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Population
Religious Belief
National Regional Autonomy
Tibetan Economy
Transportation, Posts & Telecommunications
Environmental Protection
Tourism
Education, Science & Technology
Culture, Public Health & Sports
People's Livelihood & Social Security
Appendices
Web Links
40th Anniversary of the Establishment of Tibet Autonomous Region
Tibet Through My Camera's Lens
Late Autumn in Tibet
50 Years in Tibet
China Tibet Information Center
Ethnic Makeup

Tibetan is one of the ancient ethnic groups of China. Apart from those scattered in Qinghai, Gansu, Sichuan, Yunnan and other provinces, around half of Tibetans dwell in Tibet.

 

 

In addition to Tibetans, other ethnic groups, including Han, Hui, Moinba, Lhoba, Naxi, Nu, Derung, as well as Deng and Xiarba peoples, are found in Tibet.

 

Tibetan

The principal inhabitants of Tibet, speaking the language that belongs to the Tibetan sub-group of the Tibeto-Burmese group of the Sino-Tibetan language family. There are three main dialects: U-Tsang, Kham and Amdo. Most Tibetans undertake farming and animal husbandry. Urban residents mostly engage in handicrafts, industry and commerce. They believe in Tibetan Buddhism. Tibetan people wear robes with waistcloth. Married women usually tie aprons with rainbow-like designs. Both men and women wear long hair and in plaits and like wearing ornaments. The style of dresses and ornaments varies more or less in different areas. The staple food is zanba (roasted qingke barley flour or pea meal). They like to drink tea with butter or milk and qingke wine. They also have a liking for beef and mutton, but do not eat perissodactyls. In ancient times, Tibetans buried their dead in the ground, but in modern times Tibetans practice celestial burial (by which bodies were all exposed to birds of prey), cremation and water burial.

Moinba

An old ethnic group living on the Tibetan Plateau mainly distributed in Moinyu in south Tibet, with some scattered in Medog, Nyingchi and Cona counties. The Moinbas speak the language that belongs to the Moinba sub-group of the Tibeto-Burmese group of the Sino-Tibetan language family. With complex dialects, they have no their own script of written language. Most Mionba people can speak and write Tibetan. Their livelihood is based on agriculture, supplemented by animal husbandry, forestry, hunting and handicrafts. Moinba people wear red robes and brown hats with orange margin, or black terais. Women wear ornaments while men wear saber at the waist. Both men and women like drinking and smoking. Rice, corn, buckwheat and jizhaogu (glutinous highland millet) are staple foods. Most Moinba people believe in Tibetan Buddhism, but in certain areas, some people practice traditional shamanism. The dead are generally given water burial, while burial in the ground, celestial burial and cremation are also practiced.

Lhoba

Mainly living in Lhoyu in the southeast of Tibet, with some scattered in Mainling, Medog, Zayu, Lhunze and Nang counties. The Lhoba language also falls into the Tibeto-Burmese group of the Sino-Tibetan language family. Having no scripts of their own, they normally use Tibetan for written communications. Mainly engaged in agriculture, Lhoba people are good at bamboo weaving. Men like wearing woolen sleeveless jackets and hats with brims made of animal leather or bamboo canes, while women wear short-sleeved shirts and sheathy skirts with leggings. Corn and Jizhaogu are staple foods. They also eat rice and buckwheat.

Hui

Most of the Hui people living in the Tibet Autonomous Region today are descendants of the Hui who moved to Tibet from Gansu, Shaanxi, Qinghai, Sichuan and Yunnan provinces during the Qing Dynasty. A small number of them came from Central Asia. Most live in cities and towns, notably Lhasa, Xigaze and Qamdo, doing business and handicrafts or working as butchers. They use both Tibetan and Chinese languages in daily life, and Urdu and Arabic in religious activities. They believe in Islam and mosques are found in Lhasa and some other places.

Deng

Commonly known as "Dengba people" and mainly living in Zayu County. The Deng population in China is around 1,450. They speak a language also included in the Tibeto-Burmese group of the Sino-Tibetan language family. Their dresses are very unique. Women usually wear silver, drum-shaped earrings and a string of beads or silver ornaments on the neck, while men wear black scarf on the head and sword on the waist. Having no written language, they keep records by notching wood, tying knots or arranging sticks or branches 50 years ago. After the Democratic Reform in Tibet, they started to move out from deep mountains and forests and settled in houses the government helped build for them.

Xiarba

Mainly living in Lixin Township in the vicinity of the Zham entry/exit port and Chentang in Dinggye County at the China-Nepal border. There are now over 1,200 Xiarba people in China. In Tibetan language, "Xiarba" means "oriental people." Having no scripts of their own, they use Tibetan in written communications. The Xiarba people in Lixin are divided into five surnames and those in Chentang into two. Marriage within the same surname is taboo. They believe in Buddhism. They mainly undertake agriculture and animal husbandry. Corn, potato, Jizhaogu, buckwheat and beans are staple foods. Men wear white, woolen, short-sleeved jacketing with black bands, sword on waist. Women wear black robe and colorful long-sleeved frock, gold earrings and long plaits with red string.

 

Apart from the above-mentioned ethnic groups, there are some other ethnic groups, such as Naxi, Nu and Derung, who live in the southern area of Qamdo Prefecture. In history, some Mongolians inhabited in Tibet and were later assimilated into the Tibetan ethnicity. Han people began to move to Tibet during the Qing Dynasty and mainly lived in Lhasa, Xigaze, Qamdo, Zetang and other cities, where they built some Han-style structures. The descendants of these Han people were later also assimilated into the Tibetan ethnicity. Today, most Han people living in Tibet are technicians, workers, teachers, health workers and public servants coming from other parts of China to help with the construction of Tibet.

 

Birthrate, Mortality Rate and Natural Growth Rate of Tibetan Population

Year

Birth

Mortality

Natural Growth Rate

Number10000 People

Birthrate ()

Number10000 People)

Mortality Rate ()

1970

3.75

25.3

1.52

10.2

15.1

1980

3.93

21.4

1.51

8.2

13.2

1985

4.62

23.3

2.01

10.1

13.2

1990

4.91

22.6

1.61

7.4

15.2

1995

4.82

20.6

1.77

7.6

13.0

2000

4.42

17.6

1.65

6.6

11.0

2001

3.60

14.2

1.67

6.6

7.6

2002

3.47

13.6

1.57

6.1

7.5

2003

3.64

14.2

1.71

6.7

7.5

Population of Various Ethnic Groups    Unit: Person

Ethnic Group

1985

1990

1995

2000

2002

2003

Total Population

1994808

2180520

2355540

2512300

2554423

2592113

Tibetan

1909693

2095561

2268749

2421856

2449231

2464742

Han

70932

67407

67772

72122

85166

105379

Hui

1529

2269

2357

2123

2140

2513

Lhoba

2036

2325

2690

2856

3461

3565

Moinba

6445

7463

8084

8471

9308

9584

Naxi

871

1260

1092

1024

1109

1139

Mongolian

72

79

118

104

102

161

Nu

227

378

394

430

52

468

Zhuang

31

50

31

50

62

57

Dulong

80

32

21

32

26

30

Lili

62

15

23

41

18

18

Tu

90

116

150

151

194

249

Manchurian

81

168

171

213

215

243

Bai

36

173

61

61

81

101

Boyi

12

7

5

15

22

31

Uygur

6

10

4

10

11

7

Miao

42

70

82

89

134

170

Yi

21

36

35

39

74

88

Sharpa

1403

1819

2131

2152

1604

1645

Deng People

1097

1248

1494

1395

1238

1514

Other Ethnic Groups

42

34

76

98

175

409

Number of Households and Population

Year

Year-end Number of Households

10000

Year-end Population 

10000

Annual Average Population

10000

Population Density

Person/Sq.km

1959

24.32

122.80

121.71

1.00

1965

27.60

137.12

135.90

1.12

1970

29.11

151.20

149.63

1.23

1975

32.20

169.11

167.62

1.38

1980

34.42

185.28

183.99

1.51

1985

35.49

199.48

198.08

1.62

1990

38.29

218.05

216.98

1.78

1992

40.21

225.27

223.53

1.83

1993

39.78

228.88

227.08

1.86

1994

41.44

231.98

230.43

1.89

1995

42.31

235.55

233.77

1.92

1996

43.17

239.30

237.43

1.93

1997

45.42

242.74

241.02

1.96

1998

44.68

245.39

244.06

1.99

1999

47.23

247.72

246.55

2.01

2000

49.96

251.23

248.48

2.02

2001

55.81

253.70

252.47

2.06

2002

50.91

255.44

254.57

2.08

2003

54.33

259.21

257.33

2.14

Population of Various Areas    Unit: 10000

Area

1985

1990

1995

2000

2002

2003

Total

199.48

218.05

235.55

251.23

255.44

259.21

Lhasa City

32.39

35.66

38.33

40.37

40.95

42.08

Qamdo Prefecture

46.39

49.72

53.06

57.33

58.22

58.34

Shannan Prefecture

26.10

28.30

30.28

31.53

31.78

32.01

Xigaze Prefecture

49.98

55.38

59.96

63.03

64.14

64.81

Nagqu Prefecture

26.58

29.95

33.03

36.28

37.68

38.72

Ngari Prefecture

 

5.41

6.13

6.85

7.41

7.66

7.78

Nyingchi Prefecture

12.63

12.91

14.04

14.38

15.01

15.47

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