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Tujia people

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ethnic minority group in China
Not to be confused withMonguor people orTu people.

Ethnic group
Tujia
Tujia women in traditional dress
Total population
8,353,912 (2010 census)[1]
Regions with significant populations

 China
(Hunan · Hubei · Guizhou · Chongqing)
Languages
Mandarin Chinese
Tujia (traditional)
Religion
PredominantlyNuo folk religion

TheTujia (Northern Tujia:Bifjixkhar /Bifzixkar,IPA:/bi˧˥dʑi˥kʰa˨˩//pi˧˥tsi˥kʰa˨˩/, Southern Tujia:Mongrzzir,/mõ˨˩dzi˨˩/;Chinese:土家族;pinyin:Tǔjiāzú;Wade–Giles:Tu3-chia1-tsu2) are anethnic group and, with a totalpopulation of over 8 million, the eighth-largestofficially recognizedethnic minority in thePeople's Republic of China. They live in theWuling Mountains, straddling the common borders ofHunan,Hubei andGuizhouProvinces andChongqingMunicipality.

TheendonymBizika means "native dwellers". In Chinese,Tujia literally means "local families", in contrast to theHakka (客家;Kèjiā), whose name literally means "guest families" and implies migration.[2]

Origins

[edit]

Although there are different accounts of their origins, the Tujia may trace their history back over twelve centuries and possibly beyond, to the ancientBa people who occupied the area around modern-dayChongqing some 2,500 years ago. TheBa Kingdom reached the zenith of its power between 600 BC and 400 BC but was annexed by theQin in 316 BC.

After being referred to by a long succession of different names in ancient documents, the Tujia appeared in historical records from about 14th century onwards.

Ming and Qing dynasties

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The Tujiatusi chieftains reached the zenith of their power under theMing dynasty (1368–1644), when they were accorded comparatively high status by the imperial court. They achieved this through their reputation as providers of fierce, highly disciplined fighting men, who were employed by the emperor to suppress revolts by other minorities. On numerous occasions, they helped defend China against outside invaders, such as thewokou ("Japanese" pirates) who ravaged the coast during the 16th century.

TheManchus invaded and conquered the Ming in 1644 and established the Great Qing Empire, known in China as theQing dynasty. Ever suspicious of local rulers, the Qing emperors always tried to replace Han officials with Manchu officials wherever they could. In the early 18th century, the Qing court finally felt secure enough to establish direct control over minority areas as well. This process, known asgaituguiliu (literally 'replace the local [ruler], return to mainstream [central rule]'), was carried out throughout South-West China gradually and, in general, peacefully. The court adopted acarrot and stick approach of lavish pensions for compliantchieftains, coupled with a huge show of military force on the borders of their territories.

Most of the Tujia areas returned to central control during the period 1728–1735. While the rule of the Qing government was more orderly compared to the rule of chieftains, many in the Tujia peasantry came to resent the attempts of the Qing court to impose national culture and customs on them. With the weakening of central Qing rule, numerous large-scale uprisings occurred, culminating in the violentTaiping Rebellion.

Recent history

[edit]
Tujia village in current-dayYichang
Tujia brocade

Following the collapse of the Qing, the Tujia found themselves caught between various competingwarlords. More and more land was given over to the cultivation of high-earningopium at the insistence of wealthy landlords andbanditry was rife. After the founding of thePeople's Republic of China in 1949, Tujia areas came under communist control and banditry was rapidly eradicated. TheGreat Leap Forward led to mass famine in Tujia communities.

The Tujia were officially recognized as one of the 55ethnic minorities in January 1957 and a number ofautonomous prefectures andcounties were subsequently established.[3]

State CouncillorDai Bingguo, one of China's top officials on foreign policy, is the most prominent Tujia in the Chinese government.[4]

Culture

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Today, traditional Tujia customs can only be found in the most remote areas.

The Tujia are renowned for their singing and song composing abilities and for their tradition of theBaishou dance (摆手舞), a 500-year-old collective dance which uses 70 ritual gestures to represent war, farming, hunting, courtship and other aspects of traditional life. They are also famous for their richly patternedbrocade, known asxilankapu, a product that in earlier days regularly figured in their tribute payments to the Chinese court. For their spring festival they prepare handmadeglutinous rice cakes calledciba cake. They gather round the fire to singfolk songs and eat grilled ciba.[5]

Regarding religion, most of the Tujia worship a white tiger totem, although some Tujia in western Hunan worship a turtle totem.

Language

[edit]
Main article:Tujia language

Tujia is aSino-Tibetan language and is usually considered an isolate within this group. It has some grammatical and phonological similarities withNuosu, though its vocabulary is very different.[6]

Today there are at most 70,000 native speakers of theTujia language, most of whom live in the northern partsXiangxi Tujia and Miao Autonomous Prefecture in North-WesternHunan Province.

The vast majority of the Tujia usevarieties of Chinese, mainlySouthwestern Mandarin; a few speakHmongic languages. Few monolingual Tujia speakers remain; nearly all are bilingual in some dialect of Chinese. Children now learn Chinese from childhood and many young Tujia prefer to use Chinese when communicating among themselves. Among fluent Tujia speakers, Chinese borrowings and even sentence structures, are more common.

Distribution

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By province

[edit]
Furong, an ancient town located inYongshun County ofXiangxi, Hunan

TheFifth National Population Census of 2000 recorded 8,028,133 Tujia in China.

Provincial Distribution of the Tujia
ProvinceTujia Population% of Total
Hunan2,639,53432.88%
Hubei2,177,40927.12%
Guizhou1,430,28617.82%
Chongqing1,424,35217.74%
Guangdong135,4311.69%
Zhejiang55,3100.69%
Sichuan41,2460.51%
Fujian29,0460.36%
Other95,5191.19%

In Chongqing, Tujia make up 4.67% of the total population; in Hunan, 4.17%; in Guizhou, 4.06%; in Hubei, 3.66%; and in Guangdong, 0.16%.

By county

[edit]
Distribution of Tujia people in China
Tujia autonomous prefectures and counties in China.
County-level distributions of the Tujia

(Only includes counties or county-equivalents containing >0.5% of China's Tujia population.)

ProvincePrefectureCountyTujia Population% of China's Tujia Population
ChongqingSameYouyang462,4445.76%
HunanZhangjiajieCili399,9064.98%
HubeiEnshiLichuan388,0354.83%
HunanChangdeShimen387,4804.83%
GuizhouTongrenYanhe Tujia Autonomous County383,4994.78%
ChongqingsameShizhu348,7904.34%
HunanXiangxiYongshun342,5704.27%
HunanZhangjiajieYongding319,3303.98%
GuizhouTongrenDejiang300,4323.74%
HubeiEnshiXianfeng276,3943.44%
HubeiEnshiEnshi270,7533.37%
ChongqingSameQianjiang261,3273.26%
HunanZhangjiajieSangzhi260,0923.24%
HunanXiangxiLongshan251,0073.13%
GuizhouTongrenYinjiang233,8022.91%
HubeiEnshiBadong212,4242.65%
HubeiYichangChangyang211,1292.63%
ChongqingSameXiushan197,5702.46%
HubeiYichangWufeng174,5462.17%
HubeiEnshiJianshi173,9842.17%
GuizhouTongrenSinan160,0891.99%
HunanXiangxiBaojing148,2911.85%
HubeiEnshiHefeng142,8051.78%
HubeiEnshiXuan'en140,8371.75%
HunanXiangxiJishou103,2421.29%
HunanHuaihuaYuanling102,6361.28%
HubeiEnshiLaifeng93,4711.16%
GuizhouTongrenJiangkou77,7910.97%
ChongqingSamePengshui74,5910.93%
GuizhouTongrenTongren70,2860.88%
HunanXiangxiFenghuang64,7270.81%
HunanXiangxiGuzhang47,1620.59%
GuizhouZunyiWuchuan46,2530.58%
HunanHuaihuaXupu45,9000.57%
HunanZhangjiajieWulingyuan41,9100.52%
HunanXiangxiLuxi40,6430.51%
Other771,9859.62%

Autonomous Areas Designated for Tujia

[edit]
Province-level DivisionName
HunanXiangxi Tujia and Miao Autonomous Prefecture
HubeiEnshi Tujia and Miao Autonomous Prefecture
Changyang Tujia Autonomous County
Wufeng Tujia Autonomous County
ChongqingShizhu Tujia Autonomous County
Pengshui Miao and Tujia Autonomous County
Xiushan Tujia and Miao Autonomous County
Youyang Tujia and Miao Autonomous County
Qianjiang District (former Qianjiang Tujia and Miao Autonomous County)
GuizhouYanhe Tujia Autonomous County
Yinjiang Tujia and Miao Autonomous County

Famous Tujia

[edit]

References

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Citations

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  1. ^"中國2010人口普查資料".Archived from the original on 27 November 2012. Retrieved1 August 2015.
  2. ^土家族族源 [Origins of the Tujia].Xinhua. Archived fromthe original on 3 September 2006.
  3. ^McLaren, Anne E. (2008).Performing Grief: Bridal Laments in Rural China. University of Hawaii Press. p. 158.ISBN 978-0-8248-3232-2.The Tujia people have been given the status of 'minority' by the People's Republic.
  4. ^Lin, Li (2012).On Minority Rights. Paths International Ltd. p. 149.ISBN 978-1-84464-214-4.Hui Liangyu (Hui) was elected Vice Premier of the State Council and Dai Bingguo (Tujia) State Councillor.
  5. ^Archived atGhostarchive and theWayback Machine:"A special Spring Festival snack: The Tujia tradition of making 'ciba,' a glutinous rice cake".YouTube. 13 February 2018.
  6. ^Brief Introduction to the Tujia Language

Sources

[edit]
  • Brown, M.J. (2001). "Ethnic Classification and Culture: The Case of the Tujia in Hubei, China,"Asian Ethnicity 2(1): 55–72.
  • Brown, M.J. (2004). "They Came with Their Hands Tied behind Their Backs" – Forced Migrations, Identity Changes, and State Classification in Hubei.Is Taiwan Chinese? (pp. 166–210). Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Brown, M.J. (2007). "Ethnic Identity, Cultural Variation, and Processes of Change – Rethinking the Insights of Standardization and Orthopraxy".Modern China. 33(1): 91–124. Sage Publications.
  • ---- 2002. "Local Government Agency: Manipulating Tujia Identity,"Modern China.
  • Ch'en, J. (1992).The Highlanders of Central China: A History 1895–1937. New York: M.E. Sharpe.
  • Dong, L. (1999).Ba feng Tu yun—Tujia wenhua yuanliu jiexi (Ba Manners, Tu Charm—An Analysis of the Origins of Tujia Culture). Wuhan: Wuhan Daxue Chubanshe.
  • Dong, L., Brown, M.J., Wu, X. (2002). Tujia.Encyclopedia of World Cultures – Supplement. C. Ember, M. Ember & I. Skoggard (eds.), NY: Macmillan Reference USA, pp. 351–354.
  • Huang B. (1999). "Tujiazu Zuyuan Yanjiu Zonglun" ("A Review of Research on Tujia Ancestral Origins"). InTujia zu lizhi wenhua lunji (A Colloquium on Tujia History and Culture), edited by Huang Baiquan and Tian Wanzheng. 25–42. Enshi, Hubei: Hubei Minzu Xueyuan.
  • Li, S. (1993).Chuandong Youshui Tujia (Tujia of the Youshui River in East Sichuan). Chengdu: Chengdu Chubanshe.
  • Peng, B., Peng, X. et al. (1981). Jishou University Journal, Humanities Edition #2: Special Issue on Tujia Ethnography [in Chinese]. Jishou: Jishou University.
  • Shih C. (2001). "Ethnicity as Policy Expedience: Clan Confucianism in Ethnic Tujia-Miao Yongshun,"Asian Ethnicity 2(1): 73–88.
  • Sutton, D. (2000). "Myth Making on an Ethnic Frontier: The Cult of the Heavenly Kings of West Hunan, 1715–1996,"Modern China 26(4): 448–500.
  • Sutton, D. (2003). "Violence and Ethnicity on a Qing Colonial Frontier: Customary and Statutory Law in the Eighteenth-Century Miao Pale". In:Modern Asian Studies 37(1): 41–80. Cambridge University Press.
  • Sutton, D. (2007). "Ritual, Cultural Standardization, and Orthopraxy in China: Reconsidering James L. Watson’s Ideas". In:Modern China 33(1): 3–21. Sage Publications.
  • Tien, D., He, T., Chen, K., Li, J., Xie, Z., Peng, X. (1986).Tujiayu Jianzhi (A Brief Chronicle of the Tujia Language). Beijing: Minzu Chubanshe.
  • Wu, X. (1996). "Changes of chieftains' external policy in the Three Gorges Area in the late Ming and early Qing dynasties [1630s–1660s]". In:Ethnic Forum, (3): 88–92. (Hunan, China)
  • Wu, X. (1997). "Tujia's food-getting pattern in west Hubei in the Qing Dynasty". In:Journal of Hubei Institute for Nationalities, (2): 33–35. (Hubei, China)
  • Wu, X. (1997). "On the Tage Dance". In:Journal of Chinese Classics and Culture, (2): 22–29. (Beijing, China)
  • Wu, X. (2003). "Food, Ethnoecology and Identity in Enshi Prefecture, Hubei, China". (Doctoral Dissertation, University of Alberta, 388 pages).
  • Wu, X. (2003). "Turning Waste into Things of Value": Marketing Fern, Kudzu and Osmunda in Enshi Prefecture, China. In:Journal of Developing Societies, 19(4): 433–457.
  • Wu, X. (2004). "Ethnic Foods" and Regional Identity: the Hezha Restaurants in Enshi. In:Food and Foodways, 12(4): 225–246.
  • Wu, X. (2005). "The New Year's Eve Dinner and Wormwood Meal: Festival Foodways as Ethnic Markers in Enshi". In:Modern China, 31(3): 353–380.
  • Wu, X. (2006). "Maize, Ecosystem Transition and Ethnicity in Enshi Prefecture, China". In:East Asian History, 31(1): 1–22.
  • Wu, X. (2010). "Tujia National Minority".Berg Encyclopedia of World Dress and Fashion.
  • Ye, D. (1995).Tujiayu yanjiu (Studies of the Tujia Language). Jishou, Hunan: Hunan Chu Wenhua Zhongxin, Jishou Daxue.

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