Dayak: see Dyak.
The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2007, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
Related content from HighBeam Research on: Dayak
Becoming Christian and Dayak: a Study of Christian Conversion among Dayaks in East Kalimantan, Indonesia.(Book Review) (Borneo Research Bulletin)
Establishment of Dayak Studies at the Universiti Malaysia Sarawak (Unimas). (Sarawak News). (Borneo Research Bulletin)
Bloodshed in Borneo.(The killing of migrants by native Dayaks in Kalimantan, Indonesia's part of Borneo, goes on)(Asia)(Brief Article) (The Economist (US))
Dayak Tales.(King Siliman and other Bidayuh Folk Tales; Suket: Penan Folk Stories; Apai Alui Becomes a Shaman and Other Iban Comic Tales)(Book Review) (Asian Folklore Studies)
Dayak Kings, Malay sultans, oral histories, and colonial archives: a comment on Djuweng (1999) and Sellato (1999). (Research Notes). (Borneo Research Bulletin)
Malaysia. (Communications: Announcement).(Dayak Studies Oral Literature Series)(Brief Article) (Asian Folklore Studies)
The Dayak Cultural Foundation's Ethnic Orchestra. (Brief Communications). (Borneo Research Bulletin)
Dayak kings among Malay sultans (1). (Research Notes). (Borneo Research Bulletin)
The "Dayak Kingdom" in West Kalimantan: earthly or spiritual? (Borneo Research Bulletin)
Indigenous people, the state and ethnogenesis: a study of the communal associations of the 'Dayak' communities in Sarawak, Malaysia. (Journal of Southeast Asian Studies)
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