Murut people

Murut people
Murut in traditional attire in Mari Mari Cultural Village, Sabah
Total population
112,900 (2020)[1] (Malaysia)
Regions with significant populations
 Malaysia
 Indonesia
 Brunei
Languages
Murutic languages, Sabah Malay, Sarawak Malay, Standard Malay, English (those resident in Sabah, Sarawak and Labuan), Brunei Malay (those living in Temburong district) and Indonesian (those resident in Kalimantan)
Religion
Christianity (82%), Islam (16%), Animism (2%)
Related ethnic groups
Tidung, Sino-Murut, Dayak, Kadazan-Dusun, Lundayeh, Orang Ulu and other Austronesian peoples

The Murut, alternatively referred to as Tagol/Tahol,[2] constitute an indigenous ethnic community comprising 29 distinct sub-ethnic groups dwelling within the northern inland territories of Borneo. Characterized by their rich cultural diversity, the Murutic languages form a linguistic family encompassing approximately half a dozen closely intertwined Austronesian languages. Murut populations exhibit dispersion in Malaysia's Sabah and the northern part of Sarawak, as well as in the country of Brunei and the Indonesian North Kalimantan Province. Furthermore, the Murut people have close connections with the Tidung, who historically inhabited Borneo's east coast region that underwent processes of Islamization and Malayalization,

  1. ^ "Taburan Penduduk dan Ciri-ciri asas demografi (Population Distribution and Basic demographic characteristics 2010)" (PDF). Department of Statistics, Malaysia. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 May 2014. Retrieved 11 December 2015. p. 13 [26/156]
  2. ^ Keat Gin, Ooi (14 December 2015). Brunei – History, Islam, Society and Contemporary Issues. Routledge. ISBN 9781317659983. Retrieved 3 March 2017.

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