Jinxiu Yao Autonomous County

Jinxiu County
金秀县
County
Jinxiu Yao Autonomous County
金秀瑶族自治县
Coordinates: 24°07′N 110°11′E / 24.117°N 110.183°ECoordinates: 24°07′N 110°11′E / 24.117°N 110.183°E
Country People's Republic of China
Autonomous region Guangxi
Prefecture-level city Laibin
Township-level divisions 3 towns
7 townships
County seat Jinxiu (金秀镇)
Area
  Total 2,517 km2 (972 sq mi)
Elevation 787 m (2,582 ft)
Population (2004)
  Total 150,000
  Density 60/km2 (150/sq mi)
Time zone China Standard (UTC+8)

Jinxiu (Chinese: 金秀; pinyin: Jīnxiù) is a county of eastern Guangxi, China, located in an area of relatively high concentrations of the Yao people. It is administered as the Jinxiu Yao Autonomous County of Laibin City. Established in 1952, with the name of Dayaoshan Autonomous Zone, in 1966, it was renamed as Jinxiu Yao Autonomous County. It has an area of 2,517 square kilometres (972 sq mi), much of it mountainous, and a population in 2004 of approximately 150,000.

Administrative divisions

The county administers 3 towns and 7 townships:[1]

Towns:

Townships:

Ethnic groups

Practically isolated from the outside world until the 1930s, Jinxiu was inhabited by five different branches of Yao: Chashan 茶山, Ao 坳, Hualan 花蓝, Pan 盘, and Shanzi 山子. The first three branches (Chashan 茶山, Ao 坳, Hualan 花蓝) were considered the owners of the lands, as the dates of their first arrivals are estimated at around 1,000 years ago. They lived in settled villages and enjoyed some economic stability. The Pan 盘 and Shanzi 山子 are more recent arrivals, and they lived as tenants of the other established Yao people, living a nomadic life that did not allow them to accumulate many material possessions.

Languages

The languages spoken by each five Yao groups are as follows (L.-Thongkum 1993). Unless indicated otherwise, all locations are in Jinxiu County.

Additionally, Jiongnai is spoken in Liuxiang 六巷乡, and Longhua 龙化村 of Changdong 长垌乡. Mao Zongwu (2004) notes that Jiongnai speakers are also given the exonym "Hualan Yao" 花蓝瑶.

L.-Thongkum (1993:170) proposes the following classification scheme for the languages of the four Mienic-speaking groups, which go back to what she calls the Proto-Mjuenic language.

References

  1. 2011年统计用区划代码和城乡划分代码:金秀瑶族自治县 (in Chinese). National Bureau of Statistics of the People's Republic of China. Retrieved 2013-01-04.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 广西瑶族社会历史调查 (2009).
  3. Also spoken in Chiang Rai Province, Thailand

External links