Wp/iba/Dayak

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Dayak (sepil lama: Dajak) tauka Dyak tauka Dayuh nya siti ari raban bansa asal ari Borneo.[4] Iya nya leka jaku ti lunggar ungkup lebih 200 bansa ti diau ba sungai enggau bukit, ti bepalan tebal agi ba tengah enggau selatan pedalaman Borneo, tiap-tiap raban bansa bisi jaku, adat, undang-undang, kandang menua, enggau budaya kediri empu, taja pan ulah ti sama mida nya mudah dikelala. Orang Dayak kala megai pengarap animisme (Kaharingan); tang kenyau ari abad ke-19 udah bisi orang bebala mayuh masuk pengarap Kristian sereta mega pengarap Islam ketegal pengerembai pengarap-pengarap Abrahamik.[5]

Dayak
Dyak
Dayak chief as seen holding a spear and a Klebit Bok shield.
Penyampau tubuh
c. 8.18 million
Kandang endur ti mayuh mensia
Borneo:
 Indonesiac. 4,589,938[1]
 Wp/iba/Malaysiac. 3,597,644[2]
Jaku
Indigenous
Greater North Borneo (Malayic, Land Dayak, Kayan-Murik, Central Sarawak, North Sarawak, Sabahan ) • Barito  • Tamanic
Other
English  • Malaysian  • Indonesian  • Varieties of Malay
Pengarap
Predominantly
Christianity (Protestantism, Catholic)(62.7%)
Minorities
Islam (Sunni) (31.6%)
Hinduism/Kaharingan (4.8%)
and Others (i.e. Animism) (0.9%)[3]
Related ethnic groups
Austronesian peoples
Banjarese • Malays • Sama-Bajau • Rejang • Malagasy, etc.
A sandung, housing the remains of a Pesaguan Dayak after Tiwah ceremony which is a part of Kaharingan religion rituals.

Penerang

  1. "Jumlah dan Persentase Penduduk menurut Kelompok Suku Bangsa" (PDF). media.neliti.com. Kewarganegaraan, suku bangsa, agama dan bahasa sehari-hari penduduk Indonesia. Diambi 13 May 2022.
  2. "Population Distribution and Demography" (PDF). Malaysian Department of Statistics. Diarkib ari asal (PDF) on 13 November 2013.
  3. Ananta, Aris; Arifin, Evi; Hasbullah, M.; Handayani, Nur; Pramono, Wahyu (2015). Demography of Indonesia's Ethnicity. Singapore: ISEAS Publishing. p. 272. ISBN 978-981-4519-87-8. Diambi 8 May 2020.
  4. "Report for ISO 639 code: day". Ethnologue: Countries of the World. Diarkib ari asal on 1 October 2007.
  5. Chalmers, Ian (2006). "The Dynamics of Conversion: the Islamisation of the Dayak peoples of Central Kalimantan" (PDF). Asian Studies Association of Australia. Diarkib ari asal (PDF) on 7 March 2014. Diambi 3 December 2016.