Nu Ethnic Minority

Population and Distribution
The Nu ethnic group has a population of 28,759 (in 2000) in which 96 % live in Gongshan, Fugong, Laping and Bijiang counties in Yunnan Province, along with Lisus, Drungs, Tibetans, Naxis, Bais and Hans. There is also a sparse distribution of Nu in Weixi County in Diqing Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture and Chayu County in Tibet Autonomous Region.

History
The Nu is an ancient tribe that originally lived on the banks of the Nu and Lancang Rivers. Historical records show that they are the descendants of both the Luluman people who inhabited the area during the Yuan Dynasty and people who resided in the Gongshan area during ancient times. These two tribes intermingled and intermarried, finally giving birth to a new group - Nu even though some distinctive characteristics of each group were preserved.

In the eighth century, the area inhabited by the Nu people came under the jurisdiction of the Nanzhao and Dali principalities, which paid tribute to the Tang (618-907) Dynasty court. During the Yuan and Ming dynasties the Nu people were administrated by a Naxi headman in Lijiang. From the 17th century on, Bai, Naxi and Tibetan rulers governed the Nu area simultaneously. In addition, the newly-immigrated Lisu headmen also oppress the Nu People, usurping the Nu people's land and sometimes carrying many of them off as slaves.

The Nu people used to be called Nusu, Anu, and Along. With the founding of the PRC in 1949, it was agreed upon that their official name would become the Nu ethnic group.

Language
The spoken language of the Nu people, consisting of three dialects, belongs to the Tibetan-Burmese group of the Chinese-Tibetan language family. These dialects differ from each other so greatly that people from different dialect areas cannot even communicate. As a result of frequent contact with the Han and Lisu, most Nu people can speak the Chinese and Lisu languages. Without a written script system of their own, the Nu people used to keep records by carving notches on sticks. Now, Han script is in common use.

Religion
The Nu people believe in a primitive religion and worship nature. They believe that everything in the world has its own spirit. Objects such as the sun, moon, stars, mountains, rivers, trees and rocks are all worshipped. Some also believe in Christianity and Lamaism.

Economy
The Nu people mainly engage in agriculture, but also hunt and gather wild plants. Their main crops include corn, buckwheat, barley, potatoes and beans. Some Nu people support themselves through cottage industries such as weaving, wine brewing, iron forging, etc.

The area inhabited by the Nu people is a kingdom of rare animals and plants. The dense forest here not only produces rare plants such as spruce, hemlock and fir but also serves as an important habitat for tigers, leopards, bears, red deer, and other animals. In addition, rich deposits of mineral resources, including bronze, iron, aluminum, crystal and mica, are found here.

Diet
The Nu people are used to having two meals per day. Their staple foods are maize and buckwheat. They seldom grow vegetables. The vegetables they do grow are usually leafy greens, cabbages, radishes, red peppers, etc. Each year in May and June, they often go to mountain forest areas to collect potherbs. The meat they eat mostly comes from family raised animals such as cattle, pigs, chickens, dogs, and sheep; another meat source for them is wild game.

Both men and women like drinking. They are especially adept at brewing wine. They make wine at home with surplus grain. When a distinguished guest comes for a visit, they always entertain him with good wine.

Residence
The Nu people's houses, mostly built adjacent to mountains, include two types: plank houses and bamboo-slip houses. Both types of houses are two-storied. The second floor makes up the living quarters for the family while the ground floor is used for storage and provides accommodation for the livestock. The second floor is subdivided into two rooms. The inner room is used as a bedroom as well as storeroom while the outer one, with a fireplace in the middle used for cooking, is for guests and also serves as the kitchen.

The floor of the house is made of planks or bamboo slips and is supported by a large number of stakes and pillars under it. So, people figuratively called the house "house propped on the ground by thousands of legs".

Fashion
Both men and women wear linen clothes. The women wear linen or cotton tunics with sleeves, which are buttoned on the left and long skirts. Young girls often wear aprons over their tunics. They like to wear necklaces strung with colored plastic beads. Some don beautiful head or chest ornaments with strings of coral, agates, shells and silver coins. They wear big copper earrings that hang to the shoulder.

Men often put on linen sleeved tunics over shorts. Most of them have ear length haircuts and wrap their heads with black turbans. Almost every man wears a string of coral on his left ear and hangs a machete from the left side of his waist. When they go out, they often carry machetes, bows, and arrow bags made from animal felt, which make them looks chivalrous and heroic.

Social Life
The Nu people like singing and dancing. Their energetic and straightforward songs and dances are full of national flavor. In addition, they play short flutes, Kouxuang, Dabian, Chinese lute, and other ethnic accompaniment musical instruments.

Festivals
The Fairy Festival, also called the Flower Festival, is a traditional festival celebrated by the Nu people who live in the Gongshan area of Yunnan Province. The festival comes on March 15th [lunar calendar], and lasts for three days. The legend goes that the Nu River often flooded in ancient times. A Nu girl named A-Rong, inspired by the web of a spider, created a kind of rope-bridge, by which the people could conveniently cross the river. Coveting the beauty of A-Rong, the chief of the Hou tribe tried to force her to marry him time and time again. A-Rong wouldn't agree, so she escaped into the mountains and eventually turned into a stone statue in a cave. To honor her, the Nu people celebrate Fairy Festival on March 15th every year.

When the festival comes, people will pick bunches of azaleas and sacrifice the fairy maiden at a cave called Fairy People Cave. After the ceremony, they drink together at home. The Nu people, young and old alike, dress up in their best traditional costumes, hold fresh flowers, and gather together in the open air, singing, dancing, and telling stories. There are also ball matches (a kind of football match), bow and arrow competitions, etc.

The Jijiamu Festival is the Spring Festival of the Nu people. It lasts about 15 days from the end of lunar December to the beginning of lunar January. It is often celebrated by the Nu living in Bijiang, Fugong, Gongshan, Lanping and Weixi counties of Yunnan Province.

Before the festival, households in every village are busy butchering pigs, making soft-rice dumplings, brewing wine and cleaning their courtyards. On New Year's Eve, before eating, they put corn and dishes of food on a three-legged barbecue. On top of the three legs, three cups are put and also three pieces of meat, then the family members, either young or old, pray for a good harvest and strong livestock for the upcoming New Year.  

  • A nationality that crosses water by overhead cable 04/15 17:15

    The Nus have their own language without writings. The Nu language belongs to the Tibeto-Burmese family of the Sino-Tibetan Family, and there is big difference among local dialects, which make them cant communicate with each other. But because they have lived with the Lisus for long, most of them can speak the Lisu language.
  • House with thousand of feet reaching the ground 04/15 17:13

    House of the Nus is pile dwelling style and is often built at the foot of a hill. There are mainly wooden house and bamboo strips house. Most of the Nus in Gongshan region live in wooden house or house half of which is earth and half is wood. This kind of house is wide, and the wall of it is usually built with logs as walls and thin slab stones covering the roof.
  • Overhead cable---sliding bridge over high mountains and valleys 04/15 17:09

    There are two kinds of overhead cable: flat cable and steep cable. Flat cable only has one rope, which is flat without degree of inclination and can be used when coming and going. But its hard to cross the river by this method.
  • One heart wine with deep and long affection 04/15 17:04

    The Nu compatriots like to drink wine, and are also good at making wine. Their main wines are "Gulu wine", "turbid wine" and "Sorghum spirit". The "Gulu wine" is made by "Gulu rice" (made of corn fl
  • Holding memorial ceremony with fresh flowers for the hero 04/15 17:03

    On the 15th of third month in every lunar year, Nus in the Gongshan spend joyfully the grand traditional festival---Fresh Flowers Festival (also called Fairy Festival).
  • Pure, simple and elegant dances 04/15 17:00

    The Nu nationality is good at singing and dancing. In Nu villages, even child that has just learned to walk can hum several sentences like learning to speak, and dance shapelessly. Mountain villages are sea of songs and dance. Their songs are endless and they dance ceaselessly.
  • The Nujiang River in great change 04/15 16:55

    Nujiang was peacefully liberated in 1949. Before that year, there were only 500 kilometers of post road in the mountains in Nujiang, and they were always destroyed by mountain torrents because the road was very narrow.
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