Product Code Database
Example Keywords: wheels -nokia $19-105
barcode-scavenger
   » » Wiki: Yi People
Tag Wiki 'Yi People'.
Tag

The Yi or Nuosu people (: , ; see also § Names and subgroups) are an in . Numbering nine million people, they are the seventh largest of the 55 ethnic minority groups recognized by the Chinese government. They live primarily in rural areas of , , , and , usually in mountainous regions. The Liangshan Yi Autonomous Prefecture is home to the largest population of Yi people within China, with two million Yi people in the region. In neighbouring , , there are 4,827 Lô Lô people (a subgroup of the Yi) living in the Hà Giang, Cao Bằng, and Lào Cai provinces, in the country's north.

The Yi speak various Loloish languages, closely related to . The prestige variety is , which is written in the .


Location
Of the more than 9 million Yi people, over 4.5 million live in , 2.5 million live in southern Sichuan Province and 1 million live in the northwest corner of Guizhou Province. Nearly all the Yi live in mountainous areas, often carving out their existence on the sides of steep mountain slopes far from the cities of China.

The altitudinal differences of the Yi areas directly affect the climate and precipitation of these areas. These striking differences are the basis of the old saying that "The weather is different a few miles away" in the Yi area. Yi populations in different areas are very different from one another, making their living in completely different ways.


Names and subgroups
Although different groups of Yi refer to themselves in different ways (including Nisu, Sani, Axi, Lolo, and Acheh) and sometimes speak mutually unintelligible languages, they have been grouped into a single ethnicity by the and the various local appellations can be classified into three groups:
  • Ni (ꆀ). The appellations of Nuosu,Some scholars, however, argue that the Nuosu-series appellations are from the word "black" instead (ꆈ, Nuo). , Nesu, Nisu and other similar names are considered derivatives of the original autonym Nip (ꆀ) appended with the suffix -su, indicating 'people'. The name Sani is also a variety of this group. Further, it is widely believed that the Chinese name (both 夷 and 彝) were derived from Ni.
  • Lolo. The appellations of Lolo, Lolopu, etc. are related to the Yi people's worship of the tiger, as lo in their dialects means 'tiger'. #5560 PTB *k-la TIGER in Sino-Tibetan Etymological Dictionary and Thesaurus Lo is also the basis for the Chinese Luóluó (猓猓, 倮倮 or 罗罗). The original character (猓), with the "dog radical" (犭) and a guǒ (果) phonetic, was a graphic pejorative,Ramsey, Robert S. (1987). The Languages of China, p. 160. Princeton University Press. comparable to the Chinese name guǒran (猓然, 'a long-tailed ape'). Languages reforms in the PRC replaced the character in Luóluó twice—first by Luó (倮), with the "human radical" (亻) and the same phonetic, but that was a graphic variant for luǒ (裸, 'naked'), and later by Luó (罗, 'net for catching birds'). Paul K. Benedict noted, "a leading Chinese linguist, has remarked that the name 'Lolo' is offensive only when written with the 'dog' radical."Benedict, Paul K. (1987). " Autonyms: ought or ought not." Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area 10: 188. Italics in original.
  • Other. This group includes various other appellations of different groups of Yi. Some of them may be of other ethnic groups but are recognised as Yi by the Chinese. The "Pu" may be relevant to an ancient ethnic group Pu (濮). In the legends of the Northern Yi, the Yi people conquered Pu and its territory in the northeastern part of the modern Liangshan.

Groups listed below are sorted by their broad linguistic classification and the general geographic area where they live. Within each section, larger groups are listed first.

Southern1,082,120Nisu, Southern Nasu, Muji, A Che, Southern Gaisu, Pula,
Boka, Lesu, Chesu, Laowu, Alu, Azong, Xiuba
Southeastern729,760Poluo, Sani, Axi, Azhe, Southeastern Lolo, Jiasou, Puwa,
Aluo, Awu, Digao, Meng, Xiqi, Ati, Daizhan, Asahei, Laba,
Zuoke, Ani, Minglang, Long
Central565,080Lolopo, Dayao Lipo, Central Niesu, Enipu, Lopi, Popei
Eastern1,456,270Eastern Nasu, Panxian Nasu, Wusa Nasu, Shuixi Nosu,
, Mangbu Nosu, Eastern Gepo, Naisu, Wumeng,
Naluo, Samei, Sanie, Luowu, Guopu, Gese, Xiaohei Neisu,
Dahei Neisu, Depo, Laka, Lagou, Aling, Tushu, Gouzou,
Wopu, Eastern Samadu
Western1,162,040Mishaba Laluo, Western Lolo, Xiangtang, Xinping Lalu,
Yangliu Lalu, Tusu, Gaiji, Jiantou Laluo, Xijima, Limi, Mili,
Lawu, Qiangyi, Western Samadu, Western Gepo,
Xuzhang Lalu, Eka, Western Gaisu, Suan, Pengzi
Northern2,534,120Shengba Nosu, Yinuo Nosu, Xiaoliangshan Nosu, Butuo Nosu,
Suodi, Tianba Nosu, Bai Yi, Naruo, Naru, Talu, Mixisu, Liwu,
Northern Awu, Tagu, Liude, Naza, Ta'er
Unclassified55,490Michi (Miqie), Jinghong Nasu, Apu, Muzi, Tanglang, Micha,
Ayizi, Guaigun


History

Origin myth
According to Yi legend, all life originated in water and water was created by snowmelt, which as it dripped down, created a creature called the Ni. The Ni gave birth to all life. Ni is another name for the Yi people. It is sometimes translated as black because black is a revered color in Yi culture. Yi tradition tells us that their common ancestor was named Apu Dumu ꀉꁌꅋꃅ or ꀉꁌꐧꃅ ( Axpu Ddutmu or Axpu Jjutmu). Apu Dumu had three wives, each of whom had two sons. The six sons migrated to the area that is now and spread out in the four directions, creating the Wu, Zha, Nuo, Heng, Bu, and Mo clans. The Yi practiced a lineage system where younger brothers were treated as slaves by their elders, which resulted in a culture of migration where younger brothers constantly left their villages to create their own domains.


Guizhou kingdoms
The Heng clan divided into two branches. One branch, known as the Wumeng, settled along the western slope of the Wumeng Mountain range, extending their control as far west as modern day , Yunnan. The other branch, known as the Chele, moved along the eastern slope of the Wumeng Mountain range and settled to the north of the . By the (618–907), the Chele occupied the area from today county in Sichuan to city in Guizhou. The Bu clan fragmented into four branches. The Bole branch settled in , the Wusa branch settled in Weining, the Azouchi branch settled in , and the Gukuge branch settled in northeast Yunnan. The Mo clan, descended from Mujiji (慕齊齊), split into three branches. One branch known as the Awangren, led by Wualou, settled in southwest Guizhou and formed the Kingdom. Wuake led the second branch, the Ayuxi, to settle near Ma'an Mountain south of . Wuana led the third branch to settle in . In the 3rd century AD, Wuana's branch split into the Mangbu branch in , led by Tuomangbu, and Luodian (羅甸) in Luogen, led by Tuoazhe. By 300, Luodian covered over much of the region. Its ruler, Moweng (莫翁), moved the capital to Mugebaizhage (modern ), where he renamed his realm the Mu'ege kingdom, otherwise known as the Chiefdom of Shuixi.

+ Nasu Yi kingdoms by the Tang dynasty
Southwest

After the Eastern Han dynasty, the of the conducted several wars against the ancestors of Yi under the lead of . They defeated the king of Yi, ꂽꉼ ( , 孟获) and expanded their conquered territory in Yi area. After that, the Jin Dynasty succeeded Shu as the of Yi area but with weak control.


Yunnan kingdoms
Some historians believe that the majority of the kingdom of were of the ,
(1991). 9780864421234, Lonely Planet.
but that the elite spoke a variant of (also called Yi), a language closely related to .
(2025). 9780313315121, Greenwood Publishing Group. .
The people came to power in Yunnan during Zhuge Liang's Southern Campaign in 225. By the fourth century they had gained control of the region, but they rebelled against the in 593 and were destroyed by a retaliatory expedition in 602. The Cuan split into two groups known as the Black and White Mywa. The White Mywa (Baiman) tribes, who are considered the predecessors of the Bai people, settled on the fertile land of western Yunnan around the alpine fault lake . The Black Mywa (Wuman), considered to be predecessors of the Yi people, settled in the mountainous regions of eastern Yunnan. These tribes were called Mengshe (蒙舍), Mengxi (蒙嶲), Langqiong (浪穹), Tengtan (邆賧), Shilang (施浪), and Yuexi (越析). Each tribe was known as a zhao. In academia, the ethnic composition of the Nanzhao kingdom's population has been debated for a century. Chinese scholars tend to favour the theory that the rulers came from the aforementioned Bai or Yi groups, while some non-Chinese scholars subscribed to the theory that the was a major component, that later moved south into modern-day and .
(2025). 9781631818844, American Academic Press. .

In 649, the chieftain of the Mengshe tribe, Xinuluo (細奴邏), founded the Great Meng (大蒙) and took the title of Qijia Wang (奇嘉王; "Outstanding King"). He acknowledged Tang suzerainty. In 652, Xinuluo absorbed the White Mywa realm of Zhang Lejinqiu, who ruled and . This event occurred peacefully as Zhang made way for Xinuluo of his own accord. The agreement was consecrated under an iron pillar in Dali. Thereafter the Black and White Mywa acted as warriors and ministers respectively.

In 704 the made the White Mywa tribes into vassals or tributaries.

In the year 737 AD, with the support of the , the great-grandson of Xinuluo, (皮羅閣), united the six zhaos in succession, establishing a new kingdom called Nanzhao (Mandarin, "Southern Zhao"). The capital was established in 738 at Taihe, (the site of modern-day Taihe village, a few miles south of Dali). Located in the heart of the Erhai valley, the site was ideal: it could be easily defended against attack and it was in the midst of rich farmland. Under the reign of Piluoge, the White Mywa were removed from eastern Yunnan and resettled in the west. The Black and White Mywa were separated to create a more solidified caste system of ministers and warriors.

Nanzhao existed for 165 years until A.D. 902. After 35 years of tangled warfare, Duan Siping (段思平) of the Bai birth founded the Kingdom of Dali, succeeding the territory of Nanzhao. Most Yi of that time were under the ruling of Dali. Dali's sovereign reign lasted for 316 years until it was conquered by . During the era of Dali, Yi people lived in the territory of Dali but had little communication with the royalty of Dali.

Kublai Khan included Dali in his domain. The Yuan emperors remained firmly in control of the Yi people and the area they inhabited as part of Kublai Khan's Yunnan Xingsheng (云南行省) at current Yunnan, Guizhou and part of Sichuan. In order to enhance its sovereign over the area, the Yuan dynasty set up a dominion for Yi, Luoluo Xuanweisi (罗罗宣慰司), the name of which means local government for Lolos. Although technically under the rule of the emperor, the Yi still had autonomy during the Yuan dynasty. The gulf between aristocrats and the common people increased during this time.


Ming and Qing dynasties
Beginning with the , the Chinese empire expedited its cultural assimilation policy in Southwestern China, spreading the policy of (改土歸流, 'replacing tusi (local chieftains) with "normal" officials').Ulrich Theobald, ChinaKnowledge.de: An Encyclopedia on Chinese History, Literature and Art, s.v. "gaitu guiliu", http://www.chinaknowledge.de/History/Terms/gaituguiliu.html The governing power of many Yi feudal lords had previously been expropriated by the successors of officials assigned by the central government. With the progress of gaitu guiliu, the Yi area was dismembered into many communities both large and small, and it was difficult for the communities to communicate with each other as there were often Han-ruled areas between them.

The of the defeated and took over the land of Yunnan and established a provincial government there. When became the Viceroy of Yunnan and Guizhou during the era of Yongzheng Emperor, the policy of and cultural assimilation against Yi were strengthened. Under these policies, Yi who lived near Kunming were forced to abandon their convention of traditional and adopt burial, a policy which triggered rebellions among the Yi. The Qing dynasty suppressed these rebellions.

After the Second Opium War (1856–1860), many Christian missionaries from France and Great Britain visited the area in which the Yi lived. Although some missionaries believed that Yi of some areas such as Liangshan were not under the ruling of Qing dynasty and should be independent, most aristocrats insisted that Yi was a part of China despite their resentment against Qing rule.


Modern era
, a Yi, was the military governor of , during the Republic of China rule on mainland China.

The Fourth Front Army of the CCP encountered the Yi people during the and many Yi joined the communist forces.Edgar, Snow. "Red Star Over China," 225. Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England: Penguin Books, 1972.

After the establishment of the PRC, several Yi autonomous administrative districts of prefecture or county level were set up in Sichuan, Yunnan and Guizhou. With the development of automotive traffic and telecommunications, the communications among different Yi areas have been increasing sharply.

Yi people face systematic discrimination and abuse as migrant laborers in contemporary China.

(2013). 9781781680902, Verso Books. .


Yi polities throughout history
  • Mu'ege Kingdom (circa 300–1279), afterwards known as the Chiefdom of Shuixi from 1279 to 1698
  • Empire (738–937)
  • Luodian Kingdom (羅甸國) of the Bole clan in present-day , Yunnan
  • Badedian Kingdom of the Mangbu Azhe clan in present-day
    (2025). 9781684174638, Brill.
  • Luogui Kingdom (羅鬼國) (10th century–1278) in
  • (Yushi) (自杞國) (1100–1260) of the Awangren clan in present-day Xingyi, Guizhou
  • Kingdom of Shu (1621–1629), a short-lived state during the


Language
The Chinese government recognizes six mutually unintelligible Yi languages, from various branches of the Loloish family:Andrew West, The Yi People and Language
  • Northern Yi (Nuosu 诺苏)
  • Western Yi (Lalo 腊罗)
  • Central Yi (Lolopo 倮倮泼)
  • Southern Yi (Nisu 尼苏)
  • Southeastern Yi (Sani 撒尼)
  • (Nasu 纳苏)
Northern Yi is the largest with some two million speakers and is the basis of the literary language. It is an analytic language. There are also ethnically Yi languages of Vietnam which use the , such as .

Many Yi in , Guizhou and Guangxi know and between Yi and Chinese is common.


Script
The was originally like Chinese and dates to at least the 13th century, but seems to be completely independent of any other known script. Until the early 20th century, usage of this script was primarily the domain of for transmitting ritual texts from generation to generation. It was not until the mid-twentieth century that elite families in Liangshan began to use the script for non-religious purposes, such as letter writing.

There were perhaps 10,000 characters, many of which were regional, since the script had never been standardized across the Yi peoples. A number of works of history, literature and medicine, as well as genealogies of the ruling families, written in the Old Yi script are still in use and there are Old Yi stone tablets and steles in the area.

An attempt to the script was made in the 1950s but it failed to gain traction. In the 1970s and 1980s, the traditional script was standardized into a . Syllabic Yi is widely used in books, newspapers, street signs, and education, although with increasing influence from Chinese.


Culture

Gender
Descent and inheritance in Yi society was traditionally patrilineal and men were generally considered superior to women. Men practiced polygamy and marriage. Women were excluded from oral genealogies. In certain locales, Yi women still lag behind men in terms of primary education and very few Yi women become educational instructors or political leaders. Yi women noticeably drank and smoked more than Han Chinese women.


Names
The Yi use what has been described as a father-son naming system. According to the popular conception of the Yi patronymic naming system, the last character of the father's name transfers to become the first character of the son's name. The last character of the son's name is then used as the first character of the grandson's name. However this is not strictly a name per se but rather a shortening of the genealogical system which links the father and son across generations. A complete Yi name is composed of the clan name, the branch clan name, the father's name, and the person's own name (ex. Aho Bbujji Jjiha Lomusse). Aho is the name of a tribe, Bbuji is the name of a clan, Jjiha is the father's name, and Lomusse is a personal name. The name therefore means Lomusse the son of Jjiha of the Bbujji clan of the Aho tribe. Within the clan he would just be called Lomusse and within the tribe he would be called Jjiha Lomusse. Yi names use the suffixes - sse and - mo to express maleness and femaleness respectively. When the genealogy of a person is recited, only the father-son linkage is used to make it easier: Aho Ddezze—Ddezze Zuluo—Zuluo Jjiha—Jjiha Lomusse—Lomu Shuogge. This caused the assumption that the Yi practiced a father-son linkage system when it was actually a traditional genealogical recitation pattern.

The names of Nanzhao rulers have been transcribed according to this system with the first character representing the father's name:

  • (Xi)nuluo
  • (Luo)sheng
  • (Sheng)luopi
  • (Pi)luoge
  • (Ge)luofeng
  • (Feng)jiayi
  • (Yi)mouxun
  • (Xun)gequan
  • ( Quan) fengyou – sought to imitate Chinese practices and only went by Fengyou; broke tradition and named his son Shilong
  • Shilong
  • (Long)shun
  • (Shun)huazhen

This is a tradition closely tied to Tibeto-Burman traditions and suggests that the rulers of Nanzhao were not Tai people.


Slavery
Traditional Yi society was divided into four castes, the aristocratic nuohuo/ nzymo Black Yi, the commoner qunuo/ quho White Yi, the ajia/ mgajie, and the xiaxi/ gaxy. The Black Yi made up around 7 per cent of the population while the White Yi made up 50 per cent of the population. The two castes did not intermarry and the Black Yi were always considered of higher status than the White Yi, even if the White Yi was wealthier or owned more slaves. The White and Black Yi also lived in separate villages. The Black Yi did not farm, which was traditionally done by White Yi and slaves. Black Yi were responsible only for administration and military activities. The White Yi were not technically slaves but lived as indentured servants to the Black Yi. The Ajia made up 33 per cent of the population. They were owned by both the Black and White Yi and worked as indentured laborers lower than the White Yi. The Xiaxi were the lowest caste. They were slaves who lived with their owners' livestock and had no rights. They could be beaten, sold, and killed for sport. Membership of all four castes was through patrilineal descent.Martin Schoenhals Intimate Exclusion: Race and Caste Turned Inside Out 2003– Page 26 "A non-slave-owning Black Yi, or a poor one, was nonetheless always higher in caste status than any White Yi, even a wealthy one or one owning slaves, and the Black Yi manifested this superiority by refusing to marry White Yi even if the latter ..."Barbara A. West Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Asia and Oceania 2009 – Page 910 "Yi society prior to the revolution in 1949 was divided into four ranked classes or castes: Nuohuo, or Black Yi; Qunuo, or White Yi; Ajia; and Xiaxi. The Nuohuo, or Black Yi, was the highest and smallest caste at just about 7 percent of the ..."Yongming Zhou Anti-Drug Crusades in Twentieth-Century – China: Nationalism, ... – 1999 – Page 150 "The black Yi (about 7 percent of the population) made up the aristocratic ruling class, and the white Yi held subordinate status. Within the white Yi, however, there were three subgroups: Qunuo, Anjia, and Jiaxi. Qunuo (about 50 percent of the ...")S. Robert Ramsey The Languages of China 1987– Page 253 "The Black Yi looked down on farming, and all cultivation was traditionally done by White Yi and slaves. The Black Yi were responsible only for administration and military protection. Even so, however, they usually took great care to tend to their ..."Stevan Harrell Perspectives on the Yi of Southwest China 2001 – Page 174 "One village is for Black Yi, who speak Black Yi language. One village is for White Yi, who speak White Yi language. One place is for Red Yi, who speak Red Yi language. One village is for Gan Yi, who speak Gan Yi language. One village is for ..."Daniel H. Bays Christianity in China: From the Eighteenth Century to the Present 1999– Page 144 "In the local hierarchy of ethnic groups, they ranked near the bottom, below the Chinese, the Yi aristocracy (Black Yi) and free men (White Yi), and the Hui, closer to the Yi slave caste." The prevalence of the slave culture was so great that sometimes children were named after how many slaves they owned. For example: Lurbbu (many slaves), Lurda (strong slaves), Lurshy (commander of slaves), Lurnji (origin of slaves), Lurpo (slave lord), Lurha, (hundred slaves), Jjinu (lots of slaves).

Cases of the caste slavery system's influence could be found as late as the 1980s and early 1990s, when nuohuo clans prevented marriage with qunuo or punished members who did.


Folklore
The most famous hero in Yi mythology is Zhyge Alu. He was the son of a dragon and an eagle who possessed supernatural strength, anti-magic, and anti-ghost powers. He rode a nine-winged flying horse called "long heavenly wings." He also had the help of a magical peacock and python. The magical peacock was called Shuotnyie Voplie and could deafen the ears of those who heard its cry, but if invited into one's house, would consume evil and expel leprosy. The python, called Bbahxa Ayuosse, was defeated by Zhyge Alu, who wrestled with it in the ocean after transforming into a dragon. It was said to be able to detect leprosy, cure tuberculosis, and eradicate epidemics. Like the Chinese mythological archer, , Zhyge Alu shoots down the suns to save the people.Lihui, Yang, and An Deming. "The World of Chinese Mythology: An Introduction". In: China's Creation and Origin Myths Https://doi.org/10.1163/ej.9789004194854.i-354.18< /ref> In the Yi religion , Zhyge Alu aids the bimo priests in curing leprosy and fighting ghosts.

Jiegujienuo was a ghost that caused dizziness, slowness in action, dementia and anxiety. The ghost was blamed for ailments and exorcism rituals were conducted to combat the ghost. The bimo erected small sticks considered to be sacred, the kiemobbur, at the ritual site in preparation.


Torch Festival
The is one of the Yi people's main holidays. According to Yi legend, there were once two men of great strength, Sireabi and Atilaba. Sireabi lived in heaven while Atilaba on earth. When Sireabi heard of Atilaba's strength, he challenged Atilaba to a wrestling match. After suffering two defeats, Sireabi was killed in a bout, which greatly angered the , who sent a plague of locusts to punish the earth. On the 24th day of the 6th month of the , Atilaba cut down many pine trees and used them as torches to kill the locusts, protecting the crops from destruction. The Torch Festival is thus held in his honor.South of the Clouds, 114–115


Music
The Yi play a number of traditional musical instruments, including large plucked and bowed string instruments, as well as wind instruments called () and mabu (). The Yi also play the hulu sheng, though unlike other minority groups in Yunnan, the Yi do not play the hulu sheng for courtship or love songs (aiqing). The kouxian, a small four-pronged instrument similar to the Jew's harp, is another commonly found instrument among the Liangshan Yi. Kouxian songs are most often improvised and are supposed to reflect the mood of the player or the surrounding environment. Kouxian songs can also occasionally function in the aiqing form. Yi dance is perhaps the most commonly recognized form of musical performance, as it is often performed during publicly sponsored holidays and/or festival events.


Literature
Artist , great-granddaughter of has spent time from 1996 till present photographing the Yi community in Yunnan Province. Her series of pop-up books, titled We are Tiger Dragon People, includes images of many Yi groups.

File:00 Yi minority in traditional 00.jpg|Yi woman in traditional dress File:00 Yi minority in traditional 01.jpg|Yi woman in traditional dress with a child File:00 Yi minority in traditional 03.jpg|Yi woman in traditional dress File:00 Yi minority in traditional 04.jpg|Yi man in traditional dress File:00 Yi minority in traditional 05.jpg|Yi man in traditional dress


Religion

Bimoism

Other religions
In , some of the Yi have adopted as a result of exchanges with other predominantly Buddhist ethnic groups present in Yunnan, such as the and the . The most important god of Yi Buddhism is , a wrathful deity found in and . In the 20th century, many Yi people in China converted to , after the arrival of Gladstone Porteous in 1904 and, later, medical missionaries such as Alfred James Broomhall, Janet Broomhall, Ruth Dix and Joan Wales of the China Inland Mission. According to missionary organization OMF International, the exact number of Yi Christians is not known. In 1991 it was reported that there were as many as 1,500,000 Yi Christians in , especially in Luquan County where there are more than 20 churches.


Medicine
The Yi are known for the extent of their inter-generational transmission of traditional medicine through oral tradition and written records. Their traditional medicine system has been academically inventoried. Since the prefecture the Yi medicinal data was collected from also contains the cave containing human-infectable SARS clades and it is known that people living in the vicinity SARS caves show serological signs of past infection, it has been suggested that the Yi were repeatably exposed to coronavirus over their history, passively learned to medicinally fend off coronavirus infection centuries ago, and committed the results into their inter-generational record of medicinal indications. Sheridan, R. "The forgotten legacy of Traditional Medicine in the age of coronavirus"


Distribution
County-level distribution of the Yi 2000 census in China.

(Only includes counties or county-equivalents containing >1% of county population.)

82,348,296
1,091,657
315,707
170,862
204,170
207,300
193,618
3,324,139
52,916
141,166
170,425
250,620
1,522,845
347,471
123,261
897,239
77,855
50,816
4,081,697
615,212
124,462
313,765
188,980
433,185
351,310
169,962
139,156
138,604
140,028
207,712
137,676
324,332
237,800
175,426
176,214
207,873
35,247,695
187,695
471,305
2,744,085
453,293
541,762
678,228
1,070,802
2,864,920
719,605
425,091
259,881
258,031
399,384
6,327,471
1,128,230
851,729
697,075
496,063
825,350
661,772
1,056,009
611,243
42,360,089
5,781,294
413,420
344,754
1,398,305
603,363
275,564
180,685
267,739
140,046
396,677
223,978
429,355
481,721
295,173
5,466,089
648,956
185,766
349,770
515,211
657,474
844,485
389,838
1,292,825
2,073,005
409,044
257,078
149,748
275,063
196,519
169,581
151,426
264,615
199,931
4,592,388
727,959
345,740
461,034
235,802
362,943
1,097,093
477,811
2,542,530
503,682
153,403
195,322
227,970
199,071
279,838
103,606
202,779
262,601
414,258
4,130,463
453,311
292,039
340,051
149,088
513,712
277,580
495,642
365,585
362,950
267,627
316,171
201,256
95,451
3,268,553
429,639
437,508
236,120
267,986
350,002
434,009
730,376
382,913
2,480,346
230,834
188,106
355,364
352,089
288,794
205,709
100,243
208,593
464,016
86,598
993,397
443,672
314,068
235,657
3,296,552
521,169
105,380
437,371
324,412
296,860
209,887
296,124
178,438
196,978
315,003
165,900
249,030
2,348,315
846,865
314,187
260,097
333,241
1,126,646
366,705
375,769
154,968
229,204
491,824
171,974
196,977
353,518
147,416
146,017
2,332,570
285,163
426,943
416,507
339,918
182,258
165,982
313,220
347,462


Notable people
  • (1993–), singer
  • (1986–), singer
  • Wu Jinghua (1931-2007), former Communist Party secretary of Tibet Autonomous Region
  • (1941–), community leader
  • (1929-2021), former chairman of the Guizhou Provincial Committee of the
  • Zhang Chong (1900-1980), former vice chairman of the
  • (1989–), singer
  • Jike Junyi (1988–), singer
  • (1884–1962), governor and warlord of Yunnan Province
  • Lu Han (1895–1974), general and governor of Yunnan Province
  • (1984–1942), Yi clan leader
  • (1941–2000), actress

==Gallery==

, ]]
, ]]
]]
]]
]]


See also
  • Liangshan Yi Autonomous Prefecture
  • Honghe Hani and Yi Autonomous Prefecture
  • Chuxiong Yi Autonomous Prefecture
  • , a prehistoric fish named in honor of the Yi.
  • The Art of Not Being Governed


Citations

Sources
  • Cheng Xiamin. A Survey of the Demographic Problems of the Yi Nationality in the Greater and Lesser Liang Mountains. Social Sciences in China. 3: Autumn 1984, 207–231.
  • Clements, Ronald. Point Me to the Skies: the amazing story of Joan Wales. (Monarch Publications, 2007), .
  • Dessaint, Alain Y. Minorities of Southwest China: An Introduction to the Yi (Lolo) and Related Peoples. (New Haven: HRAF Press, 1980).
  • Du Ruofu and Vip, Vincent F. Ethnic Groups in China. (Beijing: Science Press, 1993).
  • . Princes of the Black Bone. (John Murray, London, 1959).
  • Grimes, Barbara F. Ethnologue. (Dallas: , 1988).
  • Cultural Encounters on China's Ethnic Frontiers. The History of the History of the Yi. Edited by Stevan Harrell. (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1995).
  • Perspectives on the Yi of Southwest China. Edited by Stevan Harrell. (Berkeley / Los Angeles / London: University of California Press, 2001), .
  • China's Minority Nationalities. Edited by Ma Yin. (Beijing: Foreign Language Press, 1994).
  • Zhang Weiwen and Zeng Qingnan. In Search of China's Minorities. (Beijing: New World Press).
  • Ritual for Expelling Ghosts: A religious Classic of the Yi nationality in Liangshan Prefecture, Sichuan (The Taipei Ricci Institute, Nov. 1998), .


Further reading
  • Benoît Vermander. L'enclos à moutons: un village nuosu du sud-ouest de la Chine. Paris: Les Indes savantes (2007).
  • Ollone, Henri d', vicomte (1912) In Forbidden China: the d'Ollone mission, 1906–1909, China—Tibet—Mongolia; translated from the French of the second edition by . Chapters II-V & VII. London: T. Fisher Unwin.
  • Pollard, S. (1921) In Unknown China: Record of the Observations, Adventures and Experiences of a Pioneer Missionary During a Prolonged Sojourn Amongst the Wild and Unknown Nosu Tribe of Western China London: Seeley Service and Co. Limited.
  • Wang, Zhen. " Out of the Mountains: Changing Landscapes in Rural China," RCC Perspectives: Transformations in Environment and Society 2018, no. 2. doi.org/10.5282/rcc/8523.


External links

Page 1 of 1
1
Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs
5s Time