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  2. Lamin house - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lamin_House

    Lamin house is the identifier of the Dayak people who live at East Kalimantan. [1] its 300 meters long, and 15 meters wide, as well as 3 meters high. [1] Few families live in lamin houses because this house can accommodate approximately 100 people. [1] In 1967, Indonesia Government inaugurated the lamin house at East Kalimantan. [2]

  3. Kenyah people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenyah_people

    The Usun Apau (aka Usun Apo) plateau (in the Plieran River valley) or Apo Kayan Highlands (a remote forested plateau in Malaysian and Indonesian border) in the present-day Indonesian province of North Kalimantan and Malaysia's Sarawak is believed by the Kenyah people to be their place of origin; [15] which was the largest concentration site of ...

  4. Apo Kayan people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apo_Kayan_people

    A photo of a Dayak Kenyah woman from the Apo Kayan region (upper Bulungan Regency), central Borneo (now North Kalimantan), Indonesia taken by Anton Willem Nieuwenhuis during the Commission's Trip to central Borneo, circa 1898–1900. Photo of Jean Demmeni . The Apo Kayan people group are divided into 3 sub-ethic Dayak people, namely:-

  5. Kendayan people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kendayan_people

    The original religion of the Kanayatn people is not the Kaharingan as it is with the Dayak people. Kanayatn Dayak's indigenous religion is inseparable from their customs (Adat). It can even be said their customs assert their religious identity. In daily practice, Kanayatn Dayak people never mention religion as their normative, but Adat (custom).

  6. Demographics of Sarawak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographics_of_Sarawak

    Such groups include the major Kayan and Kenyah tribes, and the smaller neighbouring groups of the Kajang, Kejaman, Punan, Ukit, and Penan. Nowadays, the definition also includes the down-river tribes of the Lun Bawang , Lun Dayeh, "mean upriver" or "far upstream", Berawan, Saban as well as the plateau-dwelling Kelabits .

  7. Bidayuh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bidayuh

    Linguistically, the Salako belong to another language family tree which is of the Malayic Dayak family (the same family as the Iban). [11] The Lara, although said to be more related to the Bidayuh (Jagoi-Singai), speak a language almost not mutually intelligible at all with the Bidayuh but belonged to the same language family tree which is the ...

  8. Bakumpai people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bakumpai_people

    Therefore, the Dayak Ot Danum people is considered as the parent tribe, but the Ngaju people is still the dominant ethnic in the region. [3] The tribal genealogy of the Bakumpai people:- Dayak people (the originator) divided into primary ethnics: Sea Dayaks or Iban people; Land Dayaks; Dayak Apo Kayan or Kenyah-Bahau people; Murut people

  9. Iban culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iban_culture

    Ini Andan/Inee (female) the natural-born doctor and the god of justice In addition to these gods, there are mystical people namely the orang Panggau Libau and Gelong who hailed from Java, with the most notable ones being Keling and Laja with their respective wives, Kumang and Lulong who often help the Iban Dayaks to be successful in life and ...