| Naxi (纳西)  
			Chinese. An ethnic group of people in 
			 
			
			China, who dwell in the 
			foothills of the
			
			
        
		Himalayas, mainly in the northwestern part of 
			 
			
        
			Yunnan, as well as the southwestern part of 
			Sichuan Province. This geographical determinant is reflected in 
			their name, which can be translated as ‘brought into the West’. They 
			are believed to be the descendants of the Qiang (羌), a previously 
			nomadic ethnic tribe that mainly inhabited the Tibetan plateau, but 
			nowadays are mostly mountain dwellers in northern Sichuan. They are one of the 56 ethnic groups officially recognized by the 
			People's Republic of China, but which also includes the Mosuo (摩梭) 
			as part of the Naxi. However, the Mosuo are actually another ethnic 
			group of Yunnan and Sichuan, that –despite similar origins and 
			linguistic roots– are culturally distinct, with the Naxi being more 
			inspired by the Han Chinese culture, whilst the Mosuo are more 
			influenced by Tibetan culture. Traditionally, 
			the Naxi are followers of the Dongba religion (fig.).
			Naxi subgroups include those from Jiuhe (fig.), Baisha, 
			Lijiang (fig.), 
			Sanba, Eya, etc. The traditional dress of the Naxi people varies per subgroup, 
			which usually correspondents with their dwelling place, yet the 
			women's dress typically has a piece of goat's skin 
			attached to it at the lower back (fig.), 
			and the women of many groups wear a skirt with –usually white or 
			blue– strips that are crossed in 
			front of the chest (fig.). 
			To indicate their marital status, married women will cross these strips 
			into a knot. The Naxi women of Baisha often wear their traditional 
			dress with the former Communist-style cerulean cap, typical of 
			Chairman Mao's time (fig.). 
			The traditional dress of the Naxi  
			men also varies widely, depending on the 
			subgroups as well as the 
			occasion, i.e. casual or formal (fig.), 
			with fewer men than women dressing up the  
			
			traditional way. Interestingly, some Naxi men still carry on the 
	ancient Chinese tradition of hunting with falcons (fig.), a practice which is 
			nowadays rarely found elsewhere in China. Akin to most other hill tribe people from southern China and northern mainland Southeast Asia, the Naxi use a small mountain horse for riding (fig.) and as beast of burden, a kind of hybrid that resulted from crossbreeding between Mongolian and Asian horses, and similar to the Thai Pony or mah klaeb (fig.), and the horses used on the Tea Horse Road, known in Chinese as Cha Ma Dao (fig.). Also spelled Nakhi. See 
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