Gin people

The Gin, or Jing people, (Chinese: , Sino-Vietnamese: Kinh tộc; Vietnamese: người Kinh tại Trung Quốc) are a community of descendants of ethnic Vietnamese people living in China. They mainly live in an area called the Jing Islands (京族三岛), off the coast of Dongxing, Fangchenggang, in the Chinese autonomous region of Guangxi. These territories were administered by the Nguyễn dynasty but were later ceded by the French to the Qing dynasty due to the 1887 convention, after the Sino-French war.

Gin people
京族
Người Kinh (𠊛京)
Total population
33,112 (2020 census)
Regions with significant populations
China (Wutou, Wanwei and Shanxin islands off the coast of Dongxing, Guangxi)
Languages
Primarily: Standard Chinese (lingua franca)
Historically: Vietnamese (writing in chữ Nôm and chữ Hán) & other Vietic languages
Religion
Vietnamese folk religion · Mahayana Buddhism · Taoism
Related ethnic groups
Vietnamese people, Muong, Chứt, Thổ
Gin people
Chinese name
Chinese京族
Vietnamese name
Vietnamese alphabetDân tộc Kinh
Người Kinh tại Trung Quốc
Chữ Hán民族京
Chữ Nôm𠊛京在中國

The Việt were labelled Yue (Chinese: 越族; pinyin: Yuèzú, Sino-Vietnamese: Việt tộc; Vietnamese: người Việt tại Trung Quốc) before the introduction of the names "Kinh", "Gin", or "Jing", in 1958.

The Gin population was 33,112 as of 2020. This number does not include the 36,205 Vietnamese nationals studying or working in Mainland China, recorded by the 2010 national population census.

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