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Huns
Origins Of The Huns
Linguistic
Explorations
The Huns vs Eastern
Hu Nomads
Modu's Hun Empire
and Early Han Dynasty
Huns & the
Latter Han Dynasty
Huns During Wei-Jinn
Time Periods
Hunnic Han &
Zhao Dynasty (AD 304-329)
Five Nomad Groups
Ravaging China
Toba's Wei Dynasty,
Ruruans, & Hunnic Decline
Descriptions of
Non-Mongolian Physiques
Attila the Hun
Roman Legions Under Huns & Living In China
Distinction From The Turks & Uygurs
Uygurs & Karlaks vs Orkhon Turks
Uygurs vs Kirghiz
Distinction From "White Huns (Hephthalites)"
Yüeh-chih, Scythians, & Ye-tai (White Huns) |
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Origins Of The Huns - Rong &
Di |
Huns were called
'Xiongnu' or 'Hsiung-nu ', ferocious slaves, in Chinese. Huns
were said to have originated from 'Chunwei' (or Xunyu), the son
of last Xia Dynasty Lord Jie. Uygurs claimed they descended from
this very person. Sima Qian's Shi Ji mentioned that Jie
was driven to Youcao area (Caohu Lake of Anhui Province) in the
southeast; that Jie's son married Jie's concubines; and that
Chunwei fled to northern plains where he became ancestors of the
Huns. Both Sima Qian's Shi Ji and Ban Gu's Han Shu
said that the Huns were the descendants of Xiahou-shi (i.e., Xia
descendant); that they migrated to the Western Rong areas during
the demise years of Xia Dynasty; and that they would attack the
ancestors of Zhou founder in a place called 'Bin'. Zhou ancestor
was forced to relocate to Qishan Mountain. Zhou kings had zigzag
wars with the Rongs.
Two ancient categorical designation of barbarians would be
'Rong(2)' and 'Di(2)'. Rong was used mostly with the word 'Xi'
for west, while 'Di' with the word 'Bei' for north. According to
Sima Qian, among the northern nomads would be 'Shanrong'
(Mountain Rong) or Xunyu or Xianyun at times of
Lord Yao and Lord Shun, Chunwei tribe at times of Xia
Dynasty, Guifang (ghost domain) at times of Shang
Dynasty, again Xianyun at times of Zhou Dynasty, and
Xiongnu (Huns) at times of Han Dynasty. Rong would be a
categorical designation of barbarians in the west & northwest.
(Shanrong or Mountain Rong, however, belonged to southern
Manchuria.) Rongs are differentiated into "Jiangrong"
(carrying the name Jiang of the tribe of Yandi the Fiery Lord),
"Xirong" (Western Rong), "Quanrong" (Doggy Rong, a
derogatory designation, similar to Mongols' calling the Tartars
"Noghai" the running dogs), and "Shanrong" (Mountain
Rong) or "Beirong" (Northern Rong, who are most likely
the ancestors of ancient Koreans who lost large patch of land to
the allied forces of Yan and Qi principalities of Zhou Dynasty).
Nomads, by the name of 'Shanrong' or 'Xunyu' or 'Xianyun', had
been roaming on the east-west Asian steppe over 4000 years ago,
prior to Xia-Shang-Zhou dynasties. The demise of Xia Dynasty
would see Chunwei, the son of last Xia Dynasty Lord Jie, fleeing
to the northwest to join the nomads and becoming the de
facto ancestor of the later Huns. Sima Qian's section on Shang
Dynasty did not mention too much on the steppe people other than
the "Jie" legend. Ban Gu commented that Huns did not usually
carry family names and that beginning from Tou-man, the names of
Hunnic chanyu rulers were recorded in the Chinese chronicles.
Shang King Wuding's wife, Fuhao, would be the famous female
warrior of China who had led a campaign against ancient Gui-fang
(ghost domain) barbarians (speculated to be either on the
northern steppe or in Shanxi Prov). Shang Dynasty also warred
with Jiang-fang in the west and Ren-fang in the east. As
expounded below, Rong people in the west, sharing possibly the
same blood-line with Xia Chinese but differring in 'Culture'
such as cuisine, clothing, money and language, appeared
to be an early offshoot of Sino-Tibetan speaking Qiangic people.
After the demise of Shang Dynasty, records from Zhou Dynasty
mentioned a group of Rong people under King Bo in northwestern
China. Qin Lord Wengong (r. BC 765-716) would defeat King Bo's
Rong and gave the land east of Qishan Mountain back to Zhou
court. This would be a Xirong lord by the title of 'Bo' in a
place called 'Dang(4) She' where the character 'dang' was said
to be a mutation of the Shang Dynasty founder, 'Shang-Tang'.
Ancient classics said that this group of people claimed heritage
from Shang-Tang and used the ancient Shang capital name 'Bo' for
the title of their king. Later, Qin Lord Ninggong (r. BC
715-704) would defeat King Bo and drove King Bo towards the Rong
people during the 3rd year reign, i.e., in 713 BC. Ninggong
conquered King Bo's Dang-shi clan during the 12th year reign,
i.e., 704 BC.
Rong's Possible Link To Qiangic People
Shallow-minded and opportunist Chinese, who never hesitated to
be a traitor since the Opium War of 1839-42, had speculated a
purported link to non-Mongoloid on basis of incomplete analysis
of Linzi DNA on the tomb remains of people living in Shandong
Peninsula 2500-3000 years ago. Such racial demeaning approach
led to claims that ancient Rong-di people were non-Mongoloid or
that ancient Chang-di barbarian &
Zhongshan-guo people were non-Mongoloid. A thorough perusal
of ancient history only leads to one conclusion, i.e., ancient
Rong-di people and their offsprings were ancestors of today's
Tibetans.
http://mbe.oupjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/20/2/214
carried an article about the new research paper by Society for
Molecular Biology and Evolution, claiming that "The reanalysis
of two previously published ancient mtDNA population data sets
from Linzi (same province) then indicates that the ancient
populations had features in common with the modern populations
from south China rather than any specific affinity to the
European mtDNA pool". (Prof Wei Chu-Hsien, in China & America,
had research into 'bat cave' drawings on Taiwan Island and
concluded that ancient Taiwan aboriginals had migrated there
from coastal China.)
The compositions of the Rong in the west and northwest are
many-layered. In light of King Bo, we could say that some
descendants or affiliates of Shang would be related to the King
Bo's Rong people. Huangfu Mi of Jinn Dynasty had doubts about
King Bo's ancestry in Shang-Tang. Huangfu Mi of Jinn Dynasty
treated King Bo as a branch of 'Xi-yi' or Western Yi aliens.
Yi is more an inclusive word to mean aliens, and the Qiangs and
Di(1) people could be called Xi Yi, i.e., Yi in the west, while
some southwestern barbarians would be called Xi-Nan Yi, namely,
southwestern Yi. In this sense, some of the Rongs at the time of
Zhou Dynasty could be of Qiangic or Di(1) nature.
The Qiangs, in turn, would be the descendants of the Yandi
(Fiery Lord or Fiery Emperor) tribal group carrying the tribal
name "Jiang". Xin Tang Shi (New History Of Tang Dynasty)
said that the Tibetans belonged to the Xi Qiang, namely, the
western Qiangic peoples. There were 150 different groups of
Qiangic peoples, widely dispersed among Sichuan, Ganshu, Qinhai
and Shenxi Provinces. Ancient classics stated that the word
'qiang' means the shepherds in the west. The book which was
called 'Continuum To Hou Han Shu' stated that the Qiangs
were alternative race of the Jiang surname tribes of San Miao.
According to Sima Qian, the 'SanMiao' people, who originally
resided in the middle Yangtze River area where the later Chu
Statelet was, were mostly relocated to western China to guard
against the western barbarians. Lord Shun, who took over the
overlord post from Lord Zhi (reign 2366-2358 BC ?, the son of
Lord Diku), relocated them to western China as a punishment for
their aiding Dan Zhu (the son of Lord Yao reign 2357-2258 BC ?)
in rebellion. (This could lead to a sound speculation that
Sino-Tibetan speaking San Miao people had dwelled in Gansu much
earlier than the later Indo-European Yuezhi people, by about
1000 years at minimum.)
Reading through China's history, we could distinguish three
groups of Rong in the west, Xirong or Western Rong, Quanrong or
Doggy Rong, and the Rongdi or Rong-Di Rong. (Borrowing Shan
Hai Jing, Quan-yi or Quan-rong, one of the varieties of Rong
people, could have derived from Huangdi the Yellow Lord since
Huangdi bore Miao-long, Miaolong bore Nong-ming, Nongming bore
Bai-quan or White dog which was the ancestors of Quanrong. ) All
three groups could be of same family, could be related to Jie
the son of last Xia Lord as Shi Ji claimed, and could be
related to descendants of Shang Dynasty (as detailed in the
story of King Bo of Shang heritage). Qin's ancestors absorbed
eight Xirong Tribes, and Qin was also responsible for helping
Zhou drive the Doggy Rong out of Zhou capital. The Rongdi Rongs
had migrated to the central plains of China, and the Jinn
Principality and its three successor states have very close
connection with them. Rongdi Rongs had inter-marriage with Zhou
Kingdom. They later split into Chidi and Baidi as explained
below.
Xia Chinese versus Rong - Differing In 'Culture', Not
'Blood-Line'
What distinguished Chinese from Rong or Di would mostly likely
lie in the customs, not the ethnicity. Zhou Dynasty's founder,
per Shi Ji, Gugong abolished Rong & Di customs,
built city in a plain called Zhou-yuan under the foot of Qishan,
and devised five posts of si tu, si ma, si kong, si shi, & si
kou per Shang Dynasty system. Similar to Zhou founder, Qin's
ancestors had emerged from the barbaric West to become the ruler
of China. In both cases, they discarded the Rong & Di(2) customs
and adopted the rituals of the central China of the time. Shang
Yang [the Reformer for Qin Dynasty] claimed that he should be
ascribed great contributions to Qin because he was responsible
for i) renovating Qin's Rong-Di customs such as parent and son
living in same bedroom and ii) differentiating the protocol of
men from women.
Scholar Liu Qiyu stated that the difference between Rong and
Chinese lied in 'culture', not 'blood-line'. In article
The Rong People In Nine Ancient Prefectures versus Rong-yu Xia
People, Liu Qiyu cited ancient classics Zhou Yu's
paragraph: "In the ancient times, Gong-gong-shi ... had first
worked on repairing the 100 rivers (including the flooding of
the Yellow River) ... Gong-gong-shi's descendant, Count Yu
(i.e., Lord Yu), repented over his father Gun's mistake in flood
control ... Gong-gong-shi's grandson, Si-yue, had acted as an
assistant to Lord Yu in flood control ... Hence, Si-yue was
conferred the fief of Si-yue-guo Statelet and assigned the
surname of 'Jiang' which included the clan name of 'Luu' ...
Today (i.e., in Zhou Dynasty times), the clan names of Shen and
Luu had declined in prestige and influence but the 'Jiang'
family still prevailed in Qi Principality." Liu Qiyu further
cited ancient classics Zuo Zhuan and listed the statement
of Ju-zhi, a son or prince of Jiang-rong barbarians, as
paraphrased below: "Everyone had said that our folks, i.e.,
miscellaneous Rong people, belonged to the descendants of Si-yue
... Our various Rong peoples differed from Hua (i.e., Xia)
people in cuisine, clothing, money and language." Liu Qiyu
speculated that the clan names of Shen-Luu-Qi-Xu etc, who
entered China during Western Zhou Dynasty, had been the Rong
people who came eastward to China earlier, while Jiang-rong
would be the original Rong people who came into China during the
Eastern Zhou Dynasty time period.
Yuezhi versus 'Jiang' Surname Tribe Of SanMiao People
In the Yellow River Bend area could also be found Yuezhi people.
The relationship of the Yuezhi to Rong people is not clear.
Gua Di Zhi stated that Yuezhi country included ancient
Liangzhou, Ganzhou, Suzhou, Yanzhou and Shazhou [Dunhuang],
i.e., today's Gansu, Ningxia and western Shenxi Provinces. Among
Liangzhou, Ganzhou, Suzhou, Yanzhou and Shazhou, it seems only
Yanzhou prefecture would fall inside today's Shenxi Prov while
the rest would belong to the so-called 'Western Corridor' to the
west of the West Yellow River Bend. (Gua Di Zhi was a
much later book that could have error in extrapolating the
presence of Yuezhi beyond the Western Corridor.)
The section on Huns, in Sima Qian's Shi Ji and Ban Gu's
Han Shu, stated that the "Donghu nomads and the Yueh-chih
or Yüeh-chih (Yuezhi) people were stronger than the Huns".
Extrapolating on this sentence, I could say that the Yuezhi
people, who had arrived in Gansu Prov 1000 years later than
Sino-Tibetan SanMiao people, might have been steadily exerting
pressure on the Qiangic 'Rong' & 'Di' peoples and could have
ultimately driven the Qiangic people towards Shenxi-Shanxi-Henan
provinces for 1000 years, from the Zhou Dynasty ancestor Gugong
(12th c BC ?) to Qin China's expelling the Huns from the Ordos
Plains (3th c BC).
Rond-di barbarians, who had made peace with Jinn Principality,
had later split into Bai-di and Chi-di. Baidi (White Di) dwelled
in ancient Yanzhou (today's Yan'an), Suizhou (today's Suide) and
Yinzhou (today's Ningxia on west Yellow River Bend). Zuo Shi
Chunjiu stated Jinn defeated Baidi and remnants were know as
Bai-bu-hu later. Chidi (Red Di) dwelled in a place called Lu(4),
near today's Shangdang. Zuo Shi Chunjiu stated that Jinn
Principality destroyed the Lu(4) tribe of the Chidi, and the
remnants were know as Chi-she-hu nomads later.
Yuezhi versus Xia People
According to ancient records, after Shang Dynasty overthrew Xia,
remnant Xia people fled northward and westward, and majority of
them returned to their ancestral home in southern Shanxi Prov,
i.e., ancient 'ji-zhou' prefecture or 'zhongguo' the central
statelet. Some of those Xia people who fled northward and
westward, per early 20th century scholar Wang Guowei, would
become the Yuezhi (?) in the west and the Huns in the north.
Should we buy Wang Guowei's speculation as to Yuezhi, then it
would throw the discussion into an ethnicity dispute unless we
discount the actual linkage between the Yuezhi of Gansu Province
and the
Loulan Mummies in Xinjiang [new dominion] Autonomous Region.
It is understandable that Wang Guowei might have blundered in
early 20th century since Loulan mummies were not known at that
time.
I would now expound on the underlying logic behind Wang Guowei's
fallacy. Scholar Liu Qiyu cited Guo Yu's statement in
regards to You-yu-shi as proof that Yu-shi clan had deep
connection with Xia people. Liu Qiyu claimed that Yu-shi and
Xia-hou-shi might have generations of inter-marriage the same
way as Ji-surname and Jiang-surname or Khitan's Yeluu-shi and
Xiao-shi did to each other. The statement from Guo Yu
could be paraphrased like this: "In ancient times, Count
Chong-bo Gun also reigned in the land of You-yu-shi clan." Count
Chong-bo Gun was the father of Lord Yu and dwelled in southern
or southwestern Shanxi Prov, i.e., the east bank of today's East
Yellow River Bend. Yu-shi clan's locality, considered the second
'Xia Ruins' in archaeology, would be in today's eastern Shenxi
Prov, i.e., Hancheng (west bank of the today's East Yellow River
Bend) and Pucheng (west bank of Luo-shui River). Today's East
Yellow River Bend was known as 'Xi-he' or western river because
the Yellow River did not flow horizontally into the sea via
Shandong Prov but made a eastern bend northward for exit into
the sea via Hebei Prov.
It is widely agreed upon that after Shang Dynasty overthrew Xia
in 1766 BC, remnant Xia people fled northward and westward, and
majority of them returned to their ancestral home in southern
Shanxi Prov. Those remnant Xia people remained on the two banks
of the Yellow River Bend, across Shanxi-Shenxi provinces, for
another 1100 years at minimum. Per section Qi Yu of
Guo Yu, Qi Lord Huan'gong (r. 685-643 BC), who proclaimed
himself a 'hegemony lord' in 679 BC and destroyed the statelets
of Shan-rong and Guzhu in Manchuria in 664 BC, had campaigned
against Bai-di barbarians in the west in 651 BC (i.e., 9th year
of Lu Lord Xigong). Qi Huan'gong was recorded to have occupied
'da xia' (i.e., Grand Xia land) and might have crossed the river
to subjugate 'xi yu' (i.e., western Yu-shi clan's land). Grand
Xia land, by the 7th century BC, would probably be lying in
northern Shanxi Prov only since Qin Emperor Shihuangdi (r.
246-210 BC) had his accomplishments of unification of China
inscribed with such words as "reaching as far as 'da xia' land
in the north", namely, Taiyuan of northern Shanxi Prov. 'xi yu'
certainly pointed to the areas west of the East Yellow River
Bend, namely, Hancheng and Pucheng of eastern Shenxi Prov. My
conclusion is that Yuezhi people had nothing to do with the
You-yu-shi or Yu-shi clan of the Xia people who were defeated by
Shang people in 1766 BC. Alternative studies of Indo-European
migrations could be checked for timing and movement. Wang Guowei
and Xu Zhongshu, including Oiu Qiyu, had all mistakenly
pointed to the You-yu-shi clan as the origin for mutation into
the first syllable of Yuezhi.
Xia Chinese vs Huns, Qiangic Tibetans vs Tokharai Yuezhi, &
Yuezhi vs Loulan Mummies
Nova, in its TV series,
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/chinamum/taklamakan.html
shows the excavations of
mysterious 3000-year-old mummies in China's western desert,
inside today's New Dominions Province. I could not find definite
link between the Yuezhi and the Loulan Mummies. The dating used
here, however, shows that the Qiangic San Miao people arrived in
Gansu Province earlier than the Yuezhi people no matter whether
Yuezhi were Indo-European or not. Note that the 'SanMiao' people
were mostly relocated to western China to guard against the
western barbarians by Lord Shun as a punishment for their aiding
Dan Zhu (the son of Lord Yao reign 2357-2258 BC ?) in rebellion.
Hence, the Sino-Tibetan speaking San Miao people had dwelled in
Gansu much earlier than the later Indo-European Yuezhi people,
by about 1000 years at minimum.
Also note more Tang Chinese mummies were found in this area than
Indo-Europeans mummies.
http://homepages.utoledo.edu/nlight/uyghhst.htm had a good
exposition of the "remarkably racialized ideas" and approaches
built on basis of the mummies.
http://www.taklamakan.org/allied_comm/commonv-1-8.html
carried an article by Takla entitled "The Origins of Relations
Between Tibet and Other Countries in Central Asia", stating that
"according to the researches of Sir Aurel Stein [i.e., the arch
thief of China's Dunhuang Grotto treasures] on the origins of
the people of Khotan, most were the descendants of the Aryans.
They also had in them Turkic and Tibetan blood, though the
Tibetan blood was more pronounced. He discovered ancient
documents at a place called
Nye-yar [Niya] in Khotan and he has stated that the script
of these documents contained no Pali, Arabic (Muslim) or Turkic
terminology. All were Tibetan terms and phrases." Tibetans,
clearly the descendants of Sino-Tibetan-speaking Qiangic SanMiao
people, had their influences reaching the southern Chinese
Turkistan in addition to the He-xi Corridor. P.T. Takla stated
further that "according to Wu Hriu(2), the facial features of
the people of Khotan were dissimilar to those of the rest of the
Horpa nomads of Drugu (Uighurs belonging to the Turkic people)
and similar, to an extent, to the Chinese. Khotan in the
north-west was called Li-yul by the ancient Tibetans. Since
Khotan was territorially contiguous with Tibet, there are
reasons to believe that the inhabitants of Khotan had originated
from Tibet."
Concluding this episode, my unchanged belief is still that
Sino-Tibetan-speaking Qiangic SanMiao people first reached the
He-xi Corridor of Gansu Prov 4000 years ago and onward to Khotan
area of southern Chinese Turkistan. It is never an accident that
early Chinese legends were full of events about the west,
including Mt Kunlun, Queen Mother of the West, Khotan jade, and
Mt Kunwu Diamond Ore etc. Tokharai, possibly related to the
Indo-Scythians, reached the areas of Lake Koko Nor and later
Tunhuang Grotto thereafter. In the 3rd century BC, the Hun
Chanyu ordered that his king attack the Yuezhi as a punishment
for disturbing peace at the Chinese border. Majority of the
Yuezhi fled to the region of Amu Daria river, and some fled
across the mountains to live among Qiangic people in the south.
Successors of the Huns, led by Helian Bobo of Tie-fu Huns,
established a Xia Dynasty lasting through AD 407-431. Helian
Bobo's acknowledgement and tracing of ancestry in a common
origin as Chinese clearly spelled out the fact that it was the
Mongoloid who had first raided to the west rathern than the
other way around.
Albert von Le Coq's Observations
Albert von Le Coq, in his 1928 book "Buried Treasures Of
Chinese Turkestan", had tackled the issue of human
migrations that occurred in the New Dominion Province. Albert
von Le Coq, after personably excavating and observing sculptures
and statutes, gave sound judgments as to the timeline of the
said migrations by people from the west, east and south. Albert
von Le Coq's conclusion would be the same as what I had
expounded via written historical chronicles, i.e., Mongoloid
people fully Turkistanized the territory by 10th century.
Albert von Le Coq believed that Scythians had come over to
Chinese Turkestan from today's Russian domain that was to the
north of the Caspian Sea. Buddhism spread to Kabul River area.
Greek Historian Herodotus called the people in Kabul River
[Hindu Kush Valley] area by Aparytai, i.e., Jian-tuo-luo
[Gandhara], who had served under ancient Persian King Xerxes. At
this time, the images of buddha still retained the modeling on
basis of Greek gods Apollo and Dionysus. Alexandre the Great
then exerted Greek influences over Central Asia, including
Bactria, i.e., today's Afghanistan. By 130 BC, Greeks were
overtaken by Parthians and Kushan Yuezhi. With the faciliation
of the Kushan Yuezhi, Buddhism spread into Chinese Turkestan
with Iranian & Indian inputs via two routes, i) Bactria ->
Pamirs -> Kashgar-Shache-Khotan, 2) Kashmir -> Kara-Kunlun Pass
[Karakorum Pass] -> Kashgar-Shache-Khotan. Then, Buddhism
arrived in Turpan oasis and onward to China.
Albert von Le Coq concluded that three racial inputs converged
in Chinese Turkestan, namely, Indo-European to the west,
Indo-Iranian to the south and west, and Indians [should be
Qiangic per translator Zhan Hongzhi of "Buried Treasures Of
Chinese Turkestan"] to the south. Albert von Le Coq
classified Su-te [Sogdians] as Iranian who distributed mainly in
Samarkand and Bokhara area. Albert von Le Coq classified the
ruling class from Kuqa to Turpan as Tochari, i.e.,
Indo-Europeans, but also pointed out that Tochari designated 100
as 'kand' similar to Latin 'centum'. Albert von Le Coq pointed
out that Tochari tombs contained similar bronze burials as
Crimea Schythian tombs. (Zhan Hongzhi pointed out that it was
Yuezhi who were a branch of Tochari, not the other way around.
Yuezhi meant for 'protector of the moon' per Ban Gu's "Hou
Han Shu", which was to corrobate the fact that Yuezhi people
revered the moon god. Zhan Hongzhi also mentioned that Tochari
tombs could be as old as 4000 years.)
Albert von Le Coq cited Chinese records in claiming that Tochari
had intruded into the Yellow River bend in 3rd century BC till
they were defeated by the Huns in 170 BC approximately [should
be 177-176 BC]. Being defeated by the Huns repeatedly, the
Tochari [i.e., Yuezhi] fled to the West to take over Scythian
land, and Scythian fled south to take over Bactria from Greeks
in 135 BC. Yuezhi went further to take over Bactria from
Scythians. Kushan, the major tribe among five Yuezhi tribes,
would build the Kushan Yuezhi empire after conquering India and
Sistan. Buddhism flourished throughout Kushan reign till 5th
century AD.
Albert von Le Coq stated that the Turks began to attack oasis in
Chinese Turkestan around 760 AD. Uygurs [i.e., Uighurs] reached
Gaochang [Karakhoja], i.e., near Turpan, and became subject to
Buddhism influences. However, Uygur king was a Manichaen, while
some of his subjects adopted Christianity. Except for Turkic
clothing, Chinese chopsticks, and calligraphy pens, the Uygurs
had adopted Su-te [Sogdian] lettering and medicine. Albert von
Le Coq claimed that for the next two hundred years, Uygurs would
control the whole area of Chinese Turkistan and became
'westernized' except for their Mongoloid facial outlooks. By 9th
century, however, Uygurs suffered a defeat in the hands of the
Kirghiz. Then, the Uygurs would surrender to the Mongols who had
recruited so many young people that the irrigated lands would be
abandoned to the moving sands.
Yuezhi versus Scythians
The Chinese recorded that the Scythians were called 'Sai' (aka
'Sai Ren' or 'Sai Zhong'), and this group of people were
described to be located to the west of the Yueh-chih (Yuezhi)
people. Yuezhi people were said to be Indo-European, a subgroup
related to the Scythians. Gua Di Zhi stated that Yuezhi
country included ancient Liangzhou, Ganzhou, Suzhou, Yanzhou and
Shazhou, i.e., today's Gansu and Shenxi Provinces.
http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field(DOCID+mn0013)
claimed that in the vast area "from the Korean Peninsula in the
east, across the northern tier of China to the Kazakh Soviet
Socialist Republic and to the Pamir Mountains and Lake Balkash
in the west ... this has been an area of constant ferment from
which emerged numerous migrations and invasions to the southeast
(into China), to the southwest (into Transoxiana--modern Uzbek
Soviet Socialist Republic, Iran, and India), and to the west
(across Scythia toward Europe). By the eighth century B.C., the
inhabitants of much of this region evidently were nomadic
Indo-European speakers, either Scythians or their kin. Also
scattered throughout the area were many other tribes that were
primarily Mongol in their ethnologic characteristics." There are
numerous excavations of Scythian tombs in the Caucasus and the
Central Asia, with artifacts like 1500 BC bronze axes in
Siberia, 1200 BC Cimerian bronze north of the Black sea, 800 BC
Scythian gold artifacts north of the Caspian, but not in East
Asia. 600 BC bronze artifacts from Baikal were labelled as
Hunnic. More, Russian archaeologists pointed out that Hunnic
excavations of Mongolia pointed to the nature of agricultural
settlements among the early Huns. Do remember that one son of
the Yellow Overlord left for the north 4000 years ago.
It would be difficult to make a distinction between the two
nomadic groups by pre-defining their domains. Could the early
human beings reject each other simply by bodily appearance and
hence maintain their separate physique till today? I might
updold this argument by making an analogy to the relationship of
dog versus wolf. It is reported via DNA studies that the dogs
split from the wolves about 135,000 years ago, that they did not
change in appearance till 15,000 years ago, and that they had
undergone inbreeding in the last several hundreds of years, only
(see Mercury News, July 25th, 2000 edition). I would not know
when the Mongoloid and the Caucasoid split from each other;
however, the physique of the Caucasoid points to the likelihood
that their ancestors had lived in the severe cold weather of the
northern hemisphere much longer than others, where they
developed the lighter skin, high nose bridge and bodily hairs.
Zhou/Qin People's
Zigzags With Rong & Di
Aside from the Rongdi Rong,
Xirong, Jiangrong & Quanrong (aka Kunyi/Hunyi or Quanyi) in
northwestern China, there were the Mountain Rongs (Beirong or
Wuzhong) in the northeast and Chang-Di barbarian in Shandong.
Across the areas of Yellow River Bend and northern Shanxi-Shenxi
provinces would be numerous small 'Rong' statelets, Chi-di and
Bai-di etc.
Now back to Rong people at the time of Zhou Dynasty. Sima Qian's
Shi Ji and Ban Gu's Han Shu said that the
Quanrongs (possibly ancestors of the Huns), at one time,
attacked the ancestor of Zhou people, forcing Zhou people into a
move to Qishan Mountain where they set up the Zhou statelet. The
Rongdi's relationship with Doggy Rong was not clear, but could
be of same family. History book mentioned that Rongdi was of
dog ancestry, related to Pan-hu the ancestor of San-Miao people
who were exiled to Gansu Prov by Lord Shun.
Count of West, Xibo, namely, Zhou Ancestor Ji Chang, once
attacked the Doggy Rongs (said to be same as Xianyun barbarian
on the steppe). Dozen years later, Zhou King Wuwang exiled the
Rongs north of the Jing & Luo Rivers. The Rongs were also called
Huangfu at the time, a name to mean their 'erratic submission'.
200 years later, Zhou King Muwang attacked the Doggy Rongs and
history recorded that he captured four white wolves & four white
deers (white deer and white wolf being the titles of ministers
of Rongdi barbarians) during his campaign. The Huangfu (Doggy
Rong) people then no longer sent in yearly gifts and tributes.
Zhou King Yiwang, the grandson of King Muwang (r. 1,001 - 946
BC), would be attacked by the Rongs. The great grandson, King
Xuanwang (reign 827 - 782), finally fought back against the
Rongs. Shi Jing eulogized King Xuanwang's reaching
Taiyuan of Shanxi Province and fighting the Jiangrong.
Dongzhou Lieguo Zi said that King Xuanwang would be futile
in fighting the Jiang-Rong nomads at Taiyuan. (Jiangrong could
mean the same as Quanrong or later Rongdi Rong.) Thereafter,
King Youwang (reign 781-771) was killed by the Doggy Rongs at
the foothill of Lishan Mountain and capital Haojing was sacked.
Quanrong & Xirong had come to aid Marquis Shenhou (father-in-law
of King Youwang of Western Zhou, c 11 cent - 770 BC) in killing
King Youwang of Zhou Dynasty in 770 BC. Rongs who stayed on at
Lishan were called Li-rong. The Rongs moved to live between the
Jing & Wei Rivers. Lord Qin Xianggong was conferred the old land
of Zhou by Zhou King Pingwang (reign 770-720). Zhou King
Pingwang encouraged the Qin Lord to drive out the Quanrongs.
Geography: The Jing River is
renowed for its clearness. It originated in today's Ningxia,
entered Shenxi, converged with the Wei River, and then flew into
the Yellow River. The Wei River originated from Gansu, entered
Shenxi, converged with Jing River, and flew into the Yellow
River. The Luo River originated from Shenxi, flew through Henan,
and then entered the Yellow River.
Quanrong or Doggy Rong of
the west were also named Quan-yi-shi (Doggy alien tribe) or
Hunyi / Kunyi (Kunlun Mountain aliens?, but was commented to be
the same as character 'hun4' for the meaning of mixing-up).
Shan Hai Jing legends stated that Huangdi or Yellow Lord
bore Miao-long, Miaolong bore Nong-ming, Nongming bore Bai-quan
(White dog) which was the ancestors of Quanrong. Shan Hai
Jing also stated that Quan-yi had human face but beast-like
body. An ancient scholar called Jia Kui stated that Quan-yi
was one of the varieties of Rong people. Among the above
names, one group of barbarians would be called the Rong-di(2)
people. Some Rong and Di must have mixed up, and one more
designation would be Rongdi Rong which later split into Chidi
and Baidi.
Qin warred with various Rong peoples over a time span of over
600 years. When Zhou King Liwang was ruling despotically, the Xi
Rong (Xirong or Western Rong) people rebelled in the west and
killed most of the Daluo lineage of Qin people. Zhou King
Xuanwang conferred Qin Lord 'Qin Zhong' (r. BC 845-822 ?) the
title of 'Da Fu' and ordered him to quell the Xirong. Qin Lord
Zhuanggong's senior son, Shifu, would swear that he would kill
the king of the Rong people to avenge the death of Qin Zhong
before returning to the Qin capital. Zhuanggong's junior son
would be Qin Lord Xianggong (Ying Kai) who assisted Zhou King
Pingwang (reign 770-720) in cracking down on both the Western
Rong and the Dogggy Rong. Shifu was taken prisoner of war by Xi
Rong during the 2nd year reign of Qin Lord Xianggong and did not
get released till one year later. During the 7th year reign of
Qin Lord Xianggong, i.e., 771 BC, Doggy Rong barbarians sacked
Zhou capital and killed Zhou king at the invitation of Marquis
Shen (i.e., Shenhou). Qin Lord Xianggong (Ying Kai) died during
the 12th year of his reign (766 BC) when he campaigned against
the Rong at Qishan. Qin Lord Wengong (r. BC 765-716), during his
16th year reign, Wengong defeated Rong at Qishan. Wengong would
give the land east of Qishan back to Zhou court. Qin Lord
Ninggong (r. BC 715-704) would defeat King Bo and drove King Bo
towards the Rong people during the 3rd year reign, i.e., 713 BC.
Ninggong conquered King Bo's Dang-shi clan during the 12th year
reign, i.e., 704 BC. Qin Lord Wugong (r. BC 697-677), during the
10th year reign, exterminated Gui-rong (Shanggui of Longxi) and
Ji-rong (Tiansui Commandary), and the next year, exterminated
Du-bo Fief (southeast of Xi'an), Zheng-guo Fief (Zheng-xian
County) and Xiao-guo Fief (an alternative Guo Fief, different
from the Guo domain conferred by Zhou King Wenwang onto his
brother, Guo-shu). Xiao-guo Fief was said to be a branch of the
Qiang people.
Meanwhile, lord of the Jinn Principality, Jinn Xian'gong (r.
676-651 BC), attacked Li-rong (Xi Rong) barbarians during his
5th year reign, i.e., 672 BC approx, and captured a Li-rong
woman called Li-ji. In 664 BC, Qi Lord Huangong destroyed the
statelets of Shan-rong and Guzhu. (Guzhu was formerly Zhu-guo
Statelet, a vassal of ex-Shang dynasty. In the northeast, The
Shan-rong or Mountain Rongs went across the Yan Principality of
Hebei Province to attack Qi Principality in today's Shandong
Province. 44 years later, they attacked Yan. Around 664 BC,
Yan-Qi joint armies destroyed the Mountain Rong Statelet as well
as the Guzhu Statelet under the command of Qi Counsellor Guan
Zhong, Marquis Qi Huanggong, and Count Yan. Around 664 BC,
Yan-Qi joint armies drove them out, penetrated into the Rong
land, and destroyed the Mountain Rong Statelet as well as the
Guzhu Statelet. The story of 'old horses knew the way home'
would be about the joint army being lost after they penetrated
deep into the Rong land. Hence, Yan Statelet extended by 500 li
to the northwest, in addition to the eastward 50 li which was
given to Count Yan for his escorting Marquis Qi all the way into
Qi Statelet.
During the 16th year of Zhou King Huiwang (reign 676-652),
namely, 661 BC, the Chang Di barbarians who were located near
today's Jinan City of Shandong Province, under Sou Man, attacked
the Wey and Xing principalities. The Di barbarians, hearing of
Qi army's counter-attacks at Mountain-rong, embarked on a
pillage in central China by attacking Wey and Xing statelets.
The Di barbarians killed Wey Lord Yigong (r. BC 668-660 ?) who
was notorious for indulging in raising numerous birds called
'he' (cranes), and the barbarians cut him into pieces. A Wey
minister would later find Yigong's liver to be intact, and hence
he committed suicide by cutting apart his chest and saving
Yigong's liver inside of his body.
Over 20 years later, in 636 BC approx, the Rongdi nomads
attacked Zhou King Xiangwang (reign 651-619) at the
encouragement of Zhou Queen who was the daughter of Rongdi
ruler. Jinn Principality helped Zhou King by attacking the Rongs
and then escorted the king back to his throne 4 years after the
king went into exile. After the defeat in the hands of Jinn, the
Rongs moved to the land between the west segment of the Yellow
River loop or bend and the Luo River, and two groups were known
at the time, Chidi (Red Di) and Baidi (White Di). (Note that
ancient West Yellow River Bend is the same as today's East
Yellow River Bend. Ancient Yellow River Bend did not equate to
today's inverse U-shaped course with the North Bend lying inside
Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, but the U-shaped Bend with
South Bend in southern Shanxi Prov and then a south-to-north
turn in Hebei Province for exit into the sea.) Baidi (White Di)
dwelled in ancient Yanzhou (today's Yan'an), Suizhou (today's
Suide) and Yinzhou (today's Ningxia on west Yellow River Bend).
Zuo Shi Chunjiu stated Jinn defeated Baidi and remnants
were know as Bai-bu-hu later. Chidi (Red Di) dwelled in a place
called Lu(4), near today's Shangdang. Zuo Shi Chunjiu
stated that Jinn Principality destroyed the Lu(4) tribe of the
Chidi, and the remnants were know as Chi-she-hu nomads later.
In 659 BC, Qin Lord Mugong conquered Maojin-rong. Two years
after Xiao'er defeat, in 625 BC, Qin Mugong dispatched
Mengmingshi on another campaign against Jinn. Meantime, Qin Lord
Mugong conquered 8 Western Rong tribes. In 623 BC, i.e., during
the 37th year reign, Qin Mugong, using You Yu as a guide,
campaigned against the Xirong nomads and conquered the Xirong
Statelet under their lord Chi Ban. Once Chi Ban submitted to
Qin, the rest of Western Rong nomads in the west acknowledged
the Qin overlordship. Qin Mugong would conquer altogether a
dozen (12) states in Gansu-Shaanxi areas and controlled the
western China of the times. Zhou King dispatched Duke Zhaogong
to congratulate Qin with a gold drum.
During the 3rd year reign of Qin Gonggong, i.e., 606 BC, Lord
Chu Zhuangwang campaigned northward against the Luhun-rong
barbarians and inquired about the Zhou cauldrons when passing
through the Zhou capital. Luhun-rong barbarians, according to
Hou Han Shu, had relocated to northern China from ancient
Gua-zhou prefecture of Gansu Prov. Alternatively speaking, per
ancient scholar Du Yu, Luhun-rong barbarians, with clan name of
Yun-shi, originally dwelled to the northwest of Qin and Jinn
principalities, but Qin/Jinn seducingly relocated them to
Yichuan area (i.e, Xincheng, Henan Prov) during the 22nd year
reign of Lu Lord Xigong (r. BC 659-627), i.e., in 638 BC.
As to barbarian groups, there were Mianzu-Quanrong-Di-Wanrong to
the west of Qin Principality, Yiqu-Dali-Wushi-Xuyan etc to the
north of Qin Principality, Linhu-Loufan to the north of Jin
(Jinn) Principality, and Donghu-Shanrong to the north of Yan
Principality. Mianzu could be pronounced Raozhu. Quanrong was
know as Kunrong or Hunrong or Hunyi. The character 'hun4' for
Hunyi or Hun-yi is the same as Hunnic King Hunye or Kunye and
could mean the word of mixing-up. Wan-rong dwelled in today's
Tianshui, Gansu Prov. Yiqu was one of the Xirong or Western rong
stateles at ancient Qingzhou and Ningzhou areas. Dali-rong
dwelled in today's Fengxu County. Wushi was originally Zhou
land, but it was taken over by Rong. Qin King Huiwang took it
back from Rong later. Linhu was later destroyed by General Li
Mu. Loufan belonged to Yanmen'guan Pass area.
During the 13th year reign of Zhou King Jianwang, i.e., 573 BC,
Jinn Lord Ligong was killed by Luan Shu and Zhongxing Yan, and
Jinn dispatched emissaries (led by a Zhi family member) to the
Zhou court to retrieve Zi-zhou as Lord Daogong. Jinn Lord
Daogong made peace with Rongdi (who attacked Zhou King Xiangwang
earlier), and the Rongdi sent in gifts and tributes to Jinn.
Another one hundred years, Zhao Xiang-zi of Zhao Principality
took over Bing and Dai areas near Yanmen'guan Pass. Zhao,
together with Haan and Wei families, destroyed another opponent
called Zhi-bo and split Jinn into three states of Haan, Zhao &
Wei. Yiqu-Rong built castles to counter Qin. Qin King Huiwang
took over 25 cities from Yiqu.
In 461 BC, Qin Lord Ligong, with 20,000 army, attacked Dali-rong
barbarians and took over Dali-rong capital. In 444 BC, Qin Lord
Ligong attacked Yiqu-rong barbarians in the areas of later
Qingzhou and Ningzhou and captured the Yiqu-rong king. Around
430 BC, Yiqu-rong barbarians counter-attacked Qin and reached
south of Wei-shui River. Qin Lord Xiaogong (r. BC 361-338),
during the first year reign, Qin Xiaogong made an open
announcement for seeking talents all over China in the attempt
of restoring Qin Mugong's glories. In the east, Qin Xiaogong
took over Shaancheng city, and in the west, he defeated and
killed a Rong king by the name of Huan-wang near Tiansui, Gansu
Prov.
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Linguistic Explorations
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