羌族; pinyin :Qiāngzú) are an ethnic group in China. They form one of the 56 ethnic groups officially recognised by the People's Republic of China,with a population of approximately 310,000 in 2000. [1] They live mainly in a mountainous region in the northwestern part of Sichuan (Szechwan) on the eastern edge of the Tibetan Plateau. [2]
The modern Qiang refer to themselves as Rma (/ɹmæː/ or /ɹmɛː/,尔玛,erma in Chinese or RRmea in Qiang orthography) or a dialect variant of this word. However,they did not define themselves with the Chinese term "Qiang ethnicity" (Chinese :羌族) until 1950,when they were officially designated Qiāngzú. [3]
Qiang has been a term that has historically referred less to a specific community,but more to the fluid western boundary of Han Chinese settlers. Chinese philosophers of the Warring States period also mentioned a 'Di-Qiang' peoples living on the western edge of Han territory. They were known for their customs of cremation. [4]
People called "Qiang" have been mentioned in ancient Chinese texts since they first appeared in oracle bone inscriptions 3,000 years ago. Recognized as a 'first ancestor culture',there is evidence of the Qiang in northwestern China dating back to the 16th-11th centuries B.C.,when they were recorded bringing tribute to the Shang Dynasty. [5] [6] They were primarily known to practice pastoral nomadism,and resisted westward expansion of the Han Empire,gradually shifting to the south-west of their ancestral lands.
However,the name Qiang has been applied to a variety of groups that might not be the same as the modern Qiang. Many of the people formerly designated as "Qiang" were gradually removed from this category in Chinese texts as they become sinicised or reclassified. By the Ming and Qing dynasties,the term "Qiang" denoted only non-Han people living in the upper Min River Valley and Beichuan area,the area now occupied by the modern Qiang. [7] Nonetheless,most modern scholarship assumes that modern Qiang are descended from the historical Qiang people. [8]
Sino-Tibetan | |
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Austroasiatic | |
Austronesian | |
Hmong-Mien | |
Mongolic | |
Kra–Dai | |
Tungusic | |
Turkic | |
Indo-European | |
Others | |
Overseas diaspora | |
Related | |
Immigrants and expatriates | |
Underlined: the 56 officially recognised ethnic groups ranked by population in their language families according to 2020 census |