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The '''Kungnai people''' ({{wp|Hmong_language|Valley Kung}}: ''Kiong nài''; [[Menghean language|Menghean]]: 켱내족, ''Kyŏngnae-jok'') are a minority ethnic group in western Menghe. Most live in the Kungnai Semi-Autonomous Province, which is also home to large numbers of [[Lac people|Lakkians]] and [[Meng]]. The term ''Kiong nài'' is an endonym from one of the region's minority dialects, and means "mountain people," in reference to their highland homeland.
The '''Kungnai people''' ({{wp|Hmong_language|Valley Kung}}: ''Kiong nài''; [[Menghean language|Menghean]]: 켱내족, ''Kyŏngnae-jok'') are a minority ethnic group in western Menghe. Most live in the Kungnai Semi-Autonomous Province, which is also home to large numbers of [[Lac people|Lakkians]] and [[Meng]]. The term ''Kiong nài'' is an endonym from one of the region's minority dialects, and means "mountain people," in reference to their highland homeland. The Kungnai are better regarded as a collection of tribes under an umbrella label, with different customs, dialects, and religious practices.


==History==
==History==
The Kungnai people historically lived in a collection of rice-farming tribal villages in the foothills of the Chŏnsan mountains. They had little in the way of organized statehood; groups of villages sometimes pledged allegiance to a local king, but these loose confederations lacked the bureaucratic governments which emerged in ancient Menghe and among the Lac people to the south, and most authority lay in the hands of customary village elders. The lack of a unified system of writing further hindered lawmaking and administration.
Nevertheless, despite their lack of organized government, the Kungnai proved adept at resisting invasions from the south and west. The Ayyubid Sultanate, which swept across Lac lands in the mid-11th century, repeatedly failed to extend its control into the Ǎ Dú valley, isolating the Kungnai from Shahidic cultural influences that shaped Lac culture in the same period. The Menghean [[Yi dynasty]] conquered Kungnai lands in the 14th century, but its actual administrative authority was in practice limited to the low-lying areas, with highland villages operating autonomously. Kungnai lands were among the first to break away during the [[Menghean Black Plague]], and even after their re-integration into the Myŏn dynasty in the 16th century, they remained a site of repeated rebellions and uprisings. As late as the 1920s, after the region's integration into the Federative Republic of Menghe, small groups of Kungnai highlanders waged a protracted, low-intensity guerilla war for independence.
These periods of partial occupation forged a divergence between the valley Kungnai, also known as "familiar" Kungnai, and the "highland" or "unfamiliar" Kungnai. This distinction first appeared in Yi dynasty administrative records to measure tribes' progress in adopting "civilized" Meng customs, but it later spread to the Kungnai peoples themselves and remains commonplace today.
After the [[Menghean War of Liberation]], the new government carved out a special Semi-Autonomous Province for the Kungnai people, as part of a series of concessions made to minority ethnic groups. Until that time, Menghean policy had regarded the western highlanders as a collection of separate tribes rather than a single ethnic group, and the official administrative dialect, Valley Kungnai, was unfamiliar to most of the population.
==Clan system==


==Religion==
==Religion==
Unlike the [[Lac people]] and [[Daryz]], who converted to {{wp|Islam|Shahidism}} in the 11th century, the Kungnai resisted conquest by the Ayyubid Sultanate and continued to practice traditional polytheistic religions.
Unlike the [[Lac people]] and [[Daryz]], who converted to {{wp|Islam|Shahidism}} in the 11th century, the Kungnai resisted conquest by the Ayyubid Sultanate and most continue to practice traditional polytheistic religions. Kungnai religions are generally regarded as distinct from Menghean [[Sindoism]], even though some deities are shared with Meng people in western Suksan province.  


==Language==
==Languages==


==Place names==
==Place names==
In part because the Kungnai people lacked a centralized government and a widespread writing system, it was not customary to assign names to villages and regions. Certain landmarks, streams, and mountains might be given names, or named for local deities, but villages were customarily known only by a description of their location, and there were no organized territorial units above them.
When the Yi dynasty acquired the region in the 14th century, they created their own administrative system of prefectures and counties, and assigned Menghean-language names to them. Yi dynasty villages still had no organized government apart from a local headman or chieftan, and were largely unaffected, but large settlements bore Menghean names even when most of the locals did not speak Menghean.
During the late 1960s, as part of the transition to a Semi-Autonomous Province, the Menghean place names were supplemented by translations of the Meng characters' meaning into the standard dialect. Thus Hŭkto (黑土), the main valley known for its dark soil, became Ǎ Dú, "Black Earth," in local government documents. Many of the resulting translations were awkward, clumsy, and unnatural; some sources claim that native speakers were not given authority over place name corrections. Nevertheless, the resulting names stuck, and they remain in use today, as the occasional movements to change them run up against disputes over whether to use a local or standard dialect.


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 19:26, 9 November 2019

The Kungnai people (Valley Kung: Kiong nài; Menghean: 켱내족, Kyŏngnae-jok) are a minority ethnic group in western Menghe. Most live in the Kungnai Semi-Autonomous Province, which is also home to large numbers of Lakkians and Meng. The term Kiong nài is an endonym from one of the region's minority dialects, and means "mountain people," in reference to their highland homeland. The Kungnai are better regarded as a collection of tribes under an umbrella label, with different customs, dialects, and religious practices.

History

The Kungnai people historically lived in a collection of rice-farming tribal villages in the foothills of the Chŏnsan mountains. They had little in the way of organized statehood; groups of villages sometimes pledged allegiance to a local king, but these loose confederations lacked the bureaucratic governments which emerged in ancient Menghe and among the Lac people to the south, and most authority lay in the hands of customary village elders. The lack of a unified system of writing further hindered lawmaking and administration.

Nevertheless, despite their lack of organized government, the Kungnai proved adept at resisting invasions from the south and west. The Ayyubid Sultanate, which swept across Lac lands in the mid-11th century, repeatedly failed to extend its control into the Ǎ Dú valley, isolating the Kungnai from Shahidic cultural influences that shaped Lac culture in the same period. The Menghean Yi dynasty conquered Kungnai lands in the 14th century, but its actual administrative authority was in practice limited to the low-lying areas, with highland villages operating autonomously. Kungnai lands were among the first to break away during the Menghean Black Plague, and even after their re-integration into the Myŏn dynasty in the 16th century, they remained a site of repeated rebellions and uprisings. As late as the 1920s, after the region's integration into the Federative Republic of Menghe, small groups of Kungnai highlanders waged a protracted, low-intensity guerilla war for independence.

These periods of partial occupation forged a divergence between the valley Kungnai, also known as "familiar" Kungnai, and the "highland" or "unfamiliar" Kungnai. This distinction first appeared in Yi dynasty administrative records to measure tribes' progress in adopting "civilized" Meng customs, but it later spread to the Kungnai peoples themselves and remains commonplace today.

After the Menghean War of Liberation, the new government carved out a special Semi-Autonomous Province for the Kungnai people, as part of a series of concessions made to minority ethnic groups. Until that time, Menghean policy had regarded the western highlanders as a collection of separate tribes rather than a single ethnic group, and the official administrative dialect, Valley Kungnai, was unfamiliar to most of the population.

Clan system

Religion

Unlike the Lac people and Daryz, who converted to Shahidism in the 11th century, the Kungnai resisted conquest by the Ayyubid Sultanate and most continue to practice traditional polytheistic religions. Kungnai religions are generally regarded as distinct from Menghean Sindoism, even though some deities are shared with Meng people in western Suksan province.

Languages

Place names

In part because the Kungnai people lacked a centralized government and a widespread writing system, it was not customary to assign names to villages and regions. Certain landmarks, streams, and mountains might be given names, or named for local deities, but villages were customarily known only by a description of their location, and there were no organized territorial units above them.

When the Yi dynasty acquired the region in the 14th century, they created their own administrative system of prefectures and counties, and assigned Menghean-language names to them. Yi dynasty villages still had no organized government apart from a local headman or chieftan, and were largely unaffected, but large settlements bore Menghean names even when most of the locals did not speak Menghean.

During the late 1960s, as part of the transition to a Semi-Autonomous Province, the Menghean place names were supplemented by translations of the Meng characters' meaning into the standard dialect. Thus Hŭkto (黑土), the main valley known for its dark soil, became Ǎ Dú, "Black Earth," in local government documents. Many of the resulting translations were awkward, clumsy, and unnatural; some sources claim that native speakers were not given authority over place name corrections. Nevertheless, the resulting names stuck, and they remain in use today, as the occasional movements to change them run up against disputes over whether to use a local or standard dialect.

See also