Saek people

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Saek
Total population
10,000 (2007)
Regions with significant populations
Thailand
Languages
Saek, Lao, Thai
Religion
Animism, Theravada Buddhism

The Saek (also known as Set, in Thai: แสก, RTGS: saek and IPA: [sɛːk]; Lao: xaeh) or Tai Saek are a small ethnic group of Laos and Thailand. The Saek are a part of the larger Tai ethnicity.

A study by the Lao government on the country's ethnic minorities reports that the Saek arrived in Laos in the 17th century, having migrated from Vietnam and China.[1] In particular, members of the village of Na Kadok claim to originate from Hà Tĩnh province, located across the Vietnamese border from Na Kadok. Specialised in finding gold in mines, it has been hypothesised that the southward migration occurred in search of new gold deposits.[2] Saek in Thailand live in Nakhon Phanom province, in Northeastern Thailand, near the villages of the Saek settled in Laos, which are located close to the Laotian bank of the Mekong.[3]

Geographic distribution

The center of the Saek population is the Mekong River in central Laos. A smaller Saek community makes its home in the Isan region of northeast Thailand, near the border with Laos.

There were 14,000 Saek people in 1990 in Laos, where they live in the central part of the country and are divided into small groups. Some are settled in the mountainous areas of Nam Noy and Nam Pheo, in the districts of Hinboune, Nakai and Ngolamath of Khammouane province, while others live near the provincial capital Thakhek.[1][4] A final group lives about one hundred kilometres further north, in the village of Na Kadok, located in the south-eastern part of Khamkheut District, in the mountainous area near the Vietnamese border of Bolikhamsai province.[5]

Across the Mekong, there were 11,000 Saek people in 1993 in the area of Nakhon Phanom, capital of the province of the same name (Nakhon Phanom province), in Northeast Thailand.[5]

Culture

Economy

References

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