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Monguor people

The Monguor (Chinese: 蒙古尔; Tu: Mongghul), the Tu people (Chinese: 土族), the White Mongol or the Tsagaan Mongol, are Mongolic people and one of the 56 officially recognized ethnic groups in China. The "Tu" ethnic category was created in the 1950s.

Monguor/Tu/Mongghul
A Monguor woman in Huzhu County, Xining, Qinghai Province
Total population
289,565 (2010 Census)
Regions with significant populations
China: Qinghai and Gansu
Languages
Monguor and Wutun
Religion
Predominantly Yellow Sect (or Tibetan) Buddhism, Taoism, and Christianity
Related ethnic groups
Mongolic peoples

According to the 2000 census, the total population was 241,198, who mostly lived in the Qinghai and the Gansu provinces. The 2010 census gave their number as 289,565. The Monguor people speak the Monguor language, which belongs to the family of Mongolic languages but has been heavily influenced by both the local Chinese and Tibetan dialects. Today, nearly all Tu people also speak Chinese. Most are farmers and some keep livestock.

Their culture and the social organizations have been influenced by Tibetan Buddhism, Confucianism, Taoism and local beliefs. A few Tu in Huzhu and Minhe are Christian, the result of on-going American and Korean missionary work in the area.

Ethnic origins

 
Tu's costumes

The ethnic history of the Monguor is contested. It has been variously suggested that their origins are related to the Tuyuhun Xianbei, to Mongol troops who came to the current Qinghai-Gansu area during the time of the Mongol conquests, to the Shatuo and/or to the Han Chinese.[1][2]

Terminology

Origins

Some references argue that the Chinese term "Tu" was derived from the name of Tuyühu Khan, who was the older son of the King of Murong Xianbei who migrated westward from the northeast in 284. The last character of Tuyühu, pronounced as "hun" today, may have been pronounced "hu" in some dialect of ancient Chinese language. The contemporary reference of this name is rendered "Tuyuhun" in China and the West should be "Tuyühu." It came from the Chinese phonetic transcription of his original name "Teihu",[3][4] which is still a common name seen among the Monguor today. Since the Chinese language cannot represent "Tei," two characters of "Tu" and "yü" were used. The ethnonym "Tu" in Chinese came from the abbreviation of "the Tuyühu people" or "the people of the Tuyühu Empire." Between the years 908 and 1042, the reference became simplified into "Tuhu" and "Tüihu" people.[5][6] As the other ethnic groups of the Tuyühu Empire came to be ascribed with different ethnonyms through subsequent history, the Xianbei who founded the empire remained to bear with the identity of "Tu."

The name "Tu" was most likely associated with a derogatory meaning and "indigenous people". Its derogatory undertone came from the concurrent meaning of the Chinese character "Tu" for "soil." The ethnonym "Tu" is increasingly a self-reference.

Monguor

The reference of "Monguor" in the Western publications came from their self-reference as "Chaghan Monguor" (or "White Mongols"). It was derived from their origins from the Murong Xianbei, from whom Tuyühu Khan separated and who had been historically referred to as "the White Section" or "Bai Bu," due to their lighter skin.[7][8][9] The term "Monguor" was first used by the European Catholic missionaries, Smedt and Mosaert, who studied the Monguor language and compiled a Monguor-French dictionary in the beginning of the twentieth century.[10][11][12][13][14][15] Subsequently, the Flemish Catholic missionary, Louis Schram, made it into an international name through three volumes of extensive reports based on his experiences from having lived among them from 1911 to 1922.[16][17][18] The term is a variant pronunciation of "Mongol" in the Monguor language, characterized by the final "-r" in place of "-l" in the Mongolian language.[19]

Despite that "Monguor" was made into an international name for the "Tu," it is not representative: the reference is only used by the Monguor in Huzhu and Datong counties in Qinghai, and when used, it should be combined with "Chaghan" (or "White") in order to be distinguished from the "Khara" (or "Black") Mongols.[citation needed] In Minhe County, which holds the most densely populated "Monguor" settlement and where everyone speaks their native "Monguor" language, it is never used as an autonym.[citation needed]

Genetic studies

Sequences in the DNA of the Tu people indicate that Greeks mixed with an East Asian population around 1200 AD, contributing about 7,7% to the Tu genepool. The source of this European DNA might have been merchants travelling the Silk Road.[20][21] This admixture may come from an earlier period as many of their carnival-like festivals and masked fertility rituals have similarities in the Hellenistic times with Dionysian representations, not in Byzantine Christian-era Greek celebrations. [22]

Distribution of Y-chromosome haplogroups in Monguor:[23]

O=38.85(O2=31.42,O1a=4.13,O1b=3.3)

D=14.87

R1=14.05(R1a=13.22,R1b=0.83)

N=11.57

C=9.09

J=5.79

others=5.78

History

Donghu

Their earliest origins from the Donghu are reflected in their account of the unique wedding ceremony attributed to Madam Lushi,[24] who organized an ambush through an elaborate banquet combined with liquor and singing in order to subdue a bully named "Wang Mang".[25][26][27][28][29] In historical terms, the "Wang Mang" people were recorded more than four thousand years ago as physically robust and active on the west of the present Liaoning, whose culture was associated with the Hongshan Culture.[30][31][32] In archaeological terms, the Hongshan Culture gradually gave rise to the Lower Xiajiadian Culture and represented the transition toward the bronze technology. It eventually evolved into the Upper Xiajidian Culture, which was associated with the Donghu and characterized by the practice of agriculture and animal husbandry supplemented by handicrafts and bronze art. The Donghu was a federation formed from the Donghu, Wuhuan, and Xianbei.

Among the northern ethnic groups, the Donghu was the earliest to evolve into a state of civilization and first developed bronze technology. Through the usage of bronze weaponry and armored cavalry in warfare, they maintained extensive dominance over the Xiongnu on their west. In the end of the third century B.C., the Xiongnu Maodun attacked to destroy the Donghu by surprise and caused disintegration in the federation. The Wuhuan moved to Mt. Wuhuan and engaged in continuous warfare with the Xiongnu on the west and China on the south. The Donghu spoke Mongolic language and was formed by the federation of the Donghu, Wuhuan, and Xianbei.[33][34]

Xianbei

As the Wuhuan and Xiongnu came to be worn out from the lengthy battles, the Xianbei preserved their strengths by moving northward to Mt. Xianbei. In the first century, the Xianbei defeated the Wuhuan and northern Xiongnu, and developed into a powerful state under the leadership of their elected Khan, Tanshihuai. In the third century, the Eastern Han dynasty (25-220 BC) disintegrated into three kingdoms, including the Cao Wei (220-265) in the north, the Eastern Wu (222-280) in the south, and the Shu Han (221-263) in the southwest. In 235, the Cao Wei assassinated the last Khan of the Xianbei, Kebineng, and caused disintegration in the Xianbei Kingdom. Thereafter, the Xianbei pushed their way inside the Great Wall of China and established extensive presence in China.

During the Sixteen Kingdoms (304-439) period, the Xianbei founded six kingdoms: the Former Yan (281-370), Western Yan (384-394), Later Yan (383-407), Southern Yan (398-410), Western Qin (385-430) and Southern Liang (397-414). Most of them were unified by the Tuoba Xianbei, who established the Northern Wei (386-535), which was the first of the Northern Dynasties (386-581) founded by the Xianbei.[35][36][37] In 534, the Northern Wei split into an Eastern Wei (534-550) and a Western Wei (535-556). The former evolved into the Northern Qi (550-577), and the latter into the Northern Zhou (557-581), while the Southern Dynasties were pushed to the south of the Yangtze. In 581, the Prime Minister of Northern Zhou, Yang Jian, usurped the throne and founded the Sui dynasty (581-618) as Emperor Wen of Sui. His son, Emperor Yang of Sui, annihilated the Chen dynasty (557-589) and unified northern and southern China, thereby bringing an end to the Southern and Northern Dynasties era. Over the course of this period, the Xianbei who entered into China were immersed among the Chinese and later classified into "Han". Yet, not all branches of the Xianbei shared this fate. In the 3rd and 4th centuries, Tuyühu, a branch of the Murong Xianbei, undertook a westward migration that allowed them and those who followed them to develop in a different path.

Westward migration

The separation of Tuyühu from the Murong Xianbei occurred during the Western Jin dynasty (265-316), which succeeded the Cao Wei (220-265) in northern China. Legends accounted the separation to be due to a fight between his horses and those of his younger brother, Murong Wei. The actual cause was intense struggle over the Khanate position and disagreement over their future directions. The fraction that supported Murong Wei into the Khanate position aimed at ruling over China, whereas Tuyühu intended to preserve the Xianbei culture and lifestyles. The disagreement resulted in Tuyühu to proclaim as the Khan, or Kehan, and undertook the long westward journey under the title of the Prince of Jin, or Jin Wang, followed by other Xianbei and Wuhuan groups. While passing through western Liaoning and Mt. Bai, more Xianbei groups joined them from the Duan, Yuwen, and Bai sections. At the Hetao Plains near Ordos in Inner Mongolia, Tuyühu Khan led them to reside by Mt. Yin for over thirty years, as the Tuoba Xianbei and Northern Xianbei joined them through political and marriage alliances. After settling down in the northwest, they established the powerful Tuyühu Empire named to his honor as the first Khan who led them there, by subjugating the native peoples who were summarily referred to as the "Qiang" and included more than 100 different and loosely coordinated tribes that did not submit to each other or any authorities.

After Tuyühu Khan departed from the northeast, Murong Wei composed an "Older Brother’s Song," or "the Song of A Gan:" "A Gan" is Chinese transcription of "a ga" for "older brother" in the Xianbei language.[5][38] The song lamented his sadness and longing for Tuyühu. Legends accounted that Murong Wei often sang it until he died and the song got spread into central and northwest China. The Murong Xianbei whom he had led successively founded the Former Yan (281-370), Western Yan (384-394), Later Yan (383-407), and Southern Yan (398-410). Their territories encompassed, at their height, the present Liaoning, Inner Mongolia, Shandong, Shanxi, Hebei, and Henan, and their capitals included Beijing and other cities. Through these establishments, they were immersed among the Chinese, whereas the Xianbei who followed Tuyühu Khan preserved their language and culture.

Mt. Xianbei

In the extensive migrations that the Xianbei undertook in the northeast, northern, and northwest China, the name of Mt. Xianbei was found along their trajectories. The earliest recorded Mt. Xianbei was in the southern portions of Daxinganling, located in northeast Inner Mongolia, which represented the originating place of the Xianbei. Two Mt. Xianbei were recorded subsequently in western Liaoning: one in the present Jinzhou City and one near Yi County. Another Mt. Xianbei was recorded in the northern portions of Daxinganling, located near Alihe Town of Oroqin Autonomous Banner in Hulunbeiermeng in the northeastern portion of Inner Mongolia that borders eastern Russia. The Gaxian Cave,[39] currently Khabarovsk and Amur regions in the Russian Far East, which had stone inscriptions of the Northern Wei emperor dated 443, was recognized to be the sacred ancestral shrine of the Xianbei. In the northwest, the Qilian Mountains that run along Gansu and Qinghai provinces were referred to as the Greater Mt. Xianbei. In Sanchuan/Guanting of Minhe County in Qinghai, which holds the most densely populated Monguor settlement, Mt. Xianbei stands in the west, upon which sits the ancestral shrine of the Xianbei Khans.

Tuyuhun Empire

After Tuyühu Khan died in Linxia, also known as Huozhou, Gansu in 317, his sixty sons inherited to further develop the empire, by annihilating the Western Qin (385-430), which had annexed Southern Liang (396-414) earlier, and Haolian Xia (407-431) kingdoms, from which the Qinghai Xianbei, Tufa Xianbei, Qifu Xianbei and Haolian Xianbei joined them. These Xianbei groups formed the core of the Tuyuhun Empire and numbered about 3.3 million at their peak. They carried out extensive military expeditions westward, reaching as far as Hetian in Xinjiang and the borders of Kashmir and Afghanistan, and established a vast empire that encompassed Qinghai, Gansu, Ningxia, northern Sichuan, eastern Shaanxi, southern Xinjiang, and most of Tibet, stretching 1,500 kilometers from the east to the west and 1,000 kilometers from the north to the south. They unified northwest China for the first time in history, developed the southern route of the Silk Road, and promoted cultural exchanges between the eastern and western territories, dominating the northwest for more than three and half centuries until the empire was destroyed by the Tibetans who rose up in 670.[40]

Tibet

Through this extensive rule, the Xianbei asserted everlasting cultural imprints in the region. The English reference for "Tibet" most likely came from the Xianbei language for the Tibetans referred to as "Tiebie," in contrast to the self-reference of the Tibetans as "Bo".[41] The name "Tiebie" was probably derived from the Tuoba Xianbei who founded the Southern Liang (397-414). Because the Tuoba who established the Northern Wei (386-535) in China proper objected the Tuoba of Southern Liang to use the same Chinese characters, the latter adopted "Tufa" when in fact they were of the same Tuoba descent.[42] After the Southern Liang was annexed by the Western Qin, which in turn was annexed by the Tuyühu Empire, the majority of Tufa Xianbei joined the Tuyühu Empire. Some submitted under the Northern Wei in China, while a small fraction went into Tibet and gave rise to the name "Tiebie".[43] In the ancient Chinese records, the reference of Tibet included "Tubo" and "Tufan," which reflected the Chinese transcriptions of "Tuoba" and "Tufa." It is likely that "Tuoba" recorded in the Chinese language may have been pronounced as "Tiebie" originally in the Xianbei language. Among the Monguor settlement in Minhe, Qinghai today, the La and Bao Family Villages were accounted to have descended from "Tiebie",[44] indicating that they have derived their origins from the Tufa (Tuoba) Xianbei of the Southern Liang. The Tibetans refer to the Monguor as "Huo’er," which came from the final word of the name of Tuyühu Khan. The Monguor refer to Tuyühu Khan as "Huozhou didi;" in which "Huozhou" was applied to Linxia, Gansu where Tuyühu Khan died, and "didi" was traditionally a reverence term for a deceased ancestor with deity status. The earliest record of the Monguor in the Western publications was made by the French missionaries, Huc and Gabet, who traveled through northwest China in 1844–46. They used "Dschiahour" to represent the Monguor, based on Tibetan reference,[45] in which "Dschia" was likely abbreviated from the first part of "Chaghan" (or "White") from the self-reference of the Monguor as "Chaghan Monguor" (or "White Mongols"), and "Hour" was a variant record to the Tibetan reference of the Monguor as "Huo’er" used by the Tibetans today.

Rise of Tibet

In the beginning of the Tang dynasty, the Tuyühu Empire came to a gradual decline and was increasingly caught in the conflict between the Tang and the Tibetan Empire. Because the Tuyühu Empire controlled the crucial trade routes between the east and the west, the Empire became the immediate target of invasion by the Tang. Meanwhile, the Tibetan Empire developed rapidly under the leadership of Songtsen Gampo, who united the Tibetans and expanded northward, directly threatening the Tuyühu Empire. The exile Tuyühu Khan, Dayan, submitted under Tibet, which resorted to an excuse that Tuyühu objected its marriage with the Tang and sent 200,000 troops to attack. The Tuyühu troops retreated to Qinghai, whereas Tibet went eastward to attack the Tangut and reached into southern Gansu. The Tang government was shocked and sent (five ???) troops to fight. Although Tibet withdrew in response, the Tuyühu Empire lost much of its territory in southern Gansu. Meanwhile, the Tuyühu government was split between the pro-Tang and pro-Tibet factions, with the latter becoming increasingly stronger and corroborating with Tibet to bring about an invasion. The Tang sent its famous general, Xue Rengui, to lead 100,000 troops to fight Tibet in Dafeichuan (present Gonghe County in Qinghai). They were annihilated in an ambush by 200,000 troops of Dayan and Tibet, which became the biggest debacle in the Tang history, and formally brought the Tuyühu Empire to an end.

After its fall in 670, the Tuyühu Empire split into an Eastern and Western Kingdom. The Eastern Kingdom existed on the eastern side of the Qilian Mountains and increasingly migrated eastward into central China, whereas the Western Kingdom existed under the leadership of the former exile Khan, Dayan, in Tibet. As the An Lushan Rebellion shook up the Tang court and caused its emperor to flee, Tibet overtook the entire territory of Tuyühu until internal turmoil developed within the Tibetan government and massive revolts brought an end to its rule. Through this period, the Xianbei underwent massive diasporas over a vast territory that stretched from the northwest into central and eastern parts of China, with the greatest concentrations found by Mt. Yin near Ordos. In 946, the Shatuo Turk, Liu Zhiyuan, conspired to murder the highest Xianbei leader, Bai Chengfu, who was reportedly so wealthy that "his horses had silver mangers".[46] With that stolen wealth, which included an abundance of property and thousands of fine horses, Liu established the Later Han (947-950), the shortest dynasty in Chinese history, lasting only four years. The incident took away the central leadership and removed any possibility for the Xianbei to restore the Tuyühu Empire.

Western Xia Empire

The Western Xia Empire inherited the political and social structures of the Tang and further developed an outstanding civilization characterized as "shining and sparkling".[47] It became the new kingdom for the descendants of the Tuyühu Xianbei who had lost their country. The Western Xia made significant achievements in literature, art, music, architecture, and chemistry. Through effective military organizations that integrated cavalry, chariots, archery, shields, artillery (cannons carried on the back of camels), and amphibious troops for combats on the land and water,[48] the Xia army maintained a powerful stance in opposition to the Song, Liao (916-1125), and Jin (1115–1234) empires to its east, the last of which was founded by the Jurchens, who were the predecessors of the Manchus who would found the Qing Dynasty (1644–1912). The Xia territory encompassed the present Ningxia, Gansu, eastern Qinghai, northern Shaanxi, northeastern Xinjiang, southwest Inner Mongolia, and southernmost Outer Mongolia, spanning about 800,000 square kilometers.[49][50][51] In the beginning of the thirteenth century, Genghis Khan unified the northern grasslands of Mongolia and led the Mongol troops to carry out six rounds of attacks against Western Xia over a period of twenty-two years. As Western Xia resisted vehemently, more and more of its people crossed the Qilian Mountains to join the earlier establishments in Qinghai and Gansu in order to avoid the Mongol assaults, which gave rise to the current settlements of the Monguor. During the last round of attacks, Genghis Khan died in Western Xia. The official Mongol historical account attributed his death to an illness, whereas legends told that he died from a wound inflicted in the battles. After the Xia capital was overrun in 1227, the Mongols destroyed much of hu its architecture and written records, killing the last emperor and massacring tens of thousands of civilians. The Xia troops were later incorporated into the Mongol army in their subsequent military conquests in central and southern China. Due to the fierce resistance of the Xia against the Mongol attacks, especially in causing the death of Genghis, they were initially suppressed in the Yuan Dynasty (1271–1368). Toward the middle and later stages of the Yuan, the Xia received equivalent treatment to the ruling Mongols and attained the highest offices in the Central Court. After the Yuan fell, the Xia who followed the Mongols into the northern grassland were immersed among and later classified into the "Mongols."

Tangut-Xixia

The English reference of "Tangut-Xixia" was derived from the combination of the Mongolian reference of "Tangut" and the Chinese reference as "Xixia" or "Western Xia." The Chinese reference was derived from the location of the empire on the western side of the Yellow River, in contrast to the Liao (916-1125) and Jin on its east. The Mongolian usage of "Tangut" most likely referred to the "Donghu people;" "-t" in Mongolian language means "people".[52][53] Whereas "Donghu" was a Chinese transcription, its Mongolian reference was "Tünghu".[54] By the time that the Mongols emerged in the thirteenth century, the only "Donghu people" who existed were the "Tu" in Western Xia.

That the Mongols referred to Western Xia as "Tangut" to represent the founding ethnic group, the Tuyühu Xianbei, is consistent with the theories of the Mongol origins postulated by the Outer Mongolian scholars, who have held that the Mongols had descended from the Xiongnu, more specifically the eastern Xiongnu who spoke proto-Mongolic language, as opposed to the western Xiongnu who spoke proto-Turkish language. In contrast, the Chinese scholars have characterized that the Mongols had descended from the Xianbei. The Mongols were recorded as "Mengwu Shiwei" in the Northern Dynasties: "Mengwu" was a variant Chinese transcription of "Menggu" designated to the Mongols, and "Shiwei" was a variant transcription of the Xianbei, as "Xianbei" was also recorded as "Sian-pie," "Serbi," "Sirbi" and "Sirvi".[55] This equated the Mongols to be "Mongol Xianbei," which was likely associated with the submission of the Xiongnu under Xianbei. In 87 A.D., the Xianbei defeated the northern Xiongnu and killed their king, Chanyu Youliu, causing its thorough disintegration. Thereafter, the Xiongnu submitted under and self-proclaimed to be Xianbei.[56] This resulted in a mix of the Xiongnu into Xianbei and made it difficult to differentiate the two groups in subsequent historical records. That the Mongolian term "Tangut" represented "the Donghu people," the Xianbei and their descendants who had founded the Tuyühu and Western Xia empires, would validate the theories of the Outer Mongolian scholars that the Mongols had descended from the Xiongnu. The fact that there were Wuhuan groups, who were part of the Donghu federation and followed Tuyühu Khan in the westward migration, would make the interpretation that "Tangut" represented "the Donghu people" stronger, not only from reflecting that the Wuhuan joined the Xianbei in the Tuyühu and Western Xia empires, but also contrasting that the Mongols had descended from the Xiongnu. If the Mongols had descended from the Xianbei, as the Chinese scholars characterized, the Mongols would have shared the same ethnic origins with the Xianbei of the Tuyühu Empire and not have called them as "the Donghu people" in reference of Western Xia. While the intimate associations between the two groups were manifested in the cross references of the Mongols as "Mengwu Shiwei" (or "Mongol Xianbei") from the first century and the Monguor as "Chaghan (or White) Monguor" in the thirteenth century, ethnically and culturally they remained different. As much as the prefix "Mengwu" (or "Mongol") in front of "Shiwei" (or "Xianbei") marked the difference between the Mongols and the Xianbei, the prefix "Chaghan" in front of "Monguor" indicated that the Monguor and their Xianbei predecessors were not the same as the Mongols. Culturally, the Mongols have retained a nomadic lifestyle, whereas the social organizations and religious lives of the Monguor are of far greater complexities.

Mongols, Khitans, and Jurchens

When the Mongols emerged as a mighty power in the thirteenth century, a reverse occurred in the ethnonyms of the Xianbei and Mongols. This was represented in the reference of the Xianbei descendants as "Chaghan Monguor" (or "White Mongols"), which gave rise to the ethnonym of "Monguor" known in the Western publications. The term "White Mongols," or "Bai Menggu," first occurred when Genghis Khan united the Mongols to rise up in Mongolia in 1206. The Xianbei descendants who resided near Mt. Yin self-proclaimed to be "White Mongols" and joined them. They received the same treatment as the Mongols and partook in their westward conquests in Central Asia and Europe.[57]

As waves and waves of the Xianbei went south and westward to establish different empires, those who remained in the northeast emerged as major powers later to rule over China. While the "Mongol Xianbei" (or "Mengwu Shiwei") emerged from the northern Manchuria and northeastern Mongolia, the Khitans, or "Qidan" in Chinese, derived their ancestral origins from the Yuwen Xianbei in southern Mongolia,[58] who had earlier founded the Western Wei (535-556) and Northern Zhou (557-581) of the Northern Dynasties. When the Khitans established the Liao Dynasty (916-1125) in China proper, they were referred to as "Qara (or Black) Khitāy".[59] Their rule gave rise to the reference of China known as "Hătāi" and "Cathay" in the Persian and European countries.[60] The reference of "Qara" (or "Black") as a prefix in the name of the Khitans and "Khara" (or "Black") in that of the Mongols may indicate that both groups had substantial input from the Xiongnu, who by self proclaiming to be "Xianbei" earlier made it hard in distinguish in the Chinese records.

After the Xianbei vacated from the northeast, the Jurchens, known as "Nüzhen" in Chinese, moved southward into Manchuria from their original habitation in the Tungus Plains in eastern Russia located on the north of Manchuria. They occupied the former areas of the Xianbei and ascribed Mt. Xianbei with a new name, known as "Daxinganling," which remains to be used today and literally meant "White Mountains" in their Tungus language.[61] They first established the Jin dynasty (1115–1234) in northern China by pushing the Liao Empire of the Khitans westward into Xinjiang. After the Jin Empire was destroyed by the Mongols in 1234, they withdrew back to Manchuria and returned later with the rejoined forces from the Mongols to establish the last dynasty of the Qing (1644–1912) in China under the new ethnonym of Manchu, or "Man Zu" in Chinese.

Xia title

The full national title of Western Xia was "the Great Xia Kingdom of the White and Mighty," or "Bai Gao Da Xia Guo" (白高大夏国). The term "White" (or "Bai") was designated to the founding ethnic group, the Xianbei descendants of the Tuyühu Empire, which is consistent with their reference of "Chaghan" (or "White"), derived from their origins from the Murong Xianbei known as the "White Section." The term "Mighty" (or "Gao") was designated to the "Qiang" people who formed the majority of the population. The "Qiang" were the native peoples who were subjugated by the Xianbei in the northwest. They initially rebelled but later their fate became intimately associated with the Xianbei, as they actively defended the empire when the enemies attacked. In addition to the Tibetans and authentic Han people, the "Qiang" comprised a portion of the Miao/Hmong who were relocated to the northwest from central China after their Three Miao Kingdom was destroyed by the legendary Chinese Emperor Yü the Great about four thousand years ago.[62][63] The "Qiang" referred to Western Xia as their "Gao (or ‘Mighty’) Mi Yao" Kingdom.[64] When "Mi Yao" is pronounced together, it is similar to "Miao." Since the autonyms of the Miao/Hmong include "Guoxiong",[65] "Gaoxiong," and "Gouxiong," the character "Gao" (or "Mighty") in the Xia national title could have derived as a variant abbreviation. "Bai Gao" in the national title was in turn used it to refer to the Yellow River, which had traditionally been referred to as the "Mother River" of China, known as "Mu Qin He," that has nurtured their homeland.

Current status

 
Mongour in 1901

The Flemish Catholic missionary, Schram, who wrote about the Monguor based on residence in the current Qinghai Province in the early twentieth century, cited Comte de Lesdain,[66] who characterized the Monguor as "the most authentic reminder of the primitive race from which the Chinese sprung."[67] This characterization reflected that the Monguor culture under their observation has embodied "a high civilization fortified by its own history and distinctive social structure"[68] developed by the Xianbei forefathers from their extensive rulings over China and preserved by the "Monguor"/"Tu". As early as the Tuyühu period, Confucianism served as the core ideology to govern the country, and the Chinese Buddhism and Shamanism functioned as the principle religions. In Western Xia, Confucianism was further strengthened, and Taoism was made into the national religion along with Buddhism. As the Yellow Sect of Buddhism, also known as the Tibetan Buddhism, became prevalent in the northwest, their religious lives shifted from the Chinese toward Tibetan Buddhism. After Western Xia fell, its territory centered in Ningxia was fragmented by the successive establishments of Shaanxi, Gansu, and Qinghai provinces, which increasingly weakened the political and military powers of the Monguor. Through the Ming (1368–1644) and Qing (1644–1912) dynasties, the Monguor continued to play important roles in the national defense, and political and religious affairs of China. Starting in the middle of the Ming Dynasty, the ranches of the Monguor were taken into the state possession, and their horses became the subject of being drafted into the national army and looted by the Mongols from the north, resulting in the eventual shift of their lifestyles toward sedentary agriculture, supplemented by minimum animal husbandry, as the original Monguor groups became settled into the form of different villages. In the last two centuries, the areas formerly occupied by the Monguor were encroached upon by increasing inland Chinese migrations. Throughout this period, the Monguor maintained a high degree of political autonomy and self governance under the local chiefdom system of Tusi.[69][70][71][72][73] The Monguor troops led by their Tusi defended not only their own homeland but also joined the national army to participate in wars that took place as far as in eastern Liaoning, Shaanxi, Shanxi, Yunnan, Mongolia, and Dunhuang,[74] which progressively weakened their military power. Their political power came to the ultimate decline when the Tusi system was abolished in 1931, which exacerbated more Monguor to lose their language. By the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949, only about fifty thousand of the Monguor have maintained to speak their language, primarily in Qinghai and Gansu. During the Chinese classificatory campaigns carried out in the 1950s, those who could no longer speak their language were classified into "Han", those who could not speak their language but adopted the Islamic religion were classified into "Hui", those who followed the Mongols into the northern grassland were classified into "Mongols", and those who spoke their language and adopted the Islamic religion were classified into "Dongxiang", "Bonan" and "Yugur", the last of which represented the intermixture of the Xianbei and Sari Uyghurs.

Culture

 
A Monguor masked dance performance.

Most Monguor in rapidly changing rural settlements today practice sedentary agriculture, supplemented by minimum animal husbandry, and seasonal work in towns and cities. Those who have succeeded in the Chinese educational system take up government jobs in a wide range of academic, medical, and business fields.

Traditional Monguor culture and language have become endangered.[75][76] Traditional events like weddings, Nadun, funerals, and New Year rituals are increasingly abbreviated and traditional songs, riddles, folktales, and proverbs are vanishing.[citation needed]

Religion

In most villages, a Buddhist temple and a Taoist shrine coexist. Almost all the temples and shrines seen today have been rebuilt in the last three decades, since they were invariably destroyed during the Cultural Revolution (1966–1976). While Buddhist monks are common in most villages, Taoist priests and shamans have become very few and serve the whole area. The Taoist priests take charge of diverse functions that include weddings, funerals, and looking after the shrines, whereas the shaman's primary function is to serve as a trance medium during the Nadun celebration and sometimes illness management.[77][78][79] Local accounts indicated that there have been multiple Catholic churches constructed in the Monguor areas in the past.[80] They were destroyed in the early 1950s after the Communists took control and have not been rebuilt.[citation needed]

Nadun and Anzhao

Distinctive cultural events take place throughout the year. Whereas the common festival held during the Spring Festival is "Yangguo," the most characteristic tradition is represented by Nadun that takes place in the end of the summer. Nadun resembles Nadam of the Mongols in name but are different in format and content. Both "Nadun" and "Nadam" are special nouns designated to an annual festival and reflect their shared origins from the Xianbei who were recorded to have "one major gathering every spring for leisure and fun by river".[81] Whereas the Mongolian Nadam preserved the nomadic features of horse race, wrestling, and archery, the Monguor Nadun has encoded their history through masked dance performances and presents as an annual military drill combined with joyful celebrations of harvest.[82] Held by villages in turn along the Yellow River and circles through the entire Sanchuan/Guanting region in Minhe, the Nadun festival is inherently tied to agricultural work. It functions as the Monguor form of "Thanksgiving" in the Western culture and expresses gratitude for an abundance of harvest blessed by Heaven referred to as "Tiangere." The event lasts over two months, starting from the twelfth of the seventh month to the fifteenth of the ninth month by the Chinese lunar calendar, and spans for a total of 63 days, giving rise to its eponym as "the world’s longest festival".[83][84][85] Among the Huzhu Monguor, the characteristic traditional dance is "Anzhao." Its name and styles bear resemblance to the "Andai" dance of the Mongols who live in Ordos, an area that has historically served as the transitional point for the Xianbei to move about in China.

Wedding songs

The traditional weddings of the Monguor differ markedly. In Minhe County, elaborate rules of courtesy and appropriateness were at work. Many songs "daola" were sung for days and nights with great variations in melody and contents.[86][87] Wherever the Monguor go, they take their songs with them, which can be heard in parties, banquets, and at gatherings in cities where they work.

References

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Further reading

  • Anonymous (1977). Pater Lodewijk, Jozef, Maria Schram (1883–1971), "Een Brugs missionaris en etnoloog." Haec Olim 21: 16–24.
  • Dpal ldan bkra shis, Hu Jun, Hu Ping, Limusishiden (Li Dechun), Keith Slater, Kevin Stuart, Wang Xianzhen, and Zhu Yongzhong (1996). "Language Materials of China’s Monguor Minority: Huzhu Mongghul and Minhe Mangghuer." Sino-Platonic Papers No 69.
  • Dwyer, Arienne M (2005). "Language Contact and Variation: A Discourse-based Grammar of Monguor."
  • Feng Lide and Kevin Stuart (1992). "Interethnic Cultural Contact on the Inner Asian Frontier: The Gangou People of Minhe County, Qinghai." Sino Platonic Papers No 33.
  • Field, Kenneth L (1997). A Grammatical Overview of Santa Mongolian. University of California, Santa Barbara PhD dissertation.
  • Kämpfe, Hans-Rainer (1974). Die soziale Rolle des 2. Pekinger Lcang skya qutuqtu Rol pa’i rdo rje (1717–1786): Beitrage zu einer Analyse anhand Tibetischer und mongolischer Biographien. Bonn: Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität.
  • Georg, Stefan (2003). "Mongghul." In Juha Janhunen, editor (2003). The Mongolic Languages. London: Routledge. pp. 286–306.
  • Hasibate, editor (1986). Tuzu yu cidian [Tu Language Dictionary]. Mongolian Language Family Dialects Research Series Vol. 14. Huhehaote: Nei menggu renmin chubanshe [Inner Mongolia People's Press].
  • Hecken, J. Van (1977). "Schram, Lodewijk, Jozef, Maria, missionaris en etnoloog." Nationaal Biografisch Woordenboek 7:856-865.
  • Hu, Alex J.(2010) 'An overview of the history and culture of the Xianbei ('Monguor'/'Tu')', Asian Ethnicity, 11: 1, 95 – 164.
  • Hu Jun and Kevin Stuart (1992). "The Guanting Tu (Monguor) Wedding Ceremonies and Songs." Anthropos 87:109 132.
  • Hu Jun and Kevin Stuart (1992). "Illness Among the Minhe Tu, Qinghai Province: Prevention and Etiology." Mongolian Studies 15:111 135.
  • Illich, Marina (2006). Selections from the Life of a Tibetan Buddhist Polymath: Chankya Rolpai Dorje (Lcang skya rol pa’i rdo rje), 1717–1786. Columbia University PhD dissertation.
  • Janhunen, Juha, editor (2003). The Mongolic Languages. London: Routledge.
  • Janhunen, Juha (2003). "Shirongol and Shirongolic." Studia Etymologica Cracoviensia 8:83-89.
  • Janhunen, Juha (2006). "On the Shirongolic Names of Amdo." Studia Etymologica Cracoviensia 11:95-103.
  • Janhunen, Juha, Lionel Ha Mingzong and Joseph Tshe.dpag.rnam.rgyal (2007). "On the Language of the Shaowa Tuzu in the Context of the Ethnic Taxonomy of Amdo Qinghai." Central Asiatic Journal.
  • Lipman, Jonathan N (1981). The Border World of Gansu, 1895–1935. Stanford University PhD dissertation. Ann Arbor: University Microfilms.
  • Li Keyu (1987). Mongghul Qidar Merlong [Mongghul–Chinese Dictionary]. Xining: Qinghai renmin chubanshe [Qinghai People's Press].
  • Li Xuewei and Kevin Stuart (1990). "Population and Culture of the Mongols, Tu, Baoan, Dongxiang, and Yugu in Gansu." Mongolian Studies 12:71 93.
  • Limusishiden and Kevin Stuart (1994). "‘Caring for All the World’: The Huzhu Monguor (Tu) Pram." In Edward H. Kaplan and Donald W. Whisenhunt, editors. Opuscula Altaica: Essays in Honor of Henry Schwarz. Bellingham: Western Washington University Press. pp. 408–426
  • Limusishiden and Kevin Stuart (1995). "Larinbuda and Jiminsu: A Monguor Tragedy." Asian Theatre Journal 12:2, 221–263.
  • Limusishiden and Kevin Stuart (1996). "Review of Shilaode [Dominik Schröder] editor, translator, Li Keyu. Tuzu gesaer [Monguor Gesar]." Anthropos 91:297.
  • Limusishiden and Kevin Stuart, editors (1998). Huzhu Mongghul Folklore: Texts and Translations. München: Lincon Europa.
  • Limusishiden and Kevin Stuart (1999). "Huzhu Mongghul Language Materials." Suomalais-Ugrilaisen Seuran Aikakauskirja—Journal de la Société Finno-Ougrienne 88:261-264.
  • Limsishiden and Kevin Stuart, editors (2001). Huzhu Mongghul Texts: Chileb 1983–1996 Selections. 2 vol. München: Lincom Europa.
  • Liu, Xueyao (劉學銚) (1994). Xianbei shi lun 鮮卑史論. Taibei 台北市, Nan tian shu ju 南天書局.
  • Lu Jianfu (吕建福) (2002). Tu Zu Shi (土族史, The Tu History). Beijing (北京), Chinese Social Sciences Publishing House (中国社会科学出版社).
  • Missions de Scheut (1920). Geschiedenis van de Christenheid Si-ning: 77-82 ; 110–116.
  • Ma, Guangxing (1990). "Wedding, Etiquette, and Traditional Songs of the Minhe Region Tu (translated by Jun Hu and Kevin Stuart)." Asian Folklore Studies 49 (2): 197–222.
  • Missions de Scheut (1920). Lettres du P. Schram: 38–41.
  • Missions de Scheut (1920). Notes sur la prefecture chinoise d Si-ning (Koukounor): 79-85 &112-119.
  • Missions de Scheut (1921). De gelukkigste men's in Kansoe: 138.
  • Missions de Scheut (1921). L’Immaculee et les paiens de Chine: 201–220.
  • Missions de Scheut (1921). De zwarte ellende in Si-ning: 217–223.
  • Molè, Gabriella (1970). The Tu-yü-hun from the Northern Wei to the Time of the Five Dynasties. Serie Orientale Roma 41. Rome: Istituto Italiano per il Medio ed Estreme Oriente.
  • Mostaert, Antoine (1931). "The Mongols of Kansu and their Language." Bulletin of the Catholic University of Peking 8:75-89.
  • Mostaert, Antoine (1963–1964). "Over Pater Louis Schram CICM." Haec Olim 15:103-108.
  • Ngag dbang chos ldan (Shes rab dar rgyas) and Klaus Sagaster (1967). Subud erike, "ein Rosenkranz aus Perlen": die Biographie des 1. Pekinger lCang skya Khutukhtu, Ngag dbang blo bzang chos ldan. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz.
  • Ngag dbang thub bstan dbang phyug and Hans-Rainer Kämpfe (1976). Nyi ma’i ‘od zer/ Naran-u gerel: Die Biographie des 2. Pekingger lCang skya Qutugtu Rol pa’i rdo rje (1717–1786), Monumenta Tibetica Historica, Abteilung II: Vitae, Band 1. St. Augustin: VGH Wissenschaftsverlag.
  • Norbu, Kalsang (Skal bzang nor bu), Zhu Yongzhong, and Kevin Stuart (1999). "A Ritual Winter Exorcism in Gnyan Thog Village, Qinghai." Asian Folklore Studies 58:189-203.
  • Postiglione, Gerard A., editor (1999). China’s National Minority Education: Ethnicity, Schooling and Development. New York: Garland Press.
  • Potanin, G. N (1893). Tangutsko-Tibetskaya okraïna Kitaya i Central’naya Mongoliya, vols. 1–2. St. Petersburg.
  • Potanin, G. N (1950). Tangutsko-Tibetskaya okraina Kitaya i tsentral’naya Mongoliya (The Tangut-Tibetan frontier of China and Central Mongolia). Moscow. State Publisher. (An abridged edition of the 1893 version.)
  • Qi Huimin, Limusishiden, and Kevin Stuart (1997–1998). "Huzhu Monguor Wedding Songs: Musical Characteristics." Parts I, II, III, IV. Chinese Music 20:1, 6–12, 14–17; 20:2, 32–37; 20:3, 43–52; 20:4, 68–71; 21:1, 10–13.
  • Qi Huimin, Zhu Yongzhong, and Kevin Stuart (1999). "Minhe Mangghuer Wedding Songs: Musical Characteristics." Asian Folklore Studies 58:77-120.
  • Schram, Louis MJ (1912). Kansou. Missions en Chine et au Congo 149.
  • Schram, Louis MJ (1918). Catholic Missions. Ethnographic Notes 229–231.
  • Schram, Louis MJ (1927). "Christelijke Kunst in China." Bulletin Catholique de Peking 668–376.
  • Schram, Louis MJ (1932). "Le mariage chez les T’ou-jen du Kan-sou [Marriage Among the Monguor of Gansu]." Variétés Sinologiques 58. [Available in an English translation (1962) by Jean H. Winchell in the Human Relations Area Files AE9].
  • Schram, Louis MJ (1954). "The Monguors of the Kansu-Tibetan Frontier: Their Origin, History, and Social Organization." Philadelphia: Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 44:1.
  • Schram, Louis MJ (1954). "The Monguors of the Kansu-Tibetan Frontier: Part II. Their Religious Life." Philadelphia: Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 47:1.
  • Schram, Louis MJ (1955). Two letters to Marguerite Hebert. Hebert (Raphael & Family) Papers Mss. 4769, Subseries 8. Louisiana and Lower Mississippi Valley Collections, Special Collections, Hill Memorial Library, Louisiana State University Libraries, Baton Rouge, Louisiana State University.
  • Schram, Louis MJ (1961). "The Monguors of the Kansu-Tibetan Frontier: Part III. Records of the Monguor Clans." Philadelphia: Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 51:3.
  • Schram, Louis MJ. (Li Meiling, translator; Robert Fried and Heather Fried, proofreaders) (2006). "蒙古尔部族的组织 Mengguer Buzu de Zuzhi [Organization of the Monguor Clan]." 青海民族研究 Qinghai Minzu Yanjiu [Nationalities Research in Qinghai]. 1:29-36; 2:10-14.
  • Schröder, Dominik (1952/1953). "Zur Religion der Tujen des Sininggebietes (Kukunor) [On the Religion of the Monguor of the Xining Region (Koknor)]." Anthropos 47:1-79, 620–658, 822–870; 48:202-249. [Available in an English translation (1962) by Richard Neuse IN Human Relations Area Files AE9.]
  • Schröder, Dominik (1959). Aus der Volksdicntung der Monguor [From the Popular Poetry of the Monguor]; 1. Teil: Das weibe Glücksschaf (Mythen, Märchen, Lieder) [Part 1. The White Lucky-Sheep (Myths, Fairytales, Songs)]. Asiatische Forschungen 6. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz.
  • Schröder, Dominik (1964). Der dialekt der Monguor In B. Spuler, editor Mongolistik. (Handbuch der Orientalistik, 1. Abteilung, 5. Band, 2. Abschnitt). Leiden: EJ Brill.
  • Schröder, Dominik (1970). Aus der Volksdichtung der Monguor [From the Popular Poetry of the Monguor]; 2. Teil: In den Tagen der Urzeit (Ein Mythus vom Licht und vom Leben) [Part 2. In the Days of Primeval Times (A Myth of Light and Life)]. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz.
  • Slater, Keith W (1998). "Minhe Mangghuer: a Mixed Language of the Inner Asian Frontier". University of California, Santa Barbara. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Slater, Kieth W (2003). "Mangghuer." In Juha Janhunen, editor (2003). The Mongolic Languages. London: Routledge. 307–324.
  • Slater, Kieth W (2003). Minhe Mangghuer: A Mongolic Language of China’s Qinghai-Gansu Sprachbund. Curzon Asian Linguistic Series 2. London: RoutledgeCurzon.
  • de Smedt, Albrecht, and Antoine Mostaert (1929–1931). "Le dialecte monguor parlé par les Mongols du Kansou occidental, Ière partie: Phonétique. (The Monguor dialect spoken by the Mongols of west Gansu, Part 1: Phonetics)." Anthropos 24: 145–166, 801–815; 25: 657–669, 961 973; 26: 253.
  • de Smedt, Albrecht, and Antoine Mostaert (1933). Le dialecte monguor parlé par les Mongols du Kansou occidental, IIIe partie: Dictionnaire monguor–français (The Monguor dialect spoken by the Mongols of west Gansu, Part 2: Monguor–French dictionary). Pei-p’ing: Imprimerie de l’Université Catholique.
  • de Smedt, Albrecht, and Antoine Mostaert (1945). Le dialecte monguor parlé par les Mongols du Kansou occidental, IIe partie: Grammaire (The Monguor dialect spoken by the Mongols of west Gansu, Part 3: Grammar). Monumenta Serica, Monograph 6. Peking.
  • Sperling, Elliot (1997). "A Note on the Chi-kya Tribe and the Two Qi Clans in Amdo." Les habitants du Toit du monde, Recherches sur la Haute Asie, 12:111-124.
  • Stuart, Kevin, and Hu Jun (1992). "Death and Funerals Among the Minhe Tu (Monguor)." Asian Folklore Studies 51:2, 67 87.
  • Stuart, Kevin, and Hu Jun (1993). "‘That All May Prosper’: The Monguor Nadun of the Guanting /Sanchuan Region." Anthropos 88:15-27.
  • Stuart, Kevin, and Limusishiden, editors (1994). "China’s Monguor Minority: Ethnography and Folktales." Sino-Platonic Papers No 59.
  • Sun Zhu, editor (1990). Menggu yuzu yuyan cidian [Mongol Language Family Dictionary]. Xining: Qinghai renmin chubanshe [Qinghai People's Press].
  • Thu’u bkwan (III) Blo bzang chos kyi nyi ma (1989) [1794]. Lcang skya Rol pa’i rdo rje’i rnam thar. Lanzhou: Gansu’u mi rigs dpe skrun khang.
  • Todaevam Buljash Khojchievna (1959). "Über die Sprache der Tung-hsiang." Acta Orientalia Hungarica 9: 273–310.
  • Todaevam Buljash Khojchievna (1961). Dunsyanskii yazyk. Moskva: Institut narodov Aziï AN SSSR.
  • Todaevam Buljash Khojchievna (1963). "Einige Besonderheiten der Paoan-Sprache." Acta Orientalia Hungarica 16: 175–197.
  • Todaevam Buljash Khojchievna (1966). Baoan’skii yazyk. Moskva: Institut narodov Aziï AN SSSR.
  • Todaevam Buljash Khojchievna (1973). Mongorskii yazyk: Issledovanie, teksty, slovar (The Monguor Language: Analysis, Texts, and Glossary). Moskva: Institut vostokovedeniya AN SSSR.
  • Üjiyediin Chuluu (Wu Chaolu) (1994). "Introduction, Grammar, and Sample Sentences for Monguor." Sino-Platonic Papers No 57.
  • Wang Xianzheng and Kevin Stuart (1995). "‘Blue Skies and Emoluments’: Minhe Monguor Men Sing I and II." Chinese Music 18(1):13-18; 18:(2):28-33.
  • Wang Xianzheng, Zhu Yongzhong, and Kevin Stuart (1995). "‘The Brightness of the World’: Minhe Monguor Women Sing." Mongolian Studies 18:65-83.
  • Wang Xianzhen, writer; Zhu Yongzhong and Kevin Stuart, editors (2001). Mangghuerla Bihuang Keli [Mangghuer Folktale Reader]. Chengdu, China-Chengdu Audio Press.
  • Zhaonasitu, editor. Tuzu yu jianzhi [A Brief Account of the Monguor Language]. Beijing: Minzu chubanshe [Nationalities Press].
  • Zhu Yongzhong and Kevin Stuart (1996). "Minhe Monguor Nadun Texts." CHIME 9:Autumn, 89–105.
  • Zhu Yongzhong and Kevin Stuart (1996). "A Minhe Monguor Drinking Song." Central Asiatic Journal 40(2):283-289.
  • Zhu Yongzhong and Kevin Stuart (1997). "Minhe Monguor Children’s Games." Orientalia Suecana XLV-XLVI:179-216.
  • Zhu Yongzhong and Kevin Stuart (1999). "Education Among the Minhe Monguor." In Postiglione, Gerard A., editor (1999). China’s National Minority Education: Ethnicity, Schooling and Development. New York: Garland Press.
  • Zhu Yongzhong and Kevin Stuart (1999). "‘Two Bodhisattvas From the East’: Minhe Monguor Funeral Orations." Journal of Contemporary China 8(20):179-188.
  • Zhu Yongzhong, Üjiyediin Chuluu (Chaolu Wu), Keith Slater, and Kevin Stuart (1997). "Gangou Chinese Dialect: A Comparative Study of a Strongly Altaicized Chinese Dialect and Its Mongolic Neighbor." Anthropos 92:433-450.
  • Zhu Yongzhong, Üjiyediin Chuluu (Chaolu Wu), and Kevin Stuart (1995). "The Frog Boy: An Example of Minhe Monguor." Orientalia Suecana XLII-XLIV:197-207.
  • Zhu Yongzhong, Üjiyediin Chuluu, and Kevin Stuart (1999). "NI in Minhe Mangghuer and Other Mongol Languages." Archiv Orientální 67(3):323-338.

External links

  • The Tu ethnic minority (Chinese government site in English)
  • Tu entry on Ethnologue, version 15
  • Case Studies: Monguor Data Collection
  • Several Monguor folktales ()

monguor, people, confused, with, tujia, people, this, article, possibly, contains, inappropriate, misinterpreted, citations, that, verify, text, please, help, improve, this, article, checking, citation, inaccuracies, november, 2009, learn, when, remove, this, . Not to be confused with Tujia people This article possibly contains inappropriate or misinterpreted citations that do not verify the text Please help improve this article by checking for citation inaccuracies November 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Monguor Chinese 蒙古尔 Tu Mongghul the Tu people Chinese 土族 the White Mongol or the Tsagaan Mongol are Mongolic people and one of the 56 officially recognized ethnic groups in China The Tu ethnic category was created in the 1950s Monguor Tu MongghulA Monguor woman in Huzhu County Xining Qinghai ProvinceTotal population289 565 2010 Census Regions with significant populationsChina Qinghai and GansuLanguagesMonguor and WutunReligionPredominantly Yellow Sect or Tibetan Buddhism Taoism and ChristianityRelated ethnic groupsMongolic peoplesAccording to the 2000 census the total population was 241 198 who mostly lived in the Qinghai and the Gansu provinces The 2010 census gave their number as 289 565 The Monguor people speak the Monguor language which belongs to the family of Mongolic languages but has been heavily influenced by both the local Chinese and Tibetan dialects Today nearly all Tu people also speak Chinese Most are farmers and some keep livestock Their culture and the social organizations have been influenced by Tibetan Buddhism Confucianism Taoism and local beliefs A few Tu in Huzhu and Minhe are Christian the result of on going American and Korean missionary work in the area Contents 1 Ethnic origins 1 1 Terminology 1 1 1 Origins 1 1 2 Monguor 2 Genetic studies 3 History 3 1 Donghu 3 2 Xianbei 3 3 Westward migration 3 3 1 Mt Xianbei 3 4 Tuyuhun Empire 3 4 1 Tibet 3 5 Rise of Tibet 3 6 Western Xia Empire 3 6 1 Tangut Xixia 3 6 2 Mongols Khitans and Jurchens 3 6 3 Xia title 3 7 Current status 4 Culture 4 1 Religion 4 2 Nadun and Anzhao 4 3 Wedding songs 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksEthnic origins Edit Tu s costumes The ethnic history of the Monguor is contested It has been variously suggested that their origins are related to the Tuyuhun Xianbei to Mongol troops who came to the current Qinghai Gansu area during the time of the Mongol conquests to the Shatuo and or to the Han Chinese 1 2 Terminology Edit Origins Edit Some references argue that the Chinese term Tu was derived from the name of Tuyuhu Khan who was the older son of the King of Murong Xianbei who migrated westward from the northeast in 284 The last character of Tuyuhu pronounced as hun today may have been pronounced hu in some dialect of ancient Chinese language The contemporary reference of this name is rendered Tuyuhun in China and the West should be Tuyuhu It came from the Chinese phonetic transcription of his original name Teihu 3 4 which is still a common name seen among the Monguor today Since the Chinese language cannot represent Tei two characters of Tu and yu were used The ethnonym Tu in Chinese came from the abbreviation of the Tuyuhu people or the people of the Tuyuhu Empire Between the years 908 and 1042 the reference became simplified into Tuhu and Tuihu people 5 6 As the other ethnic groups of the Tuyuhu Empire came to be ascribed with different ethnonyms through subsequent history the Xianbei who founded the empire remained to bear with the identity of Tu The name Tu was most likely associated with a derogatory meaning and indigenous people Its derogatory undertone came from the concurrent meaning of the Chinese character Tu for soil The ethnonym Tu is increasingly a self reference Monguor Edit The reference of Monguor in the Western publications came from their self reference as Chaghan Monguor or White Mongols It was derived from their origins from the Murong Xianbei from whom Tuyuhu Khan separated and who had been historically referred to as the White Section or Bai Bu due to their lighter skin 7 8 9 The term Monguor was first used by the European Catholic missionaries Smedt and Mosaert who studied the Monguor language and compiled a Monguor French dictionary in the beginning of the twentieth century 10 11 12 13 14 15 Subsequently the Flemish Catholic missionary Louis Schram made it into an international name through three volumes of extensive reports based on his experiences from having lived among them from 1911 to 1922 16 17 18 The term is a variant pronunciation of Mongol in the Monguor language characterized by the final r in place of l in the Mongolian language 19 Despite that Monguor was made into an international name for the Tu it is not representative the reference is only used by the Monguor in Huzhu and Datong counties in Qinghai and when used it should be combined with Chaghan or White in order to be distinguished from the Khara or Black Mongols citation needed In Minhe County which holds the most densely populated Monguor settlement and where everyone speaks their native Monguor language it is never used as an autonym citation needed Genetic studies EditSequences in the DNA of the Tu people indicate that Greeks mixed with an East Asian population around 1200 AD contributing about 7 7 to the Tu genepool The source of this European DNA might have been merchants travelling the Silk Road 20 21 This admixture may come from an earlier period as many of their carnival like festivals and masked fertility rituals have similarities in the Hellenistic times with Dionysian representations not in Byzantine Christian era Greek celebrations 22 Distribution of Y chromosome haplogroups in Monguor 23 O 38 85 O2 31 42 O1a 4 13 O1b 3 3 D 14 87R1 14 05 R1a 13 22 R1b 0 83 N 11 57C 9 09J 5 79others 5 78History EditDonghu Edit Their earliest origins from the Donghu are reflected in their account of the unique wedding ceremony attributed to Madam Lushi 24 who organized an ambush through an elaborate banquet combined with liquor and singing in order to subdue a bully named Wang Mang 25 26 27 28 29 In historical terms the Wang Mang people were recorded more than four thousand years ago as physically robust and active on the west of the present Liaoning whose culture was associated with the Hongshan Culture 30 31 32 In archaeological terms the Hongshan Culture gradually gave rise to the Lower Xiajiadian Culture and represented the transition toward the bronze technology It eventually evolved into the Upper Xiajidian Culture which was associated with the Donghu and characterized by the practice of agriculture and animal husbandry supplemented by handicrafts and bronze art The Donghu was a federation formed from the Donghu Wuhuan and Xianbei Among the northern ethnic groups the Donghu was the earliest to evolve into a state of civilization and first developed bronze technology Through the usage of bronze weaponry and armored cavalry in warfare they maintained extensive dominance over the Xiongnu on their west In the end of the third century B C the Xiongnu Maodun attacked to destroy the Donghu by surprise and caused disintegration in the federation The Wuhuan moved to Mt Wuhuan and engaged in continuous warfare with the Xiongnu on the west and China on the south The Donghu spoke Mongolic language and was formed by the federation of the Donghu Wuhuan and Xianbei 33 34 Xianbei Edit As the Wuhuan and Xiongnu came to be worn out from the lengthy battles the Xianbei preserved their strengths by moving northward to Mt Xianbei In the first century the Xianbei defeated the Wuhuan and northern Xiongnu and developed into a powerful state under the leadership of their elected Khan Tanshihuai In the third century the Eastern Han dynasty 25 220 BC disintegrated into three kingdoms including the Cao Wei 220 265 in the north the Eastern Wu 222 280 in the south and the Shu Han 221 263 in the southwest In 235 the Cao Wei assassinated the last Khan of the Xianbei Kebineng and caused disintegration in the Xianbei Kingdom Thereafter the Xianbei pushed their way inside the Great Wall of China and established extensive presence in China During the Sixteen Kingdoms 304 439 period the Xianbei founded six kingdoms the Former Yan 281 370 Western Yan 384 394 Later Yan 383 407 Southern Yan 398 410 Western Qin 385 430 and Southern Liang 397 414 Most of them were unified by the Tuoba Xianbei who established the Northern Wei 386 535 which was the first of the Northern Dynasties 386 581 founded by the Xianbei 35 36 37 In 534 the Northern Wei split into an Eastern Wei 534 550 and a Western Wei 535 556 The former evolved into the Northern Qi 550 577 and the latter into the Northern Zhou 557 581 while the Southern Dynasties were pushed to the south of the Yangtze In 581 the Prime Minister of Northern Zhou Yang Jian usurped the throne and founded the Sui dynasty 581 618 as Emperor Wen of Sui His son Emperor Yang of Sui annihilated the Chen dynasty 557 589 and unified northern and southern China thereby bringing an end to the Southern and Northern Dynasties era Over the course of this period the Xianbei who entered into China were immersed among the Chinese and later classified into Han Yet not all branches of the Xianbei shared this fate In the 3rd and 4th centuries Tuyuhu a branch of the Murong Xianbei undertook a westward migration that allowed them and those who followed them to develop in a different path Westward migration Edit Main article Tuyuhun The separation of Tuyuhu from the Murong Xianbei occurred during the Western Jin dynasty 265 316 which succeeded the Cao Wei 220 265 in northern China Legends accounted the separation to be due to a fight between his horses and those of his younger brother Murong Wei The actual cause was intense struggle over the Khanate position and disagreement over their future directions The fraction that supported Murong Wei into the Khanate position aimed at ruling over China whereas Tuyuhu intended to preserve the Xianbei culture and lifestyles The disagreement resulted in Tuyuhu to proclaim as the Khan or Kehan and undertook the long westward journey under the title of the Prince of Jin or Jin Wang followed by other Xianbei and Wuhuan groups While passing through western Liaoning and Mt Bai more Xianbei groups joined them from the Duan Yuwen and Bai sections At the Hetao Plains near Ordos in Inner Mongolia Tuyuhu Khan led them to reside by Mt Yin for over thirty years as the Tuoba Xianbei and Northern Xianbei joined them through political and marriage alliances After settling down in the northwest they established the powerful Tuyuhu Empire named to his honor as the first Khan who led them there by subjugating the native peoples who were summarily referred to as the Qiang and included more than 100 different and loosely coordinated tribes that did not submit to each other or any authorities After Tuyuhu Khan departed from the northeast Murong Wei composed an Older Brother s Song or the Song of A Gan A Gan is Chinese transcription of a ga for older brother in the Xianbei language 5 38 The song lamented his sadness and longing for Tuyuhu Legends accounted that Murong Wei often sang it until he died and the song got spread into central and northwest China The Murong Xianbei whom he had led successively founded the Former Yan 281 370 Western Yan 384 394 Later Yan 383 407 and Southern Yan 398 410 Their territories encompassed at their height the present Liaoning Inner Mongolia Shandong Shanxi Hebei and Henan and their capitals included Beijing and other cities Through these establishments they were immersed among the Chinese whereas the Xianbei who followed Tuyuhu Khan preserved their language and culture Mt Xianbei Edit In the extensive migrations that the Xianbei undertook in the northeast northern and northwest China the name of Mt Xianbei was found along their trajectories The earliest recorded Mt Xianbei was in the southern portions of Daxinganling located in northeast Inner Mongolia which represented the originating place of the Xianbei Two Mt Xianbei were recorded subsequently in western Liaoning one in the present Jinzhou City and one near Yi County Another Mt Xianbei was recorded in the northern portions of Daxinganling located near Alihe Town of Oroqin Autonomous Banner in Hulunbeiermeng in the northeastern portion of Inner Mongolia that borders eastern Russia The Gaxian Cave 39 currently Khabarovsk and Amur regions in the Russian Far East which had stone inscriptions of the Northern Wei emperor dated 443 was recognized to be the sacred ancestral shrine of the Xianbei In the northwest the Qilian Mountains that run along Gansu and Qinghai provinces were referred to as the Greater Mt Xianbei In Sanchuan Guanting of Minhe County in Qinghai which holds the most densely populated Monguor settlement Mt Xianbei stands in the west upon which sits the ancestral shrine of the Xianbei Khans Tuyuhun Empire Edit After Tuyuhu Khan died in Linxia also known as Huozhou Gansu in 317 his sixty sons inherited to further develop the empire by annihilating the Western Qin 385 430 which had annexed Southern Liang 396 414 earlier and Haolian Xia 407 431 kingdoms from which the Qinghai Xianbei Tufa Xianbei Qifu Xianbei and Haolian Xianbei joined them These Xianbei groups formed the core of the Tuyuhun Empire and numbered about 3 3 million at their peak They carried out extensive military expeditions westward reaching as far as Hetian in Xinjiang and the borders of Kashmir and Afghanistan and established a vast empire that encompassed Qinghai Gansu Ningxia northern Sichuan eastern Shaanxi southern Xinjiang and most of Tibet stretching 1 500 kilometers from the east to the west and 1 000 kilometers from the north to the south They unified northwest China for the first time in history developed the southern route of the Silk Road and promoted cultural exchanges between the eastern and western territories dominating the northwest for more than three and half centuries until the empire was destroyed by the Tibetans who rose up in 670 40 Tibet Edit Through this extensive rule the Xianbei asserted everlasting cultural imprints in the region The English reference for Tibet most likely came from the Xianbei language for the Tibetans referred to as Tiebie in contrast to the self reference of the Tibetans as Bo 41 The name Tiebie was probably derived from the Tuoba Xianbei who founded the Southern Liang 397 414 Because the Tuoba who established the Northern Wei 386 535 in China proper objected the Tuoba of Southern Liang to use the same Chinese characters the latter adopted Tufa when in fact they were of the same Tuoba descent 42 After the Southern Liang was annexed by the Western Qin which in turn was annexed by the Tuyuhu Empire the majority of Tufa Xianbei joined the Tuyuhu Empire Some submitted under the Northern Wei in China while a small fraction went into Tibet and gave rise to the name Tiebie 43 In the ancient Chinese records the reference of Tibet included Tubo and Tufan which reflected the Chinese transcriptions of Tuoba and Tufa It is likely that Tuoba recorded in the Chinese language may have been pronounced as Tiebie originally in the Xianbei language Among the Monguor settlement in Minhe Qinghai today the La and Bao Family Villages were accounted to have descended from Tiebie 44 indicating that they have derived their origins from the Tufa Tuoba Xianbei of the Southern Liang The Tibetans refer to the Monguor as Huo er which came from the final word of the name of Tuyuhu Khan The Monguor refer to Tuyuhu Khan as Huozhou didi in which Huozhou was applied to Linxia Gansu where Tuyuhu Khan died and didi was traditionally a reverence term for a deceased ancestor with deity status The earliest record of the Monguor in the Western publications was made by the French missionaries Huc and Gabet who traveled through northwest China in 1844 46 They used Dschiahour to represent the Monguor based on Tibetan reference 45 in which Dschia was likely abbreviated from the first part of Chaghan or White from the self reference of the Monguor as Chaghan Monguor or White Mongols and Hour was a variant record to the Tibetan reference of the Monguor as Huo er used by the Tibetans today Rise of Tibet Edit In the beginning of the Tang dynasty the Tuyuhu Empire came to a gradual decline and was increasingly caught in the conflict between the Tang and the Tibetan Empire Because the Tuyuhu Empire controlled the crucial trade routes between the east and the west the Empire became the immediate target of invasion by the Tang Meanwhile the Tibetan Empire developed rapidly under the leadership of Songtsen Gampo who united the Tibetans and expanded northward directly threatening the Tuyuhu Empire The exile Tuyuhu Khan Dayan submitted under Tibet which resorted to an excuse that Tuyuhu objected its marriage with the Tang and sent 200 000 troops to attack The Tuyuhu troops retreated to Qinghai whereas Tibet went eastward to attack the Tangut and reached into southern Gansu The Tang government was shocked and sent five troops to fight Although Tibet withdrew in response the Tuyuhu Empire lost much of its territory in southern Gansu Meanwhile the Tuyuhu government was split between the pro Tang and pro Tibet factions with the latter becoming increasingly stronger and corroborating with Tibet to bring about an invasion The Tang sent its famous general Xue Rengui to lead 100 000 troops to fight Tibet in Dafeichuan present Gonghe County in Qinghai They were annihilated in an ambush by 200 000 troops of Dayan and Tibet which became the biggest debacle in the Tang history and formally brought the Tuyuhu Empire to an end After its fall in 670 the Tuyuhu Empire split into an Eastern and Western Kingdom The Eastern Kingdom existed on the eastern side of the Qilian Mountains and increasingly migrated eastward into central China whereas the Western Kingdom existed under the leadership of the former exile Khan Dayan in Tibet As the An Lushan Rebellion shook up the Tang court and caused its emperor to flee Tibet overtook the entire territory of Tuyuhu until internal turmoil developed within the Tibetan government and massive revolts brought an end to its rule Through this period the Xianbei underwent massive diasporas over a vast territory that stretched from the northwest into central and eastern parts of China with the greatest concentrations found by Mt Yin near Ordos In 946 the Shatuo Turk Liu Zhiyuan conspired to murder the highest Xianbei leader Bai Chengfu who was reportedly so wealthy that his horses had silver mangers 46 With that stolen wealth which included an abundance of property and thousands of fine horses Liu established the Later Han 947 950 the shortest dynasty in Chinese history lasting only four years The incident took away the central leadership and removed any possibility for the Xianbei to restore the Tuyuhu Empire Western Xia Empire Edit The Western Xia Empire inherited the political and social structures of the Tang and further developed an outstanding civilization characterized as shining and sparkling 47 It became the new kingdom for the descendants of the Tuyuhu Xianbei who had lost their country The Western Xia made significant achievements in literature art music architecture and chemistry Through effective military organizations that integrated cavalry chariots archery shields artillery cannons carried on the back of camels and amphibious troops for combats on the land and water 48 the Xia army maintained a powerful stance in opposition to the Song Liao 916 1125 and Jin 1115 1234 empires to its east the last of which was founded by the Jurchens who were the predecessors of the Manchus who would found the Qing Dynasty 1644 1912 The Xia territory encompassed the present Ningxia Gansu eastern Qinghai northern Shaanxi northeastern Xinjiang southwest Inner Mongolia and southernmost Outer Mongolia spanning about 800 000 square kilometers 49 50 51 In the beginning of the thirteenth century Genghis Khan unified the northern grasslands of Mongolia and led the Mongol troops to carry out six rounds of attacks against Western Xia over a period of twenty two years As Western Xia resisted vehemently more and more of its people crossed the Qilian Mountains to join the earlier establishments in Qinghai and Gansu in order to avoid the Mongol assaults which gave rise to the current settlements of the Monguor During the last round of attacks Genghis Khan died in Western Xia The official Mongol historical account attributed his death to an illness whereas legends told that he died from a wound inflicted in the battles After the Xia capital was overrun in 1227 the Mongols destroyed much of hu its architecture and written records killing the last emperor and massacring tens of thousands of civilians The Xia troops were later incorporated into the Mongol army in their subsequent military conquests in central and southern China Due to the fierce resistance of the Xia against the Mongol attacks especially in causing the death of Genghis they were initially suppressed in the Yuan Dynasty 1271 1368 Toward the middle and later stages of the Yuan the Xia received equivalent treatment to the ruling Mongols and attained the highest offices in the Central Court After the Yuan fell the Xia who followed the Mongols into the northern grassland were immersed among and later classified into the Mongols Tangut Xixia Edit The English reference of Tangut Xixia was derived from the combination of the Mongolian reference of Tangut and the Chinese reference as Xixia or Western Xia The Chinese reference was derived from the location of the empire on the western side of the Yellow River in contrast to the Liao 916 1125 and Jin on its east The Mongolian usage of Tangut most likely referred to the Donghu people t in Mongolian language means people 52 53 Whereas Donghu was a Chinese transcription its Mongolian reference was Tunghu 54 By the time that the Mongols emerged in the thirteenth century the only Donghu people who existed were the Tu in Western Xia That the Mongols referred to Western Xia as Tangut to represent the founding ethnic group the Tuyuhu Xianbei is consistent with the theories of the Mongol origins postulated by the Outer Mongolian scholars who have held that the Mongols had descended from the Xiongnu more specifically the eastern Xiongnu who spoke proto Mongolic language as opposed to the western Xiongnu who spoke proto Turkish language In contrast the Chinese scholars have characterized that the Mongols had descended from the Xianbei The Mongols were recorded as Mengwu Shiwei in the Northern Dynasties Mengwu was a variant Chinese transcription of Menggu designated to the Mongols and Shiwei was a variant transcription of the Xianbei as Xianbei was also recorded as Sian pie Serbi Sirbi and Sirvi 55 This equated the Mongols to be Mongol Xianbei which was likely associated with the submission of the Xiongnu under Xianbei In 87 A D the Xianbei defeated the northern Xiongnu and killed their king Chanyu Youliu causing its thorough disintegration Thereafter the Xiongnu submitted under and self proclaimed to be Xianbei 56 This resulted in a mix of the Xiongnu into Xianbei and made it difficult to differentiate the two groups in subsequent historical records That the Mongolian term Tangut represented the Donghu people the Xianbei and their descendants who had founded the Tuyuhu and Western Xia empires would validate the theories of the Outer Mongolian scholars that the Mongols had descended from the Xiongnu The fact that there were Wuhuan groups who were part of the Donghu federation and followed Tuyuhu Khan in the westward migration would make the interpretation that Tangut represented the Donghu people stronger not only from reflecting that the Wuhuan joined the Xianbei in the Tuyuhu and Western Xia empires but also contrasting that the Mongols had descended from the Xiongnu If the Mongols had descended from the Xianbei as the Chinese scholars characterized the Mongols would have shared the same ethnic origins with the Xianbei of the Tuyuhu Empire and not have called them as the Donghu people in reference of Western Xia While the intimate associations between the two groups were manifested in the cross references of the Mongols as Mengwu Shiwei or Mongol Xianbei from the first century and the Monguor as Chaghan or White Monguor in the thirteenth century ethnically and culturally they remained different As much as the prefix Mengwu or Mongol in front of Shiwei or Xianbei marked the difference between the Mongols and the Xianbei the prefix Chaghan in front of Monguor indicated that the Monguor and their Xianbei predecessors were not the same as the Mongols Culturally the Mongols have retained a nomadic lifestyle whereas the social organizations and religious lives of the Monguor are of far greater complexities Mongols Khitans and Jurchens Edit When the Mongols emerged as a mighty power in the thirteenth century a reverse occurred in the ethnonyms of the Xianbei and Mongols This was represented in the reference of the Xianbei descendants as Chaghan Monguor or White Mongols which gave rise to the ethnonym of Monguor known in the Western publications The term White Mongols or Bai Menggu first occurred when Genghis Khan united the Mongols to rise up in Mongolia in 1206 The Xianbei descendants who resided near Mt Yin self proclaimed to be White Mongols and joined them They received the same treatment as the Mongols and partook in their westward conquests in Central Asia and Europe 57 As waves and waves of the Xianbei went south and westward to establish different empires those who remained in the northeast emerged as major powers later to rule over China While the Mongol Xianbei or Mengwu Shiwei emerged from the northern Manchuria and northeastern Mongolia the Khitans or Qidan in Chinese derived their ancestral origins from the Yuwen Xianbei in southern Mongolia 58 who had earlier founded the Western Wei 535 556 and Northern Zhou 557 581 of the Northern Dynasties When the Khitans established the Liao Dynasty 916 1125 in China proper they were referred to as Qara or Black Khitay 59 Their rule gave rise to the reference of China known as Hătai and Cathay in the Persian and European countries 60 The reference of Qara or Black as a prefix in the name of the Khitans and Khara or Black in that of the Mongols may indicate that both groups had substantial input from the Xiongnu who by self proclaiming to be Xianbei earlier made it hard in distinguish in the Chinese records After the Xianbei vacated from the northeast the Jurchens known as Nuzhen in Chinese moved southward into Manchuria from their original habitation in the Tungus Plains in eastern Russia located on the north of Manchuria They occupied the former areas of the Xianbei and ascribed Mt Xianbei with a new name known as Daxinganling which remains to be used today and literally meant White Mountains in their Tungus language 61 They first established the Jin dynasty 1115 1234 in northern China by pushing the Liao Empire of the Khitans westward into Xinjiang After the Jin Empire was destroyed by the Mongols in 1234 they withdrew back to Manchuria and returned later with the rejoined forces from the Mongols to establish the last dynasty of the Qing 1644 1912 in China under the new ethnonym of Manchu or Man Zu in Chinese Xia title Edit The full national title of Western Xia was the Great Xia Kingdom of the White and Mighty or Bai Gao Da Xia Guo 白高大夏国 The term White or Bai was designated to the founding ethnic group the Xianbei descendants of the Tuyuhu Empire which is consistent with their reference of Chaghan or White derived from their origins from the Murong Xianbei known as the White Section The term Mighty or Gao was designated to the Qiang people who formed the majority of the population The Qiang were the native peoples who were subjugated by the Xianbei in the northwest They initially rebelled but later their fate became intimately associated with the Xianbei as they actively defended the empire when the enemies attacked In addition to the Tibetans and authentic Han people the Qiang comprised a portion of the Miao Hmong who were relocated to the northwest from central China after their Three Miao Kingdom was destroyed by the legendary Chinese Emperor Yu the Great about four thousand years ago 62 63 The Qiang referred to Western Xia as their Gao or Mighty Mi Yao Kingdom 64 When Mi Yao is pronounced together it is similar to Miao Since the autonyms of the Miao Hmong include Guoxiong 65 Gaoxiong and Gouxiong the character Gao or Mighty in the Xia national title could have derived as a variant abbreviation Bai Gao in the national title was in turn used it to refer to the Yellow River which had traditionally been referred to as the Mother River of China known as Mu Qin He that has nurtured their homeland Current status Edit Mongour in 1901 The Flemish Catholic missionary Schram who wrote about the Monguor based on residence in the current Qinghai Province in the early twentieth century cited Comte de Lesdain 66 who characterized the Monguor as the most authentic reminder of the primitive race from which the Chinese sprung 67 This characterization reflected that the Monguor culture under their observation has embodied a high civilization fortified by its own history and distinctive social structure 68 developed by the Xianbei forefathers from their extensive rulings over China and preserved by the Monguor Tu As early as the Tuyuhu period Confucianism served as the core ideology to govern the country and the Chinese Buddhism and Shamanism functioned as the principle religions In Western Xia Confucianism was further strengthened and Taoism was made into the national religion along with Buddhism As the Yellow Sect of Buddhism also known as the Tibetan Buddhism became prevalent in the northwest their religious lives shifted from the Chinese toward Tibetan Buddhism After Western Xia fell its territory centered in Ningxia was fragmented by the successive establishments of Shaanxi Gansu and Qinghai provinces which increasingly weakened the political and military powers of the Monguor Through the Ming 1368 1644 and Qing 1644 1912 dynasties the Monguor continued to play important roles in the national defense and political and religious affairs of China Starting in the middle of the Ming Dynasty the ranches of the Monguor were taken into the state possession and their horses became the subject of being drafted into the national army and looted by the Mongols from the north resulting in the eventual shift of their lifestyles toward sedentary agriculture supplemented by minimum animal husbandry as the original Monguor groups became settled into the form of different villages In the last two centuries the areas formerly occupied by the Monguor were encroached upon by increasing inland Chinese migrations Throughout this period the Monguor maintained a high degree of political autonomy and self governance under the local chiefdom system of Tusi 69 70 71 72 73 The Monguor troops led by their Tusi defended not only their own homeland but also joined the national army to participate in wars that took place as far as in eastern Liaoning Shaanxi Shanxi Yunnan Mongolia and Dunhuang 74 which progressively weakened their military power Their political power came to the ultimate decline when the Tusi system was abolished in 1931 which exacerbated more Monguor to lose their language By the founding of the People s Republic of China in 1949 only about fifty thousand of the Monguor have maintained to speak their language primarily in Qinghai and Gansu During the Chinese classificatory campaigns carried out in the 1950s those who could no longer speak their language were classified into Han those who could not speak their language but adopted the Islamic religion were classified into Hui those who followed the Mongols into the northern grassland were classified into Mongols and those who spoke their language and adopted the Islamic religion were classified into Dongxiang Bonan and Yugur the last of which represented the intermixture of the Xianbei and Sari Uyghurs Culture Edit A Monguor masked dance performance Most Monguor in rapidly changing rural settlements today practice sedentary agriculture supplemented by minimum animal husbandry and seasonal work in towns and cities Those who have succeeded in the Chinese educational system take up government jobs in a wide range of academic medical and business fields Traditional Monguor culture and language have become endangered 75 76 Traditional events like weddings Nadun funerals and New Year rituals are increasingly abbreviated and traditional songs riddles folktales and proverbs are vanishing citation needed Religion Edit In most villages a Buddhist temple and a Taoist shrine coexist Almost all the temples and shrines seen today have been rebuilt in the last three decades since they were invariably destroyed during the Cultural Revolution 1966 1976 While Buddhist monks are common in most villages Taoist priests and shamans have become very few and serve the whole area The Taoist priests take charge of diverse functions that include weddings funerals and looking after the shrines whereas the shaman s primary function is to serve as a trance medium during the Nadun celebration and sometimes illness management 77 78 79 Local accounts indicated that there have been multiple Catholic churches constructed in the Monguor areas in the past 80 They were destroyed in the early 1950s after the Communists took control and have not been rebuilt citation needed Nadun and Anzhao Edit Distinctive cultural events take place throughout the year Whereas the common festival held during the Spring Festival is Yangguo the most characteristic tradition is represented by Nadun that takes place in the end of the summer Nadun resembles Nadam of the Mongols in name but are different in format and content Both Nadun and Nadam are special nouns designated to an annual festival and reflect their shared origins from the Xianbei who were recorded to have one major gathering every spring for leisure and fun by river 81 Whereas the Mongolian Nadam preserved the nomadic features of horse race wrestling and archery the Monguor Nadun has encoded their history through masked dance performances and presents as an annual military drill combined with joyful celebrations of harvest 82 Held by villages in turn along the Yellow River and circles through the entire Sanchuan Guanting region in Minhe the Nadun festival is inherently tied to agricultural work It functions as the Monguor form of Thanksgiving in the Western culture and expresses gratitude for an abundance of harvest blessed by Heaven referred to as Tiangere The event lasts over two months starting from the twelfth of the seventh month to the fifteenth of the ninth month by the Chinese lunar calendar and spans for a total of 63 days giving rise to its eponym as the world s longest festival 83 84 85 Among the Huzhu Monguor the characteristic traditional dance is Anzhao Its name and styles bear resemblance to the Andai dance of the Mongols who live in Ordos an area that has historically served as the transitional point for the Xianbei to move about in China Wedding songs Edit The traditional weddings of the Monguor differ markedly In Minhe County elaborate rules of courtesy and appropriateness were at work Many songs daola were sung for days and nights with great variations in melody and contents 86 87 Wherever the Monguor go they take their songs with them which can be heard in parties banquets and at gatherings in cities where they work References Edit Ha Mingzong Ha Mingzhu C K Stuart 2013 Mongghul Ha Clan Oral History Documentation in Oral Literature in the Digital Age Archiving Orality and Connecting with Communities pg 134 Hu Alex J 2010 An overview of the history and culture of the Xianbei Monguor Tu Asian Ethnicity 11 1 95 164 Lu Jianfu 呂建福 2002 Tu zu shi The Tu History 土族史 Beijing 北京 Zhongguo she hui ke xue chu ban she Chinese Social Sciences Press 中囯社会科学出版社 p 1 Lu Jianfu 呂建福 2007 Tuzu ming cheng kao shi A Textual Analysis of the Tu Names 土族名称考释 Qinghai min zu xue yuan xue bao Journal of Qinghai Nationalities Institute 青海民族学院学报 33 39 49 p 46 a b Carroll Thomas D 1953 Account of the T u yu hun in the history of the Chin dynasty Berkeley University of California Press Mole Gabriella 1970 The T u yu hun from the Northern Wei to the time of the five dynasties Roma Istituto italiano per il Medio ed Estremo Oriente Liu Xueyao 劉學銚 1994 Xianbei shi lun the Xianbei History 鮮卑史論 Taibei Shi 台北市 Nan tian shu ju Nantian Press 南天書局 p 99 Lu Jianfu 呂建福 2002 Tu zu shi The Tu History 土族史 Beijing 北京 Zhongguo she hui ke xue chu ban she Chinese Social Sciences Press 中囯社会科学出版社 p 15 16 Wang Zhongluo 王仲荦 2007 Wei jin nan bei chao shi History of Wei Jin Southern and Northern Dynasties 魏晋南北朝史 Beijing 北京 Zhonghua shu ju China Press 中华书局 p 257 Smedt A de and Antoine Mostaert 1929 Le dialecte monguor parle par les Mongols du Kansou occidental Ie partie Phonetique Anthropos 24 145 166 Smedt A de and Antoine Mostaert 1930 Le dialecte monguor parle par les Mongols du Kansou occidental Ie partie Phonetique Anthropos 25 657 669 961 973 Smedt A de and Antoine Mostaert 1931 Le dialecte monguor parle par les Mongols du Kansou occidental Ie partie Phonetique Anthropos 26 253 Smedt A de and Antoine Mostaert 1933 Le dialecte monguor parle par les Mongols du Kansou occidental IIIe partie Dictionnaire Monguor Francais Pei p ing Imprimerie de l Universite Catholique Smedt A de and Antoine Mostaert 1945 Le dialecte monguor parle par les Mongols du Kansou occidental IIe partie Peking Catholic University Mostaert Antoine 1931 The Mongols of Kansu and their Language Bulletin of the Catholic University of Peking 8 75 89 Schram Louis M J 1954 The Monguors of the Kansu Tibetan Frontier Their Origin History and Social Organization Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 44 1 1 138 Schram Louis M J 1957 The Monguors of the Kansu Tibetan Frontier Part II Their Religious Life Philadelphia American Philosophical Society Schram Louis M J 1961 The Monguors of the Kansu Tibetan Frontier Part III Records of the Monguor Clans History of the Monguors in Huangchung and the Chronicles of the Lu Family Philadelphia American Philosophical Society Schram Louis M J 1954 The Monguors of the Kansu Tibetan Frontier Their Origin History and Social Organization Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 44 1 1 138 p 28 A genetic atlas of human admixture history Hellenthal et al 2014 Side 1 Greek Like 7 7 Hazara 0 5 Side 2 Han China Like 26 7 Yi 16 9 Modern genes yield atlas of ancient inter ethnic sex Nature 13 February 2014 Lucas Christopoulos Dionysian rituals and the Golden Zeus of China http www sino platonic org complete spp326 dionysian rituals china pdf pp 5 63 Wen Shaoqing Xu Dan 2017 The Silk Road Language and Population Admixture and Replacement PDF Languages and Genes in Northwestern China and Adjacent Regions Springer Singapore pp 55 78 doi 10 1007 978 981 10 4169 3 4 ISBN 9789811041686 S2CID 135234209 The folktale accounted Madam Lushi which in Chinese suggest the last name of 鲁 The important role of Lu Tusi was presented in Schram 1961 The Monguors of the Kansu Tibetan Frontier Part III Records of the Monguor Clans History of the Monguors in Huangchung and the Chronicles of the Lu Family Philadelphia American Philosophical Society Hu Jun 1994 Minhe Monguor Folktales collected and translated folktales from Monguor and Chinese China s Monguor Minority ethnography and folktales Sino Platonic Papers No 59 pp 132 184 Kevin Stuart and Limusishiden In Chinese record the name of Wang Mang who were historically recorded as 汪芒 was often confused with the name of 王莽 See Anonymous 2002 Lu shi tai tai xiang wang mang Madam Lushi subdues Wang Mang 鲁氏太太降王莽 汪芒 Zhongguo tu zu China s Tu Nationality 中国土族 13 1 49 Lu Jianfu 呂建福 2002 Tu zu shi The Tu History 土族史 Beijing 北京 Zhongguo she hui ke xue chu ban she Chinese Social Sciences Press 中囯社会科学出版社 p 1 2 Li Zhinong 李志农 and Ding Bofeng 丁柏峰 2004 Tu Zu Qinghai Huzhu xian Dazhuang cun diao cha The Tu Nationality investigation in Dazhuang Village of Huzhu County Qinghai 土族 靑海互助县大庄村调查 Kunming 昆明 Yunnan da xue chu ban she Yunnan University Press 云南大学出版社 Chen Zhaojun 陈照俊 Li Xingzhong 李兴忠 Lu Jianliang 吕金良 Keith Slater Kevin Stuart Wang Xianzhen 王献珍 Wang Yongwei 王永伟 Huaizhi 辛怀志 Xin Zhu Meilan 朱梅兰 Zhu Shanzhong 朱山忠 Zhu Wenhui 朱文辉 and Zhu Yongzhong 朱永忠 2005 Zhongguo Minhe Tu zu min jian gu shi Folktales of China s Minhe Monguor 中国民和土族民间故事 Munchen Lincom Europa Lu Jianfu 呂建福 2002 Tu zu shi The Tu History 土族史 Beijing 北京 Zhongguo she hui ke xue chu ban she Chinese Social Sciences Press 中囯社会科学出版社 p 3 The Wang Mang people were likely the predecessors or a fraction of those who became known as the Xiongnu later on the west of the Donghu Ethnically the Xiongnu comprised diverse groups of Hunmi Guifang Xianyun and Rongdi in northwest China and northern grassland of Mongolia The geographic areas of their activities were centered in Hetao and along Great Mt Qing in southern Inner Mongolia see Lin Gan 林干 2007 Xiongnu shi The Xiongnu History 匈奴史 Huhehaote 呼和浩特 Nei Mengguo ren min chu ban she Inner Mongolia People s Press 内蒙古人民出版社 p 4 In physical anthropological perspectives some Xiongnu groups manifested European Central Asian and Eastern Asian Mongolic features whereas the Donghu were principally of Mongolic people of Eastern and Northern Asian origins See Zhu Hong 朱泓 1994 Ren zhong xue shang de xiong nu xian bei yu qi dan The Xiongnu Xianbei and Qidan in racial perspectives 人种学上的匈奴 鲜卑与契丹 Beifang wen wu Northern Cultural Relics 北方文物 38 2 7 13 Ma Changshou 馬長壽 1962 Wuhuan yu Xianbei Wuhuan and Xianbei 烏桓與鮮卑 Shanghai 上海 Shanghai ren min chu ban she Shanghai People s Press 上海人民出版社 p 22 25 Lin Gan 林干 2007a Donghu shi The Donghu History 东胡史 Huhehaote 呼和浩特 Nei Mengguo ren min chu ban she Inner Mongolia People s Press 内蒙古人民出版社 Ma Changshou 馬長壽 1962 Wuhuan yu Xianbei Wuhuan and Xianbei 烏桓與鮮卑 Shanghai 上海 Shanghai ren min chu ban she Shanghai People s Press 上海人民出版社 Liu Xueyao 劉學銚 1994 Xianbei shi lun the Xianbei History 鮮卑史論 Taibei 台北 Nan tian shu ju Nantian Press 南天書局 Wang Zhongluo 王仲荦 2007 Wei jin nan bei chao shi History of Wei Jin Southern and Northern Dynasties 魏晋南北朝史 Beijing 北京 Zhonghua shu ju China Press 中华书局 Qi Jinyu 祁进玉 2008 Qun ti shen fen yu duo yuan ren tong ji yu san ge tuzu she qu de ren lei xue dui bi yan jiu Group Identity and Diversity of Identification an anthropological comparison of three Tu ethnic communities 群体身份与多元认同 基于三个土族社区的人类学对比研究 Beijing 北京 Shehui ke xue wen xian chu ban she Chinese Social Sciences Academic Literature Press 社会科学文献出版社 鮮卑石室 嘎仙洞 祝詞Xianbei cave Chinese Traditional Big5 code page via Internet Archive Zhou Weizhou 周伟洲 1985 Tuyuhu shi The Tuyuhu History 吐谷浑史 Yinchuan 银川 Ningxia ren min chu ban she Ningxia People s Press 宁夏人民出版社 Shen Tsung lien and Sheng chi Liu 1953 Tibet and the Tibetans Stanford California Stanford University Press p 4 Zhou Weizhou 周伟洲 2006 Nanliang yu xi qin Southern Liang and Western Qin 南凉与西秦 Guilin 桂林 Guangxi shi fan da xue chu ban she Guangxi Normal University Press 广西师范大学出版社 Lu Jianfu 呂建福 2002 Tu zu shi The Tu History 土族史 Beijing 北京 Zhongguo she hui ke xue chu ban she Chinese Social Sciences Press 中囯社会科学出版社 p 87 90 Qi Jinyu 祁进玉 2008 Qun ti shen fen yu duo yuan ren tong ji yu san ge tuzu she qu de ren lei xue dui bi yan jiu Group Identity and Diversity of Identification an anthropological comparison of three Tu ethnic communities 群体身份与多元认同 基于三个土族社区的人类学对比研究 Beijing 北京 Shehui ke xue wen xian chu ban she Chinese Social Sciences Academic Literature Press 社会科学文献出版社 p 62 63 Huc Evariste Regis and Joseph Gabet 1987 Travels in Tartary Tibet and China 1844 1846 New York Dover Publications Mole Gabriella 1970 The T u yu hun from the Northern Wei to the time of the five dynasties ed Estremo Oriente p xxiv Zhao Yanlong 赵彦龙 2005 Qian tan xi xia gong wen wen feng yu gong wen zai ti A brief discussion on the writing style in official documents and documental carrier 浅谈西夏公文文风与公文载体 Xibei min zu yan jiu Northwest Nationalities Research 西北民族研究 45 2 78 84 Qin Wenzhong 秦文忠 Zhou Haitao 周海涛 and Qin Ling 秦岭 1998 Xixia jun shi ti yu yu ke xue ji shu The military sports science and technology of West Xia 西夏军事体育与科学技术 Ningxia da xue xue bao Journal of Ningxia University 宁夏大学学报 79 2 48 50 Wang Tianshun 王天顺 1993 Xixia zhan shi The Battle History of Western Xia 西夏战史 Yinchuan 银川 Ningxia ren min chu ban she Ningxia People s Press 宁夏人民出版社 Bian Ren 边人 2005 Xixia xiao shi zai li shi ji yi zhong de guo du Western Xia the kingdom lost in historical memories 西夏 消逝在历史记忆中的国度 Beijing 北京 Wai wen chu ban she Foreign Language Press 外文出版社 Li Fanwen 李范文 2005 Xixia tong shi Comprehensive History of Western Xia 西夏通史 Beijing 北京 and Yinchuan 银川 Ren min chu ban she People s Press 人民出版社 Ningxia ren min chu ban she Ningxia People s Press 宁夏人民出版社 The Mongols referred to the ethnic groups who were immersed among the Jurchens and Mongols as Jauqŭt Jaquit and Joyit See Fei Xiaotong 费孝通 1999 Zhonghua min zu duo yuan yi ti ge ju The Framework of Diversity in Unity of the Chinese Nationality 中华民族多元一体格局 Beijing 北京 Zhongyang min zu da xue chu ban she Central Nationalities University Press 中央民族大学出版社 p 179 All these terms end with t and suggest that the Mongolian terms ending with t in reference of ethnic groups mean people The Chinese transcription of Tangut was Tang wu ti 唐兀惕 which was interpreted to represent the people of Western Xia See Lu Jianfu 呂建福 2002 Tu zu shi The Tu History 土族史 Beijing 北京 Zhongguo she hui ke xue chu ban she Chinese Social Sciences Press 中囯社会科学出版社 p 315 Hao Weimin 郝维民 and Qimudedaoerji 齐木德道尔吉 2007 Neimenggu tong shi gang yao Outline of Comprehensive History of Inner Mongolia 内蒙古通史纲要 Beijing 北京 Renmin chu ban she People s Press 人民出版社 p 17 Zhang Jiuhe 张久和 1998 Yuan Menggu ren de li shi Shiwei Dada yan jiu History of the Original Mongols research on Shiwei Dadan 原蒙古人的历史 室韦 达怛研究 Beijing 北京 Gao deng jiao yu chu ban she High Education Press 高等教育出版社 p 27 28 Zhu Hong 朱泓 1994 Ren zhong xue shang de xiong nu xian bei yu qi dan The Xiongnu Xianbei and Qidan in racial perspectives 人种学上的匈奴 鲜卑与契丹 Beifang wen wu Northern Cultural Relics 北方文物 38 2 7 13 Lu Jianfu 呂建福 2002 Tu zu shi The Tu History 土族史 Beijing 北京 Zhongguo she hui ke xue chu ban she Chinese Social Sciences Press 中囯社会科学出版社 p 311 312 Cheng Tian 承天 2008 Qidan di guo chuan qi Legends of the Khitan Empires 契丹帝国传奇 Beijing 北京 Zhongguo guo ji guang bo chu ban she Chinese International Broadcasting Press 中国国际广播出版社 Wittfogel Karl August and Chia sheng Feng 1949 History of Chinese society Liao 907 1125 Philadelphia American Philosophical Society distributed by the Macmillan Co New York p 1 Fei Xiaotong 费孝通 1999 Zhonghua min zu duo yuan yi ti ge ju The Framework of Diversity in Unity of the Chinese Nationality 中华民族多元一体格局 Beijing 北京 Zhongyang min zu da xue chu ban she Central Nationalities University Press 中央民族大学出版社 p 176 Mi Wenping 米文平 2000 Xianbei shi yan jiu Research on the Xianbei History 鮮卑史硏究 Zhengzhou 郑州 Zhongzhou gu ji chu ban she Zhongzhou Ancient Literature Press 中州古籍出版社 p 182 Wu Xinfu 伍新福 1999 Zhongguo Miao zu tong shi A comprehensive history of the Chinese Hmong 中国苗族通史 Guiyang 贵阳市 Guizhou min zu chu ban she Guizhou Nationalities Press 贵州民族出版社 p 25 30 Schein Louisa 2000 Minority rules the Miao and the feminine in China s cultural politics Durham Duke University Press p 37 38 Li Fanwen 李范文 2005 Xixia tong shi Comprehensive History of Western Xia 西夏通史 Beijing 北京 and Yinchuan 银川 Ren min chu ban she People s Press 人民出版社 Ningxia ren min chu ban she Ningxia People s Press 宁夏人民出版社 p 42 Cen Xiuwen 岑秀文 1993 Miaozu The Miao Nationality 苗族 Beijing 北京 Min zu chu ban she Nationalities Press 民族出版社 p 5 Lesdain Jacques 1908 From Pekin to Sikkim through the Ordos the Gobi Desert and Tibet London J Murray Schram Louis M J 1954 The Monguors of the Kansu Tibetan Frontier Their Origin History and Social Organization Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 44 1 1 138 p 25 Nietupski Paul 2006 Louis Schram and the Study of Social and Political History The Monguors of the Kansu Tibetan Frontier Louis M J Schram and Kevin Charles Stuart editor Xining Plateau Publications 30 36 p 32 Li Peiye 李培业 1995 Xi xia huang zu hou yi kao Investigation on the descendants of the Royal Family of Western Xia 西夏皇族后裔考 Xi bei da xue xue bao Journal of Northwest University 西北大学学报 88 3 46 52 Da Song 大松 1996 Li pei ye shi xi xia huang zu hou yi Li Peiye is the descendant of the Royal Family of Western Xia 李培业是西夏皇族后裔 Qi lu zhu tan Qilu Abacus Forum 齐鲁珠坛 6 26 Li Peiye 李培业 1997 Xi xia huang zu hou yi zai kao Reinvestigation on the descendants of the Royal Family of Western Xia 西夏皇族后裔再考 Xi Qiang wen hua West Qiang Culture 西羌文化 Li Peiye 李培业 1998 Xi xia li shi shi pu Genealogical records of Li Clan of Western Xia 西夏李氏世谱 Shenyang 沈阳 Liaoning min zu chu ban she Liaoning Nationalities Press 辽宁民族出版社 Lu Jianfu 呂建福 2005 Li tu si xian shi bian zheng A Textual Analysis of the Ancestral Origins of Li Tusi 李土司先世辨正 Xi bei min zu yan jiu Northwest Ethno National Studies 西北民族研究 46 3 119 129 Schram 1961 The Monguors of the Kansu Tibetan Frontier Part III Records of the Monguor Clans History of the Monguors in Huangchung and the Chronicles of the Lu Family Philadelphia American Philosophical Society Slater Keith W 2003 A grammar of Mangghuer a Mongolic language of China s Quinghai Gansu Sprachbund London Routledge Referenced in the Endangered Languages Project Pullinen Aila 2015 Mangghuer Embroidery A Vanishing Tradition in Gerald Roche and CK Stuart eds Asian Highlands Perspectives 36 Mapping the Monguor pp 178 188 301 332 Retrieved from Academia edu Stuart Kevin and Jun Hu 1992 Death and funerals among the Minhe Tu Monguor Asian Folklore Studies 51 67 88 Stuart Kevin and Jun Hu 1991 The Tu Fala trance mediums of northwest China Shaman s Drum 23 28 35 Hu Jun and Kevin Stuart 1992 Illness among the Minhe Monguor Qinghai Province PR China prevention and etiology Mongolian Studies XV 111 135 Limusishiden Li Dechun and Kevin Stuart 2006 Louis M J Schram s Relevance to Current Monguor Ethnographic Research The Monguors of the Kansu Tibetan Frontier Louis M J Schram and Kevin Charles Stuart editor Xining Plateau Publications 60 85 Ma Changshou 馬長壽 1962 Wuhuan yu Xianbei The Wuhuan and Xianbei 烏桓與鮮卑 Shanghai 上海 Shanghai ren min chu ban she Shanghai People s Press 上海人民出版社 p 175 176 Stuart Kevin and Jun Hu 1993 That all may prosper the Monguor Nadun of the Guanting Sanchuan Region Qinghai China Anthropos 88 15 27 Lu Xia 呂霞 2001 Xin ji gu tu peng cheng wan li Heart tied to the homeland the eagle flies thousands of miles 心系故土 鹏程万里 Zhongguo tu zu China s Tu Nationality 中国土族 4 27 29 p 28 Hu Fang 胡芳 2004 Da hao Tu xiang nadun The Great Tu Nadun 大好 土乡 纳顿 Zhongguo tu zu China s Tu Nationality 中国土族 22 2 14 16 p 14 Ma Daxue 马达学 2005 Qinghai tu zu Nadun wen hua xian xiang jie du An Interpretation of the cultural phenomenon of Nadun of the Tu Nationality in Qinghai 青海土族 纳顿 文化现象解读 Qinghai shi fan da xue xue bao Journal of Qinghai Normal University 青海师范大学学报 108 1 79 84 p 79 Ma Guangxing 1990 Wedding Etiquette and Traditional Songs of the Minhe Region Tu translated by Jun Hu and Kevin Stuart Asian Folklore Studies 49 2 197 222 Hu Jun and Kevin Stuart 1992 The Guanting Tu Monguor wedding ceremonies and songs Anthropos 87 109 132 Further reading EditAnonymous 1977 Pater Lodewijk Jozef Maria Schram 1883 1971 Een Brugs missionaris en etnoloog Haec Olim 21 16 24 Dpal ldan bkra shis Hu Jun Hu Ping Limusishiden Li Dechun Keith Slater Kevin Stuart Wang Xianzhen and Zhu Yongzhong 1996 Language Materials of China s Monguor Minority Huzhu Mongghul and Minhe Mangghuer Sino Platonic Papers No 69 Dwyer Arienne M 2005 Language Contact and Variation A Discourse based Grammar of Monguor Feng Lide and Kevin Stuart 1992 Interethnic Cultural Contact on the Inner Asian Frontier The Gangou People of Minhe County Qinghai Sino Platonic Papers No 33 Field Kenneth L 1997 A Grammatical Overview of Santa Mongolian University of California Santa Barbara PhD dissertation Kampfe Hans Rainer 1974 Die soziale Rolle des 2 Pekinger Lcang skya qutuqtu Rol pa i rdo rje 1717 1786 Beitrage zu einer Analyse anhand Tibetischer und mongolischer Biographien Bonn Rheinische Friedrich Wilhelms Universitat Georg Stefan 2003 Mongghul In Juha Janhunen editor 2003 The Mongolic Languages London Routledge pp 286 306 Hasibate editor 1986 Tuzu yu cidian Tu Language Dictionary Mongolian Language Family Dialects Research Series Vol 14 Huhehaote Nei menggu renmin chubanshe Inner Mongolia People s Press Hecken J Van 1977 Schram Lodewijk Jozef Maria missionaris en etnoloog Nationaal Biografisch Woordenboek 7 856 865 Hu Alex J 2010 An overview of the history and culture of the Xianbei Monguor Tu Asian Ethnicity 11 1 95 164 Hu Jun and Kevin Stuart 1992 The Guanting Tu Monguor Wedding Ceremonies and Songs Anthropos 87 109 132 Hu Jun and Kevin Stuart 1992 Illness Among the Minhe Tu Qinghai Province Prevention and Etiology Mongolian Studies 15 111 135 Illich Marina 2006 Selections from the Life of a Tibetan Buddhist Polymath Chankya Rolpai Dorje Lcang skya rol pa i rdo rje 1717 1786 Columbia University PhD dissertation Janhunen Juha editor 2003 The Mongolic Languages London Routledge Janhunen Juha 2003 Shirongol and Shirongolic Studia Etymologica Cracoviensia 8 83 89 Janhunen Juha 2006 On the Shirongolic Names of Amdo Studia Etymologica Cracoviensia 11 95 103 Janhunen Juha Lionel Ha Mingzong and Joseph Tshe dpag rnam rgyal 2007 On the Language of the Shaowa Tuzu in the Context of the Ethnic Taxonomy of Amdo Qinghai Central Asiatic Journal Lipman Jonathan N 1981 The Border World of Gansu 1895 1935 Stanford University PhD dissertation Ann Arbor University Microfilms Li Keyu 1987 Mongghul Qidar Merlong Mongghul Chinese Dictionary Xining Qinghai renmin chubanshe Qinghai People s Press Li Xuewei and Kevin Stuart 1990 Population and Culture of the Mongols Tu Baoan Dongxiang and Yugu in Gansu Mongolian Studies 12 71 93 Limusishiden and Kevin Stuart 1994 Caring for All the World The Huzhu Monguor Tu Pram In Edward H Kaplan and Donald W Whisenhunt editors Opuscula Altaica Essays in Honor of Henry Schwarz Bellingham Western Washington University Press pp 408 426 Limusishiden and Kevin Stuart 1995 Larinbuda and Jiminsu A Monguor Tragedy Asian Theatre Journal 12 2 221 263 Limusishiden and Kevin Stuart 1996 Review of Shilaode Dominik Schroder editor translator Li Keyu Tuzu gesaer Monguor Gesar Anthropos 91 297 Limusishiden and Kevin Stuart editors 1998 Huzhu Mongghul Folklore Texts and Translations Munchen Lincon Europa Limusishiden and Kevin Stuart 1999 Huzhu Mongghul Language Materials Suomalais Ugrilaisen Seuran Aikakauskirja Journal de la Societe Finno Ougrienne 88 261 264 Limsishiden and Kevin Stuart editors 2001 Huzhu Mongghul Texts Chileb 1983 1996 Selections 2 vol Munchen Lincom Europa Liu Xueyao 劉學銚 1994 Xianbei shi lun 鮮卑史論 Taibei 台北市 Nan tian shu ju 南天書局 Lu Jianfu 吕建福 2002 Tu Zu Shi 土族史 The Tu History Beijing 北京 Chinese Social Sciences Publishing House 中国社会科学出版社 Missions de Scheut 1920 Geschiedenis van de Christenheid Si ning 77 82 110 116 Ma Guangxing 1990 Wedding Etiquette and Traditional Songs of the Minhe Region Tu translated by Jun Hu and Kevin Stuart Asian Folklore Studies 49 2 197 222 Missions de Scheut 1920 Lettres du P Schram 38 41 Missions de Scheut 1920 Notes sur la prefecture chinoise d Si ning Koukounor 79 85 amp 112 119 Missions de Scheut 1921 De gelukkigste men s in Kansoe 138 Missions de Scheut 1921 L Immaculee et les paiens de Chine 201 220 Missions de Scheut 1921 De zwarte ellende in Si ning 217 223 Mole Gabriella 1970 The Tu yu hun from the Northern Wei to the Time of the Five Dynasties Serie Orientale Roma 41 Rome Istituto Italiano per il Medio ed Estreme Oriente Mostaert Antoine 1931 The Mongols of Kansu and their Language Bulletin of the Catholic University of Peking 8 75 89 Mostaert Antoine 1963 1964 Over Pater Louis Schram CICM Haec Olim 15 103 108 Ngag dbang chos ldan Shes rab dar rgyas and Klaus Sagaster 1967 Subud erike ein Rosenkranz aus Perlen die Biographie des 1 Pekinger lCang skya Khutukhtu Ngag dbang blo bzang chos ldan Wiesbaden Otto Harrassowitz Ngag dbang thub bstan dbang phyug and Hans Rainer Kampfe 1976 Nyi ma i od zer Naran u gerel Die Biographie des 2 Pekingger lCang skya Qutugtu Rol pa i rdo rje 1717 1786 Monumenta Tibetica Historica Abteilung II Vitae Band 1 St Augustin VGH Wissenschaftsverlag Norbu Kalsang Skal bzang nor bu Zhu Yongzhong and Kevin Stuart 1999 A Ritual Winter Exorcism in Gnyan Thog Village Qinghai Asian Folklore Studies 58 189 203 Postiglione Gerard A editor 1999 China s National Minority Education Ethnicity Schooling and Development New York Garland Press Potanin G N 1893 Tangutsko Tibetskaya okraina Kitaya i Central naya Mongoliya vols 1 2 St Petersburg Potanin G N 1950 Tangutsko Tibetskaya okraina Kitaya i tsentral naya Mongoliya The Tangut Tibetan frontier of China and Central Mongolia Moscow State Publisher An abridged edition of the 1893 version Qi Huimin Limusishiden and Kevin Stuart 1997 1998 Huzhu Monguor Wedding Songs Musical Characteristics Parts I II III IV Chinese Music 20 1 6 12 14 17 20 2 32 37 20 3 43 52 20 4 68 71 21 1 10 13 Qi Huimin Zhu Yongzhong and Kevin Stuart 1999 Minhe Mangghuer Wedding Songs Musical Characteristics Asian Folklore Studies 58 77 120 Schram Louis MJ 1912 Kansou Missions en Chine et au Congo 149 Schram Louis MJ 1918 Catholic Missions Ethnographic Notes 229 231 Schram Louis MJ 1927 Christelijke Kunst in China Bulletin Catholique de Peking 668 376 Schram Louis MJ 1932 Le mariage chez les T ou jen du Kan sou Marriage Among the Monguor of Gansu Varietes Sinologiques 58 Available in an English translation 1962 by Jean H Winchell in the Human Relations Area Files AE9 Schram Louis MJ 1954 The Monguors of the Kansu Tibetan Frontier Their Origin History and Social Organization Philadelphia Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 44 1 Schram Louis MJ 1954 The Monguors of the Kansu Tibetan Frontier Part II Their Religious Life Philadelphia Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 47 1 Schram Louis MJ 1955 Two letters to Marguerite Hebert Hebert Raphael amp Family Papers Mss 4769 Subseries 8 Louisiana and Lower Mississippi Valley Collections Special Collections Hill Memorial Library Louisiana State University Libraries Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Schram Louis MJ 1961 The Monguors of the Kansu Tibetan Frontier Part III Records of the Monguor Clans Philadelphia Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 51 3 Schram Louis MJ Li Meiling translator Robert Fried and Heather Fried proofreaders 2006 蒙古尔部族的组织 Mengguer Buzu de Zuzhi Organization of the Monguor Clan 青海民族研究 Qinghai Minzu Yanjiu Nationalities Research in Qinghai 1 29 36 2 10 14 Schroder Dominik 1952 1953 Zur Religion der Tujen des Sininggebietes Kukunor On the Religion of the Monguor of the Xining Region Koknor Anthropos 47 1 79 620 658 822 870 48 202 249 Available in an English translation 1962 by Richard Neuse IN Human Relations Area Files AE9 Schroder Dominik 1959 Aus der Volksdicntung der Monguor From the Popular Poetry of the Monguor 1 Teil Das weibe Glucksschaf Mythen Marchen Lieder Part 1 The White Lucky Sheep Myths Fairytales Songs Asiatische Forschungen 6 Wiesbaden Otto Harrassowitz Schroder Dominik 1964 Der dialekt der Monguor In B Spuler editor Mongolistik Handbuch der Orientalistik 1 Abteilung 5 Band 2 Abschnitt Leiden EJ Brill Schroder Dominik 1970 Aus der Volksdichtung der Monguor From the Popular Poetry of the Monguor 2 Teil In den Tagen der Urzeit Ein Mythus vom Licht und vom Leben Part 2 In the Days of Primeval Times A Myth of Light and Life Wiesbaden Otto Harrassowitz Slater Keith W 1998 Minhe Mangghuer a Mixed Language of the Inner Asian Frontier University of California Santa Barbara a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Slater Kieth W 2003 Mangghuer In Juha Janhunen editor 2003 The Mongolic Languages London Routledge 307 324 Slater Kieth W 2003 Minhe Mangghuer A Mongolic Language of China s Qinghai Gansu Sprachbund Curzon Asian Linguistic Series 2 London RoutledgeCurzon de Smedt Albrecht and Antoine Mostaert 1929 1931 Le dialecte monguor parle par les Mongols du Kansou occidental Iere partie Phonetique The Monguor dialect spoken by the Mongols of west Gansu Part 1 Phonetics Anthropos 24 145 166 801 815 25 657 669 961 973 26 253 de Smedt Albrecht and Antoine Mostaert 1933 Le dialecte monguor parle par les Mongols du Kansou occidental IIIe partie Dictionnaire monguor francais The Monguor dialect spoken by the Mongols of west Gansu Part 2 Monguor French dictionary Pei p ing Imprimerie de l Universite Catholique de Smedt Albrecht and Antoine Mostaert 1945 Le dialecte monguor parle par les Mongols du Kansou occidental IIe partie Grammaire The Monguor dialect spoken by the Mongols of west Gansu Part 3 Grammar Monumenta Serica Monograph 6 Peking Sperling Elliot 1997 A Note on the Chi kya Tribe and the Two Qi Clans in Amdo Les habitants du Toit du monde Recherches sur la Haute Asie 12 111 124 Stuart Kevin and Hu Jun 1992 Death and Funerals Among the Minhe Tu Monguor Asian Folklore Studies 51 2 67 87 Stuart Kevin and Hu Jun 1993 That All May Prosper The Monguor Nadun of the Guanting Sanchuan Region Anthropos 88 15 27 Stuart Kevin and Limusishiden editors 1994 China s Monguor Minority Ethnography and Folktales Sino Platonic Papers No 59 Sun Zhu editor 1990 Menggu yuzu yuyan cidian Mongol Language Family Dictionary Xining Qinghai renmin chubanshe Qinghai People s Press Thu u bkwan III Blo bzang chos kyi nyi ma 1989 1794 Lcang skya Rol pa i rdo rje i rnam thar Lanzhou Gansu u mi rigs dpe skrun khang Todaevam Buljash Khojchievna 1959 Uber die Sprache der Tung hsiang Acta Orientalia Hungarica 9 273 310 Todaevam Buljash Khojchievna 1961 Dunsyanskii yazyk Moskva Institut narodov Azii AN SSSR Todaevam Buljash Khojchievna 1963 Einige Besonderheiten der Paoan Sprache Acta Orientalia Hungarica 16 175 197 Todaevam Buljash Khojchievna 1966 Baoan skii yazyk Moskva Institut narodov Azii AN SSSR Todaevam Buljash Khojchievna 1973 Mongorskii yazyk Issledovanie teksty slovar The Monguor Language Analysis Texts and Glossary Moskva Institut vostokovedeniya AN SSSR Ujiyediin Chuluu Wu Chaolu 1994 Introduction Grammar and Sample Sentences for Monguor Sino Platonic Papers No 57 Wang Xianzheng and Kevin Stuart 1995 Blue Skies and Emoluments Minhe Monguor Men Sing I and II Chinese Music 18 1 13 18 18 2 28 33 Wang Xianzheng Zhu Yongzhong and Kevin Stuart 1995 The Brightness of the World Minhe Monguor Women Sing Mongolian Studies 18 65 83 Wang Xianzhen writer Zhu Yongzhong and Kevin Stuart editors 2001 Mangghuerla Bihuang Keli Mangghuer Folktale Reader Chengdu China Chengdu Audio Press Zhaonasitu editor Tuzu yu jianzhi A Brief Account of the Monguor Language Beijing Minzu chubanshe Nationalities Press Zhu Yongzhong and Kevin Stuart 1996 Minhe Monguor Nadun Texts CHIME 9 Autumn 89 105 Zhu Yongzhong and Kevin Stuart 1996 A Minhe Monguor Drinking Song Central Asiatic Journal 40 2 283 289 Zhu Yongzhong and Kevin Stuart 1997 Minhe Monguor Children s Games Orientalia Suecana XLV XLVI 179 216 Zhu Yongzhong and Kevin Stuart 1999 Education Among the Minhe Monguor In Postiglione Gerard A editor 1999 China s National Minority Education Ethnicity Schooling and Development New York Garland Press Zhu Yongzhong and Kevin Stuart 1999 Two Bodhisattvas From the East Minhe Monguor Funeral Orations Journal of Contemporary China 8 20 179 188 Zhu Yongzhong Ujiyediin Chuluu Chaolu Wu Keith Slater and Kevin Stuart 1997 Gangou Chinese Dialect A Comparative Study of a Strongly Altaicized Chinese Dialect and Its Mongolic Neighbor Anthropos 92 433 450 Zhu Yongzhong Ujiyediin Chuluu Chaolu Wu and Kevin Stuart 1995 The Frog Boy An Example of Minhe Monguor Orientalia Suecana XLII XLIV 197 207 Zhu Yongzhong Ujiyediin Chuluu and Kevin Stuart 1999 NI in Minhe Mangghuer and Other Mongol Languages Archiv Orientalni 67 3 323 338 External links EditThe Tu ethnic minority Chinese government site in English Tu entry on Ethnologue version 15 Mongour wedding Traditions Case Studies Monguor Data Collection Salar and Monguor grammatical sketches pictures and sound samples Several Monguor folktales Archived version Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Monguor people amp oldid 1132106580, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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