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With
a population of more than seven million, the Miao people form one of the
largest ethnic minorities in southwest China. They are mainly
distributed across Guizhou, Yunnan, Hunan and Sichuan provinces and
Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, and a small number live on Hainan
Island in Guangdong Province and in southwest Hubei Province. Most of
them live in tightly-knit communities, with a few living in areas
inhabited by several other ethnic groups.
On the Yunnan-Guizhou Plateau and in some remote mountainous
areas, Miao villages are comprised of a few families, and are scattered
on mountain slopes and plains with easy access to transport links.
Much of the Miao area is hilly or mountainous, and is drained by
several big rivers. The weather is mild with a generous rainfall, and
the area is rich in natural resources. Major crops include paddy rice,
maize, potatoes, Chinese sorghum, beans, rape, peanuts, tobacco, ramie,
sugar cane, cotton, oil-tea camellia and tung tree. Hainan Island is
abundant in tropical fruits.
History
As early as the Qin and Han dynasties 2,000 years ago, the
ancestors of the Miao people lived in the western part of present-day
Hunan and the eastern part of present-day Guizhou. They were referred to
as the Miaos in Chinese documents of the Tang and Song period (A.D.
618-1279).
In the third century A.D., the ancestors of the Miaos went west
to present-day northwest Guizhou and south Sichuan along the Wujiang
River. In the fifth century, some Miao groups moved to east Sichuan and
west Guizhou. In the ninth century, some were taken to Yunnan as
captives. In the 16th century, some Miaos settled on Hainan Island. As a
result of these large-scale migrations over many centuries the Miaos
became widely dispersed.
Such a wide distribution and the influence of different
environments has resulted in marked differences in dialect, names and
clothes. Some Miao people from different areas have great difficulty in
communicating with each other. Their art and festivals also differ
between areas.
Language
The Miao language belongs to the Miao-Yao branch of the
Chinese-Tibetan language family. It has three main dialects in China --
one based in west Hunan, one in east Guizhou and the other in Sichuan,
Yunnan and part of Guizhou. In some places, people who call themselves
Miao use the languages of other ethnic groups. In Chengbu and Suining in
Hunan, Longsheng and Ziyuan in Guangxi and Jinping in Guizhou, about
100,000 Miao people speak a Chinese dialect. In Sangjiang in Guangxi,
over 30,000 Miaos speak the Dong language, and on Hainan Island, more
than 100,000 people speak the language of the Yaos. Due to their
centuries of contacts with the Hans, many Miaos can also speak Chinese.
Custom
Their clothing has distinctive features which vary from place to
place. In northwest Guizhou and northeast Yunnan, Miao men usually wear
linen jackets with colorful designs, and drape woolen blankets with
geometric patterns over their shoulders. In other areas, men wear short
jackets buttoned down the front or to the left, long trousers with wide
belts and long black scarves. In winter, men usually wear extra cloth
leggings known as puttees. Women's
clothing varies even from village to village. In west Hunan and
northeast Guizhou, women wear jackets buttoned on the right and
trousers, with decorations embroidered on collars, sleeves and trouser
legs. In other areas, women wear high-collared short jackets and full-
or half-length pleated skirts. They also wear various kinds of silver
jewelry on festive occasions.
In southeast Guizhou, west Hunan, Rongshui in Guangxi and on
Hainan Island, the Miaos eat rice, maize, sweet potatoes and millet as
staple foods. In northwest Guizhou, Sichuan and northeast Yunnan, they
mainly eat maize, potatoes, buckwheat and oats. In southeast Guizhou,
Miao cooks make a sour mixture of glutinous rice and vegetables by
packing them tightly into jars for up to two months. Before 1949, for
lack of salt, many Miao people had to flavor their food with pepper or a
sour taste. Many even had to live on wild vegetables.
Because timber resources are plentiful in most Miao areas, houses
are usually built of wood, and roofed with fir bark or tiles or are
thatched. In central and western Guizhou, houses are roofed with stone
slabs.
Houses vary greatly in style. In mountainous areas, they are
usually built on slopes and raised on stilts. Animals are kept under the
stilted floors. In the Zhaotong area in Yunnan and on Hainan Island,
most Miaos live in thatched huts or "branch houses," made of
woven branches and twigs or bamboo strips plastered with mud.
The typical Miao family is small and monogamous. Aged parents are
usually supported by their youngest son.
In some areas, a son's name is followed by his father's, but
generally a Miao person uses only his or her own name. Influenced by the
Han feudal patriarchal clan system, the Miaos made efforts to maintain
their family pedigrees, built ancestral halls and adopted words in their
names to indicate their position in the family hierarchy.
Marriages are usually arranged by parents, but unmarried young
men and women have the freedom to court. Mass courting occasions
sometimes take place during holidays, when young women from a host
village gather to sing antiphonal love songs with young men from
neighboring villages. If a couple are attracted to each other, they
exchange love tokens. But they must still win the approval of their
parents before they can marry.
In Chuxiong, Yunnan Province, the practice of setting up public
courting houses for unmarried men and women prevailed until a few
decades ago. After a day's work, they would visit these houses to sing,
dance and court with their partners. The Miaos there also practiced the
custom of "kidnapping brides." If the kidnapped girl consented
to an offer of marriage, a grand wedding feast was held. If she did not,
she was free to go.
Different Miao communities celebrate different festivals. Even
the same festivals may fall on different dates. In southeast Guizhou and
Rongshui County in Guangxi, the Miao New Year festival is celebrated on
"Rabbit Day" or "Ox Day" on the lunar calendar. The
festivities include beating drums, dancing to the music of a lusheng
(a wind instrument), horse racing and bull-fighting. In counties near
Guiyang, people dressed in their holiday best gather at the city's
largest fountain on April 8 of the lunar year to play
lusheng and flute and sing of the legendary hero, Yanu.
In many areas, the Miaos have Dragon Boat festivals and Flower
Mountain festivals (May 5), Tasting New Rice festivals (between June and
July), Pure Brightness festivals and the Beginning of Autumn festivals.
In Yunnan, "Stepping over Flower Mountains" is a popular
festivity for the Miaos. Childless couples use the occasion to repeat
vows to the god of fertility. They provide wine for young people, who
sing and dance under a pine tree, on which hangs a bottle of wine. Young
men and women may fall in love on this occasion, and this, it is hoped,
will help bring children to the childless couples.
The Miaos used to believe in many gods, and some of their
superstitious rituals were very expensive. In west Hunan and northeast
Guizhou, for instance, prayers for children or for the cure of an
illness were accompanied by the slaughter of two grown oxen as
sacrifices. Feasts would then be held for all the relatives for three to
five days.
Culture
The Miao have a highly diversified culture developed from a
common root. They are fond of singing and dancing, and have a
highly-developed folk literature. Their songs, which do not rhyme and
vary greatly in length from a few lines to more than 15,000, are easy to
understand and are very popular among the Miaos.
The lusheng is their
favorite musical instrument. In addition, flutes, copper drum, mouth
organs, the xiao (a vertical
bamboo flute) and the suona horn
are also very popular. Popular dances include the lusheng
dance, drum dance and bench dance.
The Miaos create a variety of colorful arts and crafts, including
cross-stitch work, embroidery, weaving, batik, and paper-cuts. Their
batik technique dates back 1,000 years. A pattern is first drawn on
white cloth with a knife dipped in hot wax. Then the cloth is boiled in
dye. The wax melts to leave a white pattern on a blue background. In
recent years, improved technology has made it possible to print more
colorful designs, and many Miao handicrafts are now exported.
Socio-economic
Structure
Miao areas differ in their scale of economic and educational
development. Early Miao society went through a long primitive stage in
which there were neither classes nor exploitation. Totem worship
survived among Miao ancestors until the Jin Dynasty 1,600 years ago. By
the Eastern Han Dynasty (A.D. 25-220), the ethnic minorities in the Wuxi
area had begun farming, and had learned to weave with bark and dye with
grass seeds, and trade on a barter basis had emerged. But productivity
was still very low and tribal leaders and the common people remained
equal in status.
Primitive Miao society changed rapidly between the third and
tenth centuries A.D. Communal clans linked by family relationships
evolved into communal villages formed of different regions. Vestiges of
the communal village remained in the Miao's political and economic
organizations until liberation in 1949. Organizations known as Men Kuan
in the Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279), and as Zai Kuan during the
Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), were formed between several neighboring
villages. Kuan leaders were elected by its members, who met regularly.
Rules and regulations were formulated by all members to protect private
property and maintain order. Anyone who violated the rules would be
fined, expelled from the community or even executed. All villages in the
same Kuan were dutybound to support one another, or else were punished
according to the relevant rule.
By the end of the Tang Dynasty (618-907), the Miaos had divided
into different social classes. Communal leaders had authority over land,
and frequent contacts with the Hans and the impact of their feudal
economy gave impetus to the development of the Miao feudal-lord economy.
The feudal lords began to call themselves "officials," and
called serfs under their rule "field people."
During the Song Dynasty (960-1279), some upper class Miaos were
appointed prefectural governors by the imperial court, thus providing a
political guarantee for the growth of the feudal economy. Under the rule
of feudal lords, the ordinary people paid their rent in the form of
unpaid service. The lords had supreme authority over them, and could
punish them and bring them to trial at will. If feuds broke out between
lords, the "field people" had to fight the battles.
By this time, agriculture and handicrafts had been further
developed. Grain was traded for salt between prefectures, and Xi cloth
was sent as a tribute to the imperial court. High-quality iron swords,
armor and crossbows came into use. By the end of the Song Dynasty, the
Miaos in west Hunan had mastered the technique of iron mining and
smelting. Textiles, notably batik, also flourished. Regular trade sprung
up between the Miaos and Hans.
The Miao feudal-lord economy reached its peak and began to
decline during the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644). A landlord economy had
taken shape and was in its early stage of development. In 1502, the Ming
Court began to abolish the rule of Miao feudal lords, and appointed
officials who were subject to recall. During the early years of the Qing
Dynasty, these measures were applied to many Miao areas, contributing a
great deal to the disintegration of the feudal-lord system and the
growth of a landlord economy. In west Guizhou and northwest Yunnan,
however, some lords still retained their power, and the feudal-lord
economy continued to exist there until the end of the Qing Dynasty.
After 1951, a number of Miao autonomous divisions were
established in Guizhou, Yunnan, Guangxi, Guangdong, and Hunan. Most of
these autonomous divisions have taken the form of multiethnic autonomy,
as the Miaos have for a long time lived harmoniously with the Tujia,
Bouyei, Dong, Zhuang, Li and Han peoples.
In some Miao areas, before autonomous authorities were
established, priority was given to such things as the election of
delegates to the People's congress and the training and appointment of
minority administrative staff. Now a large number of Miao people have
been promoted to leading posts. In Northwest Guizhou Autonomous
Prefecture alone, Miaos account for 68 per cent of the district and
township officials.
Before 1949, textiles, iron forging, carpentry, masonry, pottery,
alkali making and oil pressing were the only industries in the area.
After the birth of the People’s Republic of China, many factories and
hydroelectric stations were built. Now electricity is widely used for
lighting, irrigation and food processing.
In mountainous areas, the Miaos have built reservoirs, dug canals
and created new farmland. They have also developed a diversified economy
according to local conditions. As a result, grain production as well as
oil, fiber and starch crops and medicinal herbs have all flourished.
This has helped to open up new sources of raw materials and supplies for
industry and commerce, and improved the Miao people's living standards.
Sheep raising has a long history in Weining Autonomous County,
Guizhou, where 265,000 hectares of grassland and trees provide an ideal
grazing area. Herds have grown rapidly as a result of the introduction
of improved breeds and better veterinary services.
The construction of railways between Guiyang and Kunming, and
between Hunan and Guizhou has boosted the development of the Miao areas
along the routes. Before 1949, more than half the counties in
Qiandongnan Autonomous Prefecture had no bus services.
Cultural, educational and public health provisions have also
expanded rapidly. In 1984, there already were 23,000 teachers in
Qiandongnan alone, of whom over half were of the Miao or Dong
minorities. They set up schools in mountainous areas and brought
education to the formerly illiterate mountain villages. Before 1949, the
incidence of malaria was as high as 95 per cent in Xinchi village in
Ziyun County, Guizhou Province. But since liberation, the disease has
been eradicated through massive health campaigns. This is giving rise to
the rapid emergence of clean, hygienic and literate Miao villages.
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