Kayan people (Borneo)

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Being an indigenous tribe in Borneo, the Kayan people are similar to their neighbours, the Kenyah tribe, with which they are grouped together with the Bahau people under the Apo Kayan people group. The Kayan people are categorised as a part of the Dayak people. They are distinct from, and not to be confused with, the Kayan people of Myanmar.

The population of the Kayan ethnic group may be around 200,000.<ref>Kayan in the Encyclopædia Britannica Template:Webarchive, retrieved on 12 August 2006, from Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service.</ref> They are part of a larger grouping of people referred collectively as the Orang Ulu, or upriver people. Like some other Dayak people, they are known for being fierce warriors, former headhunters, adept in Upland rice cultivation, and having extensive tattoos and stretched earlobes amongst both sexes.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

History

File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM Een Europeaan wordt op de oever van een rivier omringd door Kajan Dajak krijgers en bevolking tijdens een expeditie naar de berg Boekit Batoe op Serawak TMnr 60043369.jpg
A European man having a discussion with leaders of the Kayan people in Sarawak, circa 1900 to 1940

They may have originated from along the Kayan river in the North Kalimantan province of Borneo. They live along the upper Kayan and the middle Kapuas and Mahakam rivers.<ref name="TK8">Template:Cite book</ref> They seem to have expanded to the south in Sarawak in historic times, generating some conflicts with the Iban that were expanding north at the same time.<ref name="TK8"/> They have settled in Sarawak on the middle Baram River, the Bintulu River and along the Rajang River,<ref name="TK8"/> having been pressed back a little during the late 19th century. In 1863 West Kalimantan, Iban people migrated to the upstreams of Saribas River and Rejang River and started to attack the Kayan people in those areas and continued doing so northwards and later eastwards. Wars and headhunting attacks have caused many other tribes to be displaced, including the Kayan people, who make up of 1.4% of the West Kutai Regency population.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Significant expansion to the east Borneo also occurred during the historical times, the conversion of the Kayan people to Islam forming the ethnogenesis of the Bulungan people.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Language

The Kayan language belongs to the Malayo-Polynesian branch of the Austronesian language family.<ref name="TK8"/>

Main activities

File:Feuererzeugen bei den Kajan durch Reiben eines Strickes un ein Stück weichen, trockenen Holzes.jpg
A Kayan using rattan to "saw" a piece of firewood
File:The pagan tribes of Borneo; a description of their physical, moral and intellectual condition, with some discussion of their ethnic relations (1912) (14598075089).jpg
Kayan people harvesting the sap of a gutta-percha tree (from Hose & McDougall, 1912)

Their basic culture is similar to the other Dayak people in Borneo. Their agriculture was based upon shifting cultivation techniques and the cultivation of Upland rice.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Other farming such as sago, corn, yams, pumpkin and tobacco are also cultivated. During the years of famine, sago is mined. Fishing (killing fish with poisons) plays an important role,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> and a smaller role is played by hunting with a sumpitan.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The Kayan people are engaged in breeding pigs and chickens, while dogs are kept for ritual purposes. The Kayan people are known as excellent blacksmiths (the Kayan Mandau swords are the main item of exchange), boat builders and carpenters.<ref name="EGOISA170">Template:Cite book</ref> Loom, weaving, production of tans, arts, wood carving, making of masks and pottery are also developed.<ref name="EGOISA170"/>

Social structure

File:KITLV - 25690 - Demmeni, J. - Wrestling Kayans on the Upper Mahakam, Central Borneo - 1898-1900.tif
Kayan wrestling at upper mahakam, central Borneo. Photo taken between c.1898 and 1900

Traditionally, they live in long houses on river banks. Their settlement consists of one or several long houses as long as 300 meters, which can accommodate up to 100 families (400–600 people) and consist of a common veranda and rooms. Residents of a long house constitute a tribal community. The Kayan people are divided into three endogamous estate groups; "house owning group" or aristocrat (ipun uma, maren, or keta'u), community members or commoners (panyin) and slaves (dipen).<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Among some Kayan, there is a fourth estate, the lower aristocrats (hipuy ok). Among the nobility, marriages are usually outside of the community, sometimes with other ethnic groups; while community members and slaves usually marry within the community. The leader is usually elected from the nobility class (in the 19th century, he also served as a military leader). The settlement is bi-localized,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> and the filiation is bilateral.

Religion

The Kayan people developed a religion and a complex cult (bounty hunting and human sacrifices<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> that disappeared at the beginning of the 20th century, as well as shamanism).<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The core event was the feast of collected heads, during which warrior initiations and funeral ceremonies were held.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In the 20th century, some Kayan people were converted to Christianity,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> while others developed an indigenous religious reform after World War II, Adat Bungan. This reform started with the Kenyah Lepo' Tau of Long Nawang.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Culture

Traditional Kayan song

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Notable people

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References

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Further reading

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