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Queue (hairstyle)

A queue or cue is a hairstyle worn by the Jurchen and Manchu peoples of Manchuria, and was later required to be worn by male subjects of Qing China.[1][2][3][4][5] Hair on top of the scalp is grown long and is often braided, while the front portion of the head is shaved. The distinctive hairstyle led to its wearers being targeted during anti-Chinese riots in Australia and the United States.[6]

Queue
Chinese American men with queues in Chinatown, San Francisco, 1880s
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese辮子
Simplified Chinese辫子
Alternative Chinese name
Traditional Chinese頭鬃尾 or 毛尾仔
Transcriptions
Southern Min
Hokkien POJmn̂g-bué-á/mn̂g-bé-á or thâu-chang-bué/thâu-chang-bé
Manchu name
Manchu scriptᠰᠣᠨᠴᠣᡥᠣ
Romanizationsoncoho

The edict that Han Chinese men and others under Manchu rule give up their traditional hairstyles and wear the queue, the Tifayifu, was met with resistance, although opinions about the queue did change over time. Han women were never required to wear their hair in the traditional women's Manchu style, liangbatou, although that too was a symbol of Manchu identity.[7]

Predecessors and origin edit

The queue hairstyle predates the Manchus. The Chinese word for queue, bian, meant plaited hair or a cord. The term bian, when used to describe the braid in the Manchu hairstyle, was originally applied by the Han dynasty to the Xiongnu. Jurchen people wore a queue like the Manchu, the Khitan people wore theirs in Tartar style and during the Tang dynasty, tribes in the west wore braids.[8][9] The Xianbei and Wuhuan were said to shave their heads, while Xiongnu had queues. Other evidence from Chinese histories indicate that the Tuoba or Tabgach groups of the Xianbei wore braids, since they were called "braided" by the southern Chinese. However, their hairstyle is hidden in depictions due to a hood they wore. The Liu Song dynasty's records called them "braided caitiff", suolu, while Southern Qi's history said they wore their "hair hanging down the back" (pifa), and called them suotou, "braided". A braid of hair was found at Zhalairuoer in a Tuoba grave.[10]

Han Chinese also made the peoples they conquered undo their queues. To show submission to the Han Chinese of the Sui dynasty, the people of Turfan (Gaochang) undid their queues, as did the Göktürks upon surrendering to the Tang dynasty. Hairstyles showed affiliation to a tribal confederation or dynasty.[11] In the Western Wei cave 285 at the Mogao Caves in Dunhuang, Xianbei people are depicted with small queues hanging from their necks. [12]

After overthrowing the Mongol Yuan dynasty, Zhu Yuanzhang, the first Ming emperor passed a law on mandatory hairstyle on 24 September 1392 mandating that all males grow their hair long and making it illegal for them to shave part of their foreheads while leaving strands of hair, which was the Mongol hairstyle. The penalty for both the barber and the person who was shaved and his sons was castration if they cut their hair and their families were to be sent to the borders for exile. This helped eradicate the partially shaved Mongol hairstyles.[13]

The Tangut people of the Western Xia may have inherited hairstyle influences from the Tuoba. It resembled a monk's hairstyle but was not exactly like their tonsure, it left the face to be framed on the sides and forehead by a fringe of hair by shaving the head top and leaving it bald. This made sure the Tibetans and Song Chinese could be told apart from shaved Tanguts. It was imposed by the Tangut emperor, Jingzong, threatening that their throats would be cut if they did not shave within three days. The emperor was the first one to shave.[14] Unlike the tonsure of the Tangut Western Xia, the Jurchen hairstyle of wearing the queue combined with shaving the crown was not the invention of an emperor of the dynasty but was an established Jurchen hairstyle which showed who submitted to Jin rule. This Jurchen queue and shaving hairstyle was not enforced on the Han Chinese in the Jin after an initial attempt to do so which was a rebuke to Jurchen values.[15] The Jin at first attempted to impose Jurchen hairstyle and clothes on the Han population during the Jin but the order was taken back. They also banned intermarriage.[16]

 
Khitan man in tomb painting in Aohan Banner, Inner Mongolia

Manchu Jurchen men had queues, while Mongol men swept their hair behind their ears and plaited them, Turk men wore loose hair and Xiongnu men braided their hair. Khitan males grew hair from their temples but shaved the crown of their heads. The Han Chinese men living in the Liao dynasty were not required to wear the shaved Khitan hairstyle which Khitan men wore to distinguish their ethnicity, unlike the Qing dynasty which mandated wearing of the Manchu hairstyle for men.[17] Khitan men left only two separate patches of hair on each of the forehead's sides in front of each ear in tresses while they shaved the top of their head. Khitan wore felt hats, fur clothes and woolen cloth and the Liao emperor switched between Han and Khitan clothing.[18] Khitan officials used gold ornamented ribbons to found their hair locks around their foreheads, covering their heads with felt hats according to the Ye Longli's (Yeh Lung-li) Qidan Guozhi (Ch'i-tan kuo-chih). Khitan wore the long side fringes and shaved pates.[19] Tomb murals of Khitan hairstyle show only some hair remaining near the neck and forehead with the rest of the head shaved.[20] Only at the temples were hair left while the crown was shaven.[21] The absence of Khitan clothes and hairstyles on a painting of riders previously identified as Khitan has led to experts questioning their purported identity.[22] Khitan men might have differentiate between classes by wearing different patterns on their small braids hanging off their shaved foreheads. They wore the braids occasionally with a forehead fringe with some shaving off all the forehead.[23] Some Han men adopted and mixed or combined Han clothing with Khitan clothing with Khitan boots and Han clothes or wearing Khitan clothes. Han women on the other hand did not adopt Khitan dress and continued wearing Han dress.[24][25]

Jurchen queue edit

Jurchen men, like their Manchu descendants, wore their hair in queues. In 1126, the Jurchen ordered male Han within their conquered territories to adopt the Jurchen hairstyle by shaving the front of their heads and to adopt Jurchen dress, but the order was lifted.[26] Some Han rebels impersonated Jurchen by wearing their hair in the Jurchen "pigtail" to strike fear within the Jurchen population.[27]

Manchu queue edit

 
Manchu queues
 
A European artist's conception of a Manchu warrior in China – surprisingly, holding the severed head of an enemy by its queue. Later historians have noted the queue looking more like Cossack chupryna as an inconsistency in the picture. (From the cover of Martino Martini's Regni Sinensis a Tartari devastati enarratio, 1661.)

The queue was a specifically male hairstyle worn by the Manchu from central Manchuria and later imposed on the Han Chinese during the Qing dynasty.[28][29][30] The hair on the front of the head was shaved off above the temples every ten days and the remainder of the hair was braided into a long braid.[31]

The Manchu hairstyle was forcefully introduced to Han Chinese and other ethnicities like the Nanai in the early 17th century during the transition from Ming to Qing. Nurhaci of the Aisin Gioro clan declared the establishment of the Later Jin dynasty, later becoming the Qing dynasty of China, after Ming dynasty forces in Liaodong defected to his side. The Ming general of Fushun, Li Yongfang, defected to Nurhaci after Nurhaci promised him rewards, titles, and Nurhaci's own granddaughter in marriage. Other Han Chinese generals in Liaodong proceeded to defect with their armies to Nurhaci and were given women from the Aisin Gioro family in marriage. Once firmly in power, Nurhaci commanded all men in the areas he conquered to adopt the Manchu hairstyle.

The Manchu hairstyle signified all ethnic groups submission to Qing rule, and also aided the Manchu identification of those Han who refused to accept Qing dynasty domination.

The hairstyle was compulsory for all males and the penalty for non-compliance was execution for treason. In the early 1910s, after the fall of the Qing dynasty, the Chinese no longer had to wear the Manchu queue. While some, such as Zhang Xun, still did so as a tradition, most of them abandoned it after the last Emperor of China, Puyi, cut his queue in 1922.[32]

The Nanais at first fought against the Nurhaci and the Manchus, led by their own Nanai Hurka chief Sosoku before surrendering to Hongtaiji in 1631. Mandatory shaving of the front of all male heads was imposed on Amur peoples like the Nanai people who were conquered by the Qing. The Amur peoples already wore the queue on the back of their heads but did not shave the front until the Qing subjected them and ordered them to shave.[33] The term "shaved-head people" was used to describe the Nanai people by Ulch people.[34]

Queue order edit

 
Chinese circus performers soon after the Manchu conquest, wearing queues. (Drawing by Johan Nieuhof, 1655–57)

The Queue Order (simplified Chinese: 剃发令; traditional Chinese: 剃髮令; pinyin: tìfàlìng),[35][36] or tonsure decree, was a series of laws violently imposed by the Qing dynasty during the seventeenth century. It was also imposed on Taiwanese indigenous peoples in 1753,[37][38] and Koreans who settled in northeast China in the late 19th century,[39][40] though the Ryukyuan people of the Ryukyu Kingdom, a tributary of China, requested and were granted an exemption from the mandate.

Traditionally, adult Han Chinese did not cut their hair for philosophical and cultural reasons. According to the Classic of Filial Piety, Confucius said

We are given our body, skin and hair from our parents; which we ought not to damage. This idea is the quintessence of filial duty. (身體髮膚,受之父母,不敢毀傷,孝至始也。)[41]

As a result of this ideology, both men and women wound their hair into a bun (a topknot) or other various hairstyles.

Han Chinese did not object to wearing the queue braid on the back of the head as they traditionally wore all their hair long, but fiercely objected to shaving the forehead so the Qing government exclusively focused on forcing people to shave the forehead rather than wear the braid. Han rebels in the first half of the Qing who objected to Qing hairstyle wore the braid but defied orders to shave the front of the head. One person was executed for refusing to shave the front but he had willingly braided the back of his hair. It was only later that westernized revolutionaries began to view the braid as backwards and advocated adopting short-haired western styles.[42] Han rebels against the Qing like the Taiping retained their queue braids on the back but rebelled by growing hair on the front of their heads. This caused the Qing government to view shaving the front of the head as the primary sign of loyalty rather than wearing the braid on the back, which did not violate Han customs and traditional Han did not object to.[43] Koxinga criticized the Qing hairstyle by referring to the shaven pate looking like a fly.[44] Koxinga and his men objected to shaving when the Qing demanded they shave in exchange for recognizing Koxinga as a feudatory.[45] The Qing demanded that Zheng Jing and his men on Taiwan shave to receive recognition as a fiefdom. His men and Ming prince Zhu Shugui fiercely objected to shaving.[46]

 
A soldier during the Boxer Rebellion with queue and conical Asian hat

In 1644, Beijing was sacked by a coalition of rebel forces led by Li Zicheng, a minor Ming dynasty official turned leader of a peasant revolt. The Chongzhen Emperor committed suicide when the city fell, marking the official end of the Ming dynasty. The Han Chinese Ming general Wu Sangui and his army then defected to the Qing and allowed them through Shanhai pass. They then seized control of Beijing, overthrowing Li's short-lived Shun dynasty. They then forced Han Chinese to adopt the queue as a sign of submission.[47]

A year later, after the Qing armies reached South China, on 21 July, 1645, the regent Dorgon issued an edict ordering all Han men to shave their foreheads and braid the rest of their hair into a queue identical to those worn by the Manchus.[48] Qing Manchu prince Dorgon initially canceled the order for all men in Ming territories south of the Great wall (post 1644 additions to the Qing) to shave. It was a Han official from Shandong, Sun Zhixie and Li Ruolin who voluntarily shaved their foreheads and demanded Qing Prince Dorgon impose the queue hairstyle on the entire population which led to the queue order.[49][50] The Han Chinese were given 10 days to comply or face death. Though Dorgon admitted that followers of Confucianism might have grounds for objection, most Han officials cited the Ming dynasty's traditional System of Rites and Music as their reason for resistance. This led Dorgon to question their motives: "If officials say that people should not respect our Rites and Music, but rather follow those of the Ming, what can be their true intentions?"[47]

In the edict, Dorgon specifically emphasized the fact that Manchus and the Qing Emperor himself all wore the queue and shaved their foreheads, so that by following the queue order, Han Chinese would look like the Manchus and the Emperor. This invoked the Confucian notion that the people were like the sons of the emperor, and should be similar in their appearance.[51][52][53]

The slogan adopted by the Qing was "Cut the hair and keep the head, (or) keep the hair and cut the head" (Chinese: 留髮不留頭,留頭不留髮; pinyin: liú fà bù liú tóu, liú tóu bù liú fà).[54] People who resisted the order were met with deadly force. Han rebels in Shandong tortured the Qing official who suggested the queue order to Dorgon to death and killed his relatives.[55]

The imposition of this order was not uniform; it took up to 10 years of martial enforcement for all of China to be brought into compliance, and while it was the Qing who imposed the queue hairstyle on the general population, they did not always personally execute those who did not obey. It was Han Chinese defectors who carried out massacres against people refusing to wear the queue. Li Chengdong, a Han Chinese general who had served the Ming but defected to the Qing,[56] ordered troops to carry out three separate massacres in the city of Jiading within a month, resulting in tens of thousands of deaths. The third massacre left few survivors.[57] The three massacres at Jiading District are some of the most infamous, with estimated death tolls in the tens or even hundreds of thousands.[58] Jiangyin also held out against about 10,000 Qing troops for 83 days. When the city wall was finally breached on 9 October, 1645, the Qing army, led by the Han Chinese Ming defector Liu Liangzuo (劉良佐), who had been ordered to "fill the city with corpses before you sheathe your swords," massacred the entire population, killing between 74,000 and 100,000 people.[59]

Han Chinese soldiers in 1645 under Han General Hong Chengchou forced the queue on the people of Jiangnan, while Han people were initially paid silver to wear the queue in Fuzhou when it was first implemented.[60][61]

The queue was the only aspect of Manchu culture that the Qing forced on the common Han population. The Qing required people serving as officials to wear Manchu clothing, but allowed other Han civilians to continue wearing Hanfu (Han clothing). Nevertheless, most Han civilian men voluntarily adopted Manchu clothing[62][63] like Changshan of their own free will. Throughout the Qing dynasty Han women continued to wear Han clothing.[64]

However, the shaving policy was not enforced in the Tusi autonomous chiefdoms in Southwestern China where many minorities lived. There was one Han Chinese Tusi, the Chiefdom of Kokang populated by Han Kokang people.

The Qing dynasty required all subjects of all ethnicities to shave their foreheads and wear the queue braid including Muslims like Hui people and Salar people but some Turkic Muslim ethnicities like Uyghur and Salar people already shaved their entire heads as part of their culture and were bald so they were not able to wear the braids on the back unless they wore wigs with fake queues. According to Jonathan Neaman Lipman the Qing dynasty required Salars to wear the queue.[65][66][67] During the Qing Salar men shaved their hair bald while when they went to journey in public they put on artificial queues.[68] Uyghur men shaved their hair bald during the Qing.[69] Uyghur males at the present still shave their heads bald in the summer.[70] Chen Cheng observed that Muslim Turks in 14th–15th century Turfan and Kumul shaved their heads while non-Muslim Turks grew long hair.[71][72]

However, after Jahangir Khoja invaded Kashgar, Turkistani Muslim begs and officials in Xinjiang eagerly fought for the "privilege" of wearing a queue to show their steadfast loyalty to the Empire. High-ranking begs were granted this right.[73]

The purpose of the Queue Order was to demonstrate loyalty to the Qing, and refusing to shave one's hair came to symbolize revolutionary ideals, as seen during the White Lotus Rebellion. Because of this, the members of the Taiping Rebellion were sometimes called the Long hairs (長毛) or Hair rebels (髮逆).[74]

Resistance to the queue edit

Han Chinese resistance to adopting the queue was widespread and bloody. The Chinese in the Liaodong Peninsula rebelled in 1622 and 1625 in response to the implementation of the mandatory hairstyle. The Manchus responded swiftly by killing the educated elite and instituting a stricter separation between Han Chinese and Manchus.[75]

In 1645, the enforcement of the queue order was taken a step further by the ruling Manchus when it was decreed that any man who did not adopt the Manchu hairstyle within ten days would be executed. The intellectual Lu Xun summed up the Chinese reaction to the implementation of the mandatory Manchu hairstyle by stating, "In fact, the Chinese people in those days revolted not because the country was on the verge of ruin, but because they had to wear queues." In 1683 Zheng Keshuang surrendered and wore a queue.[75]

The queue became a symbol of the Qing dynasty and a custom except among Buddhist monastics.[76][77][78] Some revolutionists, supporters of the Hundred Days' Reform or students who studied abroad cut their braids. The Xinhai Revolution in 1911 led to a complete change in hairstyle almost overnight. The queue became unpopular as it became associated with a fallen government; this is depicted in Lu Xun's short story Storm in a Teacup and is demonstrated by the fact that Chinese citizens in Hong Kong collectively changed to short haircuts.[79]

Cantonese outlaw bandit pirates in the Guangdong maritime frontier with Vietnam in the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries wore their hair long in defiance of the Qing laws which mandated cutting.[80]

Many people were violating the Qing laws on hair at the end of the dynasty. Some Chinese chose to wear the queue but not to shave their crown, while those people who cut the queue off and did not shave were considered revolutionary and others maintained the state-mandated combination of the queue and shaved crown.[81]

Exemptions edit

Neither Taoist priests nor Buddhist monks were required to wear the queue by the Qing; they continued to wear their traditional hairstyles, completely shaved heads for Buddhist monks, and long hair in the traditional Chinese topknot for Taoist priests.[82][83][84]

Foreign reaction edit

 
Barbershop in the Qing Dynasty (1870s)

The Manchus' willingness to impose the queue and their dress style on the men of China was viewed as an example to emulate by some foreign observers. H. E. M. James, a British civil servant in India, wrote in 1887 that the British ought to act in a similarly decisive way when imposing their will in India. In his view, the British administration should have outlawed practises such as Sati much earlier than 1829, which James ascribed to a British unwillingness to challenge long-held Indian traditions, no matter how detrimental they were to the country.[85]

British author Demetrius Charles Boulger in 1899 proposed that Britain form and head an alliance of "Philo-Chinese Powers" in setting up a new government for China based in Shanghai and Nanking as two capitals along the River Yangtze, to counter the interests of other powers in the region like the Russians due to what he believed was the imminent collapse of the Qing dynasty. The Yangtze valley was controlled by Qing officials such as Liu Kunyi and Zhang Zhidong, who were not under Beijing's influence and whom Boulger believed Britain could work with to stabilize China. He proposed that at Nanjing and Hankou a force of Chinese soldiers trained by the British be deployed and in Hong Kong, Weihaiwei and the Yangtze valley and it would have no allegiance to the Qing, and as such they in his idea would forgo the queue and be made to grow their hair long as a symbolic measure to "increasing the confidence of the Chinese in the advent of a new era".[86][87] Boulger stated he could not discern from the Chinese he spoke to on whether the queue was invented by Nurhaci to impose on the Chinese as a symbol of loyalty or whether it was an already established Manchu custom as no one seemed to know the origin of it from his or other sinologists' inquiries.[88]

English adventurer Augustus Frederick Lindley wrote that the beardless, youthful long haired Han Chinese rebels from Hunan in the Taiping armies who grew all their hair long while fighting against the Qing dynasty were among the most beautiful men in the world unlike, in his mind, the Han Chinese who wore the queue, with Lindley calling the shaved part "a disfigurement".[89]

Vietnam edit

After Nguyễn Huệ defeated the Later Lê dynasty, high ranking Lê loyalists and the last Lê emperor Lê Chiêu Thống fled Vietnam for asylum in Qing China. They went to Beijing where Lê Chiêu Thống was appointed a Chinese mandarin of the fourth rank in the Han Yellow Bordered Banner, while lower ranking loyalists were sent to cultivate government land and join the Green Standard Army in Sichuan and Zhejiang. They adopted Qing clothing and adopt the queue hairstyle, effectively becoming naturalized subjects of the Qing dynasty affording them protection against Vietnamese demands for extradition. Some Lê loyalists were also sent to Central Asia in Urumqi.[90][91] Modern descendants of the Lê monarch can be traced to southern Vietnam and Urumqi, Xinjiang.[92][93][94]

Other queues edit

 
Curley Bear with queued hair

Native American edit

The queue is also a Native American hairstyle, as described in the book House Made of Dawn by N. Scott Momaday.

Western edit

 
A Spanish soldier wearing a queue (1761)

In the 18th century, European soldiers styled their traditionally long hair into a queue called the "soldier's queue." The 18th century custom of tying periwigs (which normally reached down the back and chest) behind the neck began among soldiers and hunters, as seen as early as 1678 in a depiction of King Louis XIV hunting with his hair tied back.[95][96] By the 1730s, the queue had spread from the military and became widespread among civilians.[97] A 1697 depiction of a royal guard during the wedding of the Duke of Burgundy shows the sporting of this hairstyle, which came to influence civilian fashions due to the frequent wars France engaged in during Louis' reign. The queue, either curled or covered with a silk bag (known as a bag wig), gradually replaced the unwieldy big wigs and remained important to men's fashion until the French Revolution.[98] For civilian men, the tyewig (a wig tied into a queue) and the bag wig became widespread after the death of Louis XIV; wigs that did not feature a queue such as the bob wig were favoured by those who could not afford a long wig. The type of wig became an indicator of one's rank, occupation and political leanings.[99]

The French army plaited their wigs into a short queue (the French word for "tail") tied with a ribbon in the back, while the British military used the Ramillies wig, which featured a very long queue tied with two black ribbons, one at the neck and one at the tail end.[100] The French army continued keeping queues until the French Consulate period, when Napoleon and other officers promoted close cropped hair, known as à la Titus. However, hair policy in the French army was not uniform; some regiments such as the Imperial Guard foot grenadiers stuck to queues long afterwards, while the 2nd Line Infantry kept their queues as late as 1812. Short hair only became mandated at the end of the First Empire with the ordinance of 25 September 1815.[101] Marshal Jean Lannes notably stood out due to his refusal to cut his queue.[102][103]

British soldiers and sailors during the 18th century also wore their hair in a queue. While not always braided, the hair was pulled back very tight into a single tail, wrapped around a piece of leather and tied down with a ribbon. The hair was often greased and powdered in a fashion similar to powdered wigs, or tarred in the case of sailors. It was said that the soldiers' hair was pulled back so tightly that they had difficulty closing their eyes afterwards. The use of white hair powder in the British Army was discontinued in 1796 and queues were ordered to be cut off four years later.[104] They continued to be worn in the Royal Navy for a while longer, where they were known as "pigtails". Officers wore pigtails until 1805 and other ranks continued to wear them until about 1820.[105]

In the Prussian Army and those of several other states within the Holy Roman Empire, the soldier's queue was mandatory under the reign of Frederick William I of Prussia. An artificial or "patent" queue was issued to recruits whose hair was too short to plait. The style was abolished in the Prussian Army in 1807.[106]

In the United States Army, the order to remove all queues was issued on 30 April 1801 by Major General James Wilkinson. The order was highly unpopular with both officers and men, leading to several desertions and threats of resignation. One senior officer, Lieutenant Colonel Thomas Butler, was eventually court-martialled in 1803 for failing to cut his hair.[107]

See also edit

References edit

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Works cited

  • Dennerline, Jerry (2002). "The Shun-chih Reign". In Peterson, Willard J. (ed.). Cambridge History of China, Vol. 9, Part 1: The Ch'ing Dynasty to 1800. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 73–119. ISBN 0-521-24334-3.
  • Ebrey, Patricia (1993). Chinese Civilization: A Sourcebook. Simon and Schuster.
  • Faure, David (2007). Emperor and Ancestor: State and Lineage in South China. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-5318-0.
  • Nguyễn Khắc Thuần (2005), Danh tướng Việt Nam, Nhà Xuất bản Giáo dục.
  • Rhoads, Edward J. M. (2011). Manchus and Han: Ethnic Relations and Political Power in Late Qing and Early Republican China, 1861–1928. University of Washington Press. ISBN 978-0-295-80412-5. Retrieved 10 March 2014.
  • Sinor, Denis, ed. (1990). The Cambridge History of Early Inner Asia, Volume 1 (illustrated, reprint ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-24304-1. Retrieved 10 March 2014.
  • Struve, Lynn (1988). "The Southern Ming". In Frederic W. Mote; Denis Twitchett; John King Fairbank (eds.). Cambridge History of China, Volume 7, The Ming Dynasty, 1368–1644. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 641–725. ISBN 0-521-24332-7.
  • Wakeman, Frederic (1975b), "Localism and Loyalism During the Ch'ing Conquest of Kiangnan: The Tragedy of Chiang-yin", in Frederic Wakeman Jr.; Carolyn Grant (eds.), Conflict and Control in Late Imperial China, Berkeley: Center of Chinese Studies, University of California, Berkeley, pp. 43–85, ISBN 978-0520025974.
  • Wakeman, Frederic (1985). The Great Enterprise: The Manchu Reconstruction of Imperial Order in Seventeenth-Century China. University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-04804-0. In two volumes. [Volume 1. University of California Press. 31 March 1986. ISBN 9780520048041.]
  • 张博泉 (Zhang Boquan) (1984). 《金史简编》. 辽宁人民出版社.
  • Also mentioned in "Dragonwings", by Laurence Yep, Chapter 4

Further reading edit

  • Struve, Lynn A (1998), Voices from the Ming-Qing Cataclysm: China in Tigers' Jaws, Yale University Press, ISBN 978-0-300-07553-3. (312 pages).

External links edit

  •   Media related to Queues (hair fashion) at Wikimedia Commons
  •   The dictionary definition of queue (hairstyle) at Wiktionary

queue, hairstyle, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, require, cleanup, meet, wikipedia, quality, standards, specific, problem, excessive, re. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is excessive repetition Please help improve this article if you can December 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may be in need of reorganization to comply with Wikipedia s layout guidelines Please help by editing the article to make improvements to the overall structure May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message A queue or cue is a hairstyle worn by the Jurchen and Manchu peoples of Manchuria and was later required to be worn by male subjects of Qing China 1 2 3 4 5 Hair on top of the scalp is grown long and is often braided while the front portion of the head is shaved The distinctive hairstyle led to its wearers being targeted during anti Chinese riots in Australia and the United States 6 QueueChinese American men with queues in Chinatown San Francisco 1880sChinese nameTraditional Chinese辮子Simplified Chinese辫子TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinbianziYue CantoneseJyutpingbin1 zi2Southern MinHokkien POJpiⁿ a 辮仔 Alternative Chinese nameTraditional Chinese頭鬃尾 or 毛尾仔TranscriptionsSouthern MinHokkien POJmn g bue a mn g be a or thau chang bue thau chang beManchu nameManchu scriptᠰᠣᠨᠴᠣᡥᠣRomanizationsoncohoThe edict that Han Chinese men and others under Manchu rule give up their traditional hairstyles and wear the queue the Tifayifu was met with resistance although opinions about the queue did change over time Han women were never required to wear their hair in the traditional women s Manchu style liangbatou although that too was a symbol of Manchu identity 7 Contents 1 Predecessors and origin 1 1 Jurchen queue 1 2 Manchu queue 1 2 1 Queue order 1 2 2 Resistance to the queue 1 2 3 Exemptions 1 2 4 Foreign reaction 1 3 Vietnam 2 Other queues 2 1 Native American 2 2 Western 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksPredecessors and origin editThe queue hairstyle predates the Manchus The Chinese word for queue bian meant plaited hair or a cord The term bian when used to describe the braid in the Manchu hairstyle was originally applied by the Han dynasty to the Xiongnu Jurchen people wore a queue like the Manchu the Khitan people wore theirs in Tartar style and during the Tang dynasty tribes in the west wore braids 8 9 The Xianbei and Wuhuan were said to shave their heads while Xiongnu had queues Other evidence from Chinese histories indicate that the Tuoba or Tabgach groups of the Xianbei wore braids since they were called braided by the southern Chinese However their hairstyle is hidden in depictions due to a hood they wore The Liu Song dynasty s records called them braided caitiff suolu while Southern Qi s history said they wore their hair hanging down the back pifa and called them suotou braided A braid of hair was found at Zhalairuoer in a Tuoba grave 10 Han Chinese also made the peoples they conquered undo their queues To show submission to the Han Chinese of the Sui dynasty the people of Turfan Gaochang undid their queues as did the Gokturks upon surrendering to the Tang dynasty Hairstyles showed affiliation to a tribal confederation or dynasty 11 In the Western Wei cave 285 at the Mogao Caves in Dunhuang Xianbei people are depicted with small queues hanging from their necks 12 After overthrowing the Mongol Yuan dynasty Zhu Yuanzhang the first Ming emperor passed a law on mandatory hairstyle on 24 September 1392 mandating that all males grow their hair long and making it illegal for them to shave part of their foreheads while leaving strands of hair which was the Mongol hairstyle The penalty for both the barber and the person who was shaved and his sons was castration if they cut their hair and their families were to be sent to the borders for exile This helped eradicate the partially shaved Mongol hairstyles 13 The Tangut people of the Western Xia may have inherited hairstyle influences from the Tuoba It resembled a monk s hairstyle but was not exactly like their tonsure it left the face to be framed on the sides and forehead by a fringe of hair by shaving the head top and leaving it bald This made sure the Tibetans and Song Chinese could be told apart from shaved Tanguts It was imposed by the Tangut emperor Jingzong threatening that their throats would be cut if they did not shave within three days The emperor was the first one to shave 14 Unlike the tonsure of the Tangut Western Xia the Jurchen hairstyle of wearing the queue combined with shaving the crown was not the invention of an emperor of the dynasty but was an established Jurchen hairstyle which showed who submitted to Jin rule This Jurchen queue and shaving hairstyle was not enforced on the Han Chinese in the Jin after an initial attempt to do so which was a rebuke to Jurchen values 15 The Jin at first attempted to impose Jurchen hairstyle and clothes on the Han population during the Jin but the order was taken back They also banned intermarriage 16 nbsp Khitan man in tomb painting in Aohan Banner Inner MongoliaManchu Jurchen men had queues while Mongol men swept their hair behind their ears and plaited them Turk men wore loose hair and Xiongnu men braided their hair Khitan males grew hair from their temples but shaved the crown of their heads The Han Chinese men living in the Liao dynasty were not required to wear the shaved Khitan hairstyle which Khitan men wore to distinguish their ethnicity unlike the Qing dynasty which mandated wearing of the Manchu hairstyle for men 17 Khitan men left only two separate patches of hair on each of the forehead s sides in front of each ear in tresses while they shaved the top of their head Khitan wore felt hats fur clothes and woolen cloth and the Liao emperor switched between Han and Khitan clothing 18 Khitan officials used gold ornamented ribbons to found their hair locks around their foreheads covering their heads with felt hats according to the Ye Longli s Yeh Lung li Qidan Guozhi Ch i tan kuo chih Khitan wore the long side fringes and shaved pates 19 Tomb murals of Khitan hairstyle show only some hair remaining near the neck and forehead with the rest of the head shaved 20 Only at the temples were hair left while the crown was shaven 21 The absence of Khitan clothes and hairstyles on a painting of riders previously identified as Khitan has led to experts questioning their purported identity 22 Khitan men might have differentiate between classes by wearing different patterns on their small braids hanging off their shaved foreheads They wore the braids occasionally with a forehead fringe with some shaving off all the forehead 23 Some Han men adopted and mixed or combined Han clothing with Khitan clothing with Khitan boots and Han clothes or wearing Khitan clothes Han women on the other hand did not adopt Khitan dress and continued wearing Han dress 24 25 nbsp Yelu Bei nbsp Horsemen nbsp Horsemen at rest nbsp Hunters nbsp Cooks nbsp Boys and girls nbsp Hairstyle nbsp nbsp Jurchen queue edit Jurchen men like their Manchu descendants wore their hair in queues In 1126 the Jurchen ordered male Han within their conquered territories to adopt the Jurchen hairstyle by shaving the front of their heads and to adopt Jurchen dress but the order was lifted 26 Some Han rebels impersonated Jurchen by wearing their hair in the Jurchen pigtail to strike fear within the Jurchen population 27 Manchu queue edit nbsp Manchu queues nbsp A European artist s conception of a Manchu warrior in China surprisingly holding the severed head of an enemy by its queue Later historians have noted the queue looking more like Cossack chupryna as an inconsistency in the picture From the cover of Martino Martini s Regni Sinensis a Tartari devastati enarratio 1661 The queue was a specifically male hairstyle worn by the Manchu from central Manchuria and later imposed on the Han Chinese during the Qing dynasty 28 29 30 The hair on the front of the head was shaved off above the temples every ten days and the remainder of the hair was braided into a long braid 31 The Manchu hairstyle was forcefully introduced to Han Chinese and other ethnicities like the Nanai in the early 17th century during the transition from Ming to Qing Nurhaci of the Aisin Gioro clan declared the establishment of the Later Jin dynasty later becoming the Qing dynasty of China after Ming dynasty forces in Liaodong defected to his side The Ming general of Fushun Li Yongfang defected to Nurhaci after Nurhaci promised him rewards titles and Nurhaci s own granddaughter in marriage Other Han Chinese generals in Liaodong proceeded to defect with their armies to Nurhaci and were given women from the Aisin Gioro family in marriage Once firmly in power Nurhaci commanded all men in the areas he conquered to adopt the Manchu hairstyle The Manchu hairstyle signified all ethnic groups submission to Qing rule and also aided the Manchu identification of those Han who refused to accept Qing dynasty domination The hairstyle was compulsory for all males and the penalty for non compliance was execution for treason In the early 1910s after the fall of the Qing dynasty the Chinese no longer had to wear the Manchu queue While some such as Zhang Xun still did so as a tradition most of them abandoned it after the last Emperor of China Puyi cut his queue in 1922 32 The Nanais at first fought against the Nurhaci and the Manchus led by their own Nanai Hurka chief Sosoku before surrendering to Hongtaiji in 1631 Mandatory shaving of the front of all male heads was imposed on Amur peoples like the Nanai people who were conquered by the Qing The Amur peoples already wore the queue on the back of their heads but did not shave the front until the Qing subjected them and ordered them to shave 33 The term shaved head people was used to describe the Nanai people by Ulch people 34 Queue order edit See also Tifayifu nbsp Chinese circus performers soon after the Manchu conquest wearing queues Drawing by Johan Nieuhof 1655 57 The Queue Order simplified Chinese 剃发令 traditional Chinese 剃髮令 pinyin tifaling 35 36 or tonsure decree was a series of laws violently imposed by the Qing dynasty during the seventeenth century It was also imposed on Taiwanese indigenous peoples in 1753 37 38 and Koreans who settled in northeast China in the late 19th century 39 40 though the Ryukyuan people of the Ryukyu Kingdom a tributary of China requested and were granted an exemption from the mandate Traditionally adult Han Chinese did not cut their hair for philosophical and cultural reasons According to the Classic of Filial Piety Confucius saidWe are given our body skin and hair from our parents which we ought not to damage This idea is the quintessence of filial duty 身體髮膚 受之父母 不敢毀傷 孝至始也 41 As a result of this ideology both men and women wound their hair into a bun a topknot or other various hairstyles Han Chinese did not object to wearing the queue braid on the back of the head as they traditionally wore all their hair long but fiercely objected to shaving the forehead so the Qing government exclusively focused on forcing people to shave the forehead rather than wear the braid Han rebels in the first half of the Qing who objected to Qing hairstyle wore the braid but defied orders to shave the front of the head One person was executed for refusing to shave the front but he had willingly braided the back of his hair It was only later that westernized revolutionaries began to view the braid as backwards and advocated adopting short haired western styles 42 Han rebels against the Qing like the Taiping retained their queue braids on the back but rebelled by growing hair on the front of their heads This caused the Qing government to view shaving the front of the head as the primary sign of loyalty rather than wearing the braid on the back which did not violate Han customs and traditional Han did not object to 43 Koxinga criticized the Qing hairstyle by referring to the shaven pate looking like a fly 44 Koxinga and his men objected to shaving when the Qing demanded they shave in exchange for recognizing Koxinga as a feudatory 45 The Qing demanded that Zheng Jing and his men on Taiwan shave to receive recognition as a fiefdom His men and Ming prince Zhu Shugui fiercely objected to shaving 46 nbsp A soldier during the Boxer Rebellion with queue and conical Asian hatIn 1644 Beijing was sacked by a coalition of rebel forces led by Li Zicheng a minor Ming dynasty official turned leader of a peasant revolt The Chongzhen Emperor committed suicide when the city fell marking the official end of the Ming dynasty The Han Chinese Ming general Wu Sangui and his army then defected to the Qing and allowed them through Shanhai pass They then seized control of Beijing overthrowing Li s short lived Shun dynasty They then forced Han Chinese to adopt the queue as a sign of submission 47 A year later after the Qing armies reached South China on 21 July 1645 the regent Dorgon issued an edict ordering all Han men to shave their foreheads and braid the rest of their hair into a queue identical to those worn by the Manchus 48 Qing Manchu prince Dorgon initially canceled the order for all men in Ming territories south of the Great wall post 1644 additions to the Qing to shave It was a Han official from Shandong Sun Zhixie and Li Ruolin who voluntarily shaved their foreheads and demanded Qing Prince Dorgon impose the queue hairstyle on the entire population which led to the queue order 49 50 The Han Chinese were given 10 days to comply or face death Though Dorgon admitted that followers of Confucianism might have grounds for objection most Han officials cited the Ming dynasty s traditional System of Rites and Music as their reason for resistance This led Dorgon to question their motives If officials say that people should not respect our Rites and Music but rather follow those of the Ming what can be their true intentions 47 In the edict Dorgon specifically emphasized the fact that Manchus and the Qing Emperor himself all wore the queue and shaved their foreheads so that by following the queue order Han Chinese would look like the Manchus and the Emperor This invoked the Confucian notion that the people were like the sons of the emperor and should be similar in their appearance 51 52 53 The slogan adopted by the Qing was Cut the hair and keep the head or keep the hair and cut the head Chinese 留髮不留頭 留頭不留髮 pinyin liu fa bu liu tou liu tou bu liu fa 54 People who resisted the order were met with deadly force Han rebels in Shandong tortured the Qing official who suggested the queue order to Dorgon to death and killed his relatives 55 The imposition of this order was not uniform it took up to 10 years of martial enforcement for all of China to be brought into compliance and while it was the Qing who imposed the queue hairstyle on the general population they did not always personally execute those who did not obey It was Han Chinese defectors who carried out massacres against people refusing to wear the queue Li Chengdong a Han Chinese general who had served the Ming but defected to the Qing 56 ordered troops to carry out three separate massacres in the city of Jiading within a month resulting in tens of thousands of deaths The third massacre left few survivors 57 The three massacres at Jiading District are some of the most infamous with estimated death tolls in the tens or even hundreds of thousands 58 Jiangyin also held out against about 10 000 Qing troops for 83 days When the city wall was finally breached on 9 October 1645 the Qing army led by the Han Chinese Ming defector Liu Liangzuo 劉良佐 who had been ordered to fill the city with corpses before you sheathe your swords massacred the entire population killing between 74 000 and 100 000 people 59 Han Chinese soldiers in 1645 under Han General Hong Chengchou forced the queue on the people of Jiangnan while Han people were initially paid silver to wear the queue in Fuzhou when it was first implemented 60 61 The queue was the only aspect of Manchu culture that the Qing forced on the common Han population The Qing required people serving as officials to wear Manchu clothing but allowed other Han civilians to continue wearing Hanfu Han clothing Nevertheless most Han civilian men voluntarily adopted Manchu clothing 62 63 like Changshan of their own free will Throughout the Qing dynasty Han women continued to wear Han clothing 64 However the shaving policy was not enforced in the Tusi autonomous chiefdoms in Southwestern China where many minorities lived There was one Han Chinese Tusi the Chiefdom of Kokang populated by Han Kokang people The Qing dynasty required all subjects of all ethnicities to shave their foreheads and wear the queue braid including Muslims like Hui people and Salar people but some Turkic Muslim ethnicities like Uyghur and Salar people already shaved their entire heads as part of their culture and were bald so they were not able to wear the braids on the back unless they wore wigs with fake queues According to Jonathan Neaman Lipman the Qing dynasty required Salars to wear the queue 65 66 67 During the Qing Salar men shaved their hair bald while when they went to journey in public they put on artificial queues 68 Uyghur men shaved their hair bald during the Qing 69 Uyghur males at the present still shave their heads bald in the summer 70 Chen Cheng observed that Muslim Turks in 14th 15th century Turfan and Kumul shaved their heads while non Muslim Turks grew long hair 71 72 However after Jahangir Khoja invaded Kashgar Turkistani Muslim begs and officials in Xinjiang eagerly fought for the privilege of wearing a queue to show their steadfast loyalty to the Empire High ranking begs were granted this right 73 The purpose of the Queue Order was to demonstrate loyalty to the Qing and refusing to shave one s hair came to symbolize revolutionary ideals as seen during the White Lotus Rebellion Because of this the members of the Taiping Rebellion were sometimes called the Long hairs 長毛 or Hair rebels 髮逆 74 Resistance to the queue edit Han Chinese resistance to adopting the queue was widespread and bloody The Chinese in the Liaodong Peninsula rebelled in 1622 and 1625 in response to the implementation of the mandatory hairstyle The Manchus responded swiftly by killing the educated elite and instituting a stricter separation between Han Chinese and Manchus 75 In 1645 the enforcement of the queue order was taken a step further by the ruling Manchus when it was decreed that any man who did not adopt the Manchu hairstyle within ten days would be executed The intellectual Lu Xun summed up the Chinese reaction to the implementation of the mandatory Manchu hairstyle by stating In fact the Chinese people in those days revolted not because the country was on the verge of ruin but because they had to wear queues In 1683 Zheng Keshuang surrendered and wore a queue 75 The queue became a symbol of the Qing dynasty and a custom except among Buddhist monastics 76 77 78 Some revolutionists supporters of the Hundred Days Reform or students who studied abroad cut their braids The Xinhai Revolution in 1911 led to a complete change in hairstyle almost overnight The queue became unpopular as it became associated with a fallen government this is depicted in Lu Xun s short story Storm in a Teacup and is demonstrated by the fact that Chinese citizens in Hong Kong collectively changed to short haircuts 79 Cantonese outlaw bandit pirates in the Guangdong maritime frontier with Vietnam in the 17th 18th and 19th centuries wore their hair long in defiance of the Qing laws which mandated cutting 80 Many people were violating the Qing laws on hair at the end of the dynasty Some Chinese chose to wear the queue but not to shave their crown while those people who cut the queue off and did not shave were considered revolutionary and others maintained the state mandated combination of the queue and shaved crown 81 Exemptions edit Neither Taoist priests nor Buddhist monks were required to wear the queue by the Qing they continued to wear their traditional hairstyles completely shaved heads for Buddhist monks and long hair in the traditional Chinese topknot for Taoist priests 82 83 84 Foreign reaction edit nbsp Barbershop in the Qing Dynasty 1870s The Manchus willingness to impose the queue and their dress style on the men of China was viewed as an example to emulate by some foreign observers H E M James a British civil servant in India wrote in 1887 that the British ought to act in a similarly decisive way when imposing their will in India In his view the British administration should have outlawed practises such as Sati much earlier than 1829 which James ascribed to a British unwillingness to challenge long held Indian traditions no matter how detrimental they were to the country 85 British author Demetrius Charles Boulger in 1899 proposed that Britain form and head an alliance of Philo Chinese Powers in setting up a new government for China based in Shanghai and Nanking as two capitals along the River Yangtze to counter the interests of other powers in the region like the Russians due to what he believed was the imminent collapse of the Qing dynasty The Yangtze valley was controlled by Qing officials such as Liu Kunyi and Zhang Zhidong who were not under Beijing s influence and whom Boulger believed Britain could work with to stabilize China He proposed that at Nanjing and Hankou a force of Chinese soldiers trained by the British be deployed and in Hong Kong Weihaiwei and the Yangtze valley and it would have no allegiance to the Qing and as such they in his idea would forgo the queue and be made to grow their hair long as a symbolic measure to increasing the confidence of the Chinese in the advent of a new era 86 87 Boulger stated he could not discern from the Chinese he spoke to on whether the queue was invented by Nurhaci to impose on the Chinese as a symbol of loyalty or whether it was an already established Manchu custom as no one seemed to know the origin of it from his or other sinologists inquiries 88 English adventurer Augustus Frederick Lindley wrote that the beardless youthful long haired Han Chinese rebels from Hunan in the Taiping armies who grew all their hair long while fighting against the Qing dynasty were among the most beautiful men in the world unlike in his mind the Han Chinese who wore the queue with Lindley calling the shaved part a disfigurement 89 Vietnam edit Main article Ohaguro Elsewhere After Nguyễn Huệ defeated the Later Le dynasty high ranking Le loyalists and the last Le emperor Le Chieu Thống fled Vietnam for asylum in Qing China They went to Beijing where Le Chieu Thống was appointed a Chinese mandarin of the fourth rank in the Han Yellow Bordered Banner while lower ranking loyalists were sent to cultivate government land and join the Green Standard Army in Sichuan and Zhejiang They adopted Qing clothing and adopt the queue hairstyle effectively becoming naturalized subjects of the Qing dynasty affording them protection against Vietnamese demands for extradition Some Le loyalists were also sent to Central Asia in Urumqi 90 91 Modern descendants of the Le monarch can be traced to southern Vietnam and Urumqi Xinjiang 92 93 94 Other queues edit nbsp Curley Bear with queued hairNative American edit The queue is also a Native American hairstyle as described in the book House Made of Dawn by N Scott Momaday Western edit nbsp A Spanish soldier wearing a queue 1761 In the 18th century European soldiers styled their traditionally long hair into a queue called the soldier s queue The 18th century custom of tying periwigs which normally reached down the back and chest behind the neck began among soldiers and hunters as seen as early as 1678 in a depiction of King Louis XIV hunting with his hair tied back 95 96 By the 1730s the queue had spread from the military and became widespread among civilians 97 A 1697 depiction of a royal guard during the wedding of the Duke of Burgundy shows the sporting of this hairstyle which came to influence civilian fashions due to the frequent wars France engaged in during Louis reign The queue either curled or covered with a silk bag known as a bag wig gradually replaced the unwieldy big wigs and remained important to men s fashion until the French Revolution 98 For civilian men the tyewig a wig tied into a queue and the bag wig became widespread after the death of Louis XIV wigs that did not feature a queue such as the bob wig were favoured by those who could not afford a long wig The type of wig became an indicator of one s rank occupation and political leanings 99 The French army plaited their wigs into a short queue the French word for tail tied with a ribbon in the back while the British military used the Ramillies wig which featured a very long queue tied with two black ribbons one at the neck and one at the tail end 100 The French army continued keeping queues until the French Consulate period when Napoleon and other officers promoted close cropped hair known as a la Titus However hair policy in the French army was not uniform some regiments such as the Imperial Guard foot grenadiers stuck to queues long afterwards while the 2nd Line Infantry kept their queues as late as 1812 Short hair only became mandated at the end of the First Empire with the ordinance of 25 September 1815 101 Marshal Jean Lannes notably stood out due to his refusal to cut his queue 102 103 British soldiers and sailors during the 18th century also wore their hair in a queue While not always braided the hair was pulled back very tight into a single tail wrapped around a piece of leather and tied down with a ribbon The hair was often greased and powdered in a fashion similar to powdered wigs or tarred in the case of sailors It was said that the soldiers hair was pulled back so tightly that they had difficulty closing their eyes afterwards The use of white hair powder in the British Army was discontinued in 1796 and queues were ordered to be cut off four years later 104 They continued to be worn in the Royal Navy for a while longer where they were known as pigtails Officers wore pigtails until 1805 and other ranks continued to wear them until about 1820 105 In the Prussian Army and those of several other states within the Holy Roman Empire the soldier s queue was mandatory under the reign of Frederick William I of Prussia An artificial or patent queue was issued to recruits whose hair was too short to plait The style was abolished in the Prussian Army in 1807 106 In the United States Army the order to remove all queues was issued on 30 April 1801 by Major General James Wilkinson The order was highly unpopular with both officers and men leading to several desertions and threats of resignation One senior officer Lieutenant Colonel Thomas Butler was eventually court martialled in 1803 for failing to cut his hair 107 See also edit nbsp China portal nbsp Fashion portal nbsp History portalBeard and haircut laws by country Braid Cheongsam Chupryna Foot binding Hanfu List of hairstyles Mohawk Pigtail Pigtail Ordinance Rattail haircut SikhaReferences edit Evans Thammy 2006 Great Wall of China Beijing amp Northern China Bradt Travel Guide Great Wall of China Bradt Travel Guides p 41 ISBN 1841621587 University of Hawaii at Manoa Art Gallery Chazen Museum of Art Museum of International Folk Art N M Evergrand Art Museum Taoyuan Taiwan 2009 Writing with Thread Traditional Textiles of South Minorities a Special Exhibition from the Collection of Huang Ying Feng and the Evergrand Art Museum in Taoyuan Taiwan University of Hawai i Art Gallery p 118 ISBN 978 0982033210 Ebrey Patricia Buckley Walthall Anne Palais James B 2006 Pre modern East Asia To 1800 A Cultural Social and Political History Houghton Mifflin p 370 ISBN 0618133860 Millward James 1998 Beyond the Pass Economy Ethnicity and Empire in Qing Central Asia 1759 1864 illustrated ed Stanford University Press p 305 ISBN 0804729336 Bromber Katrin Krawietz Birgit Maguire Joseph eds 2013 Sport Across Asia Politics Cultures and Identities Vol 21 illustrated ed Routledge p 53 ISBN 978 0415884389 Hairy History Pyun Kyunghee Wong Aida Yuen 2018 Fashion Identity and Power in Modern Asia Springer ISBN 978 3319971995 East Asian History 1994 p 54 Godley Michael R December 1994 The End of the Queue Hair as a Symbol in Chinese History PDF East Asian History 8 Kuwayama George 1991 Ancient Mortuary Traditions of China Papers on Chinese Ceramic Funerary Sculptures Far Eastern Art Council Los Angeles County Museum of Art p 59 ISBN 978 0 87587 157 8 Abramson Marc Samuel 2005 4 Deep Eyes and High Noses Physiognomy and the depiction of barbarians in Tang China In Di Cosmo Nicola Wyatt Don J eds Political Frontiers Ethnic Boundaries and Human Geographies in Chinese History illustrated ed Routledge pp 126 127 ISBN 1135790957 Duan Wenjie Kapila Vatsyayan 1994 Tan Chung ed Dunhuang Art Through the Eyes of Duan Wenjie Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts p 118 ISBN 8170173132 Chan Hok Lam 2009 Ming Taizu s Placards on Harsh Regulations and Punishments Revealed in Gu Qiyuan s Kezuo Zhuiyu Asia Major 22 1 28 JSTOR 41649963 Retrieved 16 April 2021 Keay John 2011 China A History Basic Books p 312 ISBN 978 0 465 02518 3 Keay John 2011 China A History Basic Books p 335 ISBN 978 0 465 02518 3 Franke Herbert Twitchett Denis C 1994 The Cambridge History of China Volume 6 Alien Regimes and Border States 907 1368 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 24331 5 Tackett Nicolas 2017 The Origins of the Chinese Nation Song China and the Forging of an East Asian World Order Cambridge University Press p 241 ISBN 978 1108186926 Zhu Ruixi Zhang Bangwei Liu Fusheng Cai Chongbang Wang Zengyu 2016 A Social History of Medieval China The Cambridge China Library Bang Qian Zhu translator Peter Ditmanson contributor illustrated ed Cambridge University Press p 34 ISBN 978 1107167865 Liu Cary Yee Wei Ching Dora C Y eds 1999 Arts of the Sung and Yuan Ritual Ethnicity and Style in Painting contributors Metropolitan Museum of Art New York N Y Princeton University Art Museum Kuo li ku kung po wu yuan Guo li gu gong bo wu yuan Art Museum Princeton University pp 168 159 179 ISBN 0943012309 Shen Hsueh man Asia Society eds 2006 Gilded Splendor Treasures of China s Liao Empire contributors Asia Society Museum Museum fur Ostasiatische Kunst Berlin Germany Museum Rietberg illustrated ed Harry N Abrams p 114 ISBN 8874393326 Zhou Xun Gao Chunming Shang hai shih hsi chʿu hsueh hsiao Chung kuo fu chuang shih yen chiu tsu 1987 5000 years of Chinese costumes reprint ed Commercial Press p 130 ISBN 9620750551 Tung W U Tung Wu Museum of Fine Arts Boston 1997 Tales from the Land of Dragons 1000 Years of Chinese Painting illustrated ed Museum of Fine Arts p 136 ISBN 0878464395 Johnson Linda Cooke 2011 Women of the Conquest Dynasties Gender and Identity in Liao and Jin China UPCC book collections on Project MUSE illustrated ed University of Hawaiʻi Press pp 53 190 ISBN 978 0824834043 Johnson Linda Cooke 2011 Women of the Conquest Dynasties Gender and Identity in Liao and Jin China UPCC book collections on Project MUSE illustrated ed University of Hawaiʻi Press pp 48 52 53 ISBN 978 0824834043 China Review International Volume 19 China Review International University of Hawaiʻi Center for Chinese Studies and University of Hawaii Press 19 101 2012 张博泉 Zhang Boquan 1984 pp 97 98 Sinor 1996 p 417 Jia Sheng 贾笙 宋金时代的 留发不留头 Archived 16 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine Keep the hair lose the head in the Song Jin era 身体的争夺与展示 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 7 July 2011 Zi Yunju 紫雲居 中國的髮爪與接觸巫術 Hair nails and magic of China Archived from the original on 21 July 2011 Li Ziming 李子明 剃头的故事晚清出国人员生活小记 Barber s tale notes from the life of Chinese abroad in the late Qing era Archived from the original on 11 July 2011 Lao Lu Chinese 老鲁 Chinese 彻底改变两百年官定习俗 民国初年剪辫轶话 Archived 1 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine Thoroughly changing the customs officially established for 200 years the story of queue cutting in the early Republic of China period Forsyth James 1994 A History of the Peoples of Siberia Russia s North Asian Colony 1581 1990 illustrated reprint revised ed Cambridge University Press p 214 ISBN 0521477719 Majewicz Alfred F ed 2011 Materials for the Study of Tungusic Languages and Folklore illustrated reprint ed Walter de Gruyter p 21 ISBN 978 3110221053 Volume 15 Issue 4 of Trends in Linguistics Documentation TiLDOC Paolo Santangelo 2013 Zibuyu What The Master Would Not Discuss according to Yuan Mei 1716 1798 A Collection of Supernatural Stories 2 vols Brill pp 829 ISBN 978 90 04 21628 0 Evelyn S Rawski 1998 The Last Emperors A Social History of Qing Imperial Institutions University of California Press pp 41 ISBN 978 0 520 92679 0 tifa queue 清朝乾隆23年清政府令平埔族人學清俗 Archived 9 July 2009 at the Wayback Machine 清朝之剃髮結辮 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 12 June 2009 On Qing Government s Land Policy towards Chaoxian Reclamation People of Break Probibition 论清朝对图们江以北朝鲜垦民的 薙发易服 政策 ltgx net De Bary William T 1999 Sources of Chinese Tradition Columbia University Press p 326 Godley Michael R September 2011 The End of the Queue Hair as Symbol in Chinese History China Heritage Quarterly China Heritage Project ANU College of Asia amp the Pacific CAP The Australian National University 27 ISSN 1833 8461 Meyer Fong Tobie 2013 What Remains Coming to Terms with Civil War in 19th Century China illustrated ed Stanford University Press p 83 ISBN 978 0804785594 Hang Xing 2016 Conflict and Commerce in Maritime East Asia The Zheng Family and the Shaping of the Modern World c 1620 1720 Cambridge University Press p 77 ISBN 978 1316453841 Hang Xing 2016 Conflict and Commerce in Maritime East Asia The Zheng Family and the Shaping of the Modern World c 1620 1720 Cambridge University Press p 86 ISBN 978 1316453841 Hang Xing 2016 Conflict and Commerce in Maritime East Asia The Zheng Family and the Shaping of the Modern World c 1620 1720 Cambridge University Press p 187 ISBN 978 1316453841 a b Kuhn Philip A 1990 Soulstealers The Chinese Sorcery Scare of 1768 Harvard University Press pp 53 54 Wakeman 1985 p 647 Struve 1988 p 662 Dennerline 2002 p 87 which calls this edict the most untimely promulgation of Dorgon s career Wakeman 1985 p 868 Lui Adam Yuen chung 1989 Two Rulers in One Reign Dorgon and Shun chih 1644 1660 Faculty of Asian Studies monographs The Australian National University illustrated ed Faculty of Asian Studies Australian National University p 37 ISBN 0731506545 Dorgon did not want to see anything go wrong in a province and this might be the main reason why the government When the Chinese were ordered to wear the queue Sun and Li took the initiative in changing their Ming hairstyle to Cheng Weikun 1998 6 politics of the queue agitation and resistance in the beginning and end of qing china In Hiltebeitel Alf Miller Barbara D eds Hair Its Power and Meaning in Asian Cultures illustrated ed SUNY Press p 125 ISBN 0791437418 Hang Xing 2016 2 From smuggler pirates to loyal Confucians Conflict and Commerce in Maritime East Asia The Zheng Family and the Shaping of the Modern World c 1620 1720 Cambridge University Press p 40 ISBN 978 1316453841 Wakeman 1985 pp 647 650 Chee Kiong Tong et al 2001 Alternate Identities The Chinese of Contemporary Thailand Brill Publishers p 44 ISBN 978 981 210 142 6 keep your hair and lose your head 研堂見聞雜記 Faure 2007 p 164 Ebrey 1993 p page needed Ebrey 1993 p 271 Wakeman 1975b p 83 Godley Michael R September 2011 The End of the Queue Hair as Symbol in Chinese History China Heritage Quarterly China Heritage Project The Australian National University 27 ISSN 1833 8461 Justus Doolittle 1876 Social Life of the Chinese With Some Account of Their Religious Governmental Educational and Business Customs and Opinions With Special But Not Exclusive Reference to Fuhchau Harpers pp 242 Edward J M Rhoads 2000 Manchus and Han Ethnic Relations and Political Power in Late Qing and Early Republican China 1861 1928 University of Washington Press pp 61 ISBN 978 0 295 98040 9 Twitchett Denis Fairbank John K 2008 Cambridge History of China Volume 9 Part 1 The Ch ing Empire to 1800 pp 87 88 周锡保 中国古代服饰史 中国戏剧出版社 2002 449 ISBN 978 7104003595 Lipman Jonathan N 1997 4 Strategies of Resistance Integration by Violence Familiar Strangers A History of Muslims in Northwest China University of Washington Press p 105 ISBN 0 295 97644 6 Lipman Jonathan N 2011 Familiar Strangers A History of Muslims in Northwest China University of Washington Press ISBN 978 0295800554 Lipman Jonathan N 1997 Familiar Strangers A History of Muslims in Northwest China University of Washington Press ISBN 978 0 295 97644 0 JSTOR j ctvbtzmb8 Arienne M Dwyer 2007 Salar Otto Harrassowitz Verlag p 22 ISBN 978 3 447 04091 4 Pamela Kyle Crossley Helen F Siu Donald S Sutton 2006 Empire at the Margins Culture Ethnicity and Frontier in Early Modern China University of California Press p 127 ISBN 978 0 520 23015 6 Chen Yangbin 2008 Muslim Uyghur Students in a Chinese Boarding School Social Recapitalization as a Response to Ethnic Integration Emerging Perspectives on Education in China Lexington Books p 165 ISBN 978 1461633846 Yakup Abdurishid 2005 The Turfan Dialect of Uyghur Vol 63 of Turcologica Series illustrated ed Otto Harrassowitz Verlag p 187 ISBN 3447052333 Brophy David 2016 Uyghur Nation Reform and Revolution on the Russia China Frontier Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674970465 James Millward 1998 Beyond the Pass Economy Ethnicity and Empire in Qing Central Asia 1759 1864 Stanford University Press pp 204 ISBN 978 0 8047 9792 4 Hiltebeitel Alf ed 1998 Hair Its Power and Meaning in Asian Cultures State University of New York Press p 128 a b 鄭氏王朝的滅亡 taiwanus net cutting tail reflected the jiang nan social in guang xu dynasty two years PDF Archived from the original PDF on 14 August 2011 Retrieved 26 September 2009 清代妖术恐慌及政府的对策 以两次剪辫谣言为例 历史千年 lsqn cn 24 April 2013 Archived from the original on 24 April 2013 頭可斷辮子不可剪 清朝留學生剪辮 偷了情 Archived 3 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine Wiltshire Trea First published 1987 republished amp reduced 2003 Old Hong Kong Volume One Central Hong Kong Text Form Asia books Ltd ISBN 962 7283 59 2 Vol One Anthony Robert J 2014 Violence and Predation on the Sino Vietnamese Maritime Frontier 1450 1850 Asia Major 27 2 104 JSTOR 44740552 Retrieved 16 April 2021 Modern Chinese Literature and Culture Volume 19 Issue 1 Foreign Language Publications 2007 p 175 Edward J M Rhoads 2000 Manchus and Han Ethnic Relations and Political Power in Late Qing and Early Republican China 1861 1928 University of Washington Press pp 60 ISBN 978 0 295 98040 9 The Museum Journal The Museum 1921 pp 102 George Cockburn 1896 John Chinaman His Ways and Notions J Gardner Hitt pp 86 James Henry Evan Murchison 1888 The Long White Mountain or A journey in Manchuria with some account of the history people administration and religion of that country Longmans Green and Co pp 110 112 Boulger Demetrius C 1899 The Dissolution of the Chinese Empire The North American Review 168 508 264 JSTOR 25119153 Boulger Demetrius C 1900 America s Share in a Partition of China The North American Review 171 525 171 181 JSTOR 25105038 Boulger Demetrius Charles 28 April 1893 Chapter IX China PDF p 76 Meyer Fong Tobie 2013 What Remains Coming to Terms with Civil War in 19th Century China illustrated ed Stanford University Press p 94 ISBN 978 0804785594 Anderson James A Whitmore John K 2014 China s Encounters on the South and Southwest Reforging the Fiery Frontier Over Two Millennia Handbook of Oriental Studies Section 3 Southeast Asia reprint revised ed Brill p 309 ISBN 978 9004282483 Annam and its Minor Currency chapter 16 新疆曾有大批越南皇室后裔 乾隆时期投靠中国并前往乌鲁木齐开荒 in Chinese 27 May 2018 Thai Mỹ 24 April 2019 Con trai vua Le Thế Tong ở đất Thanh Chau in Vietnamese Le Tien Long 9 December 2018 After Minh Mang reigned Nguyen Dynasty why he deported Le royal descendants to the Southern Vietnam in Vietnamese Joan Nunn 2000 Fashion in Costume 1200 2000 New Amsterdam Books p 62 ISBN 9781566632799 Francis Michael Kelly Randolph Schwabe 2002 European Costume and Fashion 1490 1790 Dover Publications p 168 ISBN 9780486423227 Heather Vaughan Lee Jose Blanco F Mary Doering Patricia Kay Hunt Hurst 2015 Clothing and Fashion 4 Volumes American Fashion from Head to Toe 4 Volumes ABC CLIO p 135 ISBN 9781610693103 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Mark Ledbury Robert Wellington 2020 The Versailles Effect Objects Lives and Afterlives of the Domaine Bloomsbury Publishing USA p 98 ISBN 9781501357763 Lynn Festa 2005 Personal Effects Wigs and Possessive Individualism in the Long Eighteenth Century Eighteenth Century Life 29 2 59 Beverly Chico 2013 Hats and Headwear Around the World A Cultural Encyclopedia ABC CLIO p 484 ISBN 9781610690638 Terry Crowdy 2015 Napoleon s Infantry Handbook An Essential Guide to Life in the Grand Army Pen amp Sword Military p 78 ISBN 9781783462957 R F Delderfield 2002 Napoleon s Marshals Cooper Square Press p 74 ISBN 9781461661191 Janice Best 2023 Power and Propaganda in French Second Empire Theatre Playing Napoleon Cambridge Scholars Publishing p 237 ISBN 9781527500914 Stocqueler Joachim Hayward 1871 A Familiar History of the British Army from the Restoration in 1660 to the Present Time Edward Stanford London pp 103 104 Wilkinson Latham Robert 1977 The Royal Navy 1790 1970 Osprey Publishing ISBN 0 85045 248 1 p 34 Hudson Elizabeth Harriot 1878 The Life And Times of Louisa Queen of Prussia With an Introductory Sketch of Prussian History Volume II reprinted by Adamant Media Corporation 13 September 2001 pp 214 215 Borch Fred L March 2012 Lore of the Corps The True Story of a Colonel s Pigtail and a Court Martial The Army Lawyer Special Edition 1 2 Retrieved 20 May 2022 Works cited Dennerline Jerry 2002 The Shun chih Reign In Peterson Willard J ed Cambridge History of China Vol 9 Part 1 The Ch ing Dynasty to 1800 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 73 119 ISBN 0 521 24334 3 Ebrey Patricia 1993 Chinese Civilization A Sourcebook Simon and Schuster Faure David 2007 Emperor and Ancestor State and Lineage in South China Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 5318 0 Nguyễn Khắc Thuần 2005 Danh tướng Việt Nam Nha Xuất bản Giao dục Rhoads Edward J M 2011 Manchus and Han Ethnic Relations and Political Power in Late Qing and Early Republican China 1861 1928 University of Washington Press ISBN 978 0 295 80412 5 Retrieved 10 March 2014 Sinor Denis ed 1990 The Cambridge History of Early Inner Asia Volume 1 illustrated reprint ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 24304 1 Retrieved 10 March 2014 Struve Lynn 1988 The Southern Ming In Frederic W Mote Denis Twitchett John King Fairbank eds Cambridge History of China Volume 7 The Ming Dynasty 1368 1644 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 641 725 ISBN 0 521 24332 7 Wakeman Frederic 1975b Localism and Loyalism During the Ch ing Conquest of Kiangnan The Tragedy of Chiang yin in Frederic Wakeman Jr Carolyn Grant eds Conflict and Control in Late Imperial China Berkeley Center of Chinese Studies University of California Berkeley pp 43 85 ISBN 978 0520025974 Wakeman Frederic 1985 The Great Enterprise The Manchu Reconstruction of Imperial Order in Seventeenth Century China University of California Press ISBN 0 520 04804 0 In two volumes Volume 1 University of California Press 31 March 1986 ISBN 9780520048041 张博泉 Zhang Boquan 1984 金史简编 辽宁人民出版社 Also mentioned in Dragonwings by Laurence Yep Chapter 4Further reading edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Queues hair fashion Struve Lynn A 1998 Voices from the Ming Qing Cataclysm China in Tigers Jaws Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 07553 3 312 pages External links edit nbsp Media related to Queues hair fashion at Wikimedia Commons nbsp The dictionary definition of queue hairstyle at Wiktionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Queue hairstyle amp oldid 1201519193, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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