翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Zou (state)
・ Zou (surname)
・ Zou (TV series)
・ Zou Bisou Bisou
・ Zou Dejia
・ Zou Department
・ Zou Hang
・ Zou huo ru mo (medicine)
・ Zou Jiahua
・ Zou Jie
・ Zou Jing
・ Zou Jingzhi
・ Zou Kai
・ Zou language
・ Zou Lunlun
Zou people
・ Zou River
・ Zou Rong
・ Zou Run
・ Zou Shiming
・ Zou Sixin
・ Zou Taixin
・ Zou Xi Kou
・ Zou Yan
・ Zou Yigui
・ Zou You
・ Zou Yougen
・ Zou Yu
・ Zou Yuan
・ Zou Zhe


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Zou people : ウィキペディア英語版
Zou people

The Zou people ((ビルマ語:ဇိုလူမျိုး); also spelled Zo) are an indigenous community living along the frontier of India and Burma, they are a sub-group of the Zo people (Mizo-Kuki-Chin). In India, they live with and are similar in language and habits to the Paite and the Simte peoples. In Burma, Zou are counted among the Chin people. They are a hill people ("Zou" being translated as "lofty hill ranges").〔
In India, the Zou are officially recognized as one of the thirty-three indigenous peoples within the state of Manipur, and are one of the Scheduled tribes. According to the 2001 Census, the Zou population in Manipur is around 20,000, less than 3% of the population.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://censusindia.gov.in/Tables_Published/SCST/dh_st_manipur.pdf )〕 The community is concentrated in Churachandpur and Chandel districts of Manipur in North-East India.
==Historical background==

The early history of the Zou people is lost in myths and legends; they claim an origin somewhere in the north,〔 and some claim that they are originally the same as the Paite and were only separated at the end of the British Raj.〔 Linguistic and racial evidence suggest the Indo-Chinese origin of the people. Linguists classified the Zou language as Tibeto-Burman, with only small differences between Zote and Paite.〔
The American Baptist missionary J.H. Cope made an attempt to trace the pre-colonial history of the Chin Hills in a church journal, ''Tedim Thu Kizakna Lai.''〔Tedim Thu Kizakna Lai (Tedim Journal), July 1937, p.4.〕 The journal (edited by Cope) provides a glimpse of the Zomis in Chin Hills before the arrival of British imperialism. Under the Manlun chiefs,〔Fowler, E.O. (1924) Letter to Howchinkhup, General Department, No. 3432/7M-11, office of the Commissioner, North West Border Division, 25 march 1924, in Acts and Achievements of Hau Chin Khup, KMS, Chief of the Kamhau clan, Chin Hills, Tiddim (Ratnadipan Pitika Press, Mandalay, 1927) p. 17.〕 the Zous had a bitter struggle with the Kamhau-Suktes over the control of the hill tracts between Manipur (India) and Chin hills (Burma). Inter-village raids were frequent but they never resulted in decisive victory. The fortification of Tedim village by Kamhau finally gave him the upper hand over his Zou rivals. British records about the Zou tribe became available towards the end of the 19th century.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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