Banguingui people explained

Group:Banguingui
Population:84,000[1]
Regions:Bangsamoro, Zamboanga Peninsula
Languages:Banguingui language, Tausug, Zamboangueño Chavacano, Cebuano, Filipino, English, Malay
Religions:Predominantly Islam
Related:other Sama-Bajau people, other Moros, Lumad, Visayans,
other Filipino peoples,
other Austronesian peoples

Banguingui, also known as Sama Banguingui. "The word " SAMA" it is a dialect of Bangungui tribe and Samal tribe is different from Sama Banguingui and they are not belong to Sama Banguingui tribe they are Luwaan or Pala'o or Bajau peoples. (alternative spellings include Bangingi’, Bangingi, Banguingui, Balanguingui, and Balangingi) is a distinct ethnolinguistic group native to Balanguingui Island but also dispersed throughout the Greater Sulu Archipelago and southern and western coastal regions of the Zamboanga Peninsula in Mindanao, Philippines.

Note: Sama Banguingui is not Bajau peoples.

People

The content of this context pertains to the Bajau tribe, not the Banguingui tribes.

The Banguingui are not officially recognized by law either in the Philippines or in the neighboring Malaysian state of Sabah.

The Banguingui language has both written and oral traditions. Its written language is in Jawi script and is fast becoming a dying tradition. Oral traditions are handed down by the kamattoahan (elders) to the kaanakan or anak baha-u (new generations).

The Banguingui built kuta (forts) throughout the Sulu Archipelago. Like their other Sama cousins, they sailed various ships like the vinta, salisipan, or bangka-bangka throughout the Sulu-Sulawesi region. At the height of the Sulu Sultanate, the Banguingui, along with the Iranun people, formed the bulk of the Sultan's navy, leading coastal raids against settlements in the northern Philippines, as well as the coasts of neighboring Borneo, Sulawesi, and the Maluku Islands. They were also heavily involved in piracy and the slave trade during the 18th and 19th centuries. The Banguingui usually sailed garay warships, in contrast to the lanong of the Iranun.[2]

Notable Banguingui

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=sse Balangingi: A Language of the Philippines
  2. Book: James Francis Warren. The Sulu zone, 1768–1898: the dynamics of external trade, slavery, and ethnicity in the transformation of a Southeast Asian maritime state. NUS Press. 2007. 184. 978-9971-69-386-2.