Farang  

From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Related e

Wikipedia
Wiktionary
Shop


Featured:

Farang (Template:Lang) is a Persian word which refers to Franks, once the major Germanic tribe ruling Western Europe. In the Middle East, South Asia and Southeast Asia "Farang" refers to Europeans. This in turn comes from the Old French word Template:Lang, meaning "Frank", a West Germanic tribe that became a major political power in Western and Central Europe during the early Middle Ages, and from which France derives its name. As the French, who formed a substantial part of the force of the First Crusade, called themselves Franks, and as Old French became the dominant language in the crusader states of the 12th century, the term Frank soon became associated with Western European Christian (whether French, Saxon, Flemish, etc.) in the muslim world. Frangistan (Template:Lang-fa) was a term used by Muslims and Persians in particular, during the Middle Ages and later periods, to refer to Western or Latin Europe. Muslim traders referred to European traders as Farang and it also entered the local vernaculars of South Asia and Southeast Asia.

Farang (Template:Lang-th, Template:IPA-th, colloquially Template:IPA-th) is a generic Thai word for person of white race no matter where they may come from; the Americas, Europe, etc. The term is also used for white Latin Americans and light skinned Latinos. Not all Latinos however, brown skinned Latin-Americans are often confused with Arabs in Thailand, and thus, not Farang. The Royal Institute Dictionary 1999, the official dictionary of Thai words, defines the word as "a person of white race". The term is also blended into everyday terms meaning "of/from the white race" such as: man farang (Template:Lang-th; "farang yam") meaning potato, no mai farang (Template:Lang-th; "farang shoot") meaning asparagus, and achan farang (Template:Lang-th; "farang professor") which is the nickname of the influential figure in Thai art history, Italian art professor Silpa Bhirasri. The word also means guava in Thai.

Edmund Roberts, US envoy in 1833, defined the term as "Frank (or European)". People of mixed Sub-Saharan African-European descent were called farang dam (Template:Lang-th; 'black farang') to distinguish them from white people. This began during the Vietnam War, when the United States military maintained bases in Thailand. The practice continues in present-day Bangkok.

Contents

Name

The word farang is from Persian word farang (Template:Lang) or farangī (Template:Lang), refers to Franks, the major Germanic tribe ruling Western Europe. Frangistan (Template:Lang-fa) was a term used by Muslims and Persians in particular, during the Middle Ages and later periods, to refer to Western or Latin Europe. According to Rashid al-din Fazl Allâh, farang comes from the Arabic word afranj. In Ethiopia faranj means white/European people. During the Muslim Mughal Empire when the Europeans arrived in South Asia, the Persian word Farang was used to refer to them since the Muslims knew the Europeans during their Crusades wars in the Middle East. The words also added to local languages such as Hindi and Nepali as firangi (Devanāgarī: फिरंगी) and Bengali as firingi. The word was pronounced paranki (പറങ്കി) in Malayalam, parangiar in Tamil, entered Khmer as barang, and Malay as ferenggi. From there the term spread into China as folangji (佛郎機), which was used to refer to the Portuguese and their breech-loading swivel guns when they first arrived in China.

Other uses

South Asia

In Bangladesh and West Bengal, the modern meaning of firingi (ফিরিঙ্গি) refers to Anglo-Bengalis or Bengalis with European ancestry. Most firingis tend to be Bengali Christians. Descendants of firingis which married local Bengali women may also be referred to as Kaala Firingis (Black firingis) or Matiya Firingis' (Earth-coloured firingis). Following the Portuguese settlement in Chittagong, the Portuguese fort and naval base came to be known as Firingi Bandar or the Foreigner's Port. There are also places such as Firingi Bazaar which exist in older parts of Dhaka and Chittagong. The descendants of these Portuguese traders in Chittagong continue to be referred to as Firingis. The Indian biographical film Antony Firingee was very popular in the mid 20th century and was based on Anthony Firingee - a Bengali folk singer of Portuguese origin. There is also a river in the Sundarbans called Firingi River.

In the Maldives faranji was the term used to refer to foreigners of European origin, especially the French. Until recently the lane next to the Bastion in the northern shore of Male' was called Faranji Kalō Gōlhi.


Southeast Asia

Farang is also the Thai word for the guava fruit, introduced by Portuguese traders over 400 years ago.

Farang khi nok (Thai: ฝรั่งขี้นก) is slang commonly used as an insult to a person of white race, equivalent to white trash. The term means "bird-droppings Farang", as khi means feces, nok means bird, this refer bird-droppings is white color.

Çaise-Farang (Thai: เศษฝรั่ง, Çaise is Thai word mean fragment/trash; is swap position from française) is commonly used as an insult to a French ethnic.

Varieties of food/produce that were introduced by Europeans are often called farang varieties. Hence, potatoes are man farang (Template:Lang-th), whereas man (Template:Lang-th) alone can be any tuber; culantro is called phak chi farang (Template:Lang-th, literally farang cilantro/coriander); and chewing gum is mak farang (Template:Lang-th). Mak (Template:Lang-th) is Thai for arecanut; chewing mak together with betel leaves (baiphlu) was a Thai custom.

In the Isan Lao dialect, the guava is called mak sida (Template:Lang-th), mak being a prefix for fruit names. Thus bak sida (Template:Lang-th), bak being a prefix when calling males, refers jokingly to a Westerner, by analogy to the Thai language where farang can mean both guava and Westerner.

See also




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Farang" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

Personal tools