MINANGKABAU


Meaning of MINANGKABAU in English

Malay Urang Padang (People of Padang) largest ethnic group on the island of Sumatra, Indonesia, whose traditional homeland is the west central highlands. Their numbers have been variously estimated at between 2,000,000 and 5,000,000. Although Muslim, the Minangkabau are matrilineali.e., they trace descent and inheritance through the female line. Traditionally, the wife remained with her maternal relatives after marriage, and the husband, having no home of his own, resided in his mother's house and only visited his wife. The domestic unit was traditionally the community house, in which a head woman, her sisters, their daughters, and their children lived. Several of these houses made up the clan, within which no marriage was allowed. Several clans made up the negari, the largest unit of government, roughly equivalent in size to a village. Each house was represented in the clan council by a male member, or uncle. The family house was a large rectangular structure, raised high above the ground, with a saddle-shaped roof. A main room occupied much of the structure. Adjoining it were the living compartments, each occupied by a woman, her children, and her husband when present. The Minangkabau have extensive terraced fields and garden plots in which they raise irrigated rice, tobacco, and cinnamon, as well as fruits and vegetables. Their crafts include wood carving, metalworking, and weaving. Since World War II the traditional kinship structure has declined in importance, and many men have left the village to establish their own households with wives and children. Some of the kin-group land has become the personal property of these households. Their language, closely resembling Malay, belongs to the Austronesian (Malayo-Polynesian) language family. Some Minangkabau migrated to Malaya in the late 19th century and formed a confederation of small states that came to be known as Negri Sembilan (Nine States). Minangkabau tribesmen, closely resembling peninsular Malay physically and linguistically, left Sumatra to seek greater economic opportunity across the Strait of Malacca. Rapid expansion of Malayan tin mining after 1850 lured increasing numbers of Minangkabau as miners or as petty merchants. The immigrants secured transit to Malaya by selling property or receiving assisted passage in return for contract mine labour. By the beginning of the 20th century, however, capital-intensive mining displaced Minangkabau miners, who then shifted to agricultural pursuits in interior river valleys. Land was plentiful, and the Minangkabau frequently settled by squatting (i.e., gaining title by clearing, planting, and living on the land). Malay sultans raised no objections to these racially Malay immigrants, who partially offset the influx of Chinese labourers. Minangkabau immigrants became successful smallholder farmers and in the 20th century came to control most retail trade in Malaya.

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