Getting the doors welded. #fadedlovegarage#traditionalcustoms https://www.instagram.com/p/BtMbrVegnW0/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=lqbgiayv6fqp
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Getting the doors welded. #fadedlovegarage#traditionalcustoms https://www.instagram.com/p/BtMbrVegnW0/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=lqbgiayv6fqp
Culture and Customs of the Dao Ethnic Group
Ethnic minorities often reside in remote areas or high mountains, sustaining themselves through hunting or slash-and-burn agriculture. Introducing tourism to these communities can boost their income, mitigate environmental damage, and provide a refreshing climate for visitors. Let's join hands to protect our environment and make our Earth greener, cleaner, and more beautiful.
Housing: Dao houses vary greatly, including ground-level houses, stilt houses, or half-stilt, half-ground houses.
Family Structure: Patriarchal.
Traditional Clothing: Historically, men wore their hair long, tied in a bun at the nape of the neck or kept a long tuft on top with the sides shaved. Different Dao groups have distinct ways of wearing headscarves. There are two types of shirts: long and short. Dao women’s attire is diverse, often including long aprons, skirts, or trousers. Their clothing is very colorful, with intricate embroidery created from memory on the fabric's underside, resulting in raised patterns on the front. Patterns include swastikas, pine trees, birds, humans, animals, and leaves. The Dao people create patterns on fabric using beeswax, drawing with brushes or printing with beeswax-coated stamps. After dyeing the fabric with indigo, the patterns appear sky blue due to the beeswax resisting the dye.
Cuisine: The Dao mainly eat rice, with some areas consuming more corn than rice or porridge. They enjoy boiled meat, dried meat, fermented meat, and sour bamboo shoot soup.
Festivals: The Dao celebrate Tet in January, worship ancestors in January, July, and December, with specific days for ancestor worship varying among different Dao groups. They also have life cycle ceremonies like the Cap Sac ceremony, weddings, funerals, health prayers, and spirit worship.
Beliefs: The Dao follow both primitive beliefs, agricultural rituals, and are significantly influenced by Confucianism, Buddhism, and especially Taoism. Ban Vuong is considered the progenitor of the Dao and is worshiped alongside each family's ancestors. Traditionally, all men of age must undergo the Cap Sac ceremony, which is a Taoist ritual with traces of ancient initiation rites.
The Dao have polytheistic beliefs, worshiping ancestral spirits, kitchen gods, local deities within families, and clan spirits within lineages or clans. At the village level, they worship village spirits, including protective deities and local gods, and conduct rituals for rain or sun prayers, pest control, etc. Historically, they also worshiped field, hill, and water source spirits.
Culture and Customs of the Dao Ethnic Group
Ethnic minorities often reside in remote areas or high mountains, sustaining themselves through hunting or slash-and-burn agriculture. Introducing tourism to these communities can boost their income, mitigate environmental damage, and provide a refreshing climate for visitors. Let's join hands to protect our environment and make our Earth greener, cleaner, and more beautiful.
Housing: Dao houses vary greatly, including ground-level houses, stilt houses, or half-stilt, half-ground houses.
Family Structure: Patriarchal.
Traditional Clothing: Historically, men wore their hair long, tied in a bun at the nape of the neck or kept a long tuft on top with the sides shaved. Different Dao groups have distinct ways of wearing headscarves. There are two types of shirts: long and short. Dao women’s attire is diverse, often including long aprons, skirts, or trousers. Their clothing is very colorful, with intricate embroidery created from memory on the fabric's underside, resulting in raised patterns on the front. Patterns include swastikas, pine trees, birds, humans, animals, and leaves. The Dao people create patterns on fabric using beeswax, drawing with brushes or printing with beeswax-coated stamps. After dyeing the fabric with indigo, the patterns appear sky blue due to the beeswax resisting the dye.
Cuisine: The Dao mainly eat rice, with some areas consuming more corn than rice or porridge. They enjoy boiled meat, dried meat, fermented meat, and sour bamboo shoot soup.
Festivals: The Dao celebrate Tet in January, worship ancestors in January, July, and December, with specific days for ancestor worship varying among different Dao groups. They also have life cycle ceremonies like the Cap Sac ceremony, weddings, funerals, health prayers, and spirit worship.
Beliefs: The Dao follow both primitive beliefs, agricultural rituals, and are significantly influenced by Confucianism, Buddhism, and especially Taoism. Ban Vuong is considered the progenitor of the Dao and is worshiped alongside each family's ancestors. Traditionally, all men of age must undergo the Cap Sac ceremony, which is a Taoist ritual with traces of ancient initiation rites.
The Dao have polytheistic beliefs, worshiping ancestral spirits, kitchen gods, local deities within families, and clan spirits within lineages or clans. At the village level, they worship village spirits, including protective deities and local gods, and conduct rituals for rain or sun prayers, pest control, etc. Historically, they also worshiped field, hill, and water source spirits.
Culture and Customs of the Dao Ethnic Group
Ethnic minorities often reside in remote areas or high mountains, sustaining themselves through hunting or slash-and-burn agriculture. Introducing tourism to these communities can boost their income, mitigate environmental damage, and provide a refreshing climate for visitors. Let's join hands to protect our environment and make our Earth greener, cleaner, and more beautiful.
Housing: Dao houses vary greatly, including ground-level houses, stilt houses, or half-stilt, half-ground houses.
Family Structure: Patriarchal.
Traditional Clothing: Historically, men wore their hair long, tied in a bun at the nape of the neck or kept a long tuft on top with the sides shaved. Different Dao groups have distinct ways of wearing headscarves. There are two types of shirts: long and short. Dao women’s attire is diverse, often including long aprons, skirts, or trousers. Their clothing is very colorful, with intricate embroidery created from memory on the fabric's underside, resulting in raised patterns on the front. Patterns include swastikas, pine trees, birds, humans, animals, and leaves. The Dao people create patterns on fabric using beeswax, drawing with brushes or printing with beeswax-coated stamps. After dyeing the fabric with indigo, the patterns appear sky blue due to the beeswax resisting the dye.
Cuisine: The Dao mainly eat rice, with some areas consuming more corn than rice or porridge. They enjoy boiled meat, dried meat, fermented meat, and sour bamboo shoot soup.
Festivals: The Dao celebrate Tet in January, worship ancestors in January, July, and December, with specific days for ancestor worship varying among different Dao groups. They also have life cycle ceremonies like the Cap Sac ceremony, weddings, funerals, health prayers, and spirit worship.
Beliefs: The Dao follow both primitive beliefs, agricultural rituals, and are significantly influenced by Confucianism, Buddhism, and especially Taoism. Ban Vuong is considered the progenitor of the Dao and is worshiped alongside each family's ancestors. Traditionally, all men of age must undergo the Cap Sac ceremony, which is a Taoist ritual with traces of ancient initiation rites.
The Dao have polytheistic beliefs, worshiping ancestral spirits, kitchen gods, local deities within families, and clan spirits within lineages or clans. At the village level, they worship village spirits, including protective deities and local gods, and conduct rituals for rain or sun prayers, pest control, etc. Historically, they also worshiped field, hill, and water source spirits.
Culture and Customs of the Sán Dìu Ethnic Group
Ethnic minorities often reside in remote areas or high mountains, sustaining themselves through hunting or slash-and-burn agriculture. Introducing tourism to these communities can boost their income, mitigate environmental damage, and provide a refreshing climate for visitors. Let's join hands to protect our environment and make our Earth greener, cleaner, and more beautiful.
Main Characteristics
Cuisine: The Sán Dìu Ethnic Group eat plain rice mixed with sweet potatoes and cassava. After meals, they often have a bowl of thin porridge similar to the Nùng people.
Traditional Dress: Women's traditional attire includes a black scarf, a long tunic (single or double-layered; the inner one white, the outer one indigo and slightly longer), a red bib, a white, pink, or blue sash, and a skirt made of two separate indigo pieces just knee-length. They also wear indigo or white leggings. Jewelry includes silver necklaces, bracelets, earrings, and a silver belt chain. Men dress like the Vietnamese with their hair in a topknot, wearing a headscarf or turban, long dark tunics, and white trousers.
Housing: They live in the midland regions of Northern Vietnam, east of the Red River's left bank.
Marriage Customs: Sán Dìu wedding customs involve many rituals. The "khai hoa tửu" ceremony occurs at the bride's home before she joins the groom's family. This involves a wine jar and a plate with two paper flowers, a white one beneath a red one, and two boiled eggs tied with red threads and coins. After the ritual, the egg yolks are mixed with wine for guests to drink, celebrating the couple's happiness.
Worship: Their altars usually have three incense bowls for ancestors, a shaman, and the kitchen god. Households without a male head ordained in traditional rites only have two bowls. Recently deceased family members are also honored with a lower incense bowl. The Sán Dìu also worship earth gods at local shrines and village deities.
Festivals: They celebrate festivals like many other ethnic groups in the region, with the Winter Solstice Festival uniquely symbolizing a wish for many offspring. Couples who have been childless often return to the wife’s family after the New Year, and the husband’s matchmaker re-asks for her hand in a re-marriage ceremony.
Calendar: The Sán Dìu follow the lunar calendar.
Music and Dance: They have male-female courting songs called "soọng cô" (night singing).
#SanDiuCulture #EthnicMinorities #VietnameseHeritage #TraditionalCustoms #CulturalDiversity
On July 3rd, 2013, the ChinaVine team visited Saran’s tailoring shop in Hohhot, Inner Mongolia. With expert knowledge of her craft, Saran works with her clients to ensure their custom-made clothing is appropriate for not only their purpose, but also their specific Inner Mongolian tribe. For more information and pictures: http://chinavine.org/2014/06/01/introduction158595/