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- Qiang people - Wikipedia
There are numerous Qiang dialects; traditionally they are split into two groups, Northern Qiang and Southern Qiang, although in fact the Qiang language complex is made up of a large number of dialectal continua which cannot be easily grouped into Northern or Southern
- QIANG MINORITY AND THEIR HISTORY AND RELIGION - Facts and Details
Qiang can refer to: 1) the distinctive culture shared by speakers of languages belonging to the Qiang Language Branch (QLB) of the Sino-Tibetan Language Family or 2) the Qiang one of China's officially recognized minority nationalities or minzu
- Taoping Qiang Village in Chinas Sichuan Province
Qiang-style songs and dances are the main features of Taoping Qiang Village The Qiang people have been best known for being good at singing and dancing for over 2,000 years
- Qiang Ethnic Group, Facts about Qiang Minority, Qiang People . . .
Interesting facts of Qiang people in China, including population, language, history, culture, art, religion, traditions, taboos, festivals, marriage, clothing, buildings, food, life, tourism and more
- Ethnic Qiang sparkles with vast trove of cultural heritage - CGTN
As one of the oldest ethnic groups in China, the Qiang have inherited an immense cultural legacy courtesy of the customs, culture and heritage amassed and preserved over thousands of years
- Qiang people - Detailed Pedia
By the Ming and Qing dynasties, the term "Qiang" denoted only non-Han people living in the upper Min River Valley and Beichuan area, the area now occupied by the modern Qiang Nonetheless, most modern scholarship assumes that modern Qiang are descended from the historical Qiang people
- Qiang Ethnic Group in Sichuan: Language, Crafts, Architecture
Qiang ethnic group lives mainly in the counties of the Aba Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Sichuan; Maowen Qiang Autonomous County is the largest area that is home to the Qiang people
- Qiang | Encyclopedia. com
Today's Qiang were given that name (they call themselves the "Rma") because of supposed cultural affinities and historical ties with the historical group Self-identity, in the sense of being a minzu, is foreign to most of these peoples, an exception being the Qiang themselves
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