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Baiyue

The Baiyue, Hundred Yue, or simply Yue, were various ethnic groups who inhabited the regions of Southern China and Northern Vietnam during the 1st millennium BC and 1st millennium AD.[1][2][3] They were known for their short hair, body tattoos, fine swords, and naval prowess.

Baiyue
Statue of a man with short hair and body tattoos typical of the Baiyue, from the state of Yue
Chinese name
Chinese百越
Literal meaningHundred Yue
Vietnamese name
Vietnamese alphabetBách Việt
Chữ Hán百越

During the Warring States period, the word "Yue" referred to the state of Yue in Zhejiang. The later kingdoms of Minyue in Fujian and Nanyue in Guangdong were both considered Yue states. During the Zhou and Han dynasties, the Yue lived in a vast territory from Jiangsu to Yunnan,[3] while Barlow (1997:2) indicates that the Luoyue occupied the southwest Guangxi and northern Vietnam.[4] The Book of Han describes the various Yue tribes and peoples can be found from the regions of Kuaiji to Jiaozhi.[5]

The Yue tribes were gradually displaced or assimilated into Chinese culture as the Han empire expanded into what is now Southern China and Northern Vietnam.[6][7][8][9] Many modern southern Chinese dialects bear traces of substrate languages[citation needed] originally spoken by the ancient Yue. Variations of the name are still used for the name of modern Vietnam, in Zhejiang-related names including Yue opera, the Yue Chinese language, and in the abbreviation for Guangdong.

Names edit

The modern term "Yue" (traditional Chinese: 越、粵; simplified Chinese: 越、粤; pinyin: Yuè; Cantonese Jyutping: Jyut6; Wade–Giles: Yüeh4; Vietnamese: Việt; Early Middle Chinese: Wuat) comes from Old Chinese *ɢʷat.[10] It was first written using the pictograph for an axe (a homophone), in oracle bone and bronze inscriptions of the late Shang dynasty (c. 1200 BC), and later as .[11] At that time it referred to a people or chieftain to the northwest of the Shang.[3][12][better source needed] In the early 8th century BC, a tribe on the middle Yangtze were called the Yangyue, a term later used for peoples further south.[3] Between the 7th and 4th centuries BC "Yue" referred to the state of Yue in the lower Yangtze basin and its people.[3][11] According to Ye Wenxian, as cited by Wan, the ethnonym of the Yuefang in northwestern China is not associated with that of the Baiyue in southeastern China.[13]

The term Baiyue first appears in the Lüshi Chunqiu, compiled around 239 BC.[14][15] It was later used as a collective term for many non-Huaxia/Han Chinese populations of Southern China and Northern Vietnam.[3]

Ancient texts mention a number of Yue states or groups. Most of these names survived into early imperial times:

Ancient Yue groups
Chinese Mandarin Cantonese (Jyutping) Vietnamese Literal meaning
於越/于越 Yuyue Jyut1 jyut6 Ư Việt Yue by Wuyu (first ruler of Yue)
揚越 Yangyue Joeng4 jyut6 Dương Việt Yue of Yangzhou
東甌 Dong'ou Dung1 au1 Đông Âu Eastern Ou
閩越 Minyue Man5 jyut6 Mân Việt Yue of Min
夜郎 Yelang Je6 long4 Dạ Lang
南越 Nanyue Naam4 jyut6 Nam Việt Southern Yue
山越 Shanyue Saan1 jyut6 Sơn Việt Mountain Yue
雒越 Luoyue Lok6 jyut6 Lạc Việt
甌越 Ouyue Au1 jyut6 Âu Việt Yue of Ou
滇越 Dianyue Din1 jyut6 Điền Việt Yue of Dian

History edit

 
Wu and Yue during the Warring States period

Yuyue edit

During the early Zhou dynasty, the Chinese came into contact with a people known as the Yuyue, but it is uncertain if they had any connection with the later Yue.[16]

Wu and Yue edit

From the 9th century BC, two northern Yue tribes on the southeastern coastline of China, the Gouwu and Yuyue, came under the cultural influence of their northern Chinese neighbours. These two peoples were based in the areas of what is now southern Jiangsu and northern Zhejiang, respectively. Traditional accounts attribute the cultural exchange to Taibo, a Zhou dynasty prince who had self-exiled to the south. During the Spring and Autumn period, the Gouwu founded the state of Wu and the Yuyue the state of Yue. The Wu and Yue peoples hated each other and had an intense rivalry but were indistinguishable from each other to the other Chinese states. It is suggested in some sources that their distinctive appearance made them victims of discrimination abroad.[17]

The northern Wu eventually became the more sinicized of the two states. The royal family of Wu claimed descent from King Wen of Zhou as the founder of their dynasty. King Fuchai of Wu made every effort to assert this claim and was the source of much contention among his contemporaries. Some scholars believe the Wu royalty may have been Chinese and ethnically distinct from the people they ruled.[16] The recorded history of Wu began with King Shoumeng (r. 585–561 BC). He was succeeded in succession by his sons King Zhufan (r. 560–548 BC), King Yuji (r. 547–531 BC), and King Yumei (r. 530–527 BC). The brothers all agreed to exclude their sons from the line of succession and to eventually pass the throne to their youngest brother, Prince Jizha, but when Yumei died, a succession crisis erupted which saw his son King Liao taking the throne. Not much is known about their reigns as Yue history largely concentrates on the last two Wu kings, Helü of Wu, who killed his cousin Liao, and his son Fuchai of Wu.[18]

Records for the southern state of Yue begin with the reign of King Yunchang (d. 497 BC). According to the Records of the Grand Historian, the Yue kings were descended from Shao Kang of the Xia dynasty. According to another source, the kings of Yue were related to the royal family of Chu. Other sources simply name the Yue ruling family as the house of Zou. There is no scholarly consensus on the origin of the Yue or their royalty.[19]

Wu and Yue spent much of the time at war with each other, during which Yue gained a fearsome reputation for its martial valour:

Zhuangzi of Qi wanted to attack Yue, and he discussed this with Hezi. Hezi said: “Our former ruler handed down his instruction: ‘Do not attack Yue, for Yue is [like] a cruel tiger.’” Zhuangzi said: “Even though it was a cruel tiger, now it is already dead.” Hezi reported this to Xiaozi. Xiaozi said: “It may already be dead but people still think it is alive.[20]

Almost nothing is known about the organizational structure of the Wu and Yue states. Wu records only mention its ministers and kings while Yue records only mention its kings, and of these kings only Goujian's life is recorded in any appreciable detail. Goujian's descendants are listed but aside from their succession of each other until 330 BC, when Yue was conquered by Chu, nothing else about them is known. Therefore, the lower echelons of Wu–Yue society remain shrouded in mystery, appearing only in reference to their strange clothing, tattoos, and short hair by northern Chinese states. After the fall of Yue, the ruling family moved south to what is now Fujian and established the kingdom of Minyue. There they stayed, outside the reach of Chinese history until the end of the Warring States period and the rise of the Qin dynasty.[20]

In 512 BC, Wu launched a large expedition against the large state of Chu, based in the Middle Yangtze River. A similar campaign in 506 succeeded in sacking the Chu capital Ying. Also in that year, war broke out between Wu and Yue and continued with breaks for the next three decades. Wu campaigns against other states such as Jin and Qi are also mentioned. In 473, King Goujian of Yue finally conquered Wu and was acknowledged by the northern states of Qi and Jin. In 333, Yue was in turn conquered by Chu.[21]

Qin dynasty edit

 
Qin dynasty and Yue peoples, 210 BC

After the unification of China by Qin Shi Huang, the former Wu and Yue states were absorbed into the nascent Qin empire. The Qin armies also advanced south along the Xiang River to modern Guangdong and set up commanderies along the main communication routes. Motivated by the region's vast land and valuable exotic products, Emperor Qin Shi Huang is said to have sent half a million troops divided into five armies to conquer the lands of the Yue.[22][23][24] The Yue defeated the first attack by Qin troops and killed the Qin commander.[23] A passage from Huainanzi of Liu An quoted by Keith Taylor (1991:18) describing the Qin defeat as follows:[25]

The Yue fled into the depths of the mountains and forests, and it was not possible to fight them. The soldiers were kept in the garrisons to watch over abandoned territories. This went on for a long time, and the soldiers went weary. Then the Yue went out and attacked; the Ch'in (Qin) soldiers suffered a great defeat. Subsequently, convicts were sent to hold the garrisons against the Yue.

Afterwards, Qin Shi Huang sent reinforcements to defend against the Yue. In 214 BC, Qin Shi Huang ordered the construction of the Lingqu Canal, which linked the north and south so that reinforcements could be transported to modern Guangdong, Guangxi and northern Vietnam, which were subjugated and reorganized into three prefectures within the Qin empire.[26] Qin Shi Huang imposed sinicisation by sending a large number of Chinese military agricultural colonists to what are now eastern Guangxi and western Guangdong.[27]

Minyue and Dong'ou edit

 
Southern tribes in pre-Han conquest southern China and Vietnam [citation needed]

When the Qin fell in 206 BC, the hegemon-king Xiang Yu did not make Zou Wuzhu and Zou Yao kings. For this reason they refused to support him and instead joined Liu Bang in attacking Xiang Yu. When Liu Bang won the war in 202 BC, he made Zou Wuzhu king of Minyue; in 192, Zou Yao was made the king of Dong'ou.[28] Both Minyue and Dong'ou claimed descent from Goujian.[20]

In 154, Liu Pi, the King of Wu, revolted against the Han and tried to persuade Minyue and Dong'ou to join him. The king of Minyue refused but Dong'ou sided with the rebels. However, when Liu Pi was defeated and fled to Dong'ou, they killed him to appease the Han, and therefore escaped any retaliation. Liu Pi's son, Liu Ziju, fled to Minyue and worked to incite a war between the Minyue and Dong'ou.[28]

In 138, Minyue attacked Dong'ou and besieged their capital. Dong'ou managed to send someone to appeal for help from the Han. Opinions at the Han court were mixed on whether or not to help Dong'ou. Grand commandant Tian Fen was of the opinion that the Yue constantly attacked each other and it was not in the Han's interest to interfere in their affairs. Palace counsellor Zhuang Zhu argued that to not aid Dong'ou would be to signal the end of the empire just like the Qin. A compromise was made to allow Zhuang Zhu to call up troops, but only from Kuaiji Commandery, and finally an army was transported by sea to Dong'ou. By the time the Han forces had arrived, Minyue had already withdrawn its troops. The king of Dong'ou no longer wished to live in Dong'ou, so he requested permission for the inhabitants of his state to move into Han territory. Permission was granted and he and all his people settled in the region between the Yangtze and Huai River.[28][29]

In 137, Minyue invaded Nanyue. An imperial army was sent against them, but the Minyue king was murdered by his brother Zou Yushan, who sued for peace with the Han. The Han enthroned Zou Wuzhu's grandson, Zou Chou, as king. After they left, Zou Yushan secretly declared himself king while the Han backed Zou Chou found himself powerless. When the Han found out about this the emperor deemed it too troublesome to punish Yushan and let the matter slide.[29][30]

In 112, Nanyue rebelled against the Han. Zou Yushan pretended to send forces to aid the Han against Nanyue, but secretly maintained contact with Nanyue and only took his forces as far as Jieyang. Han general Yang Pu wanted to attack Minyue for their betrayal, however the emperor felt that their forces were already too exhausted for any further military action, so the army was disbanded. The next year, Zou Yushan learned that Yang Pu had requested permission to attack him and saw that Han forces were amassing at his border. Zou Yushan made a preemptive attack against the Han, taking Baisha, Wulin, and Meiling, killing three commanders. In the winter, the Han retaliated with a multi-pronged attack by Han Yue, Yang Pu, Wang Wenshu, and two Yue marquises. When Han Yue arrived at the Minyue capital, the Yue native Wu Yang rebelled against Zou Yushan and murdered him. Wu Yang was enfeoffed by the Han as marquis of Beishi. Emperor Wu of Han felt it was too much trouble to occupy Minyue as it was a region full of narrow mountain passes. He commanded the army to evict the region and resettle the people between the Yangtze and Huai River, leaving the region (modern Fujian) a deserted land.[31]

Lạc Việt edit

Lạc Việt, known in Chinese history as Luoyue, was an ancient conglomeration of Yue tribes in what is now modern Guangxi and northern Vietnam. According to Vietnamese folklore and legend, the Lạc Việt founded a state called Văn Lang c. 2879 BC and were ruled by the Hùng kings, who were descended from Lạc Long Quân (Lạc Dragon Lord). Lạc Long Quân came from the sea and subdued all the evil of the land, taught the people how to cultivate rice and wear clothes, and then returned to the sea again. He then met and married Âu Cơ, a goddess, daughter of Đế Lai. Âu Cơ soon bore an egg sac, from which hatched a hundred children. The first born son became Hùng King and ancestor of Luoyue people.

Despite its legendary origins, Lạc Việt history only begins in the 7th century BC with the first Hùng king in Mê Linh uniting the various tribes.[32]

In 208, the Western Ou (Xi'ou or Nam Cương) king Thục Phán, a descendant of Shu royalty, conquered Văn Lang.[33]

Âu Việt edit

 
Map of the Cổ Loa Citadel

The Âu Việt, known in Chinese as Ouyue, resided in modern northeast Vietnam, Guangdong province, and Guangxi province. At some point they split and became the Western Ou and the Eastern Ou. In the late 3rd century BC, Thục Phán, a descendant of the last ruler of Shu, came to rule the Western Ou. In 219 BC, Western Ou came under attack from the Qin empire and lost its king. Seeking refuge, Thục Phán led a group of dispossessed Ou lords south in 208 BC and conquered the Lạc Việt state of Văn Lang, which he renamed Âu Lạc. Henceforth he came to be known as An Dương Vương.[34]

An Dương Vương and the Ou lords built the citadel Cổ Loa, literally 'Old snail'—so called because its walls were laid out in concentric rings reminiscent of a snail shell. According to legend, the construction of the citadel was halted by a group of spirits seeking to gain revenge for the son of the previous king. The spirits were led by a white chicken. A golden turtle appeared, subdued the white chicken, and protected An Dương Vương until the citadel's completion. When the turtle departed, he left one of his claws behind, which An Dương Vương used as the trigger for his magical crossbow, the "Saintly Crossbow of the Supernaturally Luminous Golden Claw".[25]

An Dương Vương sent a giant called Lý Ông Trọng to the Qin dynasty as tribute. During his stay with the Qin, Lý Ông Trọng distinguished himself in fighting the Xiongnu, after which he returned to his native village and died there.[25]

In 179 BC, An Dương Vương acknowledged the suzerainty of the Han dynasty, causing Zhao Tuo of Nanyue to become hostile and mobilize forces against Âu Lạc. Zhao Tuo's initial attack was unsuccessful. According to legend, Zhao Tuo asked for a truce and sent his son to conduct a marriage alliance with An Dương Vương's daughter. Zhao Tuo's son stole the turtle claw that powered An Dương Vương's magical crossbow, rendering his realm without protection. When Zhao Tuo invaded again, An Dương Vương fled into the sea where he was welcomed by the golden turtle. Âu Lạc was divided into the two prefectures of Jiaozhi and Jiuzhen.[35]

Nanyue edit

 
Territory and borders of Nanyue kingdom
 
Gold seal excavated from the tomb of Zhao Mo, second King of Nanyue. The seal's characters, shown in detail on the lower left, read 文帝行壐 ('Imperial Seal of Emperor Wen'), which demonstrates the first Nanyue rulers' Emperor status within Nanyue itself.
 
Six jadeite Liubo game pieces from the tomb of King Zhao Mo of Nanyue (r. 137–122 BC)

Zhao Tuo was a Qin general originally born around 240 BC in the state of Zhao (within modern Hebei). When Zhao was annexed by Qin in 222 BC, Zhao Tuo joined the Qin and served as one of their generals in the conquest of the Baiyue. The territory of the Baiyue was divided into the three provinces of Guilin, Nanhai, and Xiang. Zhao served as magistrate in the province of Nanhai until his military commander, Ren Xiao, fell ill. Before he died, Ren advised Zhao not to get involved in the affairs of the declining Qin, and instead set up his own independent kingdom centered around the geographically remote and isolated city of Panyu (modern Guangzhou). Ren gave Zhao full authority to act as military commander of Nanhai and died shortly afterwards. Zhao immediately closed off the roads at Hengpu, Yangshan, and Huangqi. Using one excuse or another he eliminated the Qin officials and replaced them with his own appointees. By the time the Qin fell in 206 BC, Zhao had also conquered the provinces of Guilin and Xiang. He declared himself King Wu of Nanyue (Southern Yue).[36] Unlike Qin Shi Huang, Zhao respected Yue customs, rallied their local rulers, and let local chieftains continue their old policies and local political traditions. Under Zhao's rule, he encouraged Han Chinese settlers to intermarry with the indigenous Yue tribes through instituting a policy of 'harmonizing and gathering' while creating a syncretic culture that was a blend of Han and Yue cultures.[23][26]

In 196, Emperor Gaozu of Han dispatched Lu Jia to recognize Zhao Tuo as king of Nanyue.[36] Lu gave Zhao a seal legitimizing him as king of Nanyue in return for his nominal submission to the Han. Zhao received him in the manner of the local people with his hair in a chignon while squatting. Lu accused him of going native and forgetting his true ancestry. Zhao excused himself by saying he had forgotten the northern customs after living in the south for so long.[37]

In 185, Empress Lü's officials outlawed trade of iron and horses with Nanyue. Zhao Tuo retaliated by proclaiming himself Emperor Wu of Nanyue and attacking the neighboring kingdom of Changsha, taking a few border towns. In 181 BC, Zhou Zao was dispatched by Empress Lü to attack Nanyue, but the heat and dampness caused many of his officers and men to fall ill, and he failed to make it across the mountains into enemy territory. Zhao began to menace the neighboring kingdoms of Minyue, Xiou (Western Ou), and Luoluo. After securing their submission he began passing out edicts in a similar manner to the Han emperor.[38]

In 180, Emperor Wen of Han made efforts to appease Zhao. Learning that Zhao's parents were buried in Zhending, he set aside a town close by just to take care of their graves. Zhao's cousins were appointed to high offices at the Han court. He also withdrew the army stationed in Changsha on the Han-Nanyue border. In response, Zhao rescinded his claims to imperium while communicating with the Han, however he continued using the title of emperor within his kingdom. Tribute bearing envoys from Nanyue were sent to the Han and thus the iron trade was resumed.[39]

In 179, Zhao Tuo defeated the kingdom of Âu Lạc and annexed it.[23]

Zhao Tuo died in 137 and was succeeded by his grandson, Zhao Mo.[39] Upon Zhao Mo's accession, the neighboring king of Minyue, Zou Ying, sent his army to attack Nanyue. Zhao sent for help from the Han dynasty, his nominal vassal overlord. The Han responded by sending troops against Minyue, but before they could get there, Zou Ying was killed by his brother Zou Yushan, who surrendered to the Han. The Han army was recalled.[40] Zhao considered visiting the Han court in order to show his gratitude. His high ministers argued against it, reminding him that his father kept his distance from the Han and merely avoided a breach of etiquette to keep the peace. Zhao therefore pleaded illness and never went through with the trip. Zhao did actually fall ill several years later and died in 122. He was succeeded by his son, Zhao Yingqi.[40]

After the Han dynasty aided Nanyue in fending off an invasion by Minyue, Zhao Mo sent his son Yingqi to the Han court, where he joined the emperor's guard. Zhao Yingqi married a Han Chinese woman from the Jiu family of Handan, who gave birth to his second son, Zhao Xing. Yingqi behaved without any scruples and committed murder on several occasions. When his father died in 122, he refused to visit the Han emperor to ask for his leave due to fearing that he would be arrested and punished for his behavior. Yingqi died in 115 and was succeeded by his second son, Zhao Xing, rather than the eldest, Zhao Jiande.[41]

In 113, Emperor Wu of Han sent Anguo Shaoji to summon Zhao Xing and the Queen Dowager Jiu to Chang'an for an audience with the emperor. The Queen Dowager Jiu, who was Han Chinese, was regarded as a foreigner by the Yue people, and it was widely rumored that she had an illicit relationship with Anguo Shaoji before she married Zhao Yingqi. When Anguo arrived, quite a number of people believed the two resumed their relationship. The Queen Dowager feared that there would be a revolt against her authority so she urged the king and his ministers to seek closer ties to the Han. Xing agreed to and proposed that relations between Nanyue and the Han should be normalized with a triennial journey to the Han court as well as the removal of custom barriers along the border.[42] The prime minister of Nanyue, Lü Jia, held military power and his family was more well connected than either the king or the Queen Dowager. According to the Records of the Grand Historian and Đại Việt sử ký toàn thư, Lü Jia was chief of a Lạc Việt tribe, related to King Qin of Cangwu by marriage, and over 70 of his kinsmen served as officials in various parts of the Nanyue court. Lü refused to meet the Han envoys which angered the Queen Dowager. She tried to kill him at a banquet but was stopped by Xing. The Queen Dowager tried to gather enough support at court to kill Lü in the following months, but her reputation prevented it.[43] When news of the situation reached Emperor Wu in 112, he ordered Zhuang Can to lead a 2,000 men expedition to Nanyue. However, Zhuang refused to accept the mission, declaring that it was illogical to send so many men under the pretext of peace, but so few to enforce the might of the Han. The former prime minister of Jibei, Han Qianqiu, offered to lead the expedition and arrest Lü Jia. When Han crossed the Han–Nanyue border, Lü conducted a coup, killing Xing, Queen Dowager Jiu, and all the Han emissaries in the capital. Xing's brother, Zhao Jiande, was declared the new king.[43]

The 2000 men led by Han Qianqiu took several small towns but were defeated as they neared Panyu, which greatly shocked and angered Emperor Wu. The emperor then sent an army of 100,000 to attack Nanyue. The army marched on Panyu in a multi-pronged assault. Lu Bode advanced from the Hui River and Yang Pu from the Hengpu River. Three natives of Nanyue also joined the Han. One advanced from the Li River, the second invaded Cangwu, and the third advanced from the Zangke River. In the winter of 111 BC Yang Pu captured Xunxia and broke through the line at Shimen. With 20,000 men he drove back the vanguard of the Nanyue army and waited for Lu Bode. However, Lu failed to meet up on time and when he did arrive, he had no more than a thousand men. Yang reached Panyu first and attacked it at night, setting fire to the city. Panyu surrendered at dawn. Jiande and Lü Jia fled the city by boat, heading east to appeal for Minyue's aid, but the Han learned of their escape and sent the general Sima Shuang after them. Both Jiande and Lü Jia were captured and executed.[44]

Dianyue edit

In 135 BC, the Han envoy Tang Meng brought gifts to Duotong, the king of Yelang, which bordered the Dian Kingdom, and convinced him to submit to the Han. Jianwei Commandery was established in the region. In 122, Emperor Wu dispatched four groups of envoys to the southwest in search of a route to Daxia in Central Asia. One group was welcomed by the king of Dian but none of them were able to make it any further as they were blocked in the north by the Sui and Kunming tribes of the Erhai region and in the south by the Di and Zuo tribes. However, they learned that further west there was a kingdom called Dianyue where the people rode elephants and traded with the merchants from Shu in secret.[45]

Han dynasty edit

 
Map showing directions of Han attacks on the Yue home region to the south and the Xiongnu territories to the north in 2nd century BC

In 111 BC, the Han conquered Nanyue and ruled it for the next several hundred years.[46][47] The former territory of Nanyue was converted into nine commanderies and two outpost commands.[48][49]

Nanyue was seen as attractive to the Han rulers as they desired to secure the area's maritime trade routes and gain access to luxury goods from the south such as pearls, incense, elephant tusks, rhinoceros horns, tortoise shells, coral, parrots, kingfishers, peacocks, and other rare luxuries to satisfy the demands of the Han aristocracy.[50][51][52] Other considerations such as frontier security, revenue from a relatively large agricultural population, and access to tropical commodities all contributed to the Han dynasty's desire to retain control of the region.[53] Panyu was already a major center for international maritime trade and was one of the most economically prosperous metropolises during the Han dynasty.[54] Regions in the principal ports of modern Guangdong were used for the production of pearls and a trading terminal for maritime silk with Ancient India and the Roman Empire.[54]

Sinicization of the southern Han dynasty which used to be Nanyue was the result of several factors.[55] Northern and central China was often a theater of imperial dynastic conflict which resulted in waves of Han Chinese refugees fleeing to the south. With dynastic changes, wars, and foreign invasions, Han Chinese living in central China were forced to expand into the unfamiliar and southern regions in large numbers.[2] As the number of Han Chinese immigrants into the Yue coastal regions increased, many Chinese families joined them to escape political unrest, military service, tax obligations, persecution, or sought new opportunities.[56][57] As early arrivals took advantage of the easily accessible fertile land, latecomers had to continue migrating to more remote areas.[2] Conflicts would sometimes arise between the two groups but eventually Han Chinese immigrants from the northern plains moved south to form ad hoc groups and take on the role as powerful local political leaders, many of whom accepted Chinese government titles.[58] Each new wave of Han immigrants exerted additional pressure on the indigenous Yue inhabitants as the Han Chinese in southern China gradually became the predominant ethnic group in local life while displacing the Yue tribes into more mountainous and remote border areas.[59]

The difficulty of logistics and the malarial climate in the south made Han migration and eventual sinicization of the region a slow process.[60][61] Describing the contrast in immunity towards malaria between the indigenous Yue and the Chinese immigrants, Robert B. Marks (2017:145-146) writes:[62]

The Yue population in southern China, especially those who lived in the lower reaches of the river valleys, may have had knowledge of the curative value of the "qinghao" plant, and possibly could also have acquired a certain level of immunity to malaria before Han Chinese even appeared on the scene. But for those without acquired immunity—such as Han Chinese migrants from north China—the disease would have been deadly.

Over the same period, the Han dynasty incorporated many other border peoples such as the Dian and assimilated them.[63] Under the direct rule and greater efforts at sinification by the victorious Han, the territories of the Lac states were annexed and ruled directly, along with other former Yue territories to the north as provinces of the Han empire.[64]

Trưng Sisters edit

In 40 AD, the Lạc lord Thi Sách rebelled on the advice of his wife Trưng Trắc. The administrator of Jiaozhi Commandery, Su Ding, was too afraid to confront them and fled. The commanderies of Jiuzhen, Hepu, and Rinan all rebelled. Trưng Trắc abolished the Han taxes and was recognized as queen at Mê Linh. Later Vietnamese sources would claim that her husband was killed by the Han, thus stirring her to action, but Chinese sources make it clear Trưng Trắc was always in the leading position, alongside her sister Trưng Nhị. Together they came to be known as the legendary Trưng Sisters of Vietnamese history. A large number of names and biographies of leaders under the Trưng Sisters are recorded in temples dedicated to them, many of them also women.[65]

In 42 AD, the veteran Han general Ma Yuan led 20,000 troops against the Trưng Sisters. His advance was checked by Cổ Loa Citadel for over a year, but the Lạc lords became increasingly nervous at the sight of a large Han army. Realizing that she would soon lose her followers if she did not do anything, Trưng Trắc sallied out against the Han army and lost badly, losing more than 10,000 followers. Her followers fled, allowing Ma Yuan to advance. By early 43 AD, both sisters had been captured and executed.[66]

Post-rebellion sinicisation edit

 
Late Eastern Han provinces and commanderies as well as nearby non-Han Chinese peoples[67]

After the rebellion of the Trưng Sisters, more direct rule and greater efforts at sinicisation were imposed by the Han dynasty. The territories of the Lạc lords were revoked and ruled directly, along with other former Yue territories to the north, as provinces of the Han empire.[68] Division among the Yue leaders were exploited by the Han dynasty with the Han military winning battles against the southern kingdoms and commanderies that were of geographic and strategic value to them. Han foreign policy also took advantage of the political turmoil among rival Yue leaders and enticed them with bribes and lured prospects for submitting to the Han Empire as a subordinate vassal.[69]

Continuing internal Han Chinese migration during the Han dynasty eventually brought all the Yue coastal peoples under Chinese political control and cultural influence.[70] As the number of Han Chinese migrants intensified following the annexation of Nanyue, the Yue people were gradually absorbed and driven out into poorer land on the hills and into the mountains.[9][71][72][73][74] Chinese military garrisons showed little patience with the Yue tribes who refused to submit to Han Chinese imperial power and resisted the influx of Han Chinese immigrants, driving them out to the coastal extremities such as the river valleys and highland areas where they became marginal scavengers and outcasts.[75][76] Han dynasty rulers saw the opportunity offered by the Chinese family agricultural settlements and used it as a tool for colonizing newly conquered regions and transforming those environments.[77][76] Displaced Yue tribes often staged sneak attacks and small-scale raids or attacks to reclaim their lost territories on Chinese settlements termed "rebellions" by traditional historians but were eventually stymied by the strong action of the Han dynasty's military superiority.[78][79][80][76][81][2][6][64]

Shanyue edit

The Shanyue "Mountain Yue" were one of the last groups of Yue mentioned in Chinese history. They lived in the mountain regions of modern Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Anhui, Jiangxi and Fujian.

Yan Baihu, or "White Tiger Yan", was a bandit leader of possibly Shanyue origins. When Sun Ce came to Wu Commandery in 195, Yan Baihu gave refuge to the displaced Xu Gong and threatened the flank of Sun Ce's army. However, Sun Ce paid him no attention and the two avoided any altercations. In 197, Cao Cao's agent Chen Yu provoked Yan into rebellion. Sun Ce sent Lü Fan to drive out Chen Yu while he himself attacked Yan. The defeated Yan fled south to join Xu Zhao but died soon afterwards. Remnants of Yan's band joined Xu Gong in 200 to threaten Sun Ce's rear as he attacked Huang Zu in the west. Sun Ce decided to retreat and finish off the bandits once and for all, only to fall into an ambush and die at their hands.[82]

In 203, they rebelled against Sun Quan's rule and were defeated by the generals Lü Fan, Cheng Pu, and Taishi Ci. In 217, Sun Quan appointed Lu Xun supreme commander of an army to suppress martial activities by the Shanyue in Guiji (modern Shaoxing). Captured Shanyue tribesmen were recruited into the army. In 234, Zhuge Ke was made governor of Danyang. Under his governorship, the region was cleansed of the Shanyue through systematic destruction of their settlements. Captured tribesmen were used as front line fodder in the army. The remaining population was resettled in lowlands and many became tenant farmers for Chinese landowners.[83][better source needed]

Post-Han edit

The fall of the Han dynasty and the following period of division sped up the process of sinicisation. Periods of instability and war in northern and central China, such as the Northern and Southern dynasties and during the Mongol conquest of the Song dynasty sent waves of Han Chinese into the south.[84] Waves of migration and subsequent intermarriage and cross-cultural dialogue gave rise to modern Chinese demographics with a dominant Han Chinese majority and minority non-Han Chinese indigenous peoples in the south.[85][86] By the Tang dynasty (618–907), the term "Yue" had largely become a regional designation rather than a cultural one, as in the Wuyue state during the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period in what is now Zhejiang province. During the Song dynasty, a bridge known as the Guojie qiao (World Crossing Bridge) was built at Jiaxing between the modern border of Jiangsu province and Zhejiang province. On the northern side of the bridge stands a statue of King Fuchai of Wu and on the southern side, a statue of King Goujian of Yue.[87] Successive waves of migration in different localities during various times in Chinese history over the past two thousand years have given rise to different dialect groups seen in Southern China today.[88] Modern Lingnan culture contains both Nanyue and Han Chinese elements: the modern Cantonese language resembles Middle Chinese (the prestige language of the Tang Dynasty), but has retained some features of the long-extinct Nanyue language. Some distinctive features of the vocabulary, phonology, and syntax of southern varieties of Chinese are attributed to substrate languages that were spoken by the Yue.[89][90]

Legacy edit

In ancient China, the characters 越 and 粵 (both yuè in pinyin and jyut6 in Jyutping) were used interchangeably, but they are differentiated in modern Chinese:

  • The character refers to the original territory of the state of Yue, which was based in what is now northern Zhejiang, especially the areas around Shaoxing and Ningbo. It is also used to write Vietnam, a word adapted from Nanyue (Vietnamese: Nam Việt), (literal English translation as Southern Yue). This character is also still used in the city Guangzhou for the Yuexiu (越秀) district, and when referring to the Nanyue Kingdom.
  • The character is associated with the southern province of Guangdong. Both the regional dialects of Yue Chinese and the standard form, popularly called Cantonese, are spoken in Guangdong, Guangxi, Hong Kong, Macau and in many Cantonese communities around the world.

Vietnam edit

Việt is the Vietnamese pronunciation of Yue. The modern name of Vietnam derives from Nanyue, or Nam Việt, except reversed.[91]

Tanka people edit

The Tanka are considered by some scholars to be related to other minority peoples of southern China, such as the Yao and Li people (Miao).[92] The Amoy University anthropologist Ling Hui-hsiang wrote his theory of the Fujian Tanka as descendants of the Bai Yue. He claimed that Guangdong and Fujian Tanka are definitely descended from the old Bai Yue peoples, and that they may have been ancestors of the Malay race.[93] The Tanka inherited their lifestyle and culture from the original Yue peoples who inhabited Hong Kong during the Neolithic era.[94] After the First Emperor of China conquered Hong Kong, groups from northern and central China moved into the general area of Guangdong, including Hong Kong.[95]

One theory proposes that the ancient Yue inhabitants of southern China are the ancestors of the modern Tanka boat people. The majority of western academics subscribe to this theory, and use Chinese historical sources. (The ancient Chinese used the term "Yue" to refer to all southern barbarians.)[96][97] The Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd Edition, states that the ancestors of the Tanka were native people.[98][99]

The Tanka's ancestors were pushed to the southern coast by Chinese peasants who took over their land.[100][101]

During the British colonial era in Hong Kong, the Tanka were considered a separate ethnic group from the Punti, Hakka, and Hoklo.[102] Punti is another name for Cantonese (it means "local"), who came from mainly Guangdong districts. The Hakka and Hoklo are not considered as Puntis.

The Tanka have been compared to the She people by some historians, practising Han Chinese culture, while being an ethnic minority descended from natives of Southern China.[103]

Culture edit

The Ou Yue people have their hair cut short and tattooed bodies, their right shoulder is left bare and their clothes are fastened on the left. In the kingdom of Wu they blacken their teeth and scarify their faces, they wear hats made of fish-skin and [clothes] stitched with an awl.[17]

The Han referred to the various non-Han "barbarian" peoples of southern China as "Baiyue", saying they possessed habits like adapting to water, having their hair cropped short and tattooed.[104] The Han also said their language was "animal shrieking" and that they lacked morals, modesty, civilization and culture.[105][106] According to one Han Chinese immigrant of the 2nd century BC, "The Yue cut their hair short, tattooed their body, live in bamboo groves with neither towns nor villages, possessing neither bows or arrows, nor horses or chariots."[107][108][109] They also blackened their teeth.[110]

 
Miniature model of a Yue ship

Militarily, the ancient states of Yue and Wu were distinct from other Sinitic states for their possession of a navy.[111] Unlike other Chinese states of the time, they also named their boats and swords.[112] A Chinese text described the Yue as a people who used boats as their carriages and oars as their horses.[113] The marshy lands of the south gave the Gouwu and Yuyue people unique characteristics. According to Robert Marks, the Yue lived in what is now Fujian province gained their livelihood mostly from fishing, hunting, and practiced some kind of swidden rice farming.[114] Prior to Han Chinese migration from the north, the Yue tribes cultivated wet rice, practiced fishing and slash-and-burn agriculture, domesticated water buffalo, built stilt houses, tattooed their faces and dominated the coastal regions from shores all the way to the fertile valleys in the interior mountains.[115][116][117][118][119][120][121] Water transport was paramount in the south, so the two states became advanced in shipbuilding and developed maritime warfare technology mapping trade routes to Eastern coasts of China and Southeast Asia.[122][123]

Swords edit

 
Yue sword

The Yue were known for their swordsmanship and producing fine double-edged swords (; ; jiàn). Kao Gong Ji stated that Wu and Yue manufactured the best double-edged swords.[124][125] According to the Spring and Autumn Annals of Wu and Yue, King Goujian met a female sword fighter called Nanlin (Yuenü) who demonstrated mastery over the art, and so he commanded his top five commanders to study her technique. Ever since, the technique came to be known as the "Sword of the Lady of Yue". The Yue were also known for their possession of mystical knives embued with the talismanic power of dragons or other amphibious creatures.[126]

The woman was going to travel north to have audience with King [Goujian of Yue] when she met an old man on the road, and he introduced himself as Lord Yuan. He asked the woman: “I have heard that you are good at swordsmanship, I would like to see this!" the woman said: “I do not dare to conceal anything from you; my lord, you may put me to the test.” Lord Yuan then selected a stave of linyu bamboo, the top of which was withered. He broke off [the leaves] at the top and threw them to the ground, and the woman picked them up [before they hit the ground]. Lord Yuan then grabbed the bottom end of the bamboo and stabbed at the woman. She responded, and they fought three bouts, and just as the woman lifted the stave to strike him, Lord Yuan flew into the treetops and became a white gibbon (yuan).[127]

The Zhan Guo Ce mentions the high quality of southern swords and their ability to cleave through oxen, horses, bowls, and basins, but would shatter if used on a pillar or rock. Wu and Yue swords were highly valued and those who owned them would hardly ever use them for fear of damage, however in Wu and Yue these swords were commonplace and treated with less reverence.[128] The Yuejue shu (Record of Precious Swords) mentions several named swords: Zhanlu (Black), Haocao (Bravery), Juque (Great Destroyer), Lutan (Dew Platform), Chunjun (Purity), Shengxie (Victor over Evil), Yuchang (Fish-belly), Longyuan (Dragon Gulf), Taie (Great Riverbank), and Gongbu (Artisanal Display). Many of these were made by the Yue swordsmith Ou Yezi.[129]

Swords held a special place in the culture of the ancient kingdoms of Wu and Yue. Legends about swords were recorded here far earlier and in much greater detail than any other part of China, and this reflects both the development of sophisticated sword-making technology in this region of China, and the importance of these blades within the culture of the ancient south. Both Wu and Yue were famous among their contemporaries for the quantity and quality of the blades that they produced, but it was not until much later, during the Han dynasty, that legends about them were first collected. These tales became an important part of Chinese mythology, and introduced the characters of legendary swordsmiths such as Gan Jiang 干將 and Mo Ye 莫耶 to new audiences in stories that would be popular for millennia. These tales would serve to keep the fame of Wu and Yue sword-craft alive, many centuries after these kingdoms had vanished, and indeed into a time when swords had been rendered completely obsolete for other than ceremonial purposes by developments in military technology.[130]

Even after Wu and Yue were assimilated into larger Chinese polities, memory of their swords lived on. During the Han dynasty, Liu Pi King of Wu (195-154 BC) had a sword named Wujian to honour the history of metalworking in his kingdom.[131]

Language edit

Knowledge of Yue speech is limited to fragmentary references and possible loanwords in other languages, principally Chinese. The longest is the Song of the Yue Boatman, a short song transcribed phonetically in Chinese characters in 528 BC and included, with a Chinese version, in the Garden of Stories compiled by Liu Xiang five centuries later.[132]

See also edit

References edit

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  98. ^ Phil Benson (2001). Ethnocentrism and the English dictionary. Vol. 3 of Routledge studies in the history of linguistics. Psychology Press. p. 152. ISBN 0-415-22074-2. Tanka ... The boat-population of Canton, who live entirely on the boats by which they earn their living: they are descendants of some aboriginal tribe of which Tan was apparently the name.
  99. ^ "Tanka, n.1". Oxford English Dictionary Online. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 12 October 2014. Tanka, n.1 Pronunciation: /ˈtæŋkə/ Forms: Also tankia, tanchia. Etymology: < Chinese (Cantonese), < Chinese tan, lit. 'egg', + Cantonese ka, in South Mandarin kia, North Mandarin chia, family, people. The boat-population of Canton, who live entirely on the boats by which they earn their living: they are descendants of some aboriginal tribe of which Tan was apparently the name. Tanka boat, a boat of the kind in which these people live. 1839 Chinese Repository 7 506 The small boats of Tanka women are never without this appendage. 1848 S. W. Williams Middle Kingdom I. vii. 321 The tankia, or boat-people, at Canton form a class in some respects beneath the other portions of the community. 1848 S. W. Williams Middle Kingdom II. xiii. 23 A large part of the boats at Canton are tankia boats, about 25 feet long, containing only one room, and covered with movable mats, so contrived as to cover the whole vessel; they are usually rowed by women. 1909 Westm. Gaz. 23 Mar. 5/2 The Tankas, numbering perhaps 50,000 in all, gain their livelihood by ferrying people to and fro on the broad river with its creeks. Chinese repository · 1832–1851 (20 vols.). Canton Samuel Wells Williams · The middle kingdom; a survey of the geography, government … of the Chinese empire and its inhabitants · 1848. New York Samuel Wells Williams · The middle kingdom; a survey of the geography, government … of the Chinese empire and its inhabitants · 1848. New York The Westminster gazette · 1893–1928. London [England]: J. Marshall http://www.oed.com/view/Entry/197535?rskey=FwlmXQ&result=1#eid http://www.oed.com/view/Entry/197535?result=1&rskey=FwlmXQ& http://www.oed.com/view/Entry/197535?rskey=CRdtvD&result=1#eid http://www.oed.com/view/Entry/197535?rskey=CRdtvD&result=1&isAdvanced=false#eid
  100. ^ Sun Yat-sen Institute for Advancement of Culture and Education, Nanking (1940). T'ien hsia monthly, Volume 11. Kelly and Walsh, ltd. p. 342. But from the position of the sites it might be supposed that the inhabitants were pushed onto the seacoast by the pressure of other peoples and their survival may have lasted well into historic times, even possibly as late as the Sung dynasty (AD 960), the date, as we shall see, when Chinese peasants first began to migrate into this region. The Tanka might, in theory, be the descendants of these earlier peoples. They too are an ancient population living on the seaboard without any trace of their earlier habitat. But as we have seen in the first chapter they have been so
  101. ^ Sun Yat-sen Institute for Advancement of Culture and Education, Nanking (1940). T'ien hsia monthly, Volume 11. Kelly and Walsh, ltd. p. 342. and they were probably evolved as a result of contact with foreign peoples, even as late as the Portuguese.
  102. ^ Middle East and Africa. Taylor & Francis. 1996. p. 358. ISBN 1-884964-04-4. When the British appropriated the territory in the nineteenth century, they found these three major ethnic groups—Punti, Hakka, and Tanka—and one minority, the Hoklo, who were sea-nomads from the northern shore of Guangdong and
  103. ^ Susan Naquin; Evelyn Sakakida Rawski (1989). Chinese Society in the Eighteenth Century. Yale University Press. p. 169. ISBN 0-300-04602-2. The Wuyi mountains were the home of the She, remnants of an aboriginal tribe related to the Yao who practiced slash and burn agriculture. Tanka boatmen of similar origin were also found in small numbers along the coast. Both the She and the Tanka were quite assimilated into Han Chinese culture.
  104. ^ Marks 1998, p. 54.
  105. ^ Bulletin of the Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association, Issue 15. Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association. 1996. p. 94.
  106. ^ Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association. Congress (1996). Indo-Pacific Prehistory: The Chiang Mai Papers, Volume 2. Bulletin of the Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association. Vol. 2 of Indo-Pacific Prehistory: Proceedings of the 15th Congress of the Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association, Chiang Mai, Thailand, 5–12 January 1994. The Chiang Mai Papers. Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association, Australian National University. p. 94.
  107. ^ Kiernan 2017, p. 63.
  108. ^ Hutcheon, Robin (1996). China–Yellow. Chinese University Press. p. 4. ISBN 978-9-622-01725-2.
  109. ^ Mair, Victor H.; Kelley, Liam C. (2016). Imperial China and Its Southern Neighbours. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (published April 28, 2016). pp. 25–33.
  110. ^ Milburn 2010, p. 1-2.
  111. ^ Holm 2014, p. 35.
  112. ^ Kiernan 2017, pp. 49–50.
  113. ^ Kiernan 2017, p. 50.
  114. ^ Marks (2017), p. 142.
  115. ^ Marks 1998, p. 55.
  116. ^ Sharma, S. D. (2010). Rice: Origin, Antiquity and History. CRC Press. p. 27. ISBN 978-1-578-08680-1.
  117. ^ Brindley 2015, p. 66.
  118. ^ Him & Hsu (2004), p. 8.
  119. ^ Peters, Heather (April 1990). H. Mair, Victor (ed.). "Tattooed Faces and Stilt Houses: Who were the Ancient Yue?" (PDF). Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations, University of Pennsylvania. East Asian Collection. Sino-Platonic Papers. 17: 3.
  120. ^ Marks (2017), p. 72.
  121. ^ Marks (2017), p. 62.
  122. ^ Lim, Ivy Maria (2010). Lineage Society on the Southeastern Coast of China. Cambria Press. ISBN 978-1-6049-77271-.
  123. ^ Lu, Yongxiang (2016). A History of Chinese Science and Technology. Springer. p. 438. ISBN 978-3-662-51388-0.
  124. ^ Zhouli (Rites of Zhou), "Dongguan Kaogong Ji (Winter Office(r)s: Records on the Examination of Craftsmanship)" 6 quote:「鄭之刀,宋之斤,魯之削,吳粵之劍,遷乎其地而弗能為良,地氣然也。」
  125. ^ Jun Wenren (translator) (2013) Ancient Chinese Encyclopedia of Technology: Translation and Annotation of the Kaogong Ji (the Artificers' Records). New York: Routledge. p. 4. quote: "The knives of Zheng, the axes of Song, the pen-knives of Lu, and the double-edged swords of Wu and Yue are famous for their origin. In no other places, can one make these things so well. This is natural because of the qi of the earth."
  126. ^ Brindley 2015, p. 181-183.
  127. ^ Milburn 2010, p. 291.
  128. ^ Milburn 2010, p. 247.
  129. ^ Milburn 2010, p. 285.
  130. ^ Milburn 2010, p. 273.
  131. ^ Milburn 2010, p. 276.
  132. ^ Zhengzhang, Shangfang (1991). "Decipherment of Yue-Ren-Ge (Song of the Yue boatman)". Cahiers de Linguistique Asie Orientale. 20 (2): 159–168. doi:10.3406/clao.1991.1345.

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  • Marks, Robert B. (1998), Tigers, Rice, Silk, and Silt: Environment and Economy in Late Imperial South China (Studies in Environment and History), Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0521591775.
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External links edit

  • , Jerold A. Edmondson, in Studies in Southeast Asian languages and linguistics, ed. by Jimmy G. Harris, Somsonge Burusphat and James E. Harris, 39–64. Bangkok, Thailand: Ek Phim Thai Co. Ltd.

baiyue, redirects, here, cyclist, cyclist, people, redirects, here, people, present, southern, china, also, known, cantonese, people, hundred, simply, were, various, ethnic, groups, inhabited, regions, southern, china, northern, vietnam, during, millennium, mi. Bai Yue redirects here For the cyclist see Bai Yue cyclist Yue people redirects here For the people of present day southern China also known as Yue see Cantonese people The Baiyue Hundred Yue or simply Yue were various ethnic groups who inhabited the regions of Southern China and Northern Vietnam during the 1st millennium BC and 1st millennium AD 1 2 3 They were known for their short hair body tattoos fine swords and naval prowess BaiyueStatue of a man with short hair and body tattoos typical of the Baiyue from the state of YueChinese nameChinese百越Literal meaningHundred YueTranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinBǎiyueBopomofoㄅㄞˇ ㄩㄝˋWade GilesPai3 yueh4IPA pa ɪ ɥe WuRomanizationPah yuihGanRomanizationBak yetHakkaPha k fa sṳPak ye tYue CantoneseYale RomanizationBaak yuhtJyutpingBaak3 jyut6Canton RomanizationBag3 yud6IPA paːk jyːt Southern MinHokkien POJPah oa tEastern MinFuzhou BUCBah uŏkPu Xian MinHinghwa BUCBeh e hNorthern MinJian ou RomanizedBă ṳ eVietnamese nameVietnamese alphabetBach ViệtChữ Han百越 During the Warring States period the word Yue referred to the state of Yue in Zhejiang The later kingdoms of Minyue in Fujian and Nanyue in Guangdong were both considered Yue states During the Zhou and Han dynasties the Yue lived in a vast territory from Jiangsu to Yunnan 3 while Barlow 1997 2 indicates that the Luoyue occupied the southwest Guangxi and northern Vietnam 4 The Book of Han describes the various Yue tribes and peoples can be found from the regions of Kuaiji to Jiaozhi 5 The Yue tribes were gradually displaced or assimilated into Chinese culture as the Han empire expanded into what is now Southern China and Northern Vietnam 6 7 8 9 Many modern southern Chinese dialects bear traces of substrate languages citation needed originally spoken by the ancient Yue Variations of the name are still used for the name of modern Vietnam in Zhejiang related names including Yue opera the Yue Chinese language and in the abbreviation for Guangdong Contents 1 Names 2 History 2 1 Yuyue 2 2 Wu and Yue 2 3 Qin dynasty 2 4 Minyue and Dong ou 2 5 Lạc Việt 2 6 Au Việt 2 7 Nanyue 2 8 Dianyue 2 9 Han dynasty 2 9 1 Trưng Sisters 2 9 2 Post rebellion sinicisation 2 9 3 Shanyue 2 10 Post Han 3 Legacy 3 1 Vietnam 3 2 Tanka people 4 Culture 4 1 Swords 5 Language 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksNames editThe modern term Yue traditional Chinese 越 粵 simplified Chinese 越 粤 pinyin Yue Cantonese Jyutping Jyut6 Wade Giles Yueh4 Vietnamese Việt Early Middle Chinese Wuat comes from Old Chinese ɢʷat 10 It was first written using the pictograph 戉 for an axe a homophone in oracle bone and bronze inscriptions of the late Shang dynasty c 1200 BC and later as 越 11 At that time it referred to a people or chieftain to the northwest of the Shang 3 12 better source needed In the early 8th century BC a tribe on the middle Yangtze were called the Yangyue a term later used for peoples further south 3 Between the 7th and 4th centuries BC Yue referred to the state of Yue in the lower Yangtze basin and its people 3 11 According to Ye Wenxian as cited by Wan the ethnonym of the Yuefang in northwestern China is not associated with that of the Baiyue in southeastern China 13 The term Baiyue first appears in the Lushi Chunqiu compiled around 239 BC 14 15 It was later used as a collective term for many non Huaxia Han Chinese populations of Southern China and Northern Vietnam 3 Ancient texts mention a number of Yue states or groups Most of these names survived into early imperial times Ancient Yue groups Chinese Mandarin Cantonese Jyutping Vietnamese Literal meaning 於越 于越 Yuyue Jyut1 jyut6 Ư Việt Yue by Wuyu first ruler of Yue 揚越 Yangyue Joeng4 jyut6 Dương Việt Yue of Yangzhou 東甌 Dong ou Dung1 au1 Đong Au Eastern Ou 閩越 Minyue Man5 jyut6 Man Việt Yue of Min 夜郎 Yelang Je6 long4 Dạ Lang 南越 Nanyue Naam4 jyut6 Nam Việt Southern Yue 山越 Shanyue Saan1 jyut6 Sơn Việt Mountain Yue 雒越 Luoyue Lok6 jyut6 Lạc Việt 甌越 Ouyue Au1 jyut6 Au Việt Yue of Ou 滇越 Dianyue Din1 jyut6 Điền Việt Yue of DianHistory edit nbsp Wu and Yue during the Warring States period Yuyue edit During the early Zhou dynasty the Chinese came into contact with a people known as the Yuyue but it is uncertain if they had any connection with the later Yue 16 Wu and Yue edit From the 9th century BC two northern Yue tribes on the southeastern coastline of China the Gouwu and Yuyue came under the cultural influence of their northern Chinese neighbours These two peoples were based in the areas of what is now southern Jiangsu and northern Zhejiang respectively Traditional accounts attribute the cultural exchange to Taibo a Zhou dynasty prince who had self exiled to the south During the Spring and Autumn period the Gouwu founded the state of Wu and the Yuyue the state of Yue The Wu and Yue peoples hated each other and had an intense rivalry but were indistinguishable from each other to the other Chinese states It is suggested in some sources that their distinctive appearance made them victims of discrimination abroad 17 The northern Wu eventually became the more sinicized of the two states The royal family of Wu claimed descent from King Wen of Zhou as the founder of their dynasty King Fuchai of Wu made every effort to assert this claim and was the source of much contention among his contemporaries Some scholars believe the Wu royalty may have been Chinese and ethnically distinct from the people they ruled 16 The recorded history of Wu began with King Shoumeng r 585 561 BC He was succeeded in succession by his sons King Zhufan r 560 548 BC King Yuji r 547 531 BC and King Yumei r 530 527 BC The brothers all agreed to exclude their sons from the line of succession and to eventually pass the throne to their youngest brother Prince Jizha but when Yumei died a succession crisis erupted which saw his son King Liao taking the throne Not much is known about their reigns as Yue history largely concentrates on the last two Wu kings Helu of Wu who killed his cousin Liao and his son Fuchai of Wu 18 Records for the southern state of Yue begin with the reign of King Yunchang d 497 BC According to the Records of the Grand Historian the Yue kings were descended from Shao Kang of the Xia dynasty According to another source the kings of Yue were related to the royal family of Chu Other sources simply name the Yue ruling family as the house of Zou There is no scholarly consensus on the origin of the Yue or their royalty 19 Wu and Yue spent much of the time at war with each other during which Yue gained a fearsome reputation for its martial valour Zhuangzi of Qi wanted to attack Yue and he discussed this with Hezi Hezi said Our former ruler handed down his instruction Do not attack Yue for Yue is like a cruel tiger Zhuangzi said Even though it was a cruel tiger now it is already dead Hezi reported this to Xiaozi Xiaozi said It may already be dead but people still think it is alive 20 Lushi Chunqiu Almost nothing is known about the organizational structure of the Wu and Yue states Wu records only mention its ministers and kings while Yue records only mention its kings and of these kings only Goujian s life is recorded in any appreciable detail Goujian s descendants are listed but aside from their succession of each other until 330 BC when Yue was conquered by Chu nothing else about them is known Therefore the lower echelons of Wu Yue society remain shrouded in mystery appearing only in reference to their strange clothing tattoos and short hair by northern Chinese states After the fall of Yue the ruling family moved south to what is now Fujian and established the kingdom of Minyue There they stayed outside the reach of Chinese history until the end of the Warring States period and the rise of the Qin dynasty 20 In 512 BC Wu launched a large expedition against the large state of Chu based in the Middle Yangtze River A similar campaign in 506 succeeded in sacking the Chu capital Ying Also in that year war broke out between Wu and Yue and continued with breaks for the next three decades Wu campaigns against other states such as Jin and Qi are also mentioned In 473 King Goujian of Yue finally conquered Wu and was acknowledged by the northern states of Qi and Jin In 333 Yue was in turn conquered by Chu 21 Qin dynasty edit nbsp Qin dynasty and Yue peoples 210 BC Main article Qin campaign against the Baiyue After the unification of China by Qin Shi Huang the former Wu and Yue states were absorbed into the nascent Qin empire The Qin armies also advanced south along the Xiang River to modern Guangdong and set up commanderies along the main communication routes Motivated by the region s vast land and valuable exotic products Emperor Qin Shi Huang is said to have sent half a million troops divided into five armies to conquer the lands of the Yue 22 23 24 The Yue defeated the first attack by Qin troops and killed the Qin commander 23 A passage from Huainanzi of Liu An quoted by Keith Taylor 1991 18 describing the Qin defeat as follows 25 The Yue fled into the depths of the mountains and forests and it was not possible to fight them The soldiers were kept in the garrisons to watch over abandoned territories This went on for a long time and the soldiers went weary Then the Yue went out and attacked the Ch in Qin soldiers suffered a great defeat Subsequently convicts were sent to hold the garrisons against the Yue Afterwards Qin Shi Huang sent reinforcements to defend against the Yue In 214 BC Qin Shi Huang ordered the construction of the Lingqu Canal which linked the north and south so that reinforcements could be transported to modern Guangdong Guangxi and northern Vietnam which were subjugated and reorganized into three prefectures within the Qin empire 26 Qin Shi Huang imposed sinicisation by sending a large number of Chinese military agricultural colonists to what are now eastern Guangxi and western Guangdong 27 Minyue and Dong ou edit nbsp Southern tribes in pre Han conquest southern China and Vietnam citation needed When the Qin fell in 206 BC the hegemon king Xiang Yu did not make Zou Wuzhu and Zou Yao kings For this reason they refused to support him and instead joined Liu Bang in attacking Xiang Yu When Liu Bang won the war in 202 BC he made Zou Wuzhu king of Minyue in 192 Zou Yao was made the king of Dong ou 28 Both Minyue and Dong ou claimed descent from Goujian 20 In 154 Liu Pi the King of Wu revolted against the Han and tried to persuade Minyue and Dong ou to join him The king of Minyue refused but Dong ou sided with the rebels However when Liu Pi was defeated and fled to Dong ou they killed him to appease the Han and therefore escaped any retaliation Liu Pi s son Liu Ziju fled to Minyue and worked to incite a war between the Minyue and Dong ou 28 In 138 Minyue attacked Dong ou and besieged their capital Dong ou managed to send someone to appeal for help from the Han Opinions at the Han court were mixed on whether or not to help Dong ou Grand commandant Tian Fen was of the opinion that the Yue constantly attacked each other and it was not in the Han s interest to interfere in their affairs Palace counsellor Zhuang Zhu argued that to not aid Dong ou would be to signal the end of the empire just like the Qin A compromise was made to allow Zhuang Zhu to call up troops but only from Kuaiji Commandery and finally an army was transported by sea to Dong ou By the time the Han forces had arrived Minyue had already withdrawn its troops The king of Dong ou no longer wished to live in Dong ou so he requested permission for the inhabitants of his state to move into Han territory Permission was granted and he and all his people settled in the region between the Yangtze and Huai River 28 29 In 137 Minyue invaded Nanyue An imperial army was sent against them but the Minyue king was murdered by his brother Zou Yushan who sued for peace with the Han The Han enthroned Zou Wuzhu s grandson Zou Chou as king After they left Zou Yushan secretly declared himself king while the Han backed Zou Chou found himself powerless When the Han found out about this the emperor deemed it too troublesome to punish Yushan and let the matter slide 29 30 In 112 Nanyue rebelled against the Han Zou Yushan pretended to send forces to aid the Han against Nanyue but secretly maintained contact with Nanyue and only took his forces as far as Jieyang Han general Yang Pu wanted to attack Minyue for their betrayal however the emperor felt that their forces were already too exhausted for any further military action so the army was disbanded The next year Zou Yushan learned that Yang Pu had requested permission to attack him and saw that Han forces were amassing at his border Zou Yushan made a preemptive attack against the Han taking Baisha Wulin and Meiling killing three commanders In the winter the Han retaliated with a multi pronged attack by Han Yue Yang Pu Wang Wenshu and two Yue marquises When Han Yue arrived at the Minyue capital the Yue native Wu Yang rebelled against Zou Yushan and murdered him Wu Yang was enfeoffed by the Han as marquis of Beishi Emperor Wu of Han felt it was too much trouble to occupy Minyue as it was a region full of narrow mountain passes He commanded the army to evict the region and resettle the people between the Yangtze and Huai River leaving the region modern Fujian a deserted land 31 Lạc Việt edit Lạc Việt known in Chinese history as Luoyue was an ancient conglomeration of Yue tribes in what is now modern Guangxi and northern Vietnam According to Vietnamese folklore and legend the Lạc Việt founded a state called Văn Lang c 2879 BC and were ruled by the Hung kings who were descended from Lạc Long Quan Lạc Dragon Lord Lạc Long Quan came from the sea and subdued all the evil of the land taught the people how to cultivate rice and wear clothes and then returned to the sea again He then met and married Au Cơ a goddess daughter of Đế Lai Au Cơ soon bore an egg sac from which hatched a hundred children The first born son became Hung King and ancestor of Luoyue people Despite its legendary origins Lạc Việt history only begins in the 7th century BC with the first Hung king in Me Linh uniting the various tribes 32 In 208 the Western Ou Xi ou or Nam Cương king Thục Phan a descendant of Shu royalty conquered Văn Lang 33 Au Việt edit nbsp Map of the Cổ Loa Citadel The Au Việt known in Chinese as Ouyue resided in modern northeast Vietnam Guangdong province and Guangxi province At some point they split and became the Western Ou and the Eastern Ou In the late 3rd century BC Thục Phan a descendant of the last ruler of Shu came to rule the Western Ou In 219 BC Western Ou came under attack from the Qin empire and lost its king Seeking refuge Thục Phan led a group of dispossessed Ou lords south in 208 BC and conquered the Lạc Việt state of Văn Lang which he renamed Au Lạc Henceforth he came to be known as An Dương Vương 34 An Dương Vương and the Ou lords built the citadel Cổ Loa literally Old snail so called because its walls were laid out in concentric rings reminiscent of a snail shell According to legend the construction of the citadel was halted by a group of spirits seeking to gain revenge for the son of the previous king The spirits were led by a white chicken A golden turtle appeared subdued the white chicken and protected An Dương Vương until the citadel s completion When the turtle departed he left one of his claws behind which An Dương Vương used as the trigger for his magical crossbow the Saintly Crossbow of the Supernaturally Luminous Golden Claw 25 An Dương Vương sent a giant called Ly Ong Trọng to the Qin dynasty as tribute During his stay with the Qin Ly Ong Trọng distinguished himself in fighting the Xiongnu after which he returned to his native village and died there 25 In 179 BC An Dương Vương acknowledged the suzerainty of the Han dynasty causing Zhao Tuo of Nanyue to become hostile and mobilize forces against Au Lạc Zhao Tuo s initial attack was unsuccessful According to legend Zhao Tuo asked for a truce and sent his son to conduct a marriage alliance with An Dương Vương s daughter Zhao Tuo s son stole the turtle claw that powered An Dương Vương s magical crossbow rendering his realm without protection When Zhao Tuo invaded again An Dương Vương fled into the sea where he was welcomed by the golden turtle Au Lạc was divided into the two prefectures of Jiaozhi and Jiuzhen 35 Nanyue edit nbsp Territory and borders of Nanyue kingdom nbsp Gold seal excavated from the tomb of Zhao Mo second King of Nanyue The seal s characters shown in detail on the lower left read 文帝行壐 Imperial Seal of Emperor Wen which demonstrates the first Nanyue rulers Emperor status within Nanyue itself nbsp Six jadeite Liubo game pieces from the tomb of King Zhao Mo of Nanyue r 137 122 BC Zhao Tuo was a Qin general originally born around 240 BC in the state of Zhao within modern Hebei When Zhao was annexed by Qin in 222 BC Zhao Tuo joined the Qin and served as one of their generals in the conquest of the Baiyue The territory of the Baiyue was divided into the three provinces of Guilin Nanhai and Xiang Zhao served as magistrate in the province of Nanhai until his military commander Ren Xiao fell ill Before he died Ren advised Zhao not to get involved in the affairs of the declining Qin and instead set up his own independent kingdom centered around the geographically remote and isolated city of Panyu modern Guangzhou Ren gave Zhao full authority to act as military commander of Nanhai and died shortly afterwards Zhao immediately closed off the roads at Hengpu Yangshan and Huangqi Using one excuse or another he eliminated the Qin officials and replaced them with his own appointees By the time the Qin fell in 206 BC Zhao had also conquered the provinces of Guilin and Xiang He declared himself King Wu of Nanyue Southern Yue 36 Unlike Qin Shi Huang Zhao respected Yue customs rallied their local rulers and let local chieftains continue their old policies and local political traditions Under Zhao s rule he encouraged Han Chinese settlers to intermarry with the indigenous Yue tribes through instituting a policy of harmonizing and gathering while creating a syncretic culture that was a blend of Han and Yue cultures 23 26 In 196 Emperor Gaozu of Han dispatched Lu Jia to recognize Zhao Tuo as king of Nanyue 36 Lu gave Zhao a seal legitimizing him as king of Nanyue in return for his nominal submission to the Han Zhao received him in the manner of the local people with his hair in a chignon while squatting Lu accused him of going native and forgetting his true ancestry Zhao excused himself by saying he had forgotten the northern customs after living in the south for so long 37 In 185 Empress Lu s officials outlawed trade of iron and horses with Nanyue Zhao Tuo retaliated by proclaiming himself Emperor Wu of Nanyue and attacking the neighboring kingdom of Changsha taking a few border towns In 181 BC Zhou Zao was dispatched by Empress Lu to attack Nanyue but the heat and dampness caused many of his officers and men to fall ill and he failed to make it across the mountains into enemy territory Zhao began to menace the neighboring kingdoms of Minyue Xiou Western Ou and Luoluo After securing their submission he began passing out edicts in a similar manner to the Han emperor 38 In 180 Emperor Wen of Han made efforts to appease Zhao Learning that Zhao s parents were buried in Zhending he set aside a town close by just to take care of their graves Zhao s cousins were appointed to high offices at the Han court He also withdrew the army stationed in Changsha on the Han Nanyue border In response Zhao rescinded his claims to imperium while communicating with the Han however he continued using the title of emperor within his kingdom Tribute bearing envoys from Nanyue were sent to the Han and thus the iron trade was resumed 39 In 179 Zhao Tuo defeated the kingdom of Au Lạc and annexed it 23 Zhao Tuo died in 137 and was succeeded by his grandson Zhao Mo 39 Upon Zhao Mo s accession the neighboring king of Minyue Zou Ying sent his army to attack Nanyue Zhao sent for help from the Han dynasty his nominal vassal overlord The Han responded by sending troops against Minyue but before they could get there Zou Ying was killed by his brother Zou Yushan who surrendered to the Han The Han army was recalled 40 Zhao considered visiting the Han court in order to show his gratitude His high ministers argued against it reminding him that his father kept his distance from the Han and merely avoided a breach of etiquette to keep the peace Zhao therefore pleaded illness and never went through with the trip Zhao did actually fall ill several years later and died in 122 He was succeeded by his son Zhao Yingqi 40 After the Han dynasty aided Nanyue in fending off an invasion by Minyue Zhao Mo sent his son Yingqi to the Han court where he joined the emperor s guard Zhao Yingqi married a Han Chinese woman from the Jiu family of Handan who gave birth to his second son Zhao Xing Yingqi behaved without any scruples and committed murder on several occasions When his father died in 122 he refused to visit the Han emperor to ask for his leave due to fearing that he would be arrested and punished for his behavior Yingqi died in 115 and was succeeded by his second son Zhao Xing rather than the eldest Zhao Jiande 41 In 113 Emperor Wu of Han sent Anguo Shaoji to summon Zhao Xing and the Queen Dowager Jiu to Chang an for an audience with the emperor The Queen Dowager Jiu who was Han Chinese was regarded as a foreigner by the Yue people and it was widely rumored that she had an illicit relationship with Anguo Shaoji before she married Zhao Yingqi When Anguo arrived quite a number of people believed the two resumed their relationship The Queen Dowager feared that there would be a revolt against her authority so she urged the king and his ministers to seek closer ties to the Han Xing agreed to and proposed that relations between Nanyue and the Han should be normalized with a triennial journey to the Han court as well as the removal of custom barriers along the border 42 The prime minister of Nanyue Lu Jia held military power and his family was more well connected than either the king or the Queen Dowager According to the Records of the Grand Historian and Đại Việt sử ky toan thư Lu Jia was chief of a Lạc Việt tribe related to King Qin of Cangwu by marriage and over 70 of his kinsmen served as officials in various parts of the Nanyue court Lu refused to meet the Han envoys which angered the Queen Dowager She tried to kill him at a banquet but was stopped by Xing The Queen Dowager tried to gather enough support at court to kill Lu in the following months but her reputation prevented it 43 When news of the situation reached Emperor Wu in 112 he ordered Zhuang Can to lead a 2 000 men expedition to Nanyue However Zhuang refused to accept the mission declaring that it was illogical to send so many men under the pretext of peace but so few to enforce the might of the Han The former prime minister of Jibei Han Qianqiu offered to lead the expedition and arrest Lu Jia When Han crossed the Han Nanyue border Lu conducted a coup killing Xing Queen Dowager Jiu and all the Han emissaries in the capital Xing s brother Zhao Jiande was declared the new king 43 The 2000 men led by Han Qianqiu took several small towns but were defeated as they neared Panyu which greatly shocked and angered Emperor Wu The emperor then sent an army of 100 000 to attack Nanyue The army marched on Panyu in a multi pronged assault Lu Bode advanced from the Hui River and Yang Pu from the Hengpu River Three natives of Nanyue also joined the Han One advanced from the Li River the second invaded Cangwu and the third advanced from the Zangke River In the winter of 111 BC Yang Pu captured Xunxia and broke through the line at Shimen With 20 000 men he drove back the vanguard of the Nanyue army and waited for Lu Bode However Lu failed to meet up on time and when he did arrive he had no more than a thousand men Yang reached Panyu first and attacked it at night setting fire to the city Panyu surrendered at dawn Jiande and Lu Jia fled the city by boat heading east to appeal for Minyue s aid but the Han learned of their escape and sent the general Sima Shuang after them Both Jiande and Lu Jia were captured and executed 44 Dianyue edit In 135 BC the Han envoy Tang Meng brought gifts to Duotong the king of Yelang which bordered the Dian Kingdom and convinced him to submit to the Han Jianwei Commandery was established in the region In 122 Emperor Wu dispatched four groups of envoys to the southwest in search of a route to Daxia in Central Asia One group was welcomed by the king of Dian but none of them were able to make it any further as they were blocked in the north by the Sui and Kunming tribes of the Erhai region and in the south by the Di and Zuo tribes However they learned that further west there was a kingdom called Dianyue where the people rode elephants and traded with the merchants from Shu in secret 45 Han dynasty edit nbsp Map showing directions of Han attacks on the Yue home region to the south and the Xiongnu territories to the north in 2nd century BC Main articles Han campaigns against Minyue and Southward expansion of the Han dynasty In 111 BC the Han conquered Nanyue and ruled it for the next several hundred years 46 47 The former territory of Nanyue was converted into nine commanderies and two outpost commands 48 49 Nanyue was seen as attractive to the Han rulers as they desired to secure the area s maritime trade routes and gain access to luxury goods from the south such as pearls incense elephant tusks rhinoceros horns tortoise shells coral parrots kingfishers peacocks and other rare luxuries to satisfy the demands of the Han aristocracy 50 51 52 Other considerations such as frontier security revenue from a relatively large agricultural population and access to tropical commodities all contributed to the Han dynasty s desire to retain control of the region 53 Panyu was already a major center for international maritime trade and was one of the most economically prosperous metropolises during the Han dynasty 54 Regions in the principal ports of modern Guangdong were used for the production of pearls and a trading terminal for maritime silk with Ancient India and the Roman Empire 54 Sinicization of the southern Han dynasty which used to be Nanyue was the result of several factors 55 Northern and central China was often a theater of imperial dynastic conflict which resulted in waves of Han Chinese refugees fleeing to the south With dynastic changes wars and foreign invasions Han Chinese living in central China were forced to expand into the unfamiliar and southern regions in large numbers 2 As the number of Han Chinese immigrants into the Yue coastal regions increased many Chinese families joined them to escape political unrest military service tax obligations persecution or sought new opportunities 56 57 As early arrivals took advantage of the easily accessible fertile land latecomers had to continue migrating to more remote areas 2 Conflicts would sometimes arise between the two groups but eventually Han Chinese immigrants from the northern plains moved south to form ad hoc groups and take on the role as powerful local political leaders many of whom accepted Chinese government titles 58 Each new wave of Han immigrants exerted additional pressure on the indigenous Yue inhabitants as the Han Chinese in southern China gradually became the predominant ethnic group in local life while displacing the Yue tribes into more mountainous and remote border areas 59 The difficulty of logistics and the malarial climate in the south made Han migration and eventual sinicization of the region a slow process 60 61 Describing the contrast in immunity towards malaria between the indigenous Yue and the Chinese immigrants Robert B Marks 2017 145 146 writes 62 The Yue population in southern China especially those who lived in the lower reaches of the river valleys may have had knowledge of the curative value of the qinghao plant and possibly could also have acquired a certain level of immunity to malaria before Han Chinese even appeared on the scene But for those without acquired immunity such as Han Chinese migrants from north China the disease would have been deadly Over the same period the Han dynasty incorporated many other border peoples such as the Dian and assimilated them 63 Under the direct rule and greater efforts at sinification by the victorious Han the territories of the Lac states were annexed and ruled directly along with other former Yue territories to the north as provinces of the Han empire 64 Trưng Sisters edit In 40 AD the Lạc lord Thi Sach rebelled on the advice of his wife Trưng Trắc The administrator of Jiaozhi Commandery Su Ding was too afraid to confront them and fled The commanderies of Jiuzhen Hepu and Rinan all rebelled Trưng Trắc abolished the Han taxes and was recognized as queen at Me Linh Later Vietnamese sources would claim that her husband was killed by the Han thus stirring her to action but Chinese sources make it clear Trưng Trắc was always in the leading position alongside her sister Trưng Nhị Together they came to be known as the legendary Trưng Sisters of Vietnamese history A large number of names and biographies of leaders under the Trưng Sisters are recorded in temples dedicated to them many of them also women 65 In 42 AD the veteran Han general Ma Yuan led 20 000 troops against the Trưng Sisters His advance was checked by Cổ Loa Citadel for over a year but the Lạc lords became increasingly nervous at the sight of a large Han army Realizing that she would soon lose her followers if she did not do anything Trưng Trắc sallied out against the Han army and lost badly losing more than 10 000 followers Her followers fled allowing Ma Yuan to advance By early 43 AD both sisters had been captured and executed 66 Post rebellion sinicisation edit nbsp Late Eastern Han provinces and commanderies as well as nearby non Han Chinese peoples 67 After the rebellion of the Trưng Sisters more direct rule and greater efforts at sinicisation were imposed by the Han dynasty The territories of the Lạc lords were revoked and ruled directly along with other former Yue territories to the north as provinces of the Han empire 68 Division among the Yue leaders were exploited by the Han dynasty with the Han military winning battles against the southern kingdoms and commanderies that were of geographic and strategic value to them Han foreign policy also took advantage of the political turmoil among rival Yue leaders and enticed them with bribes and lured prospects for submitting to the Han Empire as a subordinate vassal 69 Continuing internal Han Chinese migration during the Han dynasty eventually brought all the Yue coastal peoples under Chinese political control and cultural influence 70 As the number of Han Chinese migrants intensified following the annexation of Nanyue the Yue people were gradually absorbed and driven out into poorer land on the hills and into the mountains 9 71 72 73 74 Chinese military garrisons showed little patience with the Yue tribes who refused to submit to Han Chinese imperial power and resisted the influx of Han Chinese immigrants driving them out to the coastal extremities such as the river valleys and highland areas where they became marginal scavengers and outcasts 75 76 Han dynasty rulers saw the opportunity offered by the Chinese family agricultural settlements and used it as a tool for colonizing newly conquered regions and transforming those environments 77 76 Displaced Yue tribes often staged sneak attacks and small scale raids or attacks to reclaim their lost territories on Chinese settlements termed rebellions by traditional historians but were eventually stymied by the strong action of the Han dynasty s military superiority 78 79 80 76 81 2 6 64 Shanyue edit The Shanyue Mountain Yue were one of the last groups of Yue mentioned in Chinese history They lived in the mountain regions of modern Jiangsu Zhejiang Anhui Jiangxi and Fujian Yan Baihu or White Tiger Yan was a bandit leader of possibly Shanyue origins When Sun Ce came to Wu Commandery in 195 Yan Baihu gave refuge to the displaced Xu Gong and threatened the flank of Sun Ce s army However Sun Ce paid him no attention and the two avoided any altercations In 197 Cao Cao s agent Chen Yu provoked Yan into rebellion Sun Ce sent Lu Fan to drive out Chen Yu while he himself attacked Yan The defeated Yan fled south to join Xu Zhao but died soon afterwards Remnants of Yan s band joined Xu Gong in 200 to threaten Sun Ce s rear as he attacked Huang Zu in the west Sun Ce decided to retreat and finish off the bandits once and for all only to fall into an ambush and die at their hands 82 In 203 they rebelled against Sun Quan s rule and were defeated by the generals Lu Fan Cheng Pu and Taishi Ci In 217 Sun Quan appointed Lu Xun supreme commander of an army to suppress martial activities by the Shanyue in Guiji modern Shaoxing Captured Shanyue tribesmen were recruited into the army In 234 Zhuge Ke was made governor of Danyang Under his governorship the region was cleansed of the Shanyue through systematic destruction of their settlements Captured tribesmen were used as front line fodder in the army The remaining population was resettled in lowlands and many became tenant farmers for Chinese landowners 83 better source needed Post Han edit The fall of the Han dynasty and the following period of division sped up the process of sinicisation Periods of instability and war in northern and central China such as the Northern and Southern dynasties and during the Mongol conquest of the Song dynasty sent waves of Han Chinese into the south 84 Waves of migration and subsequent intermarriage and cross cultural dialogue gave rise to modern Chinese demographics with a dominant Han Chinese majority and minority non Han Chinese indigenous peoples in the south 85 86 By the Tang dynasty 618 907 the term Yue had largely become a regional designation rather than a cultural one as in the Wuyue state during the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period in what is now Zhejiang province During the Song dynasty a bridge known as the Guojie qiao World Crossing Bridge was built at Jiaxing between the modern border of Jiangsu province and Zhejiang province On the northern side of the bridge stands a statue of King Fuchai of Wu and on the southern side a statue of King Goujian of Yue 87 Successive waves of migration in different localities during various times in Chinese history over the past two thousand years have given rise to different dialect groups seen in Southern China today 88 Modern Lingnan culture contains both Nanyue and Han Chinese elements the modern Cantonese language resembles Middle Chinese the prestige language of the Tang Dynasty but has retained some features of the long extinct Nanyue language Some distinctive features of the vocabulary phonology and syntax of southern varieties of Chinese are attributed to substrate languages that were spoken by the Yue 89 90 Legacy editIn ancient China the characters 越 and 粵 both yue in pinyin and jyut6 in Jyutping were used interchangeably but they are differentiated in modern Chinese The character 越 refers to the original territory of the state of Yue which was based in what is now northern Zhejiang especially the areas around Shaoxing and Ningbo It is also used to write Vietnam a word adapted from Nanyue Vietnamese Nam Việt literal English translation as Southern Yue This character is also still used in the city Guangzhou for the Yuexiu 越秀 district and when referring to the Nanyue Kingdom The character 粵 is associated with the southern province of Guangdong Both the regional dialects of Yue Chinese and the standard form popularly called Cantonese are spoken in Guangdong Guangxi Hong Kong Macau and in many Cantonese communities around the world Vietnam edit Việt is the Vietnamese pronunciation of Yue The modern name of Vietnam derives from Nanyue or Nam Việt except reversed 91 Tanka people edit This section is an excerpt from Tanka people Baiyue connection and origins in Southern China edit The Tanka are considered by some scholars to be related to other minority peoples of southern China such as the Yao and Li people Miao 92 The Amoy University anthropologist Ling Hui hsiang wrote his theory of the Fujian Tanka as descendants of the Bai Yue He claimed that Guangdong and Fujian Tanka are definitely descended from the old Bai Yue peoples and that they may have been ancestors of the Malay race 93 The Tanka inherited their lifestyle and culture from the original Yue peoples who inhabited Hong Kong during the Neolithic era 94 After the First Emperor of China conquered Hong Kong groups from northern and central China moved into the general area of Guangdong including Hong Kong 95 One theory proposes that the ancient Yue inhabitants of southern China are the ancestors of the modern Tanka boat people The majority of western academics subscribe to this theory and use Chinese historical sources The ancient Chinese used the term Yue to refer to all southern barbarians 96 97 The Oxford English Dictionary 2nd Edition states that the ancestors of the Tanka were native people 98 99 The Tanka s ancestors were pushed to the southern coast by Chinese peasants who took over their land 100 101 During the British colonial era in Hong Kong the Tanka were considered a separate ethnic group from the Punti Hakka and Hoklo 102 Punti is another name for Cantonese it means local who came from mainly Guangdong districts The Hakka and Hoklo are not considered as Puntis The Tanka have been compared to the She people by some historians practising Han Chinese culture while being an ethnic minority descended from natives of Southern China 103 Culture editThe Ou Yue people have their hair cut short and tattooed bodies their right shoulder is left bare and their clothes are fastened on the left In the kingdom of Wu they blacken their teeth and scarify their faces they wear hats made of fish skin and clothes stitched with an awl 17 Zhanguo Ce The Han referred to the various non Han barbarian peoples of southern China as Baiyue saying they possessed habits like adapting to water having their hair cropped short and tattooed 104 The Han also said their language was animal shrieking and that they lacked morals modesty civilization and culture 105 106 According to one Han Chinese immigrant of the 2nd century BC The Yue cut their hair short tattooed their body live in bamboo groves with neither towns nor villages possessing neither bows or arrows nor horses or chariots 107 108 109 They also blackened their teeth 110 nbsp Miniature model of a Yue ship Militarily the ancient states of Yue and Wu were distinct from other Sinitic states for their possession of a navy 111 Unlike other Chinese states of the time they also named their boats and swords 112 A Chinese text described the Yue as a people who used boats as their carriages and oars as their horses 113 The marshy lands of the south gave the Gouwu and Yuyue people unique characteristics According to Robert Marks the Yue lived in what is now Fujian province gained their livelihood mostly from fishing hunting and practiced some kind of swidden rice farming 114 Prior to Han Chinese migration from the north the Yue tribes cultivated wet rice practiced fishing and slash and burn agriculture domesticated water buffalo built stilt houses tattooed their faces and dominated the coastal regions from shores all the way to the fertile valleys in the interior mountains 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 Water transport was paramount in the south so the two states became advanced in shipbuilding and developed maritime warfare technology mapping trade routes to Eastern coasts of China and Southeast Asia 122 123 Swords edit nbsp Yue sword The Yue were known for their swordsmanship and producing fine double edged swords 剑 劍 jian Kao Gong Ji stated that Wu and Yue manufactured the best double edged swords 124 125 According to the Spring and Autumn Annals of Wu and Yue King Goujian met a female sword fighter called Nanlin Yuenu who demonstrated mastery over the art and so he commanded his top five commanders to study her technique Ever since the technique came to be known as the Sword of the Lady of Yue The Yue were also known for their possession of mystical knives embued with the talismanic power of dragons or other amphibious creatures 126 The woman was going to travel north to have audience with King Goujian of Yue when she met an old man on the road and he introduced himself as Lord Yuan He asked the woman I have heard that you are good at swordsmanship I would like to see this the woman said I do not dare to conceal anything from you my lord you may put me to the test Lord Yuan then selected a stave of linyu bamboo the top of which was withered He broke off the leaves at the top and threw them to the ground and the woman picked them up before they hit the ground Lord Yuan then grabbed the bottom end of the bamboo and stabbed at the woman She responded and they fought three bouts and just as the woman lifted the stave to strike him Lord Yuan flew into the treetops and became a white gibbon yuan 127 Spring and Autumn Annals of Wu and Yue The Zhan Guo Ce mentions the high quality of southern swords and their ability to cleave through oxen horses bowls and basins but would shatter if used on a pillar or rock Wu and Yue swords were highly valued and those who owned them would hardly ever use them for fear of damage however in Wu and Yue these swords were commonplace and treated with less reverence 128 The Yuejue shu Record of Precious Swords mentions several named swords Zhanlu Black Haocao Bravery Juque Great Destroyer Lutan Dew Platform Chunjun Purity Shengxie Victor over Evil Yuchang Fish belly Longyuan Dragon Gulf Taie Great Riverbank and Gongbu Artisanal Display Many of these were made by the Yue swordsmith Ou Yezi 129 Swords held a special place in the culture of the ancient kingdoms of Wu and Yue Legends about swords were recorded here far earlier and in much greater detail than any other part of China and this reflects both the development of sophisticated sword making technology in this region of China and the importance of these blades within the culture of the ancient south Both Wu and Yue were famous among their contemporaries for the quantity and quality of the blades that they produced but it was not until much later during the Han dynasty that legends about them were first collected These tales became an important part of Chinese mythology and introduced the characters of legendary swordsmiths such as Gan Jiang 干將 and Mo Ye 莫耶 to new audiences in stories that would be popular for millennia These tales would serve to keep the fame of Wu and Yue sword craft alive many centuries after these kingdoms had vanished and indeed into a time when swords had been rendered completely obsolete for other than ceremonial purposes by developments in military technology 130 Olivia Milburn Even after Wu and Yue were assimilated into larger Chinese polities memory of their swords lived on During the Han dynasty Liu Pi King of Wu 195 154 BC had a sword named Wujian to honour the history of metalworking in his kingdom 131 nbsp The Sword of Goujian King of Yue nbsp Inscription on the Sword of Goujian nbsp Bronze Yue sword with criss cross pattern nbsp Spear of Fuchai King of Wu nbsp Base of the Spear of Fuchai nbsp Bronze vessel of a Wu kingLanguage editFurther information Old Yue language Knowledge of Yue speech is limited to fragmentary references and possible loanwords in other languages principally Chinese The longest is the Song of the Yue Boatman a short song transcribed phonetically in Chinese characters in 528 BC and included with a Chinese version in the Garden of Stories compiled by Liu Xiang five centuries later 132 See also editBo people China collective name for non Sinitic people living in upper Yangtze river Southern Man Sanmiao 三苗 Three Miao Rau peoplesReferences edit Diller Anthony Edmondson Jerry Luo Yongxian 2008 The Tai Kadai Languages Routledge published August 20 2008 p 9 ISBN 978 0 700 71457 5 Holcombe Charles 2001 The Genesis of East Asia 221 B C A D 907 University of Hawaiʻi Press published May 1 2001 p 150 ISBN 978 0 824 82465 5 Diller Anthony 2011 The Oxford Handbook of Chinese Linguistics Routledge p 11 ISBN 978 0 415 68847 5 Wang William 2015 The Oxford Handbook of Chinese Linguistics Oxford University Press p 173 ISBN 978 0 199 85633 6 Barlow Jeffrey G 1997 Culture ethnic identity and early weapons systems the Sino Vietnamese frontier In Totosy de Zepetnek Steven Jay Jennifer W eds East Asian cultural and historical perspectives histories and society culture and literatures Research Institute for Comparative Literature and Cross Cultural Studies University of Alberta pp 1 15 ISBN 978 0 921 49009 8 a b c d Hsu Cho yun Lagerwey John 2012 Y S Cheng Joseph ed China A Religious State Columbia University Press published June 19 2012 pp 193 194 a b c d e f Meacham William 1996 Defining the Hundred Yue Bulletin of the Indo Pacific Prehistory Association 15 93 100 doi 10 7152 bippa v15i0 11537 inactive 2024 03 27 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of March 2024 link Barlow Jeffrey G 1997 Culture ethnic identity and early weapons systems the Sino Vietnamese frontier In Totosy de Zepetnek Steven Jay Jennifer W eds East Asian cultural and historical perspectives histories and society culture and literatures Research Institute for Comparative Literature and Cross Cultural Studies University of Alberta p 2 ISBN 978 0 921 49009 8 Brindley 2003 p 13 a b Carson Mike T 2016 Archaeological Landscape Evolution The Mariana Islands in the Asia Pacific Region Springer published June 18 2016 p 23 ISBN 978 3 319 31399 3 Wiens Herold Jacob 1967 Han Chinese expansion in South China Shoe String Press p 276 ISBN 978 0 608 30664 3 Hutcheon Robert 1996 China Yellow The Chinese University Press p 5 ISBN 978 9 622 01725 2 Tucker Spencer C 2001 Encyclopedia of the Vietnam War A Political Social and Military History Oxford University Press p 350 ISBN 978 0 195 13525 1 a b Marks 2011 p 127 Old Chinese pronunciation from Baxter William H and Laurent Sagart 2014 Old Chinese A New Reconstruction Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 199 94537 5 These characters are both given as gjwat in Grammata Serica Recensa 303e and 305a a b Norman Jerry Mei Tsu lin 1976 The Austroasiatics in Ancient South China Some Lexical Evidence PDF Monumenta Serica 32 274 301 doi 10 1080 02549948 1976 11731121 JSTOR 40726203 Theobald Ulrich 2018 Shang Dynasty Political History in ChinaKnowledge de An Encyclopaedia on Chinese History Literature and Art quote Enemies of the Shang state were called fang 方 regions like the Tufang 土方 who roamed the northern region of Shanxi the Guifang and Gongfang 𢀛方 in the northwest the Qiangfang Suifang 繐方 Yuefang 戉方 Xuanfang 亘方 and Zhoufang in the west as well as the Yifang and Renfang 人方 in the southeast Wan Xiang 2013 A Reevaluation of Early Chinese Script The Case of Yue 戉 and Its Cultural Connotations Speech at The First Annual Conference of Society for the Study of Early China Slide 36 of 70 The Annals of Lu Buwei translated by John Knoblock and Jeffrey Riegel Stanford University Press 2000 p 510 ISBN 978 0 804 73354 0 For the most part there are no rulers to the south of the Yang and Han Rivers in the confederation of the Hundred Yue tribes Lushi Chunqiu Examination on Relying on Rulers Relying on Rulers text 揚 漢之南 百越之際 敝凱諸 夫風 餘靡之地 縛婁 陽禺 驩兜之國 多無君 translation South of the Yang and Han rivers among the Hundred Yue the lands of Bikaizhu Fufeng Yumi the nations of Fulou Yang ou Huandou most had no rulers a b Milburn 2010 p 5 a b Milburn 2010 p 2 Milburn 2010 p 6 7 Milburn 2010 p 7 a b c Milburn 2010 p 9 Brindley 2003 pp 1 32 Hoang Anh Tuan 2007 Silk for Silver Dutch Vietnamese relations 1637 1700 Brill Academic Publishing p 12 ISBN 978 9 004 15601 2 a b c d Howard Michael C 2012 Transnationalism in Ancient and Medieval Societies The Role of Cross Border Trade and Travel McFarland Publishing p 61 ISBN 978 0 7864 6803 4 Holcombe Charles 2001 The Genesis of East Asia 221 B C A D 907 University of Hawaiʻi Press published May 1 2001 p 147 ISBN 978 0 824 82465 5 a b c Taylor 1991 p 18 a b Him amp Hsu 2004 p 5 Huang Pingwen Sinification of the Zhuang People Culture And Their Language PDF SEALS XII 91 a b c Watson 1993 p 220 221 a b Whiting 2002 p 145 Watson 1993 p 222 Watson 1993 p 224 Taylor 1991 p 2 Milburn 2010 p 16 Taylor 1991 p 16 Taylor 1991 p 20 a b Watson 1993 p 208 Taylor 1991 p 19 Watson 1993 p 209 a b Watson 1993 p 210 a b Watson 1993 p 211 Watson 1993 p 212 Watson 1993 p 213 a b Watson 1993 p 214 Watson 1993 p 216 Watson 1993 p 236 Brindley 2015 pp 95 96 Suryadinata Leo 1997 Ethnic Chinese As Southeast Asians Institute of Southeast Asian Studies p 268 Xu 2016 p 27 Miksic John Norman Yian Goh Geok 2016 Ancient Southeast Asia Routledge published October 27 2016 p 157 ISBN 978 0 415 73554 4 Kiernan 2017 pp 87 Miksic John Norman Yian Goh Geok 2016 Ancient Southeast Asia Routledge published October 27 2016 p 158 ISBN 978 0 415 73554 4 Higham Charles 1989 The Archaeology of Mainland Southeast Asia From 10 000 B C to the Fall of Angkor Cambridge University Press p 289 ISBN 978 0 521 27525 5 Taylor 1991 p 21 a b Brill Robert H Gan Fuxi 2009 Tian Shouyun ed Ancient Glass Research Along the Silk Road World Scientific Publishing published March 13 2009 p 169 Taylor 1991 p 24 Hashimoto Oi kan Yue 2011 Studies in Yue Dialects 1 Phonology of Cantonese Cambridge University Press p 4 ISBN 978 0 521 18982 8 Stuart Fox Martin 2003 A Short History of China and Southeast Asia Tribute Trade and Influence Allen amp Unwin published November 1 2003 pp 24 25 Hsu Cho yun Lagerwey John 2012 Y S Cheng Joseph ed China A Religious State Columbia University Press published June 19 2012 p 241 Weinstein Jodi L 2013 Empire and Identity in Guizhou Local Resistance to Qing Expansion University of Washington Press p 32 ISBN 978 0 295 99327 0 Marks 2017 pp 144 146 Hutcheon Robert 1996 China Yellow The Chinese University Press p 4 ISBN 978 9 622 01725 2 Marks 2017 pp 145 146 Anderson David 2005 The Vietnam War Twentieth Century Wars Palgrave ISBN 978 0 333 96337 1 a b McLeod Mark Nguyen Thi Dieu 2001 Culture and Customs of Vietnam Greenwood published June 30 2001 p 15 16 ISBN 978 0 313 36113 5 Taylor 1991 p 30 31 Taylor 1991 p 32 de Crespigny 2020 p viii McLeod Mark Nguyen Thi Dieu 2001 Culture and Customs of Vietnam Greenwood published June 30 2001 pp 15 16 ISBN 978 0 313 36113 5 Brindley 2015 pp 249 Stuart Fox Martin 2003 A Short History of China and Southeast Asia Tribute Trade and Influence Allen amp Unwin published November 1 2003 p 18 Crooks Peter Parsons Timothy H 2016 Empires and Bureaucracy in World History From Late Antiquity to the Twentieth Century Cambridge University Press published August 11 2016 pp 35 36 ISBN 978 1 107 16603 5 Ebrey Patricia Walthall Anne 2013 East Asia A Cultural Social and Political History Wadsworth Publishing published January 1 2013 p 53 ISBN 978 1 133 60647 5 Peterson Glen 1998 The Power of Words Literacy and Revolution in South China 1949 95 University of British Columbia Press p 17 ISBN 978 0 774 80612 1 Michaud Jean Swain Margaret Byrne Barkataki Ruscheweyh Meenaxi 2016 Historical Dictionary of the Peoples of the Southeast Asian Massif Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers published October 14 2016 p 163 ISBN 978 1 442 27278 1 Hutcheon Robert 1996 China Yellow The Chinese University Press pp 4 5 ISBN 978 9 622 01725 2 a b c Marks 2017 p 143 Marks 2011 p 339 Walker Hugh Dyson 2012 East Asia A New History AuthorHouse p 93 Yue 越 Baiyue 百越 Shanyue 山越 China Knowledge August 17 2012 Siu Helen 2016 Tracing China A Forty Year Ethnographic Journey Hong Kong University Press p 231 ISBN 978 9 888 08373 2 Hsu Cho yun Lagerwey John 2012 Y S Cheng Joseph ed China A Religious State Columbia University Press published June 19 2012 pp 240 241 de Crespigny 2007 p 938 Yue 越 Gernet Jacques 1996 A History of Chinese Civilization 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 49781 7 de Sousa 2015 p 363 Wen Bo Li Hui Lu Daru Song Xiufeng Zhang Feng He Yungang Li Feng Gao Yang Mao Xianyun Zhang Liang Qian Ji Tan Jingze Jin Jianzhong Huang Wei Deka Ranjan Su Bing Chakraborty Ranajit Jin Li 2004 Genetic evidence supports demic diffusion of Han culture Nature 431 7006 302 305 Bibcode 2004Natur 431 302W doi 10 1038 nature02878 PMID 15372031 S2CID 4301581 Milburn 2010 p 1 Crawford Dorothy H Rickinson Alan Johannessen Ingolfur 2014 Cancer Virus The story of Epstein Barr Virus Oxford University Press published March 14 2014 p 98 de Sousa 2015 pp 356 440 Yue Hashimoto Anne Oi Kan 1972 Studies in Yue Dialects 1 Phonology of Cantonese Cambridge University Press pp 14 32 ISBN 978 0 521 08442 0 Taylor 1991 p 34 Te chʻao Cheng 1948 Acculturation of the Chinese in the United States a Philadelphia study University of Pennsylvania p 27 Among the aboriginal tribes the Iu 傜 tribe is the largest then Lai 黎 the Yi 夷 or more commonly called the Miao 苗 and the Tanka 疍家 The mixture of these peoples with the Han people therefore caused all the cultural variations and racial complexity Murray A Rubinstein 2007 Murray A Rubinstein ed Taiwan a new history M E Sharpe p 34 ISBN 978 0 7656 1494 0 which modern people are the Pai Yueh So is it possible that there is a relationship between the Pai Yueh and the Malay race Today in riverine estuaries of Fukien and Kwangtung are another Yueh people the Tanka boat people Might some of them have left the Yueh tribes and set out on the seas 1936 117 Mike Ingham 2007 Hong Kong a cultural history Oxford University Press p 2 ISBN 978 0 19 531496 0 In their turn the modern day boat people of Hong Kong the Tanka have derived their maritime and fishing cultural traditions from this long lineage Little is known about the Yue but some archaeological evidence gathered from Bronze Michael Ingham 18 June 2007 Hong Kong A Cultural History Oxford University Press US p 2 ISBN 978 0 19 988624 1 of China following the Emperor Qin s conquests in the second century BC Hong Kong now integrated into the Donguan county of Guangdong province started to be colonised or settled by non indigenous peoples from further north Eugene Newton Anderson 1972 Essays on south China s boat people Vol 29 of Asian folklore and social life monographs Dong fang wen cong Orient Cultural Service p 2 Most scholars basing themselves on traditional Chinese historians work have agreed that the boat people are descendants of the Yueh or a branch thereof Eberhard 1942 1968 Lo 1955 1963 Ho 1965 and others influenced by them such as Wiens 1954 Yueh the Viet of Vietnam seems to have been a term rather loosely used in early Chinese writings to refer to the barbarian groups of the south coast Osterreichische Leo Gesellschaft Gorres Gesellschaft Anthropos Institute 1970 Anthropos Volume 65 Zaunrith sche Buch Kunst und Steindruckerei p 249 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Phil Benson 2001 Ethnocentrism and the English dictionary Vol 3 of Routledge studies in the history of linguistics Psychology Press p 152 ISBN 0 415 22074 2 Tanka The boat population of Canton who live entirely on the boats by which they earn their living they are descendants of some aboriginal tribe of which Tan was apparently the name Tanka n 1 Oxford English Dictionary Online Oxford University Press Retrieved 12 October 2014 Tanka n 1 Pronunciation ˈtaeŋke Forms Also tankia tanchia Etymology lt Chinese Cantonese lt Chinese tan lit egg Cantonese ka in South Mandarin kia North Mandarin chia family people The boat population of Canton who live entirely on the boats by which they earn their living they are descendants of some aboriginal tribe of which Tan was apparently the name Tanka boat a boat of the kind in which these people live 1839 Chinese Repository 7 506 The small boats of Tanka women are never without this appendage 1848 S W Williams Middle Kingdom I vii 321 The tankia or boat people at Canton form a class in some respects beneath the other portions of the community 1848 S W Williams Middle Kingdom II xiii 23 A large part of the boats at Canton are tankia boats about 25 feet long containing only one room and covered with movable mats so contrived as to cover the whole vessel they are usually rowed by women 1909 Westm Gaz 23 Mar 5 2 The Tankas numbering perhaps 50 000 in all gain their livelihood by ferrying people to and fro on the broad river with its creeks Chinese repository 1832 1851 20 vols Canton Samuel Wells Williams The middle kingdom a survey of the geography government of the Chinese empire and its inhabitants 1848 New York Samuel Wells Williams The middle kingdom a survey of the geography government of the Chinese empire and its inhabitants 1848 New York The Westminster gazette 1893 1928 London England J Marshall http www oed com view Entry 197535 rskey FwlmXQ amp result 1 eid http www oed com view Entry 197535 result 1 amp rskey FwlmXQ amp http www oed com view Entry 197535 rskey CRdtvD amp result 1 eid http www oed com view Entry 197535 rskey CRdtvD amp result 1 amp isAdvanced false eid Sun Yat sen Institute for Advancement of Culture and Education Nanking 1940 T ien hsia monthly Volume 11 Kelly and Walsh ltd p 342 But from the position of the sites it might be supposed that the inhabitants were pushed onto the seacoast by the pressure of other peoples and their survival may have lasted well into historic times even possibly as late as the Sung dynasty AD 960 the date as we shall see when Chinese peasants first began to migrate into this region The Tanka might in theory be the descendants of these earlier peoples They too are an ancient population living on the seaboard without any trace of their earlier habitat But as we have seen in the first chapter they have been so Sun Yat sen Institute for Advancement of Culture and Education Nanking 1940 T ien hsia monthly Volume 11 Kelly and Walsh ltd p 342 and they were probably evolved as a result of contact with foreign peoples even as late as the Portuguese Middle East and Africa Taylor amp Francis 1996 p 358 ISBN 1 884964 04 4 When the British appropriated the territory in the nineteenth century they found these three major ethnic groups Punti Hakka and Tanka and one minority the Hoklo who were sea nomads from the northern shore of Guangdong and Susan Naquin Evelyn Sakakida Rawski 1989 Chinese Society in the Eighteenth Century Yale University Press p 169 ISBN 0 300 04602 2 The Wuyi mountains were the home of the She remnants of an aboriginal tribe related to the Yao who practiced slash and burn agriculture Tanka boatmen of similar origin were also found in small numbers along the coast Both the She and the Tanka were quite assimilated into Han Chinese culture Marks 1998 p 54 Bulletin of the Indo Pacific Prehistory Association Issue 15 Indo Pacific Prehistory Association 1996 p 94 Indo Pacific Prehistory Association Congress 1996 Indo Pacific Prehistory The Chiang Mai Papers Volume 2 Bulletin of the Indo Pacific Prehistory Association Vol 2 of Indo Pacific Prehistory Proceedings of the 15th Congress of the Indo Pacific Prehistory Association Chiang Mai Thailand 5 12 January 1994 The Chiang Mai Papers Indo Pacific Prehistory Association Australian National University p 94 Kiernan 2017 p 63 Hutcheon Robin 1996 China Yellow Chinese University Press p 4 ISBN 978 9 622 01725 2 Mair Victor H Kelley Liam C 2016 Imperial China and Its Southern Neighbours Institute of Southeast Asian Studies published April 28 2016 pp 25 33 Milburn 2010 p 1 2 Holm 2014 p 35 Kiernan 2017 pp 49 50 Kiernan 2017 p 50 Marks 2017 p 142 Marks 1998 p 55 Sharma S D 2010 Rice Origin Antiquity and History CRC Press p 27 ISBN 978 1 578 08680 1 Brindley 2015 p 66 Him amp Hsu 2004 p 8 Peters Heather April 1990 H Mair Victor ed Tattooed Faces and Stilt Houses Who were the Ancient Yue PDF Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations University of Pennsylvania East Asian Collection Sino Platonic Papers 17 3 Marks 2017 p 72 Marks 2017 p 62 Lim Ivy Maria 2010 Lineage Society on the Southeastern Coast of China Cambria Press ISBN 978 1 6049 77271 Lu Yongxiang 2016 A History of Chinese Science and Technology Springer p 438 ISBN 978 3 662 51388 0 Zhouli Rites of Zhou Dongguan Kaogong Ji Winter Office r s Records on the Examination of Craftsmanship 6 quote 鄭之刀 宋之斤 魯之削 吳粵之劍 遷乎其地而弗能為良 地氣然也 Jun Wenren translator 2013 Ancient Chinese Encyclopedia of Technology Translation and Annotation of the Kaogong Ji the Artificers Records New York Routledge p 4 quote The knives of Zheng the axes of Song the pen knives of Lu and the double edged swords of Wu and Yue are famous for their origin In no other places can one make these things so well This is natural because of the qi of the earth Brindley 2015 p 181 183 Milburn 2010 p 291 Milburn 2010 p 247 Milburn 2010 p 285 Milburn 2010 p 273 Milburn 2010 p 276 Zhengzhang Shangfang 1991 Decipherment of Yue Ren Ge Song of the Yue boatman Cahiers de Linguistique Asie Orientale 20 2 159 168 doi 10 3406 clao 1991 1345 Sources editBrindley Erica Fox 2003 Barbarians or Not Ethnicity and Changing Conceptions of the Ancient Yue Viet Peoples ca 400 50 BC PDF Asia Major 3rd Series 16 2 1 32 JSTOR 41649870 2015 Ancient China and the Yue Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 08478 0 de Crespigny Rafe 2007 A Biographical Dictionary of Later Han to the Three Kingdoms 23 220 AD Brill ISBN 978 90 04 15605 0 Retrieved 27 March 2021 2020 To Establish Peace de Sousa Hilario 2015 The Far Southern Sinitic languages as part of Mainland Southeast Asia PDF in Enfield N J Comrie Bernard eds Languages of Mainland Southeast Asia The State of the Art Walter de Gruyter pp 356 440 ISBN 978 1 5015 0168 5 Him Mark Lai Hsu Madeline 2004 Becoming Chinese American A History of Communities and Institutions AltaMira Press ISBN 978 0 759 10458 7 Holm David 2014 A Layer of Old Chinese Readings in the Traditional Zhuang Script Bulletin of the Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities 1 45 Kiernan Ben 2017 Việt Nam A History from Earliest Times to the Present Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 516076 5 Marks Robert B 1998 Tigers Rice Silk and Silt Environment and Economy in Late Imperial South China Studies in Environment and History Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521591775 2011 China Its Environment and History Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1442212756 2017 China An Environmental History Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 442 27789 2 Milburn Olivia 2010 The Glory of Yue An Annotated Translation of the Yuejue shu Sinica Leidensia vol 93 Brill Publishers Taylor Keith W 1991 The Birth of Vietnam University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 07417 0 Watson Burton 1993 Records of the Grand Historian by Sima Qian Han Dynasty II Revised Edition Columbia University Press Whiting Marvin C 2002 Imperial Chinese Military History Writers Club Press Xu Stella 2016 Reconstructing Ancient Korean History The Formation of Korean ness in the Shadow of History Lexington Books ISBN 978 1 4985 2145 1 External links edit The power of language over the past Tai settlement and Tai linguistics in southern China and northern Vietnam Jerold A Edmondson in Studies in Southeast Asian languages and linguistics ed by Jimmy G Harris Somsonge Burusphat and James E Harris 39 64 Bangkok Thailand Ek Phim Thai Co Ltd Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Baiyue amp oldid 1218362549, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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