Peoples of Asia Encyclopedia Articles By Title
Acehnese, one of the main ethnic groups on the island of Sumatra, Indonesia. They were estimated to number roughly......
Adivasi, any of various ethnic groups considered to be the original inhabitants of the Indian subcontinent. The......
Afrīdī, Pashtun tribe inhabiting the hill country from the eastern spurs of the Spīn Ghar Range to northern Pakistan.......
Ahom, tribe that ruled much of Assam from the 13th century until the establishment of British rule in 1838. Their......
Ainu, indigenous people of Hokkaido, Sakhalin, and the Kuril Islands who were culturally and physically distinct......
Akhlame, ancient Semitic nomads of northern Syria and Mesopotamia and traditional enemies of the Assyrians. They......
Alani, an ancient nomadic pastoral people who occupied the Steppe region northeast of the Black Sea. The Alani......
Amalekite, member of an ancient nomadic tribe, or collection of tribes, described in the Old Testament as relentless......
Ami, most numerous indigenous ethnic group on the island of Taiwan, numbering more than 124,000 in the late 20th......
Ammonite, any member of an ancient Semitic people whose principal city was Rabbath Ammon, in Palestine. The “sons......
Amorite, member of an ancient Semitic-speaking people who dominated the history of Mesopotamia, Syria, and Palestine......
Andamanese, aboriginal inhabitants of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands in the Bay of Bengal. Most Andamanese have......
Anglo-Indian, in India, a citizen of mixed Indian and, through the paternal line, European ancestry. From roughly......
Apa Tani, tribal people of Arunāchal Pradesh (former North East Frontier Agency), a mountainous state in the extreme......
Arab, one whose native language is Arabic. (See also Arabic language.) Before the spread of Islam and, with it,......
Arakanese, ethnic group centred in the Arakan coastal region of Myanmar (Burma), in the state of Rakhine. Most......
Aramaean, one of a confederacy of tribes that spoke a North Semitic language (Aramaic) and, between the 11th and......
Armenian, member of a people with an ancient culture who originally lived in the region known as Armenia, which......
Aryan, name originally given to a people who were said to speak an archaic Indo-European language and who were......
Assyrian, member of an ethnic group primarily in parts of Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Turkey that traces its roots to......
Atoni, predominant people of Timor, easternmost of the Lesser Sunda Islands, Indonesia. They inhabit the central......
Azerbaijani, any member of a Turkic people living chiefly in the Republic of Azerbaijan and in the region of Azerbaijan......
Bai, people of northwestern Yunnan province, southwest China. Minjia is the Chinese (Pinyin) name for them; they......
Bakhtyārī, one of the nomad peoples of Iran; its chiefs have been among the greatest tribal leaders in Iran and......
Balinese, people of the island of Bali, Indonesia. Unlike most Indonesians, who practice Islam, the Balinese adhere......
Baloch, group of tribes speaking the Balochi language and estimated at about five million inhabitants in the province......
Baqqārah, (Arabic: “Cattlemen”), nomadic people of Arab and African ancestry who live in a part of Africa that......
Batak, several closely related ethnic groups of north-central Sumatra, Indonesia. The term Batak is one of convenience,......
Baḍaga, any member of the largest tribal group living in the Nīlgiri Hills of Tamil Nādu state in southern India.......
Bedouin, Arabic-speaking nomadic peoples of the Middle Eastern deserts, especially of North Africa, the Arabian......
Bengali, majority population of Bengal, the region of northeastern South Asia that generally corresponds to the......
Bhil, ethnic group of some 12.6 million people of western India. Historically, many Bhil communities have been......
Bhutia, Himalayan people who are believed to have emigrated southward from Tibet in the 8th or 9th century ce.......
Bicol, fifth largest cultural-linguistic group in the Philippines, numbering about 4,070,000 in the late 20th century.......
Bisaya, indigenous people of northwestern Borneo, in Malaysia, concentrated above the Padas River and below Beaufort......
Bodo, group of peoples speaking Tibeto-Burman languages in the northeastern Indian states of Assam and Meghalaya......
Brahui, tribal confederacy of Balochistān, in western Pakistan. Its members are mostly nomadic goat herdsmen, distributed......
Bugis, people of southern Celebes (Sulawesi), Indonesia. Their language, also called Bugis (or Buginese), belongs......
Buryat, northernmost of the major Mongol peoples, living south and east of Lake Baikal. By the Treaty of Nerchinsk......
Buyei, an official minority group inhabiting large parts of Guizhou province in south-central China. They call......
Caucasian peoples, various ethnic groups living in the Caucasus, a geographically complex area of mountain ranges,......
Cebuano, the second largest ethnolinguistic group (after Tagalog) in the Philippines, numbering roughly 16.5 million......
Chahar, eastern tribe of Mongols, prominent in the 15th and 16th centuries. The Chahar were part of the empire......
Chakma, largest of the indigenous populations of Bangladesh, also settled in parts of northeastern India and in......
Chenchu, people of southern India, numbering about 59,000 at the turn of the 21st century. Most Chenchu live in......
Chin, group of tribes of Mongol origin, occupying the southernmost part of the mountain ranges separating Myanmar......
Chukchi, people inhabiting the northeasternmost part of Siberia, the Chukotskiy (Chukotka) autonomous okrug (district)......
Cimmerian, member of an ancient people living north of the Caucasus and the Sea of Azov, driven by the Scythians......
Circassian, member of a Caucasian people speaking a northwest Caucasian language (see Kabardian language). From......
dasyu, an aboriginal people in India who were encountered by the Indo-European-speaking peoples who entered northern......
Daur, Mongol people living mainly in the eastern portion of Inner Mongolia autonomous region and western Heilongjiang......
Dayak, the non-Muslim indigenous peoples of the island of Borneo, most of whom traditionally lived along the banks......
Dolgan, Turkic-speaking people constituting the basic population of the Taymyr autonomous okrug, which is far above......
Dong, an ethnic minority of China found in southeastern Guizhou province and in neighbouring Zhuang Autonomous......
Durrānī, one of the two chief tribal confederations of Afghanistan, the other being the Ghilzay. In the time of......
Dzungar, people of Central Asia, so called because they formed the left wing (dson, “left”; gar, “hand”) of the......
Enets, an indigenous Arctic people who traditionally resided on the east bank of the lower Yenisey River of Russia.......
Even, northern Siberian people (12,000 according to the 1979 Soviet census) closely related to the Evenk (q.v.)......
Evenk, the most numerous and widely scattered of the many small ethnic groups of northern Siberia (Asian Russia).......
Ghilzay, one of the largest of the Pashto-speaking tribes in Afghanistan, whose traditional territory extended......
Gond, group of aboriginal peoples (now officially designated as Scheduled Tribes) of central and south-central......
Gurung, people of Nepal living mainly on the southern flank of the Annapūrna mountain massif. Their numbers are......
Guti, mountain people of ancient Mesopotamia who lived primarily around Hamadan in the central Zagros Range. The......
Hakka, ethnic group of China. Originally, the Hakka were North Chinese, but they migrated to South China (especially......
Hani, an official nationality of China. The Hani live mainly on the high southwestern plateau of Yunnan province,......
Hazara, ethnolinguistic group originally from the mountainous region of central Afghanistan, known as Hazārajāt.......
Hebrew, any member of an ancient northern Semitic people that were the ancestors of the Jews. Biblical scholars......
Hephthalite, member of a people important in the history of India and Persia during the 5th and 6th centuries ce.......
Hiligaynon, fourth largest ethnolinguistic group of the Philippines, living on Panay, western Negros, southern......
Hittite, member of an ancient Indo-European people who appeared in Anatolia at the beginning of the 2nd millennium......
Hmong, ethnic group living chiefly in China and Southeast Asia and speaking Hmong, one of the Hmong-Mien languages......
Ho, tribal people of the state of Bihār in India, concentrated in the area of Kolhān on the lower Chota Nāgpur......
Hui, an official nationality of China, composed of nearly 10 million people. The Hui are Chinese Muslims (i.e.,......
Hun, member of a nomadic pastoralist people who invaded southeastern Europe c. 370 ce and during the next seven......
Hurrian, one of a people important in the history and culture of the Middle East during the 2nd millennium bc.......
Ifugao, group of wet-rice agriculturalists occupying the mountainous area of northern Luzon, Philippines. They......
Igorot, any of various ethnic groups in the mountains of northern Luzon, Philippines, all of whom keep, or have......
Ilocano, third largest ethnolinguistic group in the Philippines. When discovered by the Spanish in the 16th century,......
Itelmen, an Indigenous people of the southern Kamchatka Peninsula, far eastern Russia. In 2020 there were about......
Jakun, any member of an aboriginal people found in the interior eastern portions of the Malay Peninsula. The major......
Jat, traditionally rural ethnic group of northern India and Pakistan. In the early 21st century the Jats constituted......
Javanese, largest ethnic group in Indonesia, concentrated on the island of Java and numbering about 85 million......
Juan-juan, Central Asian people of historical importance. Because of the titles of their rulers, khan and khagan,......
Kabābīsh, nomadic people of the desert scrub of northern Kordofan region, Sudan, numbering about 70,000. Of mixed......
Kachin, tribal peoples occupying parts of northeastern Myanmar (Burma) and contiguous areas of India (Arunachal......
Kadar, small tribe of southern India residing along the hilly border between Cochin in the state of Kerala and......
Kadazan, term embracing a number of peoples that together constitute the largest indigenous ethnic group in the......
Kalmyk, Mongol people residing chiefly in Kalmykiya republic, in southwestern Russia. Their language belongs to......
Kapampangan, ethnolinguistic group living in the Philippines, principally in the central plain of Luzon, especially......
Karen, variety of tribal peoples of southern Myanmar (Burma), speaking languages of the Sino-Tibetan family. Constituting......
Kaska, member of an ancient Anatolian people who inhabited the remote valleys between the northern border of the......
Kassite, member of an ancient people known primarily for establishing the second, or middle, Babylonian dynasty;......
Kayan, indigenous people of central Borneo. They numbered about 27,000 in the late 20th century. The Kayan are......
Kazakh, Turkic-speaking people of Central Asia inhabiting mainly Kazakhstan and the adjacent parts of Xinjiang......
Kenite, member of a tribe of itinerant metalsmiths related to the Midianites and the Israelites who plied their......
Kenyah, indigenous people of Sarawak and Indonesian Borneo, grouped with the Kayan or under the general name Bahau.......
Ket, indigenous people of central Siberia who live in the Yenisey River basin; in the late 20th century they numbered......
Khakass, people who have given their name to Khakassia republic in central Russia. The general name Khakass encompasses......
Khalkha, largest group of the Mongol peoples, constituting more than 80 percent of the population of Mongolia.......
Khanty and Mansi, western Siberian peoples, living mainly in the Ob River basin of central Russia. They each speak......