Ethnic Groups
The People's Republic of China is a united multiethnic country,
having 56 ethnic groups, which have so far been identified and
recognized by the Central Government. These groups vary greatly in
the number of population. Of them, the Han ethnic group has the
largest population, while the other 55 ethnic groups, with smaller
populations, are customarily called "ethnic minorities."
According to the fifth national population census in 2000, the
55 ethnic minority groups had 106.43 million people, making up 8.41
percent of the national total. Of them, 18 ethnic minority groups
have more than 1 million population. The Zhuang is the largest of
them, with a population of nearly 16.1788 million, and the Lhoba is
the smallest, having a population of only 3,000 or so.
The Hans are distributed all over China, though living in
compact communities in the Yellow, Yangtze and Pearl river valleys
and in the Songliao Plain. The ethnic minorities inhabit 60 percent
of the Chinese territory, despite their small population. Over the
ages, the Han people have established extensive political and
economic ties and cultural exchanges with various ethnic minorities
and they have formed an interdependent relationship for common
development. People of all ethnic groups in China have made
important contributions to the creation of a unified multiethnic
country and the creation of the time-honored, splendid Chinese
civilization, as well as Chinese historical development and
progress.
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