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The
Zhuangs ethnic minority is China's largest minority group. Its
population of 15.55 million approaches that of Australia. Most
of the Zhuangs live in southwest China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous
Region, which is nearly the size of New Zealand. The rest have
settled in Yunnan, Guangdong, Guizhou and Hunan provinces.
While most Zhuang
communities concentrate in a compact area in Guangxi, the others
are scattered over places shared by other ethnic groups such
as Han, Yao, Miao, Dong, Mulao, Maonan and Shui.
Lying in Guangxi's
mountainous regions, the Zhuang area is high in the northwest,
undulating in the middle and low in the southeast. Limestone
is widely distributed in the area, which is known round the
world for its
karst topography. Many rocky peaks rise straight up from the
ground, and the peaks hide numerous fascinating grottoes and
subterranean rivers. Guilin, a tourist attraction in Guangxi,
is an excellent example of such landscape. As the saying goes:
"The landscape at Guilin is the best on earth; and the
landscape at Yangshuo is the best in Guilin." Wuming,
Jingxi and Lingyun counties are also known for their scenic
splendours.
Crisscrossing
rivers endow the Zhuang area with plentiful sources of water
for irrigation, navigation and hydropower. The coastline in
south Guangxi not only has important ports but also yields many
valuable marine products including the best pearls in China.
The Zhuang area
enjoys a mild climate with an average annual temperature of
20 degrees centigrade, being warm in winter and sweltering in
summer in the south. Plants are always green, blossoming in
all seasons. Abundant rainfall nurtures tropical and subtropical
crops such as rice, yam, corn, sugar cane, banana, longan, litchi,
pineapple, shaddock and mango. The mountains in southwest and
northwest Guangxi abound in Liuzhou fir, silver fir and camphor
trees, rare elsewhere. Mineral resources include iron, coal,
wolfram, gold, copper, tin, manganese, aluminum, stibium, zinc
and petroleum. The area is also rich in tung oil, tea, tea oil,
mushroom, Chinese cinnamon, pseudo-ginseng, Chinese gecko (used
in traditional Chinese medicine to help regain vitality),
fennal
and fennal essence. The last four items are the Zhuang area's
special products.
History
"Zhuang"
was one of the names the ancestors of the ethnic group gave
themselves. The term was first recorded some 1,000 years ago,
in the Song Dynasty. The Zhuangs used to call themselves by
at least a dozen other names, too.
The Zhuang areas
first came under the administration of China's central authority
2,000 years ago. In 221 B.C., the First Emperor of Qin, China's
first feudal emperor to unify the country, conquered the area
and established three prefectures there. The emperor had the
Lingqu Canal built to facilitate irrigation. He also started
a project to move people from other places to the area, strengthening
its political, economic and cultural ties with the central-south
part of the country.
In the centuries
that followed, a number of powerful clans emerged in this area,
who owned vast tracts of land and numerous slaves and servants.
Still later, during the Tang and Song dynasties, social and
economic development was such that irrigated rice paddies, farm
cattle, iron, copper and spinning and weaving spread far and
wide.
However, the
Zhuang area still lagged behind central China economically.
Quite a number of places retained the primitive mode of production,
including slash-and-burn cultivation and hunting. The dominant
social system was feudal serfdom and people were classified
into three strata: hereditary landowners, tenant farmers and
house slaves. The system was eliminated during the Qing Dynasty
(1644-1911), the last feudal monarchy in China.
Administratively,
most of the Zhuang area was governed by the headmen system all
through the over 1,000 years from the Tang to Qing dynasties.
Culture
The Zhuang language
belongs to the Chinese-Tibetan language family. Ancient Zhuang
characters appeared in the South Song Dynasty (1127-1279), but
never got popularized. So, the Zhuangs wrote in the Han script
until 1955, when the central government helped them create a
writing system based on the Latin alphabet. The Romanized script
has been used in books, magazines and newspapers.
The Zhuang ethnic
group's ancient culture and art are not only rich and colorful
but also outstanding with their indigenous characteristics.
For example, 2,000-year-old frescoes have been found at more
than 50 spots on the precipices hanging over the Zuojiang River
running through southwest Guangxi. The best known of them is
the Huashan fresco in Ningming County which is over 100 meters
long and 40 meters wide, featuring 1,300 figures. Drawn in rugged
and vigorous lines, it reflects the life of the Zhuangs' ancestors.
Bronze drum,
a special relic of minority groups in central south and southwest
China, dates back well over two millennia. Guangxi alone has
unearthed more than 500 of such drums, which are in different
designs and sizes. The largest exceeds one meter in diameter
and the heaviest weighs over half a ton while the lightest several
dozen kilograms. The tops and sides of the drums are decorated
with designs done in relief.
However, explanations
are diverse in so far as the use of these drums is concerned.
Some people believe that they were meant for military music,
others argue that they were for folk music, and still others
think they were for religious rites or to symbolize power and
wealth.
Zhuang brocade
is a splendid handicraft which originated in the Tang Dynasty
(618-907). Woven in beautiful designs with natural cotton warp
and dyed velour weft, the brocade is excellent for making quilt
covers, table-clothes, braces, aprons and handbags. Winning
national fame during the Ming and Qing dynasties (1368-1911),
Zhuang brocade has been steadily improved and at least 40 new
designs have been developed in the past few decades.
Legends, fairy
tales, stories and ballads frame the folk literature of the
Zhuangs who have also been reputed for their singing. Sweet
songs can be heard wherever you go in the Zhuang area. Extemporaneous
melodies and lyrics and clever use of metaphors, riddles and
cross-examinations add charm to their songs. It is said that,
in the Tang Dynasty, a Zhuang woman singer called Third Sister
Liu became known not just for her beautiful singing but especially
for the courageous exposure in her songs of the crudeness of
local tyrants. Today her name is a household word throughout
China thanks to a successful film about her made in the 1950s.
In the old days,
every Zhuang community held its regular songfests at given venues.
On those occasions, young people from nearby villages would
come together in their holiday best to meet each other and choose
their lovers through songs.
Common Zhuang
musical instruments include suona (Chinese cornet), bronze drum,
cymbal, gong, sheng (Chinese wind pipe), xiao (vertical bamboo
flute), di (Chinese flute) and huqin (a stringed instrument)
made of horse bones.
Zhuang dances
are characterized by distinct themes, forceful and nimble steps,
jocular and humorous gestures and true-to-life emotions. The
Rice-Husking Dance, Silk-Ball Dance, Shrimp-Catching Dance,
Tea-Picking Dance, Shoulder-Pole Dance and Bronze-Drum Dance
not only vividly depict the Zhuangs' life and work, but also
display their straightforward, unbending nature.
Yet what combines
the Zhuangs' folk literature, music, dance and other forms of
art is the Zhuang Opera, which first originated from religious
rites in the Tang Dynasty.
Customs and Habits
Most Zhuangs
now live in one-story houses the same as the Hans. But some
have kept their traditional two-story structures with the upper
story serving as the living quarters and the lower as stables
and storerooms. The old housing style, they think, suits the
mountainous terrain and the humid climate.
Contemporary
Zhuang clothing is in general close to the wear of the Han people.
But traditional dresses remain in many places or are worn for
special occasions. In northwest Guangxi, for instance, elderly
women like collarless, embroidered and trimmed jackets buttoned
to the left together with baggy trousers, embroidered belts
and shoes and pleated skirts. They fancy silver ornaments. Women
of southwest Guangxi prefer collarless, left-buttoned jackets,
square kerchieves and loose trousers -- all in black.
Tattoo used
to be an ancient Zhuang custom. A great writer of Tang Dynasty,
Liu Zongyuan, mentioned it in his writings. Chewing betel nuts
is a habit still popular among some Zhuang women. In places
such as southwest Guangxi, betel nuts are a treat to guests.
Rice and corn
make up the Zhuangs' staple food, and glutinous rice is particularly
favored by those in south Guangxi.
The Zhuangs
are monogamous. But they have a strange custom -- the wife stays
away from the husband's home after marriage. At the wedding,
the bride is taken to the bridegroom's home by a dozen girls
of the same generation. She returns to live with her parents
the next day and visits her husband only occasionally during
holidays or the busy farming seasons. The woman will move permanently
to the man's home two or three years later. This convention,
which often impairs the harmony between husband and wife, has
been going out of existence.
While sharing
many festivals with the Hans, the Zhuangs have three red-letter
days of their own: the Devil Festival, the Cattle Soul Festival
and the Feasting Festival. The Devil Festival, which falls on
July 14 on the lunar calendar (usually in August on the Gregorian
calendar), is an important occasion next only to the Spring
Festival. On that day, every family would prepare chicken, duck
and five-colored glutinous rice to be offered as sacrifices
to ancestors and ghosts.
The Cattle Soul
Festival usually follows the spring ploughing, when every family
would carry a basketful of steamed five-colored glutinous rice
and a bundle of fresh grass to the cattle pen. After a brief
sacrificial rite, they would feed the cattle with the grass
and half of the rice. They believe that the cattle have lost
their souls because of the whipping during the spring ploughing
and that the ritual would call back the lost souls.
The Feasting
Festival is celebrated only by people who live near the Sino-Vietnamese
border. Legend has it that a group of Zhuang soldiers, having
repulsed the French invaders in the late 19th century, returned
in late January and missed the Spring Festival. To pay tribute
to them and celebrate the victory, their neighbors prepared
a sumptuous feast for them.
The Zhuangs
are polytheists, worshipping among other things giant rocks,
old trees, high mountains, land, dragons, snakes, birds and
ancestors. Taoism has also had a deep influence on the Zhuangs
since the Tang Dynasty. In the old days, there were semi-professional
Taoist priests in the countryside, and religious rites cost
a lot of money. Foreign
missionaries came to the area in the 19th and early 20th centuries,
but their influence was limited to cities and towns.
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