Komodo people

Ethnic group in Indonesia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Komodo people (Komodo: Ata Modo; Indonesian: Orang Komodo) were an Austronesian ethnic group native to the island of Komodo, West Manggarai Regency, East Nusa Tenggara in Indonesia. They called themselves Ata Modo (lit.'Modo people') and called the island they inhabited Tana Modo. Anthropologist J.A.J. Verheijen [id] dubbed them "Komodo people" in 1989.[1]

Quick facts Ata Modo, Total population ...
Komodo people
Ata Modo
Native inhabitants of Komodo island.
Total population
Extinct[1]
Regions with significant populations
 Indonesia (Komodo island)
Languages
Komodo, Manggarai, and other Austronesian languages
Religion
Islam (Sunni)
Related ethnic groups
Manggarai, Bimanese, Sama-Bajau

  1. The native Komodo people have been extinct since the late 1980s; present-day inhabitants of the island are non-Komodo, but may still use the Komodo language and practice aspects of Komodo culture.
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The island's present-day residents are descendants of former convicts who were exiled to Komodo, and who have mixed with Bugis people from the southern part of Sulawesi. The population is primarily adherents of Islam, but there are also Christian and Hindu congregations.

History and culture

Language

Religion and beliefs

Traditional dances

Distribution

Population

See also

References

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