- Kontoi, Pang Pung, etc. Additionally,
Ethnologue (21st edition),
citing Schliesinger (2003),
lists Doi as a Tai Loi
variety in Ban Muang, Sing District, Luang...
- ISBN 9744800321.
Schliesinger,
Joachim (2003).
Ethnic Groups of Laos,
Volume 1,
Introduction and overview. Bangkok:
White Lotus. ISBN 9744800321.
Schliesinger, Joachim...
- RoutledgeCurzon.
Schliesinger,
Joachim (2000).
Ethnic Groups of Thailand: Non-Tai-speaking Peoples.
White Lotus Press.
Schliesinger,
Joachim (2015). Tai...
-
Joachim Schliesinger (2003).
Ethnic Groups of Laos,
Volume 2:
Profile of Austro-Asiatic-Speaking Peoples.
White Lotus. pp. 160–165.
Joachim Schliesinger (2003)...
- just Kang, is a Tai
language of Laos.
There is
confusion with Kháng.
Schliesinger (2003)
reports an area of
habitation being in
Bolikhamsai Province, Laos...
-
cultivation of wet rice. Some
linguists (James Chamberlain,
Joachim Schliesinger) have
suggested that Vietic-speaking
people migrated from the
North Central...
- China:
History and Culture. Checkmark. p. 202. ISBN 978-0-8160-2693-7.
Schliesinger,
Joachim (2016).
Origin of Man in
Southeast Asia 2:
Early Dominant Peoples...
-
Archived (PDF) from the
original on 8
March 2021.
Retrieved 1 May 2020.
Schliesinger, Joachim.
White Lotus Press. Bangkok. 2003 "UN
Demographic Yearbooks"...
-
Chamberlain (2016), p. 40.
Chamberlain (2000), pp. 97, 127.
Schliesinger (2018a), pp. 21, 97.
Schliesinger (2018b), pp. 3–4, 22, 50, 54.
Churchman (2011), p. 70...
- been
Siamese v****al
states since Ayudhya times. Vickery. Kohn, p. 447.
Schliesinger, p. 106. Franco-Siamese War 1893. Zottoli, p. 80. Taylor, p. 144 Tucker...