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The
Qiang ethnic minority has a population of 198,300 who mostly dwell
in hilly areas, crisscrossed by rivers and streams, in the Maowen
Qiang Autonomous Prefecture in Sichuan Province. A small number
live with Tibetan, Han and Hui ethnic groups in such localities
as Wenchuan, Dali, Heishui and Songpan.
They occupy
a fertile land of mild climate and adequate rain. The mountain
slopes are natural pastures. The area abounds in precious Chinese
caterpillar fungus, bulb of fritillary, antlers, musk and bear's
gallbladders, which are used for medicine. Deep in the forests
are such rare animals as giant pandas, golden monkeys and flying
foxes. The region is also rich in iron, coal, crystal, mica
and plaster stone deposits.
History
"Qiang"
was a name given by ancient Hans to the nomadic people in west
China. The Qiangs were not a single distinctive ethnic group
then. According to historical records, a clan group made their
homes in what is today's Sichuan Province. The Han Dynasty (206
B.C.-A.D. 220) court in the 2nd century had set up an administrative
prefecture for the area. During A.D. 600 to 900 when the Tibetan
Regime gradually expanded its rule over the region, some Qiangs
were assimilated by the Tibetans and others by the Hans, leaving
a small number unassimilated. These developed into the distinctive
ethnic group of today.
The Qiangs do
not have a written script of their own. They speak a language
belonging to the Tibetan-Myanmese language family of the Chinese-Tibetan
system. Owing to their close contact with the Han people, many
Qiang people speak Chinese, which is also the written form for
this ethnic group.
The Qiang and
Han peoples have had time-honored close political, economic
and cultural ties. Administratively, Han courts from the Qin,
Han, Sui and Tang dynasties down to the Ming Dynasty all had
political units in the Qiang-occupied areas. In the early Qing
Dynasty (1644-1911), the system of appointing local hereditary
headmen by the central authority to rule over the Qiangs gave
way to officials dispatched from the court. The central administrative
system helped enhance the ties between the Qiang and Han ethnic
groups. With their horses, medicinal herbs and other native
produce, the Qiangs used to barter farm implements and daily
necessities from the Hans. Mutual support and help stimulated
the social and economic development of Qiang society.
For a long period, the Qiangs
lived in primitive conditions marked by slash and burn farming.
A feudal landlord economy dominated production. Landlords and
rich peasants, who accounted for only 8 per cent of the population,
were in possession of 43 per cent of the cultivated land. Poor
peasants and hired farm hands, accounting for 43 per cent of
the population, had only 16 per cent of the land. Many poor
peasants lost their land due to heavy rent coupled with usury.
They became hired laborers, wandering from place to place to
make a living.
Life Style
The Qiangs dress
themselves simply but beautifully. Men and women alike wear
gowns made of gunny cloth, cotton and silk with sleeveless sheep's
wool jackets. They like to bind their hair and legs. Women's
clothing is laced and the collars are decorated with plum-shaped
silver ornaments. They wear sharp-pointed and embroidered shoes,
embroidered girdles and earrings, neck rings, hairpins and silver
badges.
Millet, highland
barley, potatoes, winter wheat and buckwheat make up their main
staple foods. The Qiangs drink a great deal of wine and smoke
orchid leaves.
They live in
blockhouses made of piled up stones of different sizes. Unique
in style, solid and practical, these houses are two or three
stories high. The first floor is for livestock and poultry,
the second retained as bedrooms and the third for grain storage.
The Qiang people are skilled in opening up roads on rocky cliffs
and erecting bamboo bridges over swift rivers. The bamboo chain
bridges they built, laid with boards, stretch up to 100 meters
with no nails and piers being used. Some of the Qiangs are excellent
masons and are good at digging wells. During slack farming seasons
they go to neighboring places to do chiseling and digging. Their
skills are highly acclaimed.
Marriages, mainly
monogamous, were arranged by parents in the past. Usually, the
wives were several years older than their husbands. It was common
for cousins to marry and for bridegrooms to live with their
wives' families. And it still is not unusual for brides to live
in their parents' houses within a year or so after marriage.
In Qiang society, younger brothers could make their widowed
sister-in-laws their wives and elder brothers could marry the
widows of their younger brothers. Such habits have been gradually
discarded since liberation.
Most Qiangs
were believers of Animism, except for those who lived near Tibetan
communities and were followers of Lamaism. The Qiangs worshipped
white stones placed on roofs as the "Heavenly God."
The Qiang people
have created a unique culture and arts and crafts. The clever
and deft Qiang women can do embroidery and drawnwork extemporaneously
without designs. The Qiangs are good singers and dancers. "Wine
song," "plate song," "mountain song"
and "leather drum" dances with accompaniment of gongs,
tambourines, sonas and bamboo flutes are popular.
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