Naxi 𦰡溪乡 (é£溪乡), Changtang é¿å¡Â乡, Dawu 大å±Â乡; Yuexi æÂÂ溪, Zhaping 渣åª, Tongshan æ¡Âå±±
- Longhui County (6,151 Yao persons): Huxingshan èÂÂ形山乡, Mao'ao èÂÂ
å³乡, Xiaoshajiang å°Âæ²Âæ±ÂéÂÂ, Qingshan éÂÂå±±, Matangshan 麻å¡Âå±±
- Chengbu County (2,276 Yao persons): Lanrong Ã¥Â
°èÂÂ, Qingyuan æ¸Â
æºÂ, Dayang 大é³, Tingping æ±Âåª, Pengdong è¬æ´Â, Yangmei æÂ¨æ¢Â
- Suining County (1,641 Yao persons): Jinta éÂÂè¶¿, Shuikou æ°´å£
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).
Written languages
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 YuÃÂsè Hòu (Traditional Chinese: ç´ÂçÂÂ÷åÂÂ/Simplified Chinese: 约çÂÂ÷åÂÂ). The writing system was finalized in 1984 in Ruyuan County (ä¹³æºÂç¤æÂÂèª治縣), Guangdong, which included Chinese professors Pan Chengqian (ç¤æÂ¿ä¹¾/çÂÂæÂ¿ä¹¾), Deng Fanggui (é§æÂ¹è²´/éÂÂæÂ¹è´µ), Liu Baoyuan (Ã¥ÂÂä¿ÂÃ¥Â
Â/Ã¥ÂÂä¿ÂÃ¥Â
Â), Su Defu (èÂÂå¾·å¯Â/èÂÂå¾·å¯Â) 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.http://iumien.com/modules.php?name=Content&pa=showpage&pid=1&page=2 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 MiaoâÂÂYao 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.
Notable people
See also
References
Sources
- 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 ZÃ
Ângwàæ¯Âå®ÂæÂ¦: Yáozú MiÃÂnyàfÃÂngyán yánjiÃ
« ç¶æÂÂÃ¥ÂÂè¯ÂæÂ¹è¨Âç Âç©¶ (Studies in Mien dialects of the Miao nationality; BÃÂijëng Ã¥ÂÂ京,Publishing House of Minority Nationalities 2004), .
- Méng CháojàèÂÂæÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ: Hàn-Yáo cÃÂdiÃÂn â BùnÃÂyàæ±Âç¶è¯ÂÃ¥Â
¸âÂÂâÂÂå¸Âåª诠(Chinese-Yao Dictionary â Bunu; ChéngdÃ
« æÂÂé½, SìchuÃÂn mÃÂnzú chÃ
«bÃÂnshè Ã¥ÂÂå·Âæ°ÂæÂÂåºçÂÂ社 1996), .
- 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): 121âÂÂ143.
- 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, 31âÂÂ42.
- Phan Ngá»Âc Khuê. 2003. Lá»Â
cấp sắc cá»§a ngðá»Âi Dao Lô Gang á» Lạng Sán. HàNá»Âi: Nhàxuất bản vÃÂn hóa thông tin.
Films
External links