Etymology
The name Nunuk Ragang is derived from two Kadazan-Dusun words "nunuk" which refers to the "banyan" tree and "ragang" which is a shortened form of the word "aragang" which means "red colored". The two words together therefore refer to a red coloured banyan tree. Zoologically, there is no known banyan tree with red leaves or trunk. This fact has contributed to the mystery surrounding Nunuk Ragang but the most logical reason for naming the settlement as "red banyan" is that the settlers, in their attempt to attract attention to their presence, intentionally made the banyan tree to appear red. The Kadazan-Dusun has a fondness for riddling, giving names to places, things and actions in terms other than the actual.Religious and cultural life
At the Nunuk Ragang settlement began the belief system and culture of the Kadazan-Dusun. There was no word for "religion" among the ancient Kadazan-Dusun and to them it was just a sort of relationship between the seen and the unseen. Some people would equate this toFood and material needs
The Dusunic-speaking peoples, descendants of the pioneers at Nunuk Ragang, are today agriculturalists and paddy planting is the common occupation among them. But according to oral traditions passed down from elders, the Nunuk Ragang people were practising vegeculture. Vegeculture is the cultivation and propagation of plant food by utilising the suckers of plants such as the yam, the sweet potato and cassava, eliminating the needs for seeds and permanent storage thus facilitating rapid migrations. Bamboo and Rattan were the primary materials used for all forms of activities connected to home construction and storage. To light a fire the settlers used dried cottony bark scraped from the Polod palm tree. Metal, used for making dangol (short machete) and pais (carving knives) was already available, most probably through barter trading with coastal peoples. The Nunuk Ragang settlers also adapted to their environment by becoming hunter-gatherers and trappers. Salt, an important food enhancer and preservative was only intermittently available from the distant coastal region, prompting the Nunuk Ragang settlers to search out for sosopon (natural salt lick) frequented by wild animals. This persistent shortage of salt also gave rise to two important techniques, "memangi" and "manalau", for the preservation of meat and fish. Memangi produces "pinongian" or "bosou" (meat or fish preserved using the fleshy kernels from seeds of the ''Pangium Edule'' tree), and manalau, a smoked meat called "sinalau".Leadership and social hierarchy
The Huguan Siou leadership, a unique position to defend the culture, rights, identity and dignity of the Kadazan-Dusun was non existent at Nunuk Ragang. This leadership position, which had its roots at Guunsing, Penampang was only institutionalised after the formation of Malaysia in 1963. Although the Nunuk Ragang society was egalitarian, at times of challenge or crisis they were led by warriors, who in turn were guided by the words of Bobolians, as revealed by divine revelation from spirits. These bobolians were mostly women who play their role as priestesses. Women thus play an important function in the early Nunuk Ragang society.Convergence
The possibility of further pinpointing the exact origin of the Kadazan-Dusun from before the Nunuk Ragang settlement was further enlightened during the official visit of Taiwan's minister of Council of indigenous People's, Icayang Parod in early June 2017. Masidi Manjun, Sabah minister of Tourism, Culture and Environment, referred to the numerous similarities particularly in ethnic languages between the indigenous peoples of Taiwan and the Kadazan-Dusun.Chin, Mary ( 2017 ). ''Chance to explore Taipei tribal links''. Daily Express, pp 10. 2 June 2017. Kota Kinabalu: Sabah Publishing House.References
* Rutter, Owen. (1922). ''British North Borneo: An Account of its History, Resources and Native tribes''. London: Constable and Company Limited. pp. 56–65 * Gidah, Mary Ellen (2001). ''Archetypes in the Cosmogonic Myths of the Australian Aboriginal People and the Kadazandusuns of Sabah''. Kota Kinabalu: Universiti Malaysia Sabah Press. * Berinai, Judy (2013). ''Liturgical Inculturation in Anglican Worship in Light of the Spirituality of the Indigenous people of Sabah''. Oxford Centre for Mission Studies, Oxford. p. 62-67 * Monica Glyn-Jones (1953). ''The Dusun of the Penampang Plains'', 2 vols. London, p. 117. * I. H. N. Evans, (1953) ''The Religion of the Tempasuk Dusuns of North Borneo'' Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 187–88; * Benedict Topin, (n.d.) "The Origin of the Kadazan/Dusun: Popular Theories and Legendary Tales" in ''Our Cultural Heritage'', Kadazan Cultural Association, pp. 73–77.