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Negrito
Set of ethnic groups in Southeast Asia and Andaman islands
Set of ethnic groups in Southeast Asia and Andaman islands
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| group | Negrito |
| image | A LUZON NEGRITO WITH SPEAR.jpg |
| caption | A Luzon Negrito with spear |
| regions | Isolated geographic regions in India and Maritime Southeast Asia |
| languages | Andamanese languages, Aslian languages, Philippine Negrito languages |
| religions | Animism, folk religion, *Anito*, Christianity, Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism |
the ethnic groups
The term Negrito (; ) refers to several diverse ethnic groups who inhabit isolated parts of Southeast Asia and the Andaman Islands. Populations often described as Negrito include: the Andamanese peoples (including the Great Andamanese, the Onge, the Jarawa, and the Sentinelese) of the Andaman Islands, the Semang peoples (among them, the Batek people) of Peninsular Malaysia, the Maniq people of Southern Thailand, as well as the Aeta of Luzon, the Ati and Tumandok of Panay, the Mamanwa of Mindanao, and about 30 other officially recognized ethnic groups in the Philippines.
Etymology
The word Negrito, the Spanish diminutive of negro, is used to mean "little black person." This usage was coined by 16th-century Spanish missionaries operating in the Philippines, and was borrowed by other European travellers and colonialists across Austronesia to label various peoples perceived as sharing relatively small physical stature and dark skin. Contemporary usage of an alternative Spanish epithet, Negrillos, also tended to bundle these peoples with the pygmy peoples of Central Africa on the basis of perceived similarities in stature and complexion. The appropriateness of bundling peoples of different ethnicities by similarities in stature and complexion has been called into question.
Population
There are over 100,000 Negritos in the Philippines. In 2010, there were 50,236 Aeta people in the Philippines. There were 55,473 Ati people (2020 census). Officially, Malaysia had approximately 4,800 Negrito (Semangs). This number increases if we include some of the populations or individual groups among Orang Asli who have either assimilated Negrito population or have admixed origins. According to the 2006 census, the number of Orang Asli was 141,230 Andamanese of India with just c. over 500. Thailand Negrito Maniq is estimated 300, divided into several clans. Other puts it at 382 or less than 500.
Culture
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Most groups designated as "Negrito" lived as hunter-gatherers, while some also used agriculture, such as plant harvesting. Today most live assimilated to the majority population of their respective homeland. Discrimination and poverty are often problems, caused either by their lower social position, their hunter-gatherer lifestyles, or both.
Origins

Based on perceived physical similarities, Negritos were once considered a single population of closely related people. However, genetic studies suggest that they consist of several separate groups descended from the same ancient East Eurasian meta-population that gave rise to modern East Asian peoples and Oceanian peoples, as well as displaying genetic heterogeneity. The Negritos form the indigenous population of Southeast Asia, but were largely absorbed by Austroasiatic- and Austronesian-speaking groups who migrated from southern East Asia into Mainland and Insular Southeast Asia with the Neolithic expansion. The remainders form minority groups in geographically isolated regions.
Genetic studies provided mixed evidence of modern Negrito populations, with populations considered Negrito showing diverse admixtures. Although a genetic affinity between Andaman Islanders, Malaysian and Filipino Negritos was detected by some authors, several studies indicate that Negrito populations are closer to their neighboring non-Negrito communities in their paternal heritage and autosomal DNA on average. Most modern groups considered Negrito possess significant admixture from Austronesian or Austroasiatic sources, with Negrito groups in the Philippines found to have between 30 and 50% Austronesian ancestry.
The Semang and Maniq in the interior of the Malay Peninsula share genetic affinities with ancient Hoabinhian hunter-gatherers, while also possessing ~35% East Asian related ancestry, likely brought about by recent admixture with surrounding agriculturalist communities in the region, according to the authors of a 2022 genetic study.
It has been found that the physical and morphological phenotypes of Negritos, such as short stature, a broad and snub nose, kinky hair and dark skin, "are shaped by novel mechanisms for adaptation to tropical rainforests" through convergent evolution and positive selection, rather than a remnant of a shared common ancestor, as suggested previously by some researchers.
A Negrito-like population was most likely also present in Taiwan before the Neolithic expansion and must have persisted into historical times, as suggested by evidence from morphological features of human skeletal remains dating from around 6,000 years ago resembling Negritos (especially Aetas in northern Luzon), and further corroborated by Chinese reports from the Qing period rule of Taiwan (1684 to 1895) and from tales of Taiwanese indigenous peoples about people with "dark skin, short-and-small body stature, frizzy hair, and occupation in forested mountains or remote caves".
References
References
- Manickham, Sandra Khor. (2009). "Responding to the West: Essays on Colonial Domination and Asian Agency". Amsterdam University Press.
- Historically, the label ''Negrito'' has also been used to refer to African pygmies.{{Cite EB1911. Akkas]], [[Batwa]]s, [[Wochua]]s and others...
- "2010 Census of Population and Housing, Report No. 2A: Demographic and Housing Characteristics (Non-Sample Variables) - Philippines". Philippine Statistics Authority.
- "Ethnicity in the Philippines (2020 Census of Population and Housing)". Philippine Statistics Authority.
- Kirk Endicott. (27 November 2015}} {{in lang). "Malaysia's Original People: Past, Present and Future of the Orang Asli. Introduction". NUS Press, National University of Singapore Press. 2016, pp. 1-38.
- "JAKOA Program". Jabatan Kemajuan Orang Asli (JAKOA).
- "36. The Negrito of Thailand; The Mani".
- ''Primal Survivor: Season 5, episode 1''
- (11 September 2023). "Calls for Maniq tribe to get their own patch". Bangkok Post.
- 2016 https://www.bangkokpost.com/thailand/special-reports/1139777/no-common-ground
- (2015-05-06). "The {{sic".
- Sofwan Noerwidi. (2017). "New Perspectives in Southeast Asian and Pacific Prehistory". ANU Press.
- (June 2013). "The Andaman Islanders in a Regional Genetic Context: Reexamining the Evidence for an Early Peopling of the Archipelago from South Asia". Human Biology.
- (2016). "Genomic reconstruction of the history of extant populations of India reveals five distinct ancestral components and a complex structure". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
- (2021). "Multiple migrations to the Philippines during the last 50,000 years". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
- (2021). "Genome of a middle Holocene hunter-gatherer from Wallacea". Nature.
- (2021). "Insights into the demographic history of Asia from common ancestry and admixture in the genomic landscape of present-day Austroasiatic speakers". BMC Biology.
- (6 January 2022). "A genetic history of migration, diversification, and admixture in Asia". Human Population Genetics and Genomics.
- (February 2018). "Genomic structure of the native inhabitants of Peninsular Malaysia and North Borneo suggests complex human population history in Southeast Asia". Human Genetics.
- (14 April 2015). "Unravelling the Genetic History of Negritos and Indigenous Populations of Southeast Asia". Genome Biology and Evolution.
- Endicott et al. 2003; Thangaraj et al. 2005; Wang et al. 2011, Y chromosome (Delfin et al. 2011; Scholes et al. 2011), and autosomal (HUGO Pan-Asia SNP Consortium 2009) studies indicate that Negrito populations are closer to their neighboring non-Negrito communities.
- (2006). "The Austronesians: Historical and Comparative Perspectives". Australian National University Press.
- (August 2014). "Reconstructing Austronesian population history in Island Southeast Asia". Nature Communications.
- (August 2017). "Discerning the Origins of the Negritos, First Sundaland People: Deep Divergence and Archaic Admixture". Genome Biology and Evolution.
- (2022). "Unveiling the Genetic History of the Maniq, a Primary Hunter-Gatherer Society". Genome Biology and Evolution.
- (June 2013). "The Skeletal Phenotype of 'Negritos' from the Andaman Islands and Philippines Relative to Global Variation among Hunter-Gatherers". Human Biology.
- (31 March 2022). "The distinct morphological phenotypes of Southeast Asian aborigines are shaped by novel mechanisms for adaptation to tropical rainforests". National Science Review.
- (3 February 2022). "Genetic Connections and Convergent Evolution of Tropical Indigenous Peoples in Asia". Molecular Biology and Evolution.
- (January 2003). "The Genetic Origins of the Andaman Islanders". The American Journal of Human Genetics.
- (4 October 2022). "Negritos in Taiwan and the wider prehistory of Southeast Asia: new discovery from the Xiaoma Caves". World Archaeology.
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