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China: A suspension bridge across a river in Lao-oua-tan in northeastern Yunnan Province, illustrated by French expeditioner Louis Delaporte in 1868.

China: A suspension bridge across a river in Lao-oua-tan in northeastern Yunnan Province, illustrated by French expeditioner Louis Delaporte in 1868.

Yunnan was a province of the Han Dynasty (206 BC-220 CE) before it became the seat of a Tibeto-Burman speaking kingdom known as Nanzhao in the 8th century. Nanzhao was multi-ethnic, but the elite most likely spoke a northern dialect of Yi. The Mongols conquered the region in the 13th century, with local control exercised by warlords until the 1930s. As with other parts of China's southwest, Japanese occupation in the north during World War II forced a migration of Chinese into the region. Ethnic minorities in Yunnan today account for about 34 percent of its total population. Major ethnic groups include Yi, Bai, Hani, Zhuang, Dai and Miao.

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