Total population | |
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3,556 (2010) | |
Regions with significant populations | |
China (Xinjiang) | |
Languages | |
Tatar, Russian, Mandarin | |
Religion | |
Islam |
Part of a series on Islam in China |
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Islam portal • China portal |
Chinese Tatars (simplified Chinese: 塔塔尔族; traditional Chinese: 塔塔爾族; pinyin: Tǎtǎ'ěrzú; Tatar: Cyrillic Кытай татарлары, Latin Qıtay tatarları) form one of the 56 ethnic groups officially recognized by the People's Republic of China.
Their ancestors are Volga Tatar traders who settled mostly in Xinjiang.
The number of Chinese Tatars stood at 3,556 as of the year 2010 and they live mainly in the cities of Yining, Tacheng and Ürümqi in Xinjiang. Their titular homeland is Daquan Tatar Village in Qitai County of Changji Hui Autonomous Prefecture, Xinjiang.[citation needed]
Culture
Chinese Tatars speak an archaic variant of the Tatar language, free from 20th-century loanwords and use the Arabic variant of the Tatar alphabet, which declined in the USSR in the 1930s. Being surrounded by speakers of other Turkic languages, Chinese Tatar partially reverses the Tatar high vowel inversion.[1]
Chinese Tatars are Sunni Muslims.[2] Most Tatars can speak Uyghur and often utlize the Uyghur Arabic script for writing.[3]
Jadid schools were founded in Xinjiang for Chinese Tatars in the early 20th century.[4]
Notable people
- Burhan Shahidi (1894–1989), political leader, Vice Chairman of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference
- Xabib Yunich (1905–1945), journalist and politician
See also
References
Citations
- ^ Minglang Zhou (2003). Multilingualism in China: the politics of writing reforms for minority languages, 1949-2002. Vol. 89 of Contributions to the sociology of language (illustrated ed.). Published Walter de Gruyter. p. 183. ISBN 3-11-017896-6. Retrieved 1 January 2011.
- ^ "Joshua Project - Tatar of China Ethnic People Profile".
- ^ Davis, Edward Lawrence (2005). "Turkic Language Speakers". Encyclopedia of Contemporary Chinese Culture. Taylor & Francis. p. 618. ISBN 978-0-415-77716-2.
- ^ Ondřej Klimeš (8 January 2015). Struggle by the Pen: The Uyghur Discourse of Nation and National Interest, c.1900-1949. BRILL. pp. 80–. ISBN 978-90-04-28809-6.
Sources
- Paul and Bernice Noll's Window on the World - List of ethnic groups in China and their population sizes