Hoanya people
The Hoanya (Chinese:
Their language, Hoanya, is now extinct.[1]
The Lloa people and Arikun people are generally considered to be a part of the Hoanya people.
Etymology
[edit]Scholars like Kaim Ang suggest the name of the people, Hoanya, comes from Taiwanese Hokkien Hoan-iá (
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "China–Taiwan | Ethnologue".
- ^ Ang, Kaim (2021). "「Hoanya」
族 名 辯 證 及其周 遭族群 " [The Debating of the Ethnic Name 'Hoanya' and its Surrounding Ethnic Groups]. Taiwan History Research. 22 (4): 1–40. - ^ Chen, I-Chen (2019-11-20). "錯置
的 名字 :(╳洪 雅 Hoanya╳)羅 亞 Lloa、阿 立 昆 Arikun" [Misplaced Names: (Hoanya) Lloa, Arikun]. Indigenous Sight. Indigenous Peoples Cultural Foundation. Retrieved 2023-08-06. - ^ Dominican Order of Preachers, O.P. (1626–1642). Written at Manila. Lee, Fabio Yuchung (
李 毓中); Chen, Tsung-jen (陳 宗 仁 ); José, Regalado Trota; Caño, José Luis Ortigosa (eds.). Dictionario Hispánico Sinicum (in Early Modern Spanish & Early Manila Hokkien and with some Middle Mandarin). Kept as Vocabulario Español-Chino con caracteres chinos (TOMO 215) in the University of Santo Tomás Archives, Manila (2018 Republished in Taiwan ed.). Hsinchu: National Tsing Hua University Press. pp. 569 [PDF] / 545 [As Written].{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link) - ^ Medhurst, Walter Henry (1832). A Dictionary of the Hok-këèn Dialect of the Chinese Language: According to the Reading and Colloquial Idioms: Containing about 12,000 Characters (in English and Hokkien). Macau: East India Press. p. 736.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link)