អំបូរជនជាតិ តៃ សេប៉ា Tai Sapa
Sapa, or Tày Sa Pa, is a Southwestern Tai language of Sa Pa, Lào Cai Province, northern Vietnam. According to Pittayaporn (2009) and Glottolog, it is the closest relative of the Southwestern Tai languages, but does not share the phonological innovations that define that group.
Prompts: Make an image with scale 900px X 1200 px of "The Tay Sa Pa (or Tày Sa Pa) " Showing an information regarding to population size per countries, original destination place and today living location in Thailand, China, Myanmar, Laos, Vietnam, Cambodia as well as their image picture on 3D map. The title of an image is in Khmer at top follow by English version. Adding this offered image overlay your made image 3D map
The Tay Sa Pa (or Tày Sa Pa) are an incredibly small, distinct Southwestern Tai ethnic subgroup whose global population is estimated to be only around 300 to 500 individuals.They are culturally and linguistically distinct from the broader, mainstream Tày ethnic group of Vietnam (which numbers over 1.8 million people). Because of their critical, near-extinct population size, they are considered one of the most endangered ethno-linguistic micro-communities in Southeast Asia
Origin and Historical MigrationGeographic Roots: The ancient ancestors of the Tay Sa Pa originated from Southern China.13th-Century Migration: During the 1200s, they migrated southward into northern Vietnam to escape the advancing Mongol armies.Displacement by Conflict: After settling in Vietnam, the Tay Sa Pa ancestors historically clashed with local Hmong factions, refusing to submit to a Hmong ruler. Following roughly 12 years of violent raids and village burnings, this specific subgroup fled deeper into isolated pockets of the northwestern highlands to preserve their community
Socio-Linguistic StatusEndangered Language: The Tay Sa Pa language belongs to the Southwestern Tai branch of the Kra-Dai language family. It is distinct from the Central Tai languages spoken by mainstream Tày people.Cultural Assimilation: Because they live in close proximity to larger ethnic groups—such as the Hmong, Dao, and Giáy—the younger generation of Tay Sa Pa increasingly speaks Vietnamese or neighboring tribal languages, placing their native tongue at extreme risk of extinction.Economic Life: The remaining families reside in lower valleys suited for wet-rice cultivation, practicing traditional agriculture alongside the booming tourism economy of the Sa Pa Highlands.

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