អំបូរជនជាតិ តៃ ឡែង Tai Leng Tai Laing
Tai Laing, also known as Shan-Ni, is a Tai language of Burma, closely related to Khamti and Shan. It is written in its own variant of Burmese script, and though not taught in schools, is experiencing a cultural revival, albeit still.
Prompts: Detail more of Tai Laing, also known as Shan-Ni in area of global population data, orgine destination and currently settlement place together with population size of each countries.
Prompts: Make an image with scale 900px X 1200 px of "The Tai Laing (commonly known as the Shan-Ni or Red Shan). " Showing an information regarding to Current Settlements and Global Population Size per each of the 06 countries list below, original destination place and today living location in Thailand, China, Myanmar, Laos, Vietnam, Cambodia as well as their image picture on 3D mountain map. The title of an image is in Khmer at top follow by English version.
The Tai Laing (commonly known as the Shan-Ni or Red Shan) are a distinct Tai ethnic group residing primarily in northern and northwestern Myanmar. Unlike the mainstream Shan people who dominate the upland Shan State plateau, the Tai Laing possess their own unique sub-identity, historical lineage, and an endangered language.The collective global population of the Tai Laing is heavily debated, ranging from 116,000 to over 300,000 individuals depending on whether calculations rely on narrow linguistic databases or broader local ethnic self-identification
Origin and Historical Migration
Geographic Roots: The ancestors of the Tai Laing split from the massive, historic southward migrations of the Tai-Kadai language family out of Southern China (primarily modern-day Yunnan and Guangxi).Northwestern Trajectory: While major Tai migrations flowed down the Chao Phraya and Mekong valleys to form Thailand and Laos, the Tai Laing ancestors tracked west into the northern river valleys of the Irrawaddy and Chindwin.The "Red Shan" Identity: By the 14th century, they established influential local principalities (such as Mong Kwang/Mogaung). The moniker Shan-Ni translates to "Red Shan," which local folklore attributes to either the historic red borders on their traditional hand-woven sarongs or the reddish, clay-heavy river soil of their ancestral territory.
Current Settlements and Global Population Size: The vast majority of the Tai Laing reside in their historical homelands within Myanmar, with a small diaspora in neighboring Northeast India

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