
The Mường (
Mường Bi dialect: ''mõl Mường''; ) are an ethnic group native to
northern Vietnam. The Mường is the country's third largest of 53 minority groups, with an estimated population of 1.45 million (according to the 2019 census). The Mường people inhabit a mountainous region of northern
Vietnam
Vietnam, officially the Socialist Republic of Vietnam (SRV), is a country at the eastern edge of mainland Southeast Asia, with an area of about and a population of over 100 million, making it the world's List of countries and depende ...
centered in
Hòa Bình Province and some districts of
Phú Thọ province and
Thanh Hóa Province. They speak the
Mường language which is related to the
Vietnamese language
Vietnamese () is an Austroasiatic languages, Austroasiatic language Speech, spoken primarily in Vietnam where it is the official language. It belongs to the Vietic languages, Vietic subgroup of the Austroasiatic language family. Vietnamese is s ...
and the
Thổ language and share ancient ethnic roots with the Vietnamese (Kinh) people.
Etymology
The word in Vietnamese is etymologically related to the word ''
mueang
Mueang ( Ahom: 𑜉𑜢𑜤𑜂𑜫; ''mɯ̄ang'', ), Muang ( ''mɯ́ang'', ), Möng ( Tai Nuea: ᥛᥫᥒᥰ ''möeng''; ''móeng'', ), Meng ( zh, c=猛 or 勐) or Mường (Vietnamese) were pre-modern semi-independent city-states or princip ...
'' from the Tai languages, meaning "cultivated land" or "community", and referred to pre-modern semi-independent city-states or principalities in mainland Southeast Asia. This comes from their close association with the Tai peoples. The Mường call the Tai as ɲew, Nyo or Âu; while referring to themselves by various names, such as "Monglong", which means "people living in the center", to distinguish themselves from the people of the valleys and of the highlands. In
Hòa Bình, They call themselves Mõl or Moăn. In
Thanh Hóa, they call themselves Mon or Mwanl and in Phú Thọ Province, they call themselves Mon or Monl. Sometimes written as Mal, Mwal or Mwai. These words are all dialectal variations on the Mường word for "people". From Vietnamese perspective in the past, the word ' is "an old word to denote ethnic minorities,
ndistant regions,
ndbackward",
[Nguyễn Quang Hồng, ''Tự Điển Chữ Nôm Dẫn Giải (Nôm Characters with Quotations and Annotations)''. quote: "Tiếng thời xưa trỏ dân tộc thiểu số, vùng miền xa xôi, lạc hậu."] even though it is cognate with the Mường word "human being", and both the Vietnamese and Mường words come from one same
Proto-Vietic *''mɔːlʔ''. Among different groups of people of Northern Vietnam, both the Vietnamese and the Mường are referred to by some other common designations such as Cheo (Cheo Chi) or Keo are derivations from Giao Chỉ, the name of Northern Vietnam during the
First Era of Northern Domination. These designations are used by Tai-speaking people in Vietnam.
The Mường were referred in Vietnamese Nôm texts as Mường Mán (茫蠻), which was used in a derogatory sense in the past.
History
From an anthropologist viewpoint, both the Mường and the Vietnamese Kinh are descended from common origins-the ancient Viet-Muong speakers-the northern subbranch of the
Vietic ethnolinguistic group of the
Austroasiatic family that had heavily contact with
Tai-speaking people and other Northern Austroasiatic speakers during the first millennia. The Mường are often perceived as an intact culture, compared to the sinicized Vietnamese (Kinh) in the lowland, and they also tend to adopt and exchange many customs of the neighboring
Black Tai.
Like other
Zomia areas (highlands >300 meters) groups, for most of history, the Mường were neither under any regional pre-modern states' influence, both politically and culturally. Professor
James C. Scott in his 2009 book ''
The Art of Not Being Governed
''The'' is a grammatical article in English, denoting nouns that are already or about to be mentioned, under discussion, implied or otherwise presumed familiar to listeners, readers, or speakers. It is the definite article in English. ''The ...
'' also included the abstract outlined by Keith Taylor and Patricia Pelley that "the Mường are popularly regarded as the pre-Sinitic version of the Việt." Although it has been little studied, scholarships believe that due to many plausible reasons, the ethnically and linguistically schism between Vietnamese and Mường speakers occurred during the seventh to ninth centuries AD, roughly during the period of Chinese
Tang Empire's domination over Northern Vietnam. Taylor describes the end of
Nanzhao-Tang war probably vis-a-vis with the Muong-Vietnamese schism. The Mường refer themselves by their variations of endonym ''Mol/Monl/Moan'' (people) and ''mwal tlong'' (inner people), while the term ''Mường'' is a mere xenonym used by the Vietnamese and then French administration implied that xenonym ''Mường'' to various
Mường-speaking tribes into one single ''Mường'' ethnicity during the 1920s.
Historical records said there were Mường rebellions in 1029, 1300, 1351, 1430s, 1822, 1833, 1880s. In 1931, Mường population was 180,000, and it grew to 415,000 by 1960.
Presently, the Mường are one of the four main groups of Vietic speakers in Vietnam, the others being the
Việt,
Thổ and
Chứt. The
Nguồn, who are classified as Việt, are sometimes believed to be the southernmost group of the Mường, who intermixed with Chứt people.
Mythology
The Mường
epic ''Te tấc te đác'' (
Vietnamese: Đẻ đất đẻ nước) traces their mythological ancestry to a legendary bird couple called Chim Ây (male bird) and Cái Ứa (female bird). In the Mường epic cycle the origins of all natural phenomena, the first people and then their cultural practices such as the acquisition of fire, building houses, producing silk, casting bronze drums, and weaving and embroidering, are related to the uplands. The first Mường people were living in a cave on the mountain Hang Hao from where their descendants resettled in all the other big and small villages (mường). Only one son of the first Mường parents, ''Dịt Dàng'', or the king Việt, went down to lowlands to live and to build a capital city there with a palace and big market.
This place in the plains is named in the epic tales as Kinh Kỳ-Kẻ Chợ, i.e. the area of the capital city and market-place. In the Mường epic tales uplanders and lowlanders intensively interact
with each other. For instance, they jointly cut down the huge tree of Chu ‘with its copper trunk and iron branches’ and together move it out of the mountains down to the plains.
In contrast to this, in the Vietnamese story of descent the capital city is located in an upland area, in Phong Châu. Here the eldest of the fifty sons who stayed in the mountains with their mother founded the capital of the first Vietnamese kingdom Văn Lang. Many depicted details of ancient life of the Vietnamese are also related to mountains: they use burnt ginger roots instead of salt that could be produced only by the sea; men cut their hair short to make it easier when moving in the forests; their lands are reserved mainly for cultivating glutinous rice which requires less water to grow than wet rice and could be easily cultivated on the hillsides; for some ritual purposes they prepare special dishes from this sort of rice such as rice cooked in bamboo tubes or stuffed steamed cakes (bánh chưng, bánh dầy).
Forests in Vietnamese tradition are always associated with mountain areas as plains are reserved for paddy fields. Cutting hair was a custom specific for Việt (Yue) men in contrast to Han Chinese who had been keeping their hair long.
Stuffed steamed cakes similar to the Vietnamese
bánh chưng and bánh dầy are also found in the cuisine of
Zhuang people
The Zhuang (; ; , , Sawndip: 佈獞) are a Tai-speaking ethnic group who mostly live in the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region in Southern China. Some also live in the Yunnan, Guangdong, Guizhou, and Hunan provinces. They form one of the 56 ...
in Guangxi province, that again provokes associations between Tai and Viet-Muong cultural traditions.
Language
The Mường speak the
Mường language, a close relative of
Vietnamese.
Writing
Writing is the act of creating a persistent representation of language. A writing system includes a particular set of symbols called a ''script'', as well as the rules by which they encode a particular spoken language. Every written language ...
based on the
Vietnamese alphabet
The Vietnamese alphabet (, ) is the modern writing script for the Vietnamese language. It uses the Latin script based on Romance languages like French language, French, originally developed by Francisco de Pina (1585–1625), a missionary from P ...
appeared in the 20th century, introduced by Western scholars. The Mường aristocracy were already familiar with Chinese writing through their study of the Confucian canon.
The Mường language is mainly used in the domestic sphere of communication. Most native speakers also speak Vietnamese.
Geographic distribution
The population of Mường in Vietnam was 1,452,095 according to the 2019 census, 1.51% of Vietnam's population.
They mostly live in the north of Vietnam, mainly in the mountainous provinces of
Hòa Bình (549,026 people, comprising 64.28% of the province's population),
Thanh Hóa (376,340 people, comprising 10.34% of the province's population),
Phú Thọ (218,404 people, comprising 14.92% of the province's population), and
Sơn La (84,676 people, comprising 6.78% of the province's population).
[ In Hòa Bình province, there are four large Mường population centers: Mường Vang ( Lạc Sơn District), Mường Bi ( Tân Lạc District), Mường Thàng ( Cao Phong District) and Mường Động ( Kim Bôi District).
]
Economy
The Mường residents primarily grow wet rice and some of them also grow corn and cassava. Breeding is attached special importance to development. The main livestock is cattle and poultries. The significant economic resources of the Mường family are exploiting products of forest including mushrooms, wood ear, wood, bamboo, rattan, etc. The typical crafts of the Mường are weaving, knitting, reeling.
Literature
The Mường people have many valuable epics (Mường: mo), such as Te tấc te đác (meaning Giving rise to the Earth and the Water).
Holidays
The main holidays of the Mường are New Year and agrarian holidays. During the celebration of the New Year, Mường people pray to the ancestors. Such prayers are also arranged on the revolutionary holidays after which the whole village treats themselves to pre-cooked dishes.
File:Festival Khai Ha - Muong Bi.jpg
File:Le hoi nang han 2016.jpg
Clothing
Different Mường groups will wear different clothing styles. Some wear clothing borrowed from the Thái, while others wear clothing similar to the Vietnamese. In general, clothing for women consists of some type of tunic or robe, headscarf, and skirt. Some women in the past wore neck rings like other minorities in Northern Vietnam. Men generally wear simple tunics and pants.
Religion
Mainly, the Mường follow Buddhism
Buddhism, also known as Buddhadharma and Dharmavinaya, is an Indian religion and List of philosophies, philosophical tradition based on Pre-sectarian Buddhism, teachings attributed to the Buddha, a wandering teacher who lived in the 6th or ...
(possibly Theravada
''Theravāda'' (; 'School of the Elders'; ) is Buddhism's oldest existing school. The school's adherents, termed ''Theravādins'' (anglicized from Pali ''theravādī''), have preserved their version of the Buddha's teaching or ''Dharma (Buddhi ...
) and Christianity
Christianity is an Abrahamic monotheistic religion, which states that Jesus in Christianity, Jesus is the Son of God (Christianity), Son of God and Resurrection of Jesus, rose from the dead after his Crucifixion of Jesus, crucifixion, whose ...
( Catholics), often with local animistic
Animism (from meaning 'breath, Soul, spirit, life') is the belief that objects, places, and creatures all possess a distinct Spirituality, spiritual essence. Animism perceives all things—animals, plants, Rock (geology), rocks, rivers, Weather, ...
influences. They believe in the existence of harmful spirits (ma tai, ma em, and others).
The Mường practice their traditional ethnic religion, worshiping ancestral spirits and other supernatural deities. They are primarily animists, which means that they believe that non-living objects have spirits. They also deify local heroes who have died. However, with the introduction of modern medicine, adherence to many folk beliefs has declined.
File:Ritual hat, Muong - Vietnam Museum of Ethnology - Hanoi, Vietnam - DSC02671.JPG, Mường shaman's hat
File:Muong funeral - Vietnam Museum of Ethnology - Hanoi, Vietnam - DSC02684.JPG, Mường funeral
Genetics
Huang et al. (2022) found that Viet-Muong speakers, including ethnic Muong and Kinh people, genetically cluster with Kra-Dai speakers.
See also
* Mường Autonomous Territory
* Mon people
The Mon (; Thai Mon: ဂကူမည်; , ; , ) are an ethnic group who inhabit Lower Myanmar's Mon State, Kayin State, Kayah State, Tanintharyi Region, Bago Region, the Irrawaddy Delta, and several areas in Thailand (mostly in Pathum Than ...
References
Works cited
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External links
* http://hedo-vietnam.tripod.com/ethnic_groups/muong.htm
vietnam people
Video
Video showing music, food, and wedding customs of the Muong people in Hoa Binh
Government scientists work with farmers from the Muong ethnic minority to improve local rice varieties
{{Authority control
Ethnic groups in Vietnam
Vietic peoples