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The Gin, [2] or Jing people, [3] (Chinese: 京 族, Sino-Vietnamese: Kinh tộc; Vietnamese: người Kinh tại Trung Quốc) are a community of descendants of ethnic Vietnamese people living in China. They mainly live in an area called the Jing Islands (京族三岛), off the coast of Dongxing, Fangchenggang, in the Chinese autonomous region ...
The Vietnamese government recognizes 54 ethnic groups, of which the Viet (Kinh) is the largest; according to official Vietnamese figures (2019 census), ethnic Vietnamese account for 85.3% of the nation's population and the non-Vietnamese ethnic groups account for the remaining portion. The ethnic Vietnamese inhabit a little less than half of ...
The Vietnamese terms for ethnic groups are dân tộc ... Chinese languages: Hoa: 0.78%: ... Statistics; Cookie statement; Mobile view; Search.
The inter-ethnic marriage between Chinese and Vietnamese brought Chinese customs into Vietnam society. For example, crocodiles were eaten by Vietnamese while they were taboo and off-limits for Chinese. Vietnamese women who married Chinese men adopted the Chinese taboo. [134] Vietnamese women were wedded to the Chinese who helped sell Viet Minh ...
The Mảng (Chinese: 莽人; pinyin: Mángrén; Vietnamese: Mảng) are an ethnic group living primarily in Lai Châu, northwestern Vietnam, where they are one of Vietnams' 54 officially recognized ethnic groups.
Chinese Nùng, rural-dwelling Hakka and Cantonese Chinese speakers who immigrated from China, counted separately from the Hoa and the Ngái Vietnamese people in China: Gin people , one of the 55 officially recognised ethnic minorities of the People's Republic of China
The Vietnamese people (Vietnamese: người Việt , lit. ' Việt people ' or ' Việt humans ') or the Kinh people (Vietnamese: người Kinh , lit. 'Metropolitan people'), also recognized as the Viet people [67] or the Viets, are a Southeast Asian ethnic group native to modern-day northern Vietnam and southern China who speak Vietnamese, the most widely spoken Austroasiatic language.
The ethnic Zhuang was a product of the "ethnic identification project" pursued in 1950s China. [6] Many scholars of the Tai peoples consider the Zhuang and Nùng to be essentially the same people, a single ethnic group. [7] During the early 11th century, ethnic identities and boundaries were more fluid than in the modern Sino-Vietnamese borderland.