Hainan people
海南人 (Hái-nâm-nâng) | |
|---|---|
| Total population | |
| 6 million+ worldwide | |
| Regions with significant populations | |
| Hainan, Hong Kong, Southeast Asia (Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Brunei, Singapore, Malaysia and Indonesia), British Isles, Oceania, Americas | |
| Languages | |
| lingua: Hainamese and Standard Chinese others: Hlai languages, Lingao, Kim Mun, Tsat, Danzhou dialect and various other languages of the countries that they inhabit as a part of the Overseas Chinese diaspora | |
| Religion | |
| Atheism, Confucianism, Taoism, Buddhism, Christianity, etc. | |
| Related ethnic groups | |
| Putian people, Cantonese people, Tanka people, Hlai people, etc. |
Hainan people (Chinese: 海南人; Hái-nâm nâng), also called Hainam people or Hainanese people, are the residents of Hainan, China's southernmost and smallest province. The term Hainanese can refer to all residents of the island or, more specifically, to the Hainanese-speaking (A Min language) Han Chinese subgroup native to the area. Hainan Min speakers often refer to their native language as Qiongwen or Qiongzhou to distinguish themselves from other groups of Hainan such as the Cantonese, Tanka, Hlai, and Miao.
Han Hainanese people, who today form the majority population of the island, trace their origins to Han colonists and exiles from Fujian and Guangdong provinces. By and large, they were not voluntary colonists, but were acting on government orders to populate the sparsely populated peninsula and island. By contrast, the Lingaoese, Hlai, and Tanka migrated to the island much earlier and are regarded as part of the Nanyue or Baiyue peoples.
Beginning in the Song dynasty, Han colonists from northeastern Fujian started settling on the Leizhou Peninsula and Hainan island. This displaced indigenous Nanyue groups, such as the Hlai, who then moved into mountain areas.
In the main, genetic studies based on Haikou Han samples show that Hainanese Han cluster most closely with Chinese Singaporeans and Han Taiwanese. However, other studies suggest that Hainanese genetically cluster most closely with Guangxi and Guangdong Han Chinese.
Like Fujian and Guangdong provinces, Hainan has been a source for emigration. Towards the turn of the 20th century, many Hainanese migrated to various Southeast Asian nations, where they worked as cooks, restaurateurs, coffee shop owners, clothes makers, sailors and hoteliers, filling niches left unoccupied by previous groups of immigrants from China. The Hainanese were particularly successful in Thailand, there are 2 million Hainanese in Thailand. as well as large number of tycoons trace Hainanese origin, and in Cambodia, where they controlled the hotel and restaurant trade. They also formed a substantial proportion of Chinese communities in Vietnam, Indonesia, Laos, Singapore and Malaysia. The outbreak of war with Japan prompted the departures of 33,000 persons in 1936 and 44,000 in 1937 from Hainan.
Overseas Hainanese have been a significant and particularly active source of remittances to China. This was done through specialized banks called "letter offices" (55 such banks were counted in 1937). The donations of overseas Hainanese helped to build schools, libraries and hospitals not just in their ancestral towns and villages, but also in Haikou, the provincial capital. Overseas Hainanese introduced rubber, pepper, pineapple, cocoa, palm oil and lemon grass to Hainan Island and ensured its commercial production there.
Main cities of Hainan island
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Haikou city, photo of old Haikou
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Wenchang city, photo of old Wenchang
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Kachek city
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Wanning city
Hainanese assembly halls outside of China
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Hainanese assembly hall in Johor Bahru
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Hainanese assembly hall in Malacca
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Hainanese assembly hall in Hoi An, Vietnam