Full text of history and
development of
Xinjiang
新疆的历史与发展
( 2003-05-26 16:14)
(8)
Foreword
The
Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region (also called Xinjiang for short),
situated in the border area of northwest China and the hinterland
of the Eurasian Continent, occupies an area of 1.6649 million sq
km, accounting for one sixth of Chinese territory. It has a land
border of 5,600 km bounded by eight countries. It was an important
section of the ancient Silk Road. According to statistics, in the
year 2000 Xinjiang had a population of 19.25 million, including
10.9696 million people of other ethnic groups than the Han, China's
majority ethnic group. There are 47 ethnic groups in Xinjiang,
mainly the Uygur, Han, Kazak, Hui, Mongolian, Kirgiz, Xibe, Tajik,
Ozbek, Manchu, Daur, Tatar and Russian. It is one of China's five
autonomous regions for ethnic minorities.
Since ancient times, Xinjiang has been inhabited by many ethnic
groups believing in a number of religions. Since the Western Han
Dynasty (206 B.C.-24 A.D.), it has been an inseparable part of the
unitary multi-ethnic Chinese nation. In the more than 50 years
since the People's Republic of China was founded, the people of all
ethnic groups in Xinjiang, with concerted and pioneering efforts,
have jointly written brilliant pages in the annals of its
development, construction and frontier defense, causing
earth-shaking changes in the social outlook of the region.
I.
Xinjiang Has Been a Multi-ethnic Region Since Ancient
Times
In
ancient history, many tribes and ethnic groups lived in Xinjiang.
The ethnic origins of the residents of Xinjiang began to be clearly
recorded in the Han Dynasty (206 B.C.-220 A.D.), the main ones
being the Sai (Sak), Rouzhi (or Yueh-chih), Wusun (Usun), Qiang,
Xiongnu (Hun) and Han.
The Sai
as a nomadic tribe used to roam about the area from the Ili and
Chuhe river basins in the east to the Sir (Syrdarya) River valley
in the west. Under pressure from the Rouzhi, they moved westward -
some to the north bank of the Sir River, while others southward to
scatter in the areas of the Pamirs.
The
Rouzhi roamed the vast region between the Gansu Corridor and the
Tarim Basin during the Warring States Period (475 B.C.-221 B.C.)
and flourished during the Qin (221B.C.-206 B.C.) and Han dynasties.
Attacked by the Xiongnu around 176 B.C., they were forced to move
to the Ili River basin, from which they dislodged the Sai.
The Wusun
first lived in the Gansu Corridor. In the late Qin and early Han
period, attacked by the Rouzhi they yielded their allegiance to the
Xiongnu. Supported by the Xiongnu, the Wusun attacked the Rouzhi,
and drove them out of the Ili River basin.
The Qiang
originally lived along the middle and upper reaches of the Yellow
River. During the Spring and Autumn (770 B.C.-476 B.C.) and Warring
States periods, some of the Qiang migrated westward across the
Gansu Corridor and the Qilian-Kunlun mountain ranges, leaving their
footprints in Xinjiang.
The
Xiongnu entered Xinjiang mainly around 176 B.C. The Han was one of
the earliest peoples to settle in Xinjiang.
In 101
B.C., the Han empire began to station garrison troops to open up
wasteland for cultivation of farm crops in Luntai (Bügür), Quli and
some other places. Later, it sent troops to all other parts of
Xinjiang for the same purpose. All the garrison reclamation points
became the early settlements of the Han people after they entered
Xinjiang. Since the Western Regions Frontier Command was
established in 60 B.C., the inflow of the Han people to Xinjiang,
including officials, soldiers and merchants, had never stopped.
The
period of the Wei, Jin and Southern and Northern Dynasties (220
A.D.-589 A.D.) was a period of the large-scale merging of ethnic
groups in China, witnessing frequent ethnic migration across the
land of China, and the entry into Xinjiang by many ancient ethnic
groups, such as the Rouran (Jorjan), Gaoche, Yeda and Tuyuhun.
The
Rouran were descendants of the Donghu, an ancient people rising on
the northern grasslands in the early fifth century. After
establishing a powerful regime on the Mongolian grasslands in 402
A.D., they struggled with the Northern Wei (386-534) for domination
of the Western Regions. The nomadic Gaoche, also called the Tolos
or Teli, first appeared around Lake Baikal and the basins of the
Orkhon and Tura rivers. In 487, Avochilo, chief of the Puwurgur
tribe of the Gaoche, and his brother Qunqi led more than 100,000
families to migrate westward, and founded the state of Gaoche to
the northwest of Anterior Cheshi (the ancient city of Jiaohe near
modern Turpan). The Yeda, rising in the region north of the Great
Wall, moved eastward to the Tarim Basin, attacked the Rouzhi in the
south and set up a state in the late fifth century. They crossed
the Pamirs, and once controlled part of southern Xinjiang.
The Tuyuhun, originating from the ancient Xianbei people, moved
westward from Liaodong (the region east of the Liaohe River in
northeast China) in the early fourth century, and set up their own
regime after conquering the ancient Di and Qiang peoples in the
region of southern Gansu, Sichuan and Qinghai.
In the
Sui (581-618) and Tang (618-907) dynasties, the ancient Turk and
Tubo peoples exerted important influences on the course of
Xinjiang's history.
The Turks
were ancient nomads active on the northwestern and northern
grasslands of China from the sixth to the eighth centuries. Tümaen,
a Turki leader, defeated the Rouran in 552, and set up a state
centered in Mobei (the area north of the vast deserts on the
Mongolian Plateau). The Turki realm later split into the eastern
and western sides which fought ceaselessly in their scramble for
the khanate. In the middle of the eighth century, both the Eastern
and Western Turki khanates disappeared, their descendants being
assimilated by other ethnic groups.
The Tubo
were the ancestors of the Tibetans, rising to notice on the
Qinghai-Tibet Plateau in the late sixth century. After occupying
Qinghai, they began to vie with the Tang Dynasty for control of the
Western Regions. In 755, An Lushan and Shi Siming raised a
rebellion in the Central Plains, and Tang troops stationed in the
Western Regions were withdrawn to battle the rebels, whereupon the
Tubo took the opportunity to occupy southern Xinjiang and part of
northern Xinjiang.
In 840,
large numbers of Uighurs (an ancient name for modern Uygurs)
entered Xinjiang. The Uighur, originally called Ouigour, sprang
from the ancient tribe Teli. They were first active in the Selenga
and Orkhon river basins, and later moved to the north of the Tura
River. In 744, the Uighur founded a khanate in Mobei, and later
dispatched troops twice to help the Tang central authorities to
quell the An Lushan-Shi Siming Rebellion. The Uighur Khanate
collapsed in 840 because of natural disasters, internal strife and
attacks by the ancient Jiegasi tribe. Consequently, most of the
Uighur migrated westward.
One of
their sub-groups moved to the modern Jimsar and Turpan regions,
where they founded the Gaochang Uighur Kingdom. Another sub-group
moved to the Central Asian grasslands, scattered in areas from
Central Asia to Kashi, and joined the Karluk and Yagma peoples in
founding the Karahan Kingdom. After that, the Tarim Basin and its
surrounding areas were under the rule of the Gaochang Uighur
Kingdom and the Karahan Kingdom. The local residents were merged
with the Uighurs that had moved west, thus laying the foundation
for the subsequent formation of the Uygur ethnic group.
In 1124,
Yollig Taxin, a member of the ruling house of the Liao Dynasty
(916-1125), led his people, the Khitan tribe, westward and
conquered Xinjiang, where he established the kingdom of Western
Liao. In the early 13th century, Genghis Khan led an expeditionary
army to Xinjiang, where he granted the territories he had conquered
to his children and grandchildren. The Uighurs further assimilated
a portion of the Khitans and Mongolians.
Oyrat was
the general name used for the Mongolians in Moxi (the area west of
the vast deserts on the Mongolian Plateau) in the Ming Dynasty
(1368-1644). The Oyrat first lived in scattered areas along the
upper reaches of the Yenisaey River, gradually spreading to the
middle reaches of the Ertix and Ili river basins. The early 17th
century saw the rise among them of the Junggar, Dorbüt, Huxut and
Turgut tribes. In the 1670s, the Junggar occupied the Ili River
basin, becoming leader of the four tribes, and put southern
Xinjiang under their control.
From the
1760s on, the government of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) sent
Manchu, Xibe and Suolun (Daur) troops from northeast China to
Xinjiang in order to strengthen the frontier defense of the region,
and they added to the ethnic mix in Xinjiang. Afterwards, Russians
and Tatars migrated into Xinjiang. By the end of the 19th century,
Xinjiang had 13 ethnic groups, namely, Uygur, Han, Kazak,
Mongolian, Hui, Kirgiz, Manchu, Xibe, Tajik, Daur, Ozbek, Tatar and
Russian. The Uygurs formed the majority, as they do today.
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