"Qiang" was a name given by ancient Hans to the nomadic people
in west China. The Qiangs were not a single distinctive ethnic group then.
According to historical records, a clan group made their homes in what
is today's Sichuan Province. The Han Dynasty (206 B.C.-A.D. 220) court
in the 2nd century had set up an administrative prefecture for the area.
During A.D. 600 to 900 when the Tibetan Regime gradually expanded its
rule over the region, some Qiangs were assimilated by the Tibetans and
others by the Hans, leaving a small number unassimilated. These developed
into the distinctive ethnic group of today.
The Qiangs do not have a written script of their own. They speak a language
belonging to the Tibetan-Myanmese language family of the Chinese-Tibetan
system. Owing to their close contact with the Han people, many Qiang people
speak Chinese, which is also the written form for this ethnic group.
The Qiang and Han peoples have had time-honored close political, economic
and cultural ties. Administratively, Han courts from the Qin, Han, Sui
and Tang dynasties down to the Ming Dynasty all had political units in
the Qiang-occupied areas. In the early Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), the system
of appointing local hereditary headmen by the central authority to rule
over the Qiangs gave way to officials dispatched from the court. The central
administrative system helped enhance the ties between the Qiang and Han
ethnic groups. With their horses, medicinal herbs and other native produce,
the Qiangs used to barter farm implements and daily necessities from the
Hans. Mutual support and help stimulated the social and economic development
of Qiang society.
For a long period before China¡¯s national liberation in
1949, the Qiangs lived in primitive conditions marked by slash and burn
farming. A feudal landlord economy dominated production. Landlords and
rich peasants, who accounted for only 8 per cent of the population, were
in possession of 43 per cent of the cultivated land. Poor peasants and
hired farm hands, accounting for 43 per cent of the population, had only
16 per cent of the land. Many poor peasants lost their land due to heavy
rent coupled with usury. They became hired laborers, wandering from place
to place to make a living.
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