Purum people

Last updated

Purum
"Purum" written in Meitei script.jpg
Purum written in Meitei script
Total population
278 [1]
Languages
Purum language (L1)
Meitei language (L2) [2]
Religion
Christianity
Related ethnic groups
Meitei people, Kharam

The Purums are a Tibeto-Burman indigenous ethnic group of Manipur. They are (or were) notable because their marriage system is the subject of ongoing statistical and ethnographical analysis; Buchler states that "they are perhaps the most over-analyzed society in anthropology". [3] Purums marry only in selected sibs; the allowed sibs are fixed by traditional customs. The Purums are divided into five sibs, namely, Marrim, Makan, Kheyang, Thao and Parpa. [4] There is no indigenous centralized government. [5] They use Meitei language as their second language (L2) according to the Ethnologue. [6]


According to the 1931 Census of India, the Purums numbered 145 men and 158 women, all practising their ancestral ethnic religion; in 1936 they numbered 303 individuals but in the 1951 census they numbered only 43 individuals. [5]

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Purum is a Southern Naga language of India. Speakers consider themselves to be ethnic Naga people, rather than part of the Kuki and Chin ethnic groups. Peterson (2017) classifies Purum as part of the Northwestern branch of Kuki-Chin. According Ethnologue, Purum shares a high degree of mutual intelligibility with Kharam. The speakers of this language use Meitei language as their second language (L2) according to the Ethnologue.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kharam language</span> Southern Naga language of Manipur, India

Kharam is a Southern Naga language of India. Peterson (2017) classifies the closely related Purum language as part of the Northwestern branch of Kuki-Chin. According Ethnologue, Kharam shares a high degree of mutual intelligibility with Purum. The speakers of this language use Meitei language as their second language (L2) according to the Ethnologue.

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Chiru people is a Zo ethnic group that mostly resides in Manipur and some in Assam, India. They are listed as a Scheduled Tribe, in accordance with The Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes Orders (Amendment) Act, 1976 Indian Constitution. They use Meitei language as their second language (L2) according to the Ethnologue.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lamkang people</span> Tibeto-Burman linguistic ethnic group in Manipur

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Meitei language, the sole official language and the lingua franca of Manipur, one of the scheduled languages of India, one of the recognised educational and literary languages of Assam and Tripura states, has its speakers spread across entire India.

References

  1. "Census of India".
  2. "Meitei | Ethnologue". Ethnologue . Retrieved 3 May 2023.
  3. Buchler, I. R. (1969). Game theory in the behavioural sciences. Pittsburgh University Press.
  4. White, H. C. (1963). An anatomy of kinship. Prentice=-Hall.
  5. 1 2 Needham, R. (1958). "A structural analysis of Purum society". American Anthropologist. 60 (1): 75–101. doi: 10.1525/aa.1958.60.1.02a00080 .
  6. "Meitei | Ethnologue". Ethnologue . Retrieved 3 May 2023.