Malays (ethnic group)

There is considerable genetic, linguistic, cultural, and social diversity among the many Malay subgroups, mainly due to hundreds of years of immigration and assimilation of various regional ethnicity and tribes within Maritime Southeast Asia. Historically, the Malay population is descended primarily from the earlier Malayic-speaking Austronesians and Austroasiatic tribes who founded several ancient maritime trading states and kingdoms, notably BruneiKedahLangkasukaGangga NegaraChi TuNakhon Si ThammaratPahangMelayu and Srivijaya.[14][15]
The advent of the Malacca Sultanate in the 15th century triggered a major revolution in Malay history, the significance of which lies in its far-reaching political and cultural legacy. Common definitive markers of a Malayness – the religion of Islam, the Malay language and traditions – are thought to have been promulgated during this era, resulting in the ethnogenesis of the Malay as a major ethnoreligious group in the region.[16] In literature, architecture, culinary traditions, traditional dress, performing arts, martial arts, and royal court traditions, Malacca set a standard that later Malay sultanates emulated. The golden age of the Malay sultanates in the Malay PeninsulaSumatra and Borneo saw many of their inhabitants, particularly from various tribal communities like the BatakDayakOrang Asli and the Orang laut become subject to Islamisation and Malayisation.[17] Today, some Malays have recent forebears from other parts of Maritime Southeast Asia, termed as anak dagang ("traders") and who predominantly consist of BanjarBugisMinangkabau people and Acehnese peoples, while some are also descended from more recent immigrants from other countries.[18]
Throughout their history, the Malays have been known as a coastal-trading community with fluid cultural characteristics.[19][20] They absorbedshared and transmitted numerous cultural features of other local ethnic groups, such as those of Minang, Acehnese, and to somJavanese culture; however Malay culture differs by being more overtly Islamic than the multi-religious Javanese culture. Ethnic Malays are also the major source of the ethnocultural development of the related BetawiBanjarCape MalayCocos Malaysand Sri Lankan Malay cultures, as well as the development of Malay trade and creole languages like Ambonese MalayBaba Malay, the Betawi language and Manado Malay.
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