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Sizang people : ウィキペディア英語版 | Sizang people
The Siyin (Sizang) people or the Thaute people are mainly the descendants of Pu Thuantak as also known as Suantak in Tedim language and related clans, and their adopted sons and daughters. The Siyin Valley is located in the present day Chin State, Burma, founded by the descendants of the Pu Thuantak, when they moved away from their original home of Ciimnuai with other Zo (Chin) people such as the Sukte, Thado, Zou, and other related clans. Zo lived collectively in the place known as Ciimnuai, for a long period of time until they experienced population explosion. Thus, finding new settlements were essential for their continued survival in terms of cultivation, in the hope of getting sufficient foods from fertile soils for each community. Consequently, they scattered throughout the mountains, dales and valleys within and surrounding the present Chin State. Due to communication difficulties and their isolations, each departed group from Ciimnuai developed a unique dialect at the later periods. The Sizang language emerged the same way as Vaiphei, Teizang, Saizang, Val, Zou, Dim, Khuangsai, Hangmi/Milhiem and others, and they are closely related to one another. ==Meaning and definition== ''Si'' means salt water; ''Zang'' means the northern side. ''Sizang'' is known as Siyin thus represents people who live at the northern part of ''the spring of salt water''. ''Sizang'' was already the name of a place to which immigrants from Ciimuai relocated. Later generations that continued to live in the same location, have adopted ''Sizang'' as their ethnic identity.
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Sizang people」の詳細全文を読む
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