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Wikipedia

Dungan people

Dungan[a] is a term used in territories of the former Soviet Union to refer to a group of Muslim people of Hui origin.[6] Turkic-speaking peoples in Xinjiang Province in Northwestern China also sometimes refer to Hui Muslims as Dungans.[7] In both China and the former Soviet republics where they reside, however, members of this ethnic group call themselves Hui because Dungans are descendants of historical Hui groups that migrated to Central Asia.

Dungan people
Хуэйзў
回族

Dungan girls in Sortobe, Kazakhstan
Total population
150,000
Regions with significant populations
 Kyrgyzstan (2021 census)75,437[1]
 Kazakhstan (2019 census)72,361[2]
 Russia (2010 census)1,651[3]
 Tajikistan6,000[citation needed]
 Mongolia5,300
 Uzbekistan1,900
 Ukraine133[4]
Languages
Dungan or Mandarin Chinese
Secondary languages:
Religion
Sunni Islam
Related ethnic groups
Hui, Han people
Alleged flag of Tunganistan.[5]

In the censuses of the countries of the former Soviet Union, the Dungans (enumerated separately from Chinese) are found in Kazakhstan (36,900 according to the 1999 census), Kyrgyzstan (58,409 according to the 2009 census) and Russia (801 according to the 2002 census).[8][9][3]

History

Migration from China

 
The gate of the Dungan Mosque in Karakol, Kyrgyzstan. The upper text on the sign is a partially Uyghurized rendering of the mosque's Kyrgyz name into the Uyghur Arabic alphabet: Isiq-köl oblasttiq Qaraqol sharindaghi Ibrahim Haji atindaghi borborduq mäsjid. The lower text is Kyrgyz in the Cyrillic script: Ysyk-Köl oblasttyk Karakol shaaryndagy Ibrakhim Ajy atyndagy borborduk mechit—Central Mosque in the name of Ibrahim Hajji in the city of Karakol, an oblast of Ysyk-Köl.

In the Ferghana Valley, the first Dungans to appear in Central Asia originated from Kuldja and Kashgar, as slaves captured by raiders; they mostly served in private wealthy households. After the Russians conquered Central Asia in the late 19th century and abolished slavery, most female Dungan slaves remained where they had originally been held captive. Russian ethnographer Validimir Petrovich Nalivkin and his wife said that "women slaves almost all remained in place, because they either were married to workers and servants of their former owners or they were too young to begin an independent life".[10] Dungan women slaves were of low status and not regarded highly in Bukhara.[11]

Turkic Muslim slave-raiders from Khoqand did not distinguish between Hui Muslim and Han Chinese, enslaving Hui Muslims in violation of Islamic law.[12][13] During the Afaqi Khoja revolts Turkic Muslim Khoja Jahangir Khoja led an invasion of Kashgar from the Kokand Khanate and Jahangir's forces captured several hundred Dungan Chinese Muslims (Tungan or Hui) who were taken to Kokand. Tajiks bought two Chinese slaves from Shaanxi; they were enslaved for a year before being returned by the Tajik Beg Ku-bu-te to China.[14] All Dungans captured, both merchants and the 300 soldiers Janhangir captured in Kashgar, had their queues cut off when brought to Kokand and Central Asia as prisoners.[15][16] It was reported that many of the captives became slaves. Accounts of these slaves in Central Asia increased.[17][18] The queues were removed from Dungan Chinese Muslim prisoners and then sold or given away. Some of them escaped to Russian territory where they were repatriated back to China and the accounts of their captures were recorded in Chinese records.[19][20] The Russians record an incident where they rescued these Chinese Muslim merchants who escaped, after they were sold by Jahangir's Army in Central Asia and sent them back to China.[21]

The Dungan in the former Soviet republics are Hui who fled China in the aftermath of the Hui Minorities' War (also known as the "Dungan Rebellion") in the 19th century. According to Rimsky-Korsakoff (1992), three separate groups of the Hui people fled to the Russian Empire across the Tian Shan Mountains during the exceptionally severe winter of 1877/78 after the end of the Hui Minorities' War:

  1. The first group, of some 1000 people, originally from Turpan in Xinjiang, led by Ma Daren (馬大人, 'the Great Man Ma'), also known as Ma Da-lao-ye (馬大老爺, 'the Great Master Ma'), reached Osh in Southern Kyrgyzstan.
  2. The second group, originally from Didaozhou (狄道州) in Gansu, led by ahong Ma Yusuf (馬郁素夫),[22] also known as Ah Ye Laoren (阿爺老人, 'the Old Man O'Granpa'), were settled in the spring of 1878 in the village of Yrdyk (Russian: Ирдык or Ырдык) some 15 km from Karakol in Eastern Kyrgyzstan. They numbered 1130 on arrival.
  3. The third group, originally from Shaanxi, led by Bai Yanhu (白彦虎; also spelt Bo Yanhu; often called by his followers "虎大人", 'The Great Man Hu (Tiger)', 1829(?)-1882), one of the leaders of the rebellion, were settled in the village of Karakunuz (now Masanchi), in modern Zhambyl Province of Kazakhstan. It is 8 km north from the city Tokmak in northwestern Kyrgyzstan. This group numbered 3314 on arrival. Bai Yanhu's name in other romanizations was Bo-yan-hu or Pai Yen-hu; other names included Boyan-akhun (Akhund or Imam Boyan) and Muhammad Ayyub.[23]

The next wave of immigration followed in the early 1880s. In accordance with the terms of the Treaty of Saint Petersburg (1881), which required the withdrawal of the Russian troops from the Upper Ili Basin (the Kulja area), the Dungan (Hui) and Taranchi (Uyghur) people of the region were allowed to opt for moving to the Russian side of the border. Many chose that option; according to Russian statistics, 4,682 Hui moved to the Russian Empire under the treaty. They migrated in many small groups between 1881 and 1883, settling in the village of Sokuluk some 30 km west of Bishkek, as well as in a number of locations between the Chinese border and Sokuluk, in Southeastern Kazakhstan and in Northern Kyrgyzstan.

Name

Dungan people
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese東干族
Simplified Chinese东干族
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinDōnggānzú
Dunganese name
DunganХуэйзў
Доңганзў
Xiao'erjingحُوِ ذَو
RomanizationHuejzw
Hanzi回族
Russian name
RussianДунгане

In the Russian Empire, Soviet Union, and the post-Soviet states, the Dungans continue to refer to themselves as the Hui people (Chinese: 回族, Huízú; in Cyrillic Soviet Dungan spelling, xуэйзў).

The name Dungan is of obscure origin. One popular theory derives this word from Turkic döñän ("one who turns"), which can be compared to Chinese 回 (huí), which has a similar meaning. Another theory derives it from the Chinese 东甘 (Dong Gan), 'Eastern Gansu', the region to which many of the Dungan can trace their ancestry; however the character gan (干) used in the name of the ethnic group is different from that used in the name of the province (甘).

The term "Dungan" ("Tonggan", "Donggan") has been used by Central Asian Turkic-and Tajik-speaking people to refer to Chinese-speaking Muslims for several centuries. Joseph Fletcher cites Turkic and Persian manuscripts related to the preaching of the 17th century Kashgarian Sufi master Muhammad Yūsuf (or, possibly, his son Afaq Khoja) inside the Ming Empire (in today's Gansu and/or Qinghai), where the Kashgarian preacher is told to have converted 'ulamā-yi Tunganiyyān (i.e., "Dungan ulema") into Sufism.[24]

Presumably, it was from the Turkic languages that the term was borrowed into Russian (дунгане, dungane (pl.); дунганин, dunganin (sing.)) and Chinese (simplified Chinese: 东干族; traditional Chinese: 東干族; pinyin: Dōnggānzú), as well as to Western European languages.

 
Caption: "Shooting exercises of taifurchi [gunners]. Dungans and Kashgar Chinese". A French engraving from the Yaqub Beg's state period

In English and German, the ethnonym "Dungan", in various spelling forms, was attested as early as the 1830s, sometimes typically referring to the Hui people of Xinjiang. For example, James Prinsep in 1835 mentions Muslim "Túngánis" in "Chinese Tartary".[25][26] In 1839, Karl Ernst von Baer in his German-language account of Russian Empire and adjacent Asian lands has a one-page account of Chinese-speaking Muslim "Dungani" or "Tungani", who had visited Orenburg in 1827 with a caravan from China; he also mentions "Tugean" as a spelling variant used by other authors.[27] R.M. Martin in 1847 mentions "Tungani" merchants in Yarkand.[28]

The word (mostly in the form "Dungani" or "Tungani", sometimes "Dungens" or "Dungans") acquired some currency in English and other western languages when a number of books in the 1860-1870s discussed the Dungan Rebellion in Northwestern China. At the time, one could see European and American authors apply the term Tungani to the Hui people both in Xinjiang,[29] and in Shaanxi and Gansu (which at the time included today's Ningxia and Qinghai as well). Authors aware of the general picture of the spread of Islam in China, viewed these "Tungani" as just one of the groups of China's Muslims.[30]

Marshall Broomhall, who has a chapter on "the Tungan Rebellion" in his 1910 book, introduces "the name Tungan or Dungan, by which the Muslims of these parts [i.e., NE China] are designated, in contradistinction as the Chinese Buddhists who are spoken of as Kithay"; the reference to "Khitay" shows that he was viewing the two terms as used by Turkic speakers.[31] Broomhall's book also contains a translation of the report on Chinese Muslims by the Ottoman writer named Abd-ul-Aziz. Abd-ul-Aziz divides the "Tungan people" into two branches: "the Tunagans of China proper" (including, apparently all Hui people in "China proper", as he also talks e.g. about the Tungans having 17 mosques in Beijing), and "The Tungans of Chinese and Russian Turkestan", who still look and speak Chinese, but have often also learned the "Turkish" language.[32]

Later authors continued to use the term Dungan (in various transcriptions) for, specifically, the Hui people of Xinjiang. For example, Owen Lattimore, writing c. 1940, maintains the terminological distinction between these two related groups: "T'ungkan" (i.e. Wade-Giles for "Dungan"), described by him as the descendants of the Gansu Hui people resettled in Xinjiang in 17-18th centuries, vs. e.g. "Gansu Moslems" or generic "Chinese Moslems".[33] The term (usually as "Tungans") continues to be used by many modern historians writing about the 19th century Dungan Rebellion (e.g., by Denis C. Twitchett in The Cambridge History of China,[34] by James A. Millward in his economic history of the region,[35] or by Kim Ho-dong in his monograph[36]).

Dungan villages in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan

The Dungans themselves referred to Karakunuz (Russian: Каракунуз, sometimes Караконыз or Караконуз) as Ingpan (Chinese: 營盤, Yingpan; Russian: Иньпан), which means 'a camp, an encampment'. In 1965, Karakunuz was renamed Masanchi (sometimes spelt as "Masanchin"), after Magaza Masanchi or Masanchin (Dungan: Магәзы Масанчын; Chinese: 馬三奇), a Dungan participant in the Communist Revolution and a Soviet Kazakhstan statesman.[37]

The following table summarizes location of Dungan villages in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan, alternative names used for them, and their Dungan population as reported by Ma Tong (2003). The Cyrillic Dungan spelling of place names is as in the textbook by Sushanlo, Imazov (1988); the spelling of the name in Chinese character is as in Ma Tong (2003).

Dungan villages in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan
Village name (and alternatives) Location (in present-day terms) Foundation Current Dungan population (from Ma Tang (2003))
Kazakhstan - total 48,000 (Ma Tang (2003)) or 36,900 (Kazakhstan Census of 1999)
Masanchi (Russian: Масанчи; Kazakh: Масаншы) or Masanchin (Russian: Масанчин; Cyrillic Dungan: Масанчын; 馬三成), prior to 1965 Karakunuz (Каракунуз, Караконыз). Traditional Dungan name is Ingpan (Cyrillic Dungan: Йинпан; Russian: Иньпан; Chinese: 營盤, Yingpan) (42°55′40″N 75°18′00″E / 42.92778°N 75.30000°E / 42.92778; 75.30000 (Masanchi)) Korday District, Jambyl Region of Kazakhstan (8 km north of Tokmok, Kyrgyzstan) Spring 1878. 3314 people from Shaanxi, led by Bai Yanhu (白彦虎). 7,000, current mayor: Iskhar Yusupovich Lou
Sortobe (Kazakh: Sortobe; Russian: Шортюбе, Shortyube; Dungan: Щёртюбе; Chinese: 新渠, Xinqu) (42°52′00″N 75°15′15″E / 42.86667°N 75.25417°E / 42.86667; 75.25417 (Sortobe)) Korday District, Jambyl Region. On the northern bank of the river Chu opposite and a few km downstream from Tokmok; south of Masanchi (Karakunuz) (Karakunuz group) 9,000
Zhalpak-tobe, (Kazakh: Жалпак-тобе; Chinese: 加爾帕克秋白, Jiaerpakeqiubai) Jambyl District, Jambyl Region; near Grodekovo, south of Taraz 3,000
Kyrgyzstan - total 50,000 (Ma Tang (2003)
Yrdyk (Kyrgyz: Ырдык; Dungan: Эрдэх; Chinese: 二道溝, Erdaogou) (42°27′30″N 78°18′0″E / 42.45833°N 78.30000°E / 42.45833; 78.30000 (Yrdyk)) Jeti-Ögüz District of Issyk-Kul Region; 15 km south-west from Karakol. Spring 1878. 1130 people, originally from Didaozhou (狄道州) in Gansu, led by Ma Yusu (馬郁素), a.k.a. Ah Yelaoren (阿爺老人). 2,800
Sokuluk (Kyrgyz: Сокулук; Dungan: Сохўлў; Chinese: 梢葫蘆, Saohulu); may also include adjacent Aleksandrovka (Александровка) Sokuluk District of Chüy Region; 30 km west of Bishkek Some of those 4,628 Hui people who arrived in 1881-1883 from the Ili Basin (Xinjiang) . 12,000
Milyanfan (Kyrgyz: Милянфан; Dungan: Милёнчуан; Chinese: 米糧川, Miliangchuan) Ysyk-Ata District of Chüy Region. Southern bank of the Chu River, some 60 km west of Tokmok and about as much north-east of Bishkek. (Karakunuz group (?)) 10,000
Ivanovka village (Kyrgyz: Ивановка; Chinese: 伊萬諾夫卡) Ysyk-Ata District of Chüy Region. Southern bank of the Chu River, some 30 km west of Tokmok. (Karakunuz group (?)) 1,500
Dungan community of Osh (Kyrgyz: Ош; Chinese: 奥什 or 敖什, Aoshe) Osh Region Spring 1878, 1000 people, originally from Turpan in Xinjiang, led by Ma Daren, also known as Ma Da-lao-ye (馬大老爺) 800

The position of the Kazakhstan villages within the administrative division of Jambyl Region, and the total population of each village can be found at the provincial statistics office web site.[38]

Besides the traditionally Dungan villages, many Dungan people live in the nearby cities, such as Bishkek, Tokmok, Karakol.

Soviet rule

 
Vanakhun's museum
 
Tungan generals of Tunganistan, in Hotan.

During World War II, some Dungans served in the Red Army, one of them who was Vanakhun Mansuza [ru] (Cyrillic Dungan: мансуза ванахун; traditional Chinese: 曼苏茲(or子)·王阿洪; simplified Chinese: 曼蘇茲·王阿洪; pinyin: Mànsūzī·Wángāhóng) a Dungan war "hero" who led a "mortar battery".[39]

Reportedly, Dungans were "strongly anti-Japanese".[40] During the 1930s, a White Russian driver for Nazi German agent Georg Vasel in Xinjiang was afraid to meet Hui general Ma Zhongying, saying: "You know how the Tungans hate the Russians." Vasel passed the Russian driver off as a German.[41]

Present day

 
In Milyanfan village, Chüy Region of Kyrgyzstan

As Ding (2005) notes, "[t]he Dungan people derive from China's Hui people, and now live mainly in Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan. Their population is about 110,000. This people have now developed a separate ethnicity outside China, yet they have close relations with the Hui people in culture, ethnic characteristics and ethnic identity." Today the Dungans play a role as cultural "shuttles" and economic mediators between Central Asia and the Chinese world.[42] Husei Daurov, the president of the Dungan center,[43] has succeeded in transforming cultural exchanges into commercial partnerships.[42]

In February 2020, a conflict broke out between ethnic Kazakhs and Dungans in the Korday area in Kazakhstan on the border to Kyrgyzstan. According to official Kazakh sources, 10 people were killed and many more were wounded. In the altercation, cars and homes were burned and rifles were fired. 600 people fled across the border to Kyrgyzstan.[44][45]

Language

The Dungan language, which the Dungan people call the "Hui language" (Хуэйзў йүян/回族語言 or Huejzw jyian), is similar to the Zhongyuan dialect of Mandarin Chinese, which is widely spoken in the south of Gansu and the west of Guanzhong in Shaanxi in China.

Like other varieties of Chinese, Dungan is tonal. There are two main dialects, one with four tones and the other, considered standard, with three tones in the final position in words and four tones in the non-final position.

Some Dungan vocabulary may sound old-fashioned to Chinese people. For example, they refer to a President as an "Emperor" (Хуаңды/皇帝, huan'g-di) and call government offices yamen (ямын/衙門, ya-min), a term for mandarins' offices in ancient China. Their language also contains many loanwords from Arabic, Persian and Turkic. Since the 1940s, the language has been written in Cyrillic script, though the language has historically also used Chinese characters and Xiao'erjing (Arabic script used for Chinese), though these are now considered obsolete.

Dungan people are generally multilingual. In addition to Dungan Chinese, more than two-thirds of the Dungan speak Russian and a small proportion can speak Kyrgyz or other languages belonging to the titular nationalities of the countries where they live.[46]

Culture

 
Many restaurants in Bishkek advertise "Dungan cuisine" (Дунганская кухня)
 
Dungan mosque in Karakol, Kyrgyzstan

Nineteenth century explorer Henry Lansdell noted that the Dungan people abstained from spirits and opium, neither smoked nor took snuff and

"are of middle height, and inclined to be stout. They have high and prominent foreheads, thick and arched eyebrows, eyes rather sunken, fairly prominent cheek-bones, face oval, mouth of average size, lips thick, teeth normal, chin round, ears small and compressed, hair black and smooth, beard scanty and rough, skin smooth, neck strong, and extremities of average proportions. The characteristics of the Dungans are kindness, industry, and hospitality.

They engage in husbandry, horticulture, and trade. In domestic life parental authority is very strong. After the birth of a child the mother does not get up for fifteen days, and, without any particular feast, the child receives its name in the presence of a mullah the day succeeding that of its birth. Circumcision takes place on the eighth, ninth, or tenth day. When a girl is married she receives a dower. In sickness they have recourse to medicine and doctors, but never to exorcisms.

After death, the mullah and the aged assemble to recite prayers; the corpse is wrapped in white linen and then buried, but never burned. On returning from the interment the mullah and the elders partake of bread and meat. To saints they erect monuments like little mosques, for others simple hillocks. The widow may re-marry after 90 days, and on the third anniversary of the death a feast takes place."[47]

The Dungan are primarily farmers, growing rice and vegetables such as sugar beet. Many also raise dairy cattle. In addition, some are involved in opium production. The Dungan tend to be endogamous[citation needed].

The Dungan are well known for their hospitality and hold many ceremonies and banquets to preserve their culture. They have elaborate and colorful observances of birthdays, weddings, and funerals. In addition, schools have museums to preserve other parts of their culture, such as embroidery, traditional clothing, silver jewelry, paper cuts of animals and flowers and tools[citation needed].

The Dungan still practice elements of Chinese culture, in cuisine and attire, up to 1948 they also practiced foot binding.[48] The conservative Shaanxi Dungan cling more tightly to Chinese customs than the Gansu Dungan.[49]

The Dungans have retained Chinese traditions which have disappeared in modern China. Traditional marriage practices are still widespread with matchmakers, the marriages conducted by the Dungan are similar to Chinese marriages in the 19th century, hairstyles worn by women and attire date back to the Qing dynasty.[50]

Shaanxi female attire is still Chinese, though the rest of the Dungans dress in western attire. Chopsticks are used by Dungans.[51] The cuisine of the Dungan resembles northwestern Chinese cuisine.[52][53]

Around the late 19th century the bride price was between 240 and 400 rubles for Dungan women. Dungans have been known to take other women such as Kirghiz and Tatars as brides willingly, or kidnap Kirghiz girls.[54] Shaanxi Dungans are even conservative when marrying with other Dungans; they want only other Shaanxi Dungans marrying their daughters, while their sons are allowed to marry Gansu Dungan, Kirghiz, and Kazakh women. As recently as 1962, inter-ethnic marriage was reported to be anathema among Dungans.[55]

Identity

During the Qing dynasty, the term Zhongyuanren (中原人; 'A person from the Central Plains of China') was synonymous with being mainstream Chinese, especially referring to Han Chinese and Hui Muslims in Xinjiang or Central Asia.

For religious reasons, while Hui people do not consider themselves Han and are not Han Chinese, they consider themselves part of the wider Chinese race and refer to themselves as Zhongyuanren.[56] The Dungan people, descendants of Hui who fled to Central Asia, called themselves Zhongyuanren in addition to the standard labels Lao Huihui and Huizi.[57] Zhongyuanren was used generally by Turkic Muslims to refer to Han and Hui Chinese people. When Central Asian invaders from Kokand invaded Kashgar, in a letter the Kokandi commander criticizes the Kashgari Turkic Muslim Ishaq for allegedly not behaving like a Turkic-origin Muslim and wanting to be a Zhongyuanren.[58][59]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Dungan: Хуэйзў (回族), romanized: Huizu, Xiao'erjing: حُوِ ظُ; simplified Chinese: 东干族; traditional Chinese: 東干族; pinyin: Dōnggān zú; Wade–Giles: Tung1kan1-tsu2, [tʊ́ŋkán tsǔ], Xiao'erjing: دْوقًا ظُ; Russian: Дунгане, Dungane; Kyrgyz: Дуңгандар, Duñgandar, دۇنغاندار; Kazakh: Дүңгендер, Düñgender, دٷڭگەندەر

References

Sources
  1. ^ "Total population by nationality (assessment at the beginning of the year, people)". Bureau of Statistics of Kyrgyzstan. 2021.
  2. ^ "The population of the Republic of Kazakhstan by individual ethnic groups at the beginning of 2019". Statistics Committee of the Ministry of National Economy of the Republic of Kazakhstan. Retrieved 8 January 2019.
  3. ^ a b Всероссийская перепись населения 2002 года 6 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ . Ukraine Census 2001. State Statistics Committee of Ukraine. Archived from the original on 17 December 2011. Retrieved 17 January 2012.
  5. ^ Autonomous Military Region of Southern Sinkiang : TUNGANISTAN Kingdom, w.ethnia.org (without date).
  6. ^ David Trilling (20 April 2010). "Kyrgyzstan Eats: A Dungan Feast in Naryn". EURASIANET.org.
  7. ^ "UNPO: East Turkestan: Strict Control of China's Uighur Muslims Continues". Unrepresented Nations & Peoples Organization. 16 August 2006. Retrieved 12 March 2020. However, the authorities' control over Dungan mosques is less strict than over mosques used by Uighurs, a Turkic people mainly found in Xinjiang but also in Central Asian states. (The Dungans are a Chinese Muslim people also found in Central Asian states.)
  8. ^ "Демографический ежегодник Кыргызской Республики: 2009-2013.-Б: Нацстатком Кырг. Респ., 2014:-320с. ISBN 978-9967-26-837-1" (PDF). Bishkek: National Committee on Statistics. 2014.
  9. ^ Aleksandr Nikolaevich Alekseenko (Александр Николаевич Алексеенко), "Republic in the Mirror of the Population Census" («Республика в зеркале переписей населения») Sotsiologicheskie Issledovaniia. 2001, No. 12. pp. 58-62.
  10. ^ Marianne Kamp (2008). The New Woman in Uzbekistan: Islam, Modernity, and Unveiling Under Communism (reprint, illustrated ed.). University of Washington Press. p. 25. ISBN 978-0-295-98819-1. Retrieved 30 July 2010.
  11. ^ Shail Mayaram (2009). Shail Mayaram (ed.). The other global city (illustrated ed.). Taylor & Francis US. p. 209. ISBN 978-0-415-99194-0. Retrieved 30 July 2010.
  12. ^ W. G. Clarence-Smith (2006). Islam and the abolition of slavery. Oxford University Press US. p. 45. ISBN 0-19-522151-6. Retrieved 31 October 2010. khoqand raiders seizing chinese slaves in east turkistan failed to between hui muslims and han.
  13. ^ W. G. Clarence-Smith (2006). Islam and the abolition of slavery. Oxford University Press US. p. 15. ISBN 0-19-522151-6. Retrieved 31 October 2010. a trickle of chinese also reached turkistan well into the nineteenth century.
  14. ^ Millward 1998, p. 298.
  15. ^ Millward 1998, p. 205.
  16. ^ Millward 1998, p. 305.
  17. ^ Laura Newby (2005). The Empire and the Khanate: a political history of Qing relations with Khoqand c. 1760-1860. BRILL. p. 97. ISBN 90-04-14550-8. Retrieved 28 November 2010.
  18. ^ Fairbank, John K., ed. (1978). The Cambridge History of China, Volume 10: Late Ch'ing 1800–1911, Part 1. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 371. ISBN 978-0-521-21447-6.
  19. ^ Millward 1998, p. 168.
  20. ^ Harrison, Henrietta (2013). The Missionary's Curse and Other Tales from a Chinese Catholic Village. Vol. 26 of Asia: Local Studies / Global Themes. University of California Press. p. 59. ISBN 978-0520954724. Retrieved 28 November 2010.
  21. ^ Millward 1998, p. 285.
  22. ^ As per Ma Tong (2003)
  23. ^ M. Th. Houtsma (1993). E.J. Brill's first encyclopedia of Islam, 1913-1936. BRILL. p. 720. ISBN 90-04-09790-2. Retrieved 28 October 2010.
  24. ^ Lipman, Jonathan Neaman (1998). Familiar strangers: a history of Muslims in Northwest China. Hong Kong University Press. p. 59. ISBN 962-209-468-6.. Lipman's source is: Joseph Fletcher, "The Naqshbandiya in Northwest China", in Beatrcie Manz, ed. (1995). Studies on Chinese and Islamic Inner Asia. London: Variorum.
  25. ^ James Prinsep, "Memoir on Chinese Tartary and Khoten". The Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, No. 48, December 1835. P. 655.On Google Books
  26. ^ Prinsep's article is also available in "The Chinese Repository", 1843, p. 234 On Google Books. A modern (2003) reprint is available, ISBN 1-4021-5631-6.
  27. ^ Karl Ernst von Baer, Grigoriĭ Petrovich Gelʹmersen. "Beiträge zur Kenntniss des russischen Reiches und der angränzenden Länder Asiens". Kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1839. p. 91. On Google Books (in German)
  28. ^ Robert Montgomery Martin, "China; political, commercial, and social; an official report". 1847. p.19. On Internet Archive
  29. ^ For example, Thomas Edward Gordon writes about the "Tunganis" with taifu wall pieces (small cannons) guarding the walls of Yaqub Beg's capital Kashgar (in today's Western Xinjiang) in his book The roof of the world: being a narrative of a journey over the high plateau of Tibet to the Russian frontier and the Oxus sources on Pamir. A Times journalist in "Russia and China in Central Asia" (reprinted by The Brisbane Courier, Wednesday 8 January 1879) distinguishes "the Tungan Country" (today, eastern Xinjiang) and "Eastern Turkestan" (corresponding to Yaqub Beg's state in today's western Xinjiang). He talks about "the Tungani who had erected in the various cities of Hamil, Barkul, Guchen, Urumtsi, and Manas a confederacy of no mean power".
  30. ^ See e.g. an anonymous article, "Mohammedanism in China", in The Living age, Volume 145, Issue 1876. 29 May 1880. Pp. 515-525. Reprinted from the Edinburgh Review. While using "Mohammedans" as the generic description of Chinese Muslim's throughout the article (including e.g., the Panthays then recently rebelling in Yunnan), the author describes "[a]n insurrection, beginning in Singan-fu, and spreading to Kan-suh in 1862, in which the Tungani (a mysterious race of Muslims dwelling in that region, supposed to be the remnant of the armies of Kublai Khan) were the chief actors" (p. 524).
  31. ^ Broomhall, Marshall (1910). Islam in China: a neglected problem. China Inland Mission. p. 147. OCLC 347514.. A 1966 reprint by Paragon Book Reprint is available. Relatedly, the Russian word for China is also Kitai (Китай), and for Chinese is kitaitsy (китайцы), a label that is not applied to the Dungans (дунгане) in an ethnic sense; that is, Dungans and kitaitsi (Chinese) were regarded as different ethnic groups or nationalities.
  32. ^ Broomhall 1910, p. 260
  33. ^ Owen Lattimore. Inner Asian Frontiers of China. Page 183 in the 1951 edition.
  34. ^ Twitchett, Denis Crispin (1978). The Cambridge History of China, Volume 11. Cambridge University Press. pp. 215–242. ISBN 0-521-22029-7.. Twitchett's definition (p. 215) is in line with the authors of 1870s-1880s, rather than with that of more recent Lattimore: for Twitchett, "Tungans" include the Huis of Shaanxi and Gansu as well, not just of Xinjiang
  35. ^ Millward, James A. (1998). Beyond the pass: economy, ethnicity, and empire in Qing Central Asia, 1759-1864. Stanford University Press. pp. 35 etc. ISBN 0-8047-2933-6.
  36. ^ Kim, Ho-dong (2004). Holy war in China: the Muslim rebellion and state in Chinese Central Asia, 1864-1877. Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-4884-5.
  37. ^ Jiménez-Tovar, Soledad (2016). "The Anthropologist as a Mushroom" (PDF). Field Notes and Research Projects. Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology. ISSN 2193-987X. Retrieved 9 February 2020. Right after Bi Yankhu's arrival, from 1878 until 1903, the village was called 'Karakunuz', meaning 'black beetle' in local Turkic languages. Dyer (1992) believes that this was a nickname given by local Turkic-speakers to Dungans, due to the fact that Dungan women liked to wear black at that time. In 1903 the name changed to 'Nikolaevka' (after the Russian Tsar) and it changed again in 1918, when the name 'Karakunuz' was again adopted, and did not change until 1964, when, as part of the rehabilitation of Magaza Masanchi, the village was renamed after him: 'Masanchi'. Besides these official names, Masanchi also has a Dungan name, Yinpan, which appears in the left image on the wall7.
  38. ^ Population data for Zhambyl Province towns and villages 1 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine (1999-2002)
  39. ^ Svetlana Rimsky-Korsakoff Dyer (1991). I︠A︡syr Shivaza: the life and works of a Soviet Dungan poet (illustrated ed.). P. Lang. p. 205. ISBN 3-631-43963-6. Retrieved 11 June 2011.
  40. ^ Forbes (1986), p. 130
  41. ^ Georg Vasel; Gerald Griffin (1937). My Russian jailers in China. Hurst & Blackett. p. 143. from the original on 8 May 2021. Retrieved 28 June 2010.
  42. ^ a b Charles E. Ziegler (2014). Civil Society and Politics in Central Asia. Asia in the New Millennium. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 9780813150789. Retrieved 8 February 2020.
  43. ^ ДАУРОВ ХУСЕЙ ШИМАРОВИЧ ("Best People", the Great International Encyclopedia)
  44. ^ "Kazakhs Start Returning Home From Kyrgyzstan After Weekend's Ethnic Violence". RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty. Retrieved 10 February 2020.
  45. ^ "Kazakhstan clashes kill 10 people and injure at least 40 others". euronews. 9 February 2020. Retrieved 10 February 2020.
  46. ^ . Archived from the original on 20 October 2008. Retrieved 1 December 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link).
  47. ^ Henry Lansdell (1885). Russian Central Asia: Including Kuldja, Bokhara, Khiva and Merv. Sampson Low, Marston, Searle and Rivington. pp. 209–10.
  48. ^ Touraj Atabaki; Sanjyot Mehendale (2005). Central Asia and the Caucasus: transnationalism and diaspora. Psychology Press. p. 31. ISBN 0-415-33260-5. Retrieved 1 January 2011.
  49. ^ French Centre for Research on Contemporary China (2000). China perspectives, Issues 27-32. C.E.F.C. p. 68. Retrieved 1 January 2011.
  50. ^ Barbara A. West (2008). Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Asia and Oceania, Volume 1. Infobase Publishing. p. 195. ISBN 978-0-8160-7109-8. Retrieved 1 January 2011.
  51. ^ James Stuart Olson; Nicholas Charles Pappas (1994). An Ethnohistorical dictionary of the Russian and Soviet empires. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 204. ISBN 0-313-27497-5. Retrieved 1 January 2011.
  52. ^ Svetlana Rimsky-Korsakoff Dyer (1979). Soviet Dungan kolkhozes in the Kirghiz SSR and the Kazakh SSR. Faculty of Asian Studies, ANU. p. 62. ISBN 0-909879-11-7. Retrieved 1 January 2011.
  53. ^ Ḥevrah ha-Mizraḥit ha-Yiśreʾelit (1983). Asian and African studies, Volume 16. Jerusalem Academic Press. p. 338. Retrieved 1 January 2011.
  54. ^ Asian Folklore Institute, Society for Asian Folklore, Nanzan Daigaku. Jinruigaku Kenkyūjo, Nanzan Shūkyō Bunka Kenkyūjo (1992). Asian folklore studies, Volume 51. Nanzan University Institute of Anthropology. p. 256. Retrieved 28 June 2010.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  55. ^ Soviet Sociology. International Arts and Sciences Press. 1962. p. 42.
  56. ^ Richard V. Weekes (1984). Muslim peoples: a world ethnographic survey, Volume 1. Greenwood Press. p. 334. ISBN 0-313-23392-6. Retrieved 28 November 2010.
  57. ^ James Stuart Olson; Nicholas Charles Pappas (1994). An Ethnohistorical dictionary of the Russian and Soviet empires. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 202. ISBN 0-313-27497-5. Retrieved 28 November 2010.
  58. ^ James A. Millward (1998). Beyond the pass: economy, ethnicity, and empire in Qing Central Asia, 1759-1864. Stanford University Press. p. 215. ISBN 0-8047-2933-6. Retrieved 28 November 2010.
  59. ^ Laura Newby (2005). The Empire and the Khanate: a political history of Qing relations with Khoqand c. 1760-1860. BRILL. p. 148. ISBN 90-04-14550-8. Retrieved 28 November 2010.

Works cited

  • Forbes, Andrew D. W. (9 October 1986). Warlords and Muslims in Chinese Central Asia: A Political History of Republican Sinkiang 1911-1949. CUP Archive. ISBN 978-0-521-25514-1.

Further reading

  • Allès, Elisabeth. 2005. "The Chinese-speaking Muslims (Dungans) of Central Asia: A Case of Multiple Identities in a Changing Context," Asian Ethnicity 6, No. 2 (June): 121-134.
  • Ding Hong. 2005. "A Comparative Study on the Cultures of the Dungan and the Hui People," Asian Ethnicity 6, No. 2 (June): 135-140.
  • Svetlana Rimsky-Korsakoff Dyer. 1979. "Soviet Dungan kolkhozes in the Kirghiz SSR and the Kazakh SSR (Oriental monograph series)". Faculty of Asian Studies, Australian National University. ISBN 0-909879-11-7.
  • Svetlana Rimsky-Korsakoff Dyer. , with an English translation of V.Tsibuzgin and A.Shmakov's work. "Asian Folklore Studies", Vol. 51 (1992), pp. 243–279.
  • , Series "丝绸之路上的穆斯林文化" (Muslim Cultures of the Silk Road), 2003-April–27. (in Chinese). (This article has some details additional to Rimsky-Korsakoff (1992)).
  • Сушанло Мухамед, Имазов Мухаме. "Совет хуэйзў вынщүә". Фрунзе, "Мектеп" чубаншә, 1988. (Mukhamed Sushanlo, Mukhame Imazov. "Dungan Soviet Literature: textbook for 9th and 10th grade". Frunze, 1988). ISBN 5-658-00068-8.
  • http://nirc.nanzan-u.ac.jp/publications/afs/pdf/a916.pdf 12 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine

External links

  • Map of Dungan settlement in Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan
  • 'A Very Dungan Wedding' Article on Kyrgyz Dungans
  • Dungans Forum (rus)
  • Samples of the Dungans' Cuisine

dungan, people, this, article, about, descendants, chinese, muslims, that, left, china, 1800s, muslims, china, that, sometimes, still, referred, this, name, central, asian, languages, people, this, article, lead, section, adequately, summarize, contents, compl. This article is about descendants of Chinese Muslims that left China in the 1800s For Muslims in China that are sometimes still referred to by this name in Central Asian languages see Hui people This article s lead section may not adequately summarize its contents To comply with Wikipedia s lead section guidelines please consider modifying the lead to provide an accessible overview of the article s key points in such a way that it can stand on its own as a concise version of the article March 2014 Dungan a is a term used in territories of the former Soviet Union to refer to a group of Muslim people of Hui origin 6 Turkic speaking peoples in Xinjiang Province in Northwestern China also sometimes refer to Hui Muslims as Dungans 7 In both China and the former Soviet republics where they reside however members of this ethnic group call themselves Hui because Dungans are descendants of historical Hui groups that migrated to Central Asia Dungan peopleHuejzy回族Dungan girls in Sortobe KazakhstanTotal population150 000Regions with significant populations Kyrgyzstan 2021 census 75 437 1 Kazakhstan 2019 census 72 361 2 Russia 2010 census 1 651 3 Tajikistan6 000 citation needed Mongolia5 300 Uzbekistan1 900 Ukraine133 4 LanguagesDungan or Mandarin ChineseSecondary languages RussianKazakhKyrgyzReligionSunni IslamRelated ethnic groupsHui Han peopleAlleged flag of Tunganistan 5 In the censuses of the countries of the former Soviet Union the Dungans enumerated separately from Chinese are found in Kazakhstan 36 900 according to the 1999 census Kyrgyzstan 58 409 according to the 2009 census and Russia 801 according to the 2002 census 8 9 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 Migration from China 1 2 Name 1 3 Dungan villages in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan 1 4 Soviet rule 1 5 Present day 2 Language 3 Culture 4 Identity 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Works cited 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory EditMigration from China Edit The gate of the Dungan Mosque in Karakol Kyrgyzstan The upper text on the sign is a partially Uyghurized rendering of the mosque s Kyrgyz name into the Uyghur Arabic alphabet Isiq kol oblasttiq Qaraqol sharindaghi Ibrahim Haji atindaghi borborduq masjid The lower text is Kyrgyz in the Cyrillic script Ysyk Kol oblasttyk Karakol shaaryndagy Ibrakhim Ajy atyndagy borborduk mechit Central Mosque in the name of Ibrahim Hajji in the city of Karakol an oblast of Ysyk Kol In the Ferghana Valley the first Dungans to appear in Central Asia originated from Kuldja and Kashgar as slaves captured by raiders they mostly served in private wealthy households After the Russians conquered Central Asia in the late 19th century and abolished slavery most female Dungan slaves remained where they had originally been held captive Russian ethnographer Validimir Petrovich Nalivkin and his wife said that women slaves almost all remained in place because they either were married to workers and servants of their former owners or they were too young to begin an independent life 10 Dungan women slaves were of low status and not regarded highly in Bukhara 11 Turkic Muslim slave raiders from Khoqand did not distinguish between Hui Muslim and Han Chinese enslaving Hui Muslims in violation of Islamic law 12 13 During the Afaqi Khoja revolts Turkic Muslim Khoja Jahangir Khoja led an invasion of Kashgar from the Kokand Khanate and Jahangir s forces captured several hundred Dungan Chinese Muslims Tungan or Hui who were taken to Kokand Tajiks bought two Chinese slaves from Shaanxi they were enslaved for a year before being returned by the Tajik Beg Ku bu te to China 14 All Dungans captured both merchants and the 300 soldiers Janhangir captured in Kashgar had their queues cut off when brought to Kokand and Central Asia as prisoners 15 16 It was reported that many of the captives became slaves Accounts of these slaves in Central Asia increased 17 18 The queues were removed from Dungan Chinese Muslim prisoners and then sold or given away Some of them escaped to Russian territory where they were repatriated back to China and the accounts of their captures were recorded in Chinese records 19 20 The Russians record an incident where they rescued these Chinese Muslim merchants who escaped after they were sold by Jahangir s Army in Central Asia and sent them back to China 21 The Dungan in the former Soviet republics are Hui who fled China in the aftermath of the Hui Minorities War also known as the Dungan Rebellion in the 19th century According to Rimsky Korsakoff 1992 three separate groups of the Hui people fled to the Russian Empire across the Tian Shan Mountains during the exceptionally severe winter of 1877 78 after the end of the Hui Minorities War The first group of some 1000 people originally from Turpan in Xinjiang led by Ma Daren 馬大人 the Great Man Ma also known as Ma Da lao ye 馬大老爺 the Great Master Ma reached Osh in Southern Kyrgyzstan The second group originally from Didaozhou 狄道州 in Gansu led by ahong Ma Yusuf 馬郁素夫 22 also known as Ah Ye Laoren 阿爺老人 the Old Man O Granpa were settled in the spring of 1878 in the village of Yrdyk Russian Irdyk or Yrdyk some 15 km from Karakol in Eastern Kyrgyzstan They numbered 1130 on arrival The third group originally from Shaanxi led by Bai Yanhu 白彦虎 also spelt Bo Yanhu often called by his followers 虎大人 The Great Man Hu Tiger 1829 1882 one of the leaders of the rebellion were settled in the village of Karakunuz now Masanchi in modern Zhambyl Province of Kazakhstan It is 8 km north from the city Tokmak in northwestern Kyrgyzstan This group numbered 3314 on arrival Bai Yanhu s name in other romanizations was Bo yan hu or Pai Yen hu other names included Boyan akhun Akhund or Imam Boyan and Muhammad Ayyub 23 The next wave of immigration followed in the early 1880s In accordance with the terms of the Treaty of Saint Petersburg 1881 which required the withdrawal of the Russian troops from the Upper Ili Basin the Kulja area the Dungan Hui and Taranchi Uyghur people of the region were allowed to opt for moving to the Russian side of the border Many chose that option according to Russian statistics 4 682 Hui moved to the Russian Empire under the treaty They migrated in many small groups between 1881 and 1883 settling in the village of Sokuluk some 30 km west of Bishkek as well as in a number of locations between the Chinese border and Sokuluk in Southeastern Kazakhstan and in Northern Kyrgyzstan Name Edit Dungan peopleChinese nameTraditional Chinese東干族Simplified Chinese东干族TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinDōngganzuDunganese nameDunganHuejzyDonganzyXiao erjingح و ذ وRomanizationHuejzwHanzi回族Russian nameRussianDunganeIn the Russian Empire Soviet Union and the post Soviet states the Dungans continue to refer to themselves as the Hui people Chinese 回族 Huizu in Cyrillic Soviet Dungan spelling xuejzy The name Dungan is of obscure origin One popular theory derives this word from Turkic donan one who turns which can be compared to Chinese 回 hui which has a similar meaning Another theory derives it from the Chinese 东甘 Dong Gan Eastern Gansu the region to which many of the Dungan can trace their ancestry however the character gan 干 used in the name of the ethnic group is different from that used in the name of the province 甘 The term Dungan Tonggan Donggan has been used by Central Asian Turkic and Tajik speaking people to refer to Chinese speaking Muslims for several centuries Joseph Fletcher cites Turkic and Persian manuscripts related to the preaching of the 17th century Kashgarian Sufi master Muhammad Yusuf or possibly his son Afaq Khoja inside the Ming Empire in today s Gansu and or Qinghai where the Kashgarian preacher is told to have converted ulama yi Tunganiyyan i e Dungan ulema into Sufism 24 Presumably it was from the Turkic languages that the term was borrowed into Russian dungane dungane pl dunganin dunganin sing and Chinese simplified Chinese 东干族 traditional Chinese 東干族 pinyin Dōngganzu as well as to Western European languages Caption Shooting exercises of taifurchi gunners Dungans and Kashgar Chinese A French engraving from the Yaqub Beg s state period In English and German the ethnonym Dungan in various spelling forms was attested as early as the 1830s sometimes typically referring to the Hui people of Xinjiang For example James Prinsep in 1835 mentions Muslim Tunganis in Chinese Tartary 25 26 In 1839 Karl Ernst von Baer in his German language account of Russian Empire and adjacent Asian lands has a one page account of Chinese speaking Muslim Dungani or Tungani who had visited Orenburg in 1827 with a caravan from China he also mentions Tugean as a spelling variant used by other authors 27 R M Martin in 1847 mentions Tungani merchants in Yarkand 28 The word mostly in the form Dungani or Tungani sometimes Dungens or Dungans acquired some currency in English and other western languages when a number of books in the 1860 1870s discussed the Dungan Rebellion in Northwestern China At the time one could see European and American authors apply the term Tungani to the Hui people both in Xinjiang 29 and in Shaanxi and Gansu which at the time included today s Ningxia and Qinghai as well Authors aware of the general picture of the spread of Islam in China viewed these Tungani as just one of the groups of China s Muslims 30 Marshall Broomhall who has a chapter on the Tungan Rebellion in his 1910 book introduces the name Tungan or Dungan by which the Muslims of these parts i e NE China are designated in contradistinction as the Chinese Buddhists who are spoken of as Kithay the reference to Khitay shows that he was viewing the two terms as used by Turkic speakers 31 Broomhall s book also contains a translation of the report on Chinese Muslims by the Ottoman writer named Abd ul Aziz Abd ul Aziz divides the Tungan people into two branches the Tunagans of China proper including apparently all Hui people in China proper as he also talks e g about the Tungans having 17 mosques in Beijing and The Tungans of Chinese and Russian Turkestan who still look and speak Chinese but have often also learned the Turkish language 32 Later authors continued to use the term Dungan in various transcriptions for specifically the Hui people of Xinjiang For example Owen Lattimore writing c 1940 maintains the terminological distinction between these two related groups T ungkan i e Wade Giles for Dungan described by him as the descendants of the Gansu Hui people resettled in Xinjiang in 17 18th centuries vs e g Gansu Moslems or generic Chinese Moslems 33 The term usually as Tungans continues to be used by many modern historians writing about the 19th century Dungan Rebellion e g by Denis C Twitchett in The Cambridge History of China 34 by James A Millward in his economic history of the region 35 or by Kim Ho dong in his monograph 36 Dungan villages in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan Edit The Dungans themselves referred to Karakunuz Russian Karakunuz sometimes Karakonyz or Karakonuz as Ingpan Chinese 營盤 Yingpan Russian Inpan which means a camp an encampment In 1965 Karakunuz was renamed Masanchi sometimes spelt as Masanchin after Magaza Masanchi or Masanchin Dungan Magәzy Masanchyn Chinese 馬三奇 a Dungan participant in the Communist Revolution and a Soviet Kazakhstan statesman 37 The following table summarizes location of Dungan villages in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan alternative names used for them and their Dungan population as reported by Ma Tong 2003 The Cyrillic Dungan spelling of place names is as in the textbook by Sushanlo Imazov 1988 the spelling of the name in Chinese character is as in Ma Tong 2003 Dungan villages in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan Village name and alternatives Location in present day terms Foundation Current Dungan population from Ma Tang 2003 Kazakhstan total 48 000 Ma Tang 2003 or 36 900 Kazakhstan Census of 1999 Masanchi Russian Masanchi Kazakh Masanshy or Masanchin Russian Masanchin Cyrillic Dungan Masanchyn 馬三成 prior to 1965 Karakunuz Karakunuz Karakonyz Traditional Dungan name is Ingpan Cyrillic Dungan Jinpan Russian Inpan Chinese 營盤 Yingpan 42 55 40 N 75 18 00 E 42 92778 N 75 30000 E 42 92778 75 30000 Masanchi Korday District Jambyl Region of Kazakhstan 8 km north of Tokmok Kyrgyzstan Spring 1878 3314 people from Shaanxi led by Bai Yanhu 白彦虎 7 000 current mayor Iskhar Yusupovich LouSortobe Kazakh Sortobe Russian Shortyube Shortyube Dungan Shyortyube Chinese 新渠 Xinqu 42 52 00 N 75 15 15 E 42 86667 N 75 25417 E 42 86667 75 25417 Sortobe Korday District Jambyl Region On the northern bank of the river Chu opposite and a few km downstream from Tokmok south of Masanchi Karakunuz Karakunuz group 9 000Zhalpak tobe Kazakh Zhalpak tobe Chinese 加爾帕克秋白 Jiaerpakeqiubai Jambyl District Jambyl Region near Grodekovo south of Taraz 3 000Kyrgyzstan total 50 000 Ma Tang 2003 Yrdyk Kyrgyz Yrdyk Dungan Erdeh Chinese 二道溝 Erdaogou 42 27 30 N 78 18 0 E 42 45833 N 78 30000 E 42 45833 78 30000 Yrdyk Jeti Oguz District of Issyk Kul Region 15 km south west from Karakol Spring 1878 1130 people originally from Didaozhou 狄道州 in Gansu led by Ma Yusu 馬郁素 a k a Ah Yelaoren 阿爺老人 2 800Sokuluk Kyrgyz Sokuluk Dungan Sohyly Chinese 梢葫蘆 Saohulu may also include adjacent Aleksandrovka Aleksandrovka Sokuluk District of Chuy Region 30 km west of Bishkek Some of those 4 628 Hui people who arrived in 1881 1883 from the Ili Basin Xinjiang 12 000Milyanfan Kyrgyz Milyanfan Dungan Milyonchuan Chinese 米糧川 Miliangchuan Ysyk Ata District of Chuy Region Southern bank of the Chu River some 60 km west of Tokmok and about as much north east of Bishkek Karakunuz group 10 000Ivanovka village Kyrgyz Ivanovka Chinese 伊萬諾夫卡 Ysyk Ata District of Chuy Region Southern bank of the Chu River some 30 km west of Tokmok Karakunuz group 1 500Dungan community of Osh Kyrgyz Osh Chinese 奥什 or 敖什 Aoshe Osh Region Spring 1878 1000 people originally from Turpan in Xinjiang led by Ma Daren also known as Ma Da lao ye 馬大老爺 800The position of the Kazakhstan villages within the administrative division of Jambyl Region and the total population of each village can be found at the provincial statistics office web site 38 Besides the traditionally Dungan villages many Dungan people live in the nearby cities such as Bishkek Tokmok Karakol Soviet rule Edit Vanakhun s museum Tungan generals of Tunganistan in Hotan During World War II some Dungans served in the Red Army one of them who was Vanakhun Mansuza ru Cyrillic Dungan mansuza vanahun traditional Chinese 曼苏茲 or 子 王阿洪 simplified Chinese 曼蘇茲 王阿洪 pinyin Mansuzi Wangahong a Dungan war hero who led a mortar battery 39 Reportedly Dungans were strongly anti Japanese 40 During the 1930s a White Russian driver for Nazi German agent Georg Vasel in Xinjiang was afraid to meet Hui general Ma Zhongying saying You know how the Tungans hate the Russians Vasel passed the Russian driver off as a German 41 Present day Edit In Milyanfan village Chuy Region of Kyrgyzstan As Ding 2005 notes t he Dungan people derive from China s Hui people and now live mainly in Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan Their population is about 110 000 This people have now developed a separate ethnicity outside China yet they have close relations with the Hui people in culture ethnic characteristics and ethnic identity Today the Dungans play a role as cultural shuttles and economic mediators between Central Asia and the Chinese world 42 Husei Daurov the president of the Dungan center 43 has succeeded in transforming cultural exchanges into commercial partnerships 42 In February 2020 a conflict broke out between ethnic Kazakhs and Dungans in the Korday area in Kazakhstan on the border to Kyrgyzstan According to official Kazakh sources 10 people were killed and many more were wounded In the altercation cars and homes were burned and rifles were fired 600 people fled across the border to Kyrgyzstan 44 45 Language EditMain article Dungan language See also Xiao erjing and Sini script The Dungan language which the Dungan people call the Hui language Huejzy jүyan 回族語言 or Huejzw jyian is similar to the Zhongyuan dialect of Mandarin Chinese which is widely spoken in the south of Gansu and the west of Guanzhong in Shaanxi in China Like other varieties of Chinese Dungan is tonal There are two main dialects one with four tones and the other considered standard with three tones in the final position in words and four tones in the non final position Some Dungan vocabulary may sound old fashioned to Chinese people For example they refer to a President as an Emperor Huandy 皇帝 huan g di and call government offices yamen yamyn 衙門 ya min a term for mandarins offices in ancient China Their language also contains many loanwords from Arabic Persian and Turkic Since the 1940s the language has been written in Cyrillic script though the language has historically also used Chinese characters and Xiao erjing Arabic script used for Chinese though these are now considered obsolete Dungan people are generally multilingual In addition to Dungan Chinese more than two thirds of the Dungan speak Russian and a small proportion can speak Kyrgyz or other languages belonging to the titular nationalities of the countries where they live 46 Culture EditSee also Chinese Islamic cuisine Many restaurants in Bishkek advertise Dungan cuisine Dunganskaya kuhnya Dungan mosque in Karakol Kyrgyzstan Nineteenth century explorer Henry Lansdell noted that the Dungan people abstained from spirits and opium neither smoked nor took snuff and are of middle height and inclined to be stout They have high and prominent foreheads thick and arched eyebrows eyes rather sunken fairly prominent cheek bones face oval mouth of average size lips thick teeth normal chin round ears small and compressed hair black and smooth beard scanty and rough skin smooth neck strong and extremities of average proportions The characteristics of the Dungans are kindness industry and hospitality They engage in husbandry horticulture and trade In domestic life parental authority is very strong After the birth of a child the mother does not get up for fifteen days and without any particular feast the child receives its name in the presence of a mullah the day succeeding that of its birth Circumcision takes place on the eighth ninth or tenth day When a girl is married she receives a dower In sickness they have recourse to medicine and doctors but never to exorcisms After death the mullah and the aged assemble to recite prayers the corpse is wrapped in white linen and then buried but never burned On returning from the interment the mullah and the elders partake of bread and meat To saints they erect monuments like little mosques for others simple hillocks The widow may re marry after 90 days and on the third anniversary of the death a feast takes place 47 The Dungan are primarily farmers growing rice and vegetables such as sugar beet Many also raise dairy cattle In addition some are involved in opium production The Dungan tend to be endogamous citation needed The Dungan are well known for their hospitality and hold many ceremonies and banquets to preserve their culture They have elaborate and colorful observances of birthdays weddings and funerals In addition schools have museums to preserve other parts of their culture such as embroidery traditional clothing silver jewelry paper cuts of animals and flowers and tools citation needed The Dungan still practice elements of Chinese culture in cuisine and attire up to 1948 they also practiced foot binding 48 The conservative Shaanxi Dungan cling more tightly to Chinese customs than the Gansu Dungan 49 The Dungans have retained Chinese traditions which have disappeared in modern China Traditional marriage practices are still widespread with matchmakers the marriages conducted by the Dungan are similar to Chinese marriages in the 19th century hairstyles worn by women and attire date back to the Qing dynasty 50 Shaanxi female attire is still Chinese though the rest of the Dungans dress in western attire Chopsticks are used by Dungans 51 The cuisine of the Dungan resembles northwestern Chinese cuisine 52 53 Around the late 19th century the bride price was between 240 and 400 rubles for Dungan women Dungans have been known to take other women such as Kirghiz and Tatars as brides willingly or kidnap Kirghiz girls 54 Shaanxi Dungans are even conservative when marrying with other Dungans they want only other Shaanxi Dungans marrying their daughters while their sons are allowed to marry Gansu Dungan Kirghiz and Kazakh women As recently as 1962 inter ethnic marriage was reported to be anathema among Dungans 55 Identity EditSee also Hui pan nationalism During the Qing dynasty the term Zhongyuanren 中原人 A person from the Central Plains of China was synonymous with being mainstream Chinese especially referring to Han Chinese and Hui Muslims in Xinjiang or Central Asia For religious reasons while Hui people do not consider themselves Han and are not Han Chinese they consider themselves part of the wider Chinese race and refer to themselves as Zhongyuanren 56 The Dungan people descendants of Hui who fled to Central Asia called themselves Zhongyuanren in addition to the standard labels Lao Huihui and Huizi 57 Zhongyuanren was used generally by Turkic Muslims to refer to Han and Hui Chinese people When Central Asian invaders from Kokand invaded Kashgar in a letter the Kokandi commander criticizes the Kashgari Turkic Muslim Ishaq for allegedly not behaving like a Turkic origin Muslim and wanting to be a Zhongyuanren 58 59 See also EditDungan revolt 1862 1877 rebellion of various Muslim ethnic groups in Shaanxi and Gansu China Dungan revolt 1895 1896 rebellion of various Muslim ethnic groups in Qinghai and Gansu China TunganistanNotes Edit Dungan Huejzy 回族 romanized Huizu Xiao erjing ح و ظ simplified Chinese 东干族 traditional Chinese 東干族 pinyin Dōnggan zu Wade Giles Tung1kan1 tsu2 tʊ ŋka n tsu Xiao erjing د وق ا ظ Russian Dungane Dungane Kyrgyz Dungandar Dungandar دۇنغاندار Kazakh Dүngender Dungender دٷڭگەندەرReferences EditSources Total population by nationality assessment at the beginning of the year people Bureau of Statistics of Kyrgyzstan 2021 The population of the Republic of Kazakhstan by individual ethnic groups at the beginning of 2019 Statistics Committee of the Ministry of National Economy of the Republic of Kazakhstan Retrieved 8 January 2019 a b Vserossijskaya perepis naseleniya 2002 goda Archived 6 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine About number and composition population of Ukraine by data All Ukrainian census of the population 2001 Ukraine Census 2001 State Statistics Committee of Ukraine Archived from the original on 17 December 2011 Retrieved 17 January 2012 Autonomous Military Region of Southern Sinkiang TUNGANISTAN Kingdom w ethnia org without date David Trilling 20 April 2010 Kyrgyzstan Eats A Dungan Feast in Naryn EURASIANET org UNPO East Turkestan Strict Control of China s Uighur Muslims Continues Unrepresented Nations amp Peoples Organization 16 August 2006 Retrieved 12 March 2020 However the authorities control over Dungan mosques is less strict than over mosques used by Uighurs a Turkic people mainly found in Xinjiang but also in Central Asian states The Dungans are a Chinese Muslim people also found in Central Asian states Demograficheskij ezhegodnik Kyrgyzskoj Respubliki 2009 2013 B Nacstatkom Kyrg Resp 2014 320s ISBN 978 9967 26 837 1 PDF Bishkek National Committee on Statistics 2014 Aleksandr Nikolaevich Alekseenko Aleksandr Nikolaevich Alekseenko Republic in the Mirror of the Population Census Respublika v zerkale perepisej naseleniya Sotsiologicheskie Issledovaniia 2001 No 12 pp 58 62 Marianne Kamp 2008 The New Woman in Uzbekistan Islam Modernity and Unveiling Under Communism reprint illustrated ed University of Washington Press p 25 ISBN 978 0 295 98819 1 Retrieved 30 July 2010 Shail Mayaram 2009 Shail Mayaram ed The other global city illustrated ed Taylor amp Francis US p 209 ISBN 978 0 415 99194 0 Retrieved 30 July 2010 W G Clarence Smith 2006 Islam and the abolition of slavery Oxford University Press US p 45 ISBN 0 19 522151 6 Retrieved 31 October 2010 khoqand raiders seizing chinese slaves in east turkistan failed to between hui muslims and han W G Clarence Smith 2006 Islam and the abolition of slavery Oxford University Press US p 15 ISBN 0 19 522151 6 Retrieved 31 October 2010 a trickle of chinese also reached turkistan well into the nineteenth century Millward 1998 p 298 Millward 1998 p 205 Millward 1998 p 305 Laura Newby 2005 The Empire and the Khanate a political history of Qing relations with Khoqand c 1760 1860 BRILL p 97 ISBN 90 04 14550 8 Retrieved 28 November 2010 Fairbank John K ed 1978 The Cambridge History of China Volume 10 Late Ch ing 1800 1911 Part 1 Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 371 ISBN 978 0 521 21447 6 Millward 1998 p 168 Harrison Henrietta 2013 The Missionary s Curse and Other Tales from a Chinese Catholic Village Vol 26 of Asia Local Studies Global Themes University of California Press p 59 ISBN 978 0520954724 Retrieved 28 November 2010 Millward 1998 p 285 As per Ma Tong 2003 M Th Houtsma 1993 E J Brill s first encyclopedia of Islam 1913 1936 BRILL p 720 ISBN 90 04 09790 2 Retrieved 28 October 2010 Lipman Jonathan Neaman 1998 Familiar strangers a history of Muslims in Northwest China Hong Kong University Press p 59 ISBN 962 209 468 6 Lipman s source is Joseph Fletcher The Naqshbandiya in Northwest China in Beatrcie Manz ed 1995 Studies on Chinese and Islamic Inner Asia London Variorum James Prinsep Memoir on Chinese Tartary and Khoten The Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal No 48 December 1835 P 655 On Google Books Prinsep s article is also available in The Chinese Repository 1843 p 234 On Google Books A modern 2003 reprint is available ISBN 1 4021 5631 6 Karl Ernst von Baer Grigoriĭ Petrovich Gelʹmersen Beitrage zur Kenntniss des russischen Reiches und der angranzenden Lander Asiens Kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften 1839 p 91 On Google Books in German Robert Montgomery Martin China political commercial and social an official report 1847 p 19 On Internet Archive For example Thomas Edward Gordon writes about the Tunganis with taifu wall pieces small cannons guarding the walls of Yaqub Beg s capital Kashgar in today s Western Xinjiang in his book The roof of the world being a narrative of a journey over the high plateau of Tibet to the Russian frontier and the Oxus sources on Pamir A Times journalist in Russia and China in Central Asia reprinted by The Brisbane Courier Wednesday 8 January 1879 distinguishes the Tungan Country today eastern Xinjiang and Eastern Turkestan corresponding to Yaqub Beg s state in today s western Xinjiang He talks about the Tungani who had erected in the various cities of Hamil Barkul Guchen Urumtsi and Manas a confederacy of no mean power See e g an anonymous article Mohammedanism in China in The Living age Volume 145 Issue 1876 29 May 1880 Pp 515 525 Reprinted from the Edinburgh Review While using Mohammedans as the generic description of Chinese Muslim s throughout the article including e g the Panthays then recently rebelling in Yunnan the author describes a n insurrection beginning in Singan fu and spreading to Kan suh in 1862 in which the Tungani a mysterious race of Muslims dwelling in that region supposed to be the remnant of the armies of Kublai Khan were the chief actors p 524 Broomhall Marshall 1910 Islam in China a neglected problem China Inland Mission p 147 OCLC 347514 A 1966 reprint by Paragon Book Reprint is available Relatedly the Russian word for China is also Kitai Kitaj and for Chinese is kitaitsy kitajcy a label that is not applied to the Dungans dungane in an ethnic sense that is Dungans and kitaitsi Chinese were regarded as different ethnic groups or nationalities Broomhall 1910 p 260 Owen Lattimore Inner Asian Frontiers of China Page 183 in the 1951 edition Twitchett Denis Crispin 1978 The Cambridge History of China Volume 11 Cambridge University Press pp 215 242 ISBN 0 521 22029 7 Twitchett s definition p 215 is in line with the authors of 1870s 1880s rather than with that of more recent Lattimore for Twitchett Tungans include the Huis of Shaanxi and Gansu as well not just of Xinjiang Millward James A 1998 Beyond the pass economy ethnicity and empire in Qing Central Asia 1759 1864 Stanford University Press pp 35 etc ISBN 0 8047 2933 6 Kim Ho dong 2004 Holy war in China the Muslim rebellion and state in Chinese Central Asia 1864 1877 Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 4884 5 Jimenez Tovar Soledad 2016 The Anthropologist as a Mushroom PDF Field Notes and Research Projects Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology ISSN 2193 987X Retrieved 9 February 2020 Right after Bi Yankhu s arrival from 1878 until 1903 the village was called Karakunuz meaning black beetle in local Turkic languages Dyer 1992 believes that this was a nickname given by local Turkic speakers to Dungans due to the fact that Dungan women liked to wear black at that time In 1903 the name changed to Nikolaevka after the Russian Tsar and it changed again in 1918 when the name Karakunuz was again adopted and did not change until 1964 when as part of the rehabilitation of Magaza Masanchi the village was renamed after him Masanchi Besides these official names Masanchi also has a Dungan name Yinpan which appears in the left image on the wall7 Population data for Zhambyl Province towns and villages Archived 1 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine 1999 2002 Svetlana Rimsky Korsakoff Dyer 1991 I A syr Shivaza the life and works of a Soviet Dungan poet illustrated ed P Lang p 205 ISBN 3 631 43963 6 Retrieved 11 June 2011 Forbes 1986 p 130 Georg Vasel Gerald Griffin 1937 My Russian jailers in China Hurst amp Blackett p 143 Archived from the original on 8 May 2021 Retrieved 28 June 2010 a b Charles E Ziegler 2014 Civil Society and Politics in Central Asia Asia in the New Millennium University Press of Kentucky ISBN 9780813150789 Retrieved 8 February 2020 DAUROV HUSEJ ShIMAROVICh Best People the Great International Encyclopedia Kazakhs Start Returning Home From Kyrgyzstan After Weekend s Ethnic Violence RadioFreeEurope RadioLiberty Retrieved 10 February 2020 Kazakhstan clashes kill 10 people and injure at least 40 others euronews 9 February 2020 Retrieved 10 February 2020 Archived copy Archived from the original on 20 October 2008 Retrieved 1 December 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Henry Lansdell 1885 Russian Central Asia Including Kuldja Bokhara Khiva and Merv Sampson Low Marston Searle and Rivington pp 209 10 Touraj Atabaki Sanjyot Mehendale 2005 Central Asia and the Caucasus transnationalism and diaspora Psychology Press p 31 ISBN 0 415 33260 5 Retrieved 1 January 2011 French Centre for Research on Contemporary China 2000 China perspectives Issues 27 32 C E F C p 68 Retrieved 1 January 2011 Barbara A West 2008 Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Asia and Oceania Volume 1 Infobase Publishing p 195 ISBN 978 0 8160 7109 8 Retrieved 1 January 2011 James Stuart Olson Nicholas Charles Pappas 1994 An Ethnohistorical dictionary of the Russian and Soviet empires Greenwood Publishing Group p 204 ISBN 0 313 27497 5 Retrieved 1 January 2011 Svetlana Rimsky Korsakoff Dyer 1979 Soviet Dungan kolkhozes in the Kirghiz SSR and the Kazakh SSR Faculty of Asian Studies ANU p 62 ISBN 0 909879 11 7 Retrieved 1 January 2011 Ḥevrah ha Mizraḥit ha Yisreʾelit 1983 Asian and African studies Volume 16 Jerusalem Academic Press p 338 Retrieved 1 January 2011 Asian Folklore Institute Society for Asian Folklore Nanzan Daigaku Jinruigaku Kenkyujo Nanzan Shukyō Bunka Kenkyujo 1992 Asian folklore studies Volume 51 Nanzan University Institute of Anthropology p 256 Retrieved 28 June 2010 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Soviet Sociology International Arts and Sciences Press 1962 p 42 Richard V Weekes 1984 Muslim peoples a world ethnographic survey Volume 1 Greenwood Press p 334 ISBN 0 313 23392 6 Retrieved 28 November 2010 James Stuart Olson Nicholas Charles Pappas 1994 An Ethnohistorical dictionary of the Russian and Soviet empires Greenwood Publishing Group p 202 ISBN 0 313 27497 5 Retrieved 28 November 2010 James A Millward 1998 Beyond the pass economy ethnicity and empire in Qing Central Asia 1759 1864 Stanford University Press p 215 ISBN 0 8047 2933 6 Retrieved 28 November 2010 Laura Newby 2005 The Empire and the Khanate a political history of Qing relations with Khoqand c 1760 1860 BRILL p 148 ISBN 90 04 14550 8 Retrieved 28 November 2010 Works cited Edit Forbes Andrew D W 9 October 1986 Warlords and Muslims in Chinese Central Asia A Political History of Republican Sinkiang 1911 1949 CUP Archive ISBN 978 0 521 25514 1 Further reading EditAlles Elisabeth 2005 The Chinese speaking Muslims Dungans of Central Asia A Case of Multiple Identities in a Changing Context Asian Ethnicity 6 No 2 June 121 134 Ding Hong 2005 A Comparative Study on the Cultures of the Dungan and the Hui People Asian Ethnicity 6 No 2 June 135 140 Svetlana Rimsky Korsakoff Dyer 1979 Soviet Dungan kolkhozes in the Kirghiz SSR and the Kazakh SSR Oriental monograph series Faculty of Asian Studies Australian National University ISBN 0 909879 11 7 Svetlana Rimsky Korsakoff Dyer Karakunuz An Early Settlement of the Chinese Muslims in Russia with an English translation of V Tsibuzgin and A Shmakov s work Asian Folklore Studies Vol 51 1992 pp 243 279 马通 Ma Tong 吉尔吉斯草原上的东干族穆斯林文化 Dungans Muslim culture on the grasslands of Kyrgyzstan Series 丝绸之路上的穆斯林文化 Muslim Cultures of the Silk Road 2003 April 27 in Chinese This article has some details additional to Rimsky Korsakoff 1992 Sushanlo Muhamed Imazov Muhame Sovet huejzy vynshүә Frunze Mektep chubanshә 1988 Mukhamed Sushanlo Mukhame Imazov Dungan Soviet Literature textbook for 9th and 10th grade Frunze 1988 ISBN 5 658 00068 8 http nirc nanzan u ac jp publications afs pdf a916 pdf Archived 12 August 2011 at the Wayback MachineExternal links Edit Look up ح و ذ و in Wiktionary the free dictionary Map of Dungan settlement in Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan A Very Dungan Wedding Article on Kyrgyz Dungans Dungans Forum rus Chinabroadcast cn Soviet Census data analyzed by mother tongue and second language in English Association of Dungans of the Kyrgyz Republic in English and Russian Samples of the Dungans Cuisine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dungan people amp oldid 1137259586, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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