Ethnic groups in Asia

Asian people
Total population
4,533,765,005
59.4% of the total world population
(World population of 7.5 billion)
Regions with significant populations
West, Central, South, East, Southeast, and North Asia
 China (PRC)1,313,688,986
 India1,496,834,042
 Indonesia262,787,403
 Pakistan238,181,034
 Bangladesh164,098,818
 Japan126,168,156
 Philippines118,277,063
 Vietnam97,040,334
 Iran85,888,910
 Turkey85,372,377
 Thailand68,615,858
 Myanmar57,069,099
 South Korea51,418,097
 Afghanistan40,121,552
 Iraq39,650,145
 Saudi Arabia33,091,113
 Uzbekistan36,520,593
 Malaysia34,564,810
 Yemen32,140,443
   Nepal30,424,878
 North Korea25,831,360
 Taiwan (ROC)23,545,963
 Sri Lanka23,044,123
 Syria19,454,263
 Kazakhstan18,744,548
 Cambodia17,288,489
 Azerbaijan10,650,239
 Jordan10,458,413
 Tajikistan10,394,063
 United Arab Emirates9,701,315
 Israel9,402,617
 Laos7,953,556
 Kyrgyzstan7,213,455
 Singapore5,996,000
 Turkmenistan5,744,151
 Oman5,494,691
 Lebanon5,469,612
 Kuwait4,985,716
 Palestine4,683,000
 Mongolia3,504,741
 Qatar3,063,005
 Bahrain1,566,888
 Brunei460,345
Languages
Languages of Asia (Chinese, Hindi-Urdu, Arabic, Bengali, Marathi, Tamil, Japanese, Filipino, Indonesian, Turkish, Khmer, Korean, Lao, Nepali, Malay, Uzbek, Mongolian, Persian, Thai, Pashto, Vietnamese, Kazakh and Hebrew among other minority Asian languages)
Religion
Major: Islam and Hinduism
Minor: Buddhism, Christianity, Sikhism, Shinto and others

The ancestral population of modern Asian people has its origins in the two primary prehistoric settlement centres – greater Southwest Asia and from the Mongolian plateau towards Northern China.

Migrations of distinct ethnolinguistic groups have probably occurred as early as 10,000 years ago. However, around 2,000 BCE early Iranian speaking people and Indo-Aryans arrived in Iran and northern Indian subcontinent. Pressed by the Mongols, Turkic peoples often migrated to the western and northern regions of the Central Asian plains. Prehistoric migrants from South China and Southeast Asia seem to have populated East Asia, Korea, and Japan in several waves, where they gradually replaced indigenous people, such as the Ainu, who are of uncertain origin. Austroasiatic and Austronesian people establish in Southeast Asia between 5.000 and 2.000 BCE, partly merging with, but eventually displacing the indigenous Australo-Melanesians.

In terms of Asian people, there is an abundance of ethnic groups in Asia, with adaptations to the climate zones of the continent, which include arctic, subarctic, temperate, subtropical or tropical, as well as extensive desert regions in Central and West Asia. The ethnic groups have adapted to mountains, deserts, grasslands, and forests, while on the coasts of Asia, resident ethnic groups have adopted various methods of harvest and transport. The types of diversity in Asia are cultural, religious, economic and historical.

Some groups are primarily hunter-gatherers- whereas others practice transhumance (nomadic lifestyle), have been agrarian for millennia, or adopted an industrial or urban lifestyle. Some groups or countries in Asia are completely urban (e.g., Qatar and Singapore); the largest countries in Asia with regard to population are the China, India, Indonesia, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Japan, Philippines, Vietnam, Iran, Turkey, Thailand, Burma, South Korea, Uzbekistan, and Malaysia. Colonisation of Asian ethnic groups and states by European peoples began in the late 1st millennium BCE, reaching its peak in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.