Niuafoʻou people

E247737

The Niuafoʻou people are an indigenous Polynesian community from the volcanic island of Niuafoʻou in Tonga, known for their distinct language variety and seafaring cultural traditions.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Niuafoʻou people canonical 3

Statements (37)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Polynesian people
ethnic group
indigenous people
administrativeDivision Tonga
continent Oceania
country Tonga
culture Polynesian culture
currentMajorReligion Christianity
ethnicGroupOf Niuafoʻou Island
surface form: Niuafoʻou
ethnicReligion pre-Christian Polynesian beliefs
ethnogenesisRegion Polynesia
hasCulturalPractice communal fishing
oral history recitation
subsistence agriculture
traditional navigation
hasCulturalTrait canoe navigation
chiefly leadership
extended family system
oral tradition
seafaring traditions
hasLanguageVariety distinct Tongan dialect
indigenousTo Niuafoʻou Island
surface form: Niuafoʻou volcano island
language Niuafoʻou language
languageFamily Austronesian languages
Polynesian languages
locatedIn Niuafoʻou Island
surface form: Niuafoʻou
nativeTo Niuafoʻou Island
partOf Polynesian cultural sphere
surface form: Polynesian Triangle cultures

Tongans
surface form: Tongan people
region northern Tonga
traditionalOccupation copra production
fishing
seafaring
taro cultivation
traditionalReligion Polynesian indigenous religion
uses outrigger canoes
usesWritingSystem Latin script

Referenced by (3)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Polynesians hasSubgroup Niuafoʻou people
Niuafoʻou language spokenBy Niuafoʻou people
Niuafoʻou Island hasEthnicGroup Niuafoʻou people