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Hakka culture: Difference between revisions





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{{Short description|Ethnic culture}}[[File:Earth building-chengqi2.jpg|thumb|350px|Hakka people are widely remembered for building walled villages to defend themselves during [[Punti-Hakka Clan Wars]].{{dubious|reason=the Fujian Tulou have nothing to do with the Guangdong Taishan clan wars linked|date=February 2021}}]]
'''Hakka culture''' ({{lang-zh|t=客家文化}}) refers to the [[culture]] created by [[Hakka people]], a [[Han Chinese]] [[Han Chinese subgroups|subgroup]], across [[Asia]]. It encompasses the shared language, various art forms, food culture, folklore, and traditional customs. Hakka culture stemmed from the culture of Ancient Han Chinese, who migrated from [[Zhongyuan|China's central plain]] to what is modern day's [[Southern China]] during the 6th to 13th century, and intermixed with local non-Han [[Hmong–Mien languages|Hmong–Mien speaking]] ethnic groups such as the [[Yao people]], the [[She people]], and the [[Miao people]].<ref>[http://www.huaxia.com/zhwh/whrd/whrdwz/2010/08/2049046.html 客家文化源于河洛文化]</ref> It has also been influenced by the cultures of surrounding Han Chinese groups, such as the [[Cantonese people|Cantonese]] and the [[Hoklo people|Hoklo]]. Having historically lived in the mountains of [[Southern China]] and being minority groups in many of the surrounding Chinese provinces, Hakka have developed a culture characterized by reservedness, stability, and frugality.<ref>Jian-xin, Z. H. O. U. (2005). Ethnic Identity, Culture Consciousness and Hakka Culture [J]. Journal of Guangxi University For Nationalities (Philosophy and Social Science Edition), 2.</ref><ref>Deng-qiu, C. A. I. (2004). On Pluralism of the Formation of the Hakka Culture [J]. Journal of Sanming College, 3, 015.</ref>
 
{{Commons category|Hakka culture}}

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