The Naxi ethnic minority has a population of
277,800, most of whom live in concentrated communities in
the Lijiang Naxi Autonomous County in Yunnan Province, the
rest being scattered in Weixi, Zhongdian, Ninglang, Deqin,
Yongsheng, Heqing, Jianchuan and Lanping counties in Yunnan
Province, as well as Yanyuan, Yanbian and Muli counties in
Sichuan Province. A small number live in Mangkang County of
Tibet Autonomous Region.
The Naxi areas,
traversed by the Jinsha, Lancang and Yalong rivers, and the
Yunling, Xueshan and Yulong mountain ranges, have a
complicated terrain. There are cold mountainous areas,
uplands, basins, rivers and valleys, averaging 2,700 meters
above sea level. The climate varies from cold and temperate
to subtropical. Rainfall is
plentiful.
Agriculture is the main occupation
of the Naxi people. The chief crops are rice, maize, wheat,
potatoes, beans, hemp and cotton. The bend of the Jinsha
River is heavily forested, and Yulong Mountain is known at
home and abroad as a "flora storehouse." The
extensive dense forests contain Chinese fir, Korean pine,
Yunnan pine and other valuable trees, as well as many
varieties of herbs including fritillary bulbs, Chinese
caterpillar fungus and musk.
There are rich
reserves of such non-ferrous metals as gold, silver, copper,
aluminum and manganese. Water resources are
abundant.
The Naxi language belongs to the
Chinese-Tibetan language family. More than 1,000 years ago,
the Naxi people had already created pictographic characters
called the "Dongba" script and a syllabic writing
known as the "Geba" script. With these scripts
they recorded a lot of beautiful folklore, legends, poems
and religious classics. However, they were difficult to
master, and in 1957 the government helped the Naxi design an
alphabetic script. Over the past few hundred years, as the
Naxi people have come into closer contact with the people in
other parts of China politically, economically and
culturally, the oral and written Chinese has become an
important means of communication in Naxi
society.
History
According to historical documents, the
forefathers of the Naxi people were closely related to a
tribe called "Maoniu Yi" in the Han Dynasty (206
B.C.-A.D. 220), "Mosha Yi" in the Jin Dynasty
(265-420) and "Moxie Yi" in the Tang Dynasty
(618-907).
Between the early 10th century and
the middle of the 13th century, production in the Lijiang
area underwent marked changes, as agriculture replaced
livestock breeding as the main occupation of the people.
Scores of agricultural, handicraft, mineral and livestock
products were turned out, and the county presented a picture
of prosperity. During that period, a number of slave-owning
groups in Ninglang, Lijiang and Weixi counties gradually
grew into a feudal manorial lord caste.
In 1278
the Yuan Dynasty (1206-1368) established Lijiang Prefecture
representing the imperial court in Yunnan Province. This
resulted in closer links between the Lijiang area and the
center of the empire.
In the early Ming Dynasty
(1368-1644), the leader of the Naxi people, named Mude, was
made the hereditary chieftain of Lijiang Prefecture,
exercising control over the Naxi people and other ethnic
groups in the vicinity. Throughout the Ming Dynasty, the
hereditary chieftains from the Mu family kept taxes and
tribute flowing to the Ming court in the form of silver and
grain. The Ming, in turn, relied on the Mu family as the
mainstay for the control of the people of various ethnic
groups in northwestern Yunnan Province.
Later,
with the development of the productive forces, buying,
selling and renting of land began to take place in the Naxi
areas, marking the beginning of a landlord
economy.
From 1723, during the Qing Dynasty
(1644-1911), hereditary local chieftains in the Lijiang area
began to be replaced by court officials and the hereditary
chieftain surnamed Mu thus became the local
administrator.
Art and Literature
Naxi literature is rich in form and content.
Besides works by Naxi scholars and writers, there is a
repository of oral folk literature. "Genesis,"
"The Rich Steal Oxen," "Revenge" and
"Song of Elopement" are characterized by simple
and fresh expressions, and distinctive national flavor. The
"Dongba Scripture," a religious work, dates back
to the Tang Dynasty. Written in the pictographic script, it
describes the various aspects of life of the Naxi people
during their long transition from slavery to feudalism. It
is extremely important for the study of Naxi literature,
history and religion.
The Naxis are fond of
singing and dancing, especially at weddings and funerals.
The most popular songs are descriptive and short. They are
sung at very high pitch and with strong rhythms, to the
accompaniment of simple dances. The most common musical
instruments are flutes, reed pipes and wind-string
instruments. The ancient musical piece,
"Baishaxiyue," which dates back to the Yuan
Dynasty, was rediscovered and preserved after the founding
of the People’s Republic of China.
Naxi
architecture, sculpture and painting have reached fairly
high standards. Moreover, they are mixed with the
traditional styles of the Hans and Tibetans. Some famous
buildings preserved in Lijiang, such as the "Dabao
Palace," "Glazed Hall," "Dading
Pavilion" and "Five-Phoenix Chamber," were
all built during the Ming Dynasty. All the murals in these
buildings have the concise and harmonious strokes of Tibetan
painting, and the style of Taoist and Buddhist paintings of
the Tang Dynasty. Modern Naxi painting has made fresh
progress since 1949
Religion
Before 1949, most Naxi people were followers
of the "Dongba" religion, which was a form of
Shamanism. Sorcerers, called "Dongba," were
invited to chant scriptures at weddings, funerals, the New
Year Day and other festivals. Some of the Naxis were
followers of Lamaism. Buddhism, Taoism and Christianity only
had limited access to the Lijiang
area.
Customs and Habits
Naxi women wear wide-sleeved loose gowns, with
jackets and long trousers, tied with richly decorated belts
at the waist. They often wear sheepskin slung over the
shoulder, on which are seven stars exquisitely embroidered,
with sun and moon symbols, one on each side. This reflects
the Naxis' admiration for diligence -- "people start
working early in the morning and do not stop until late in
the evening." Women in Ninglang County wear short
jackets and long skirts reaching the ground, with many
folds. They wrap large black cotton turbans around their
heads and wear big silver earrings. Men's garments are
similar to those of the Han people.
The
traditional festivals include the "Farm-Tool Fair"
in January, "God of the Rain Festival" in March,
and "Mule and Horse Fair" in July. There are also
the Lunar New Year, the Pure Brightness Festival, the Dragon
Boat Festival, the Mid-Autumn Festival and the Torch
Festival -- all being the same as those of the
Hans.
Cremation has been a tradition since
ancient times, but in some of the Naxi areas the custom of
burying the dead was adopted in the late Qing Dynasty. It
was common in the past to chant scriptures at the funeral
ceremony to expiate the sins of the dead.
The
monogamous family under the feudal landlord economy was the
main type of Naxi family in Lijiang, Weixi and Yongsheng
counties before liberation. However, the man enjoyed a
predominant status in the family while the woman had little
say and was denied the right to inherit property. Young
people's marriages were all arranged by their
parents.
Among some of the Naxi people in
Yongning County in Yunnan Province and Yanyuan County in
Sichuan Province, there still existed remnants of a
matriarchal family structure until the eve of the democratic
reform after liberation. The pedigree of the family was
traced back through the maternal line, and children lived
with the mother. The woman was the head of the family, and
the property was passed to the children through the mother,
or to the nephews through the mother's brothers. Women
comprised the main labor force, respected at home and in
outside society.
Social Economy
The Naxi communities had reached the stage of
feudal society long before the nationwide liberation in
1949, though the stages of development were not the same. In
Lijiang, southern Weixi and Yongsheng counties where a
feudal landlord economy was prevalent, certain factors of
capitalism began to take shape. In Jinjiang and Sanba in
Zhongdian County the remnants of manorial economy could
still be found. In northern Weixi and part of Ninglang
counties in Yunnan Province and Yanyuan County in Sichuan
Province, the main form of economy was
manorial.
The level of agricultural production
was higher in the landlord economy areas. The landlords and
rich peasants, who accounted for 10 per cent of the
population, owned 60 to 70 per cent of the land. They
exploited the peasants through land rent, usury and hiring
them as farmhands. The rates of the rent ranged from 50 to
80 per cent of the crops harvested and the annual interest
rates of the usury reached as much as 300 per cent. They
also exploited the peasants through their privileges, with
the backing of reactionary political rulers. They forced the
peasants to work for them without pay, to present them with
gifts, and to render various kinds of corvee
labor.
In the manorial economy areas, the
manorial lords owned almost all the land, water resources,
grasslands and forests. In some places, each peasant had to
do as many as 150 days of unpaid labor a year. The manorial
lords in the Yongning area invented 35 pretexts to exploit
the peasants. They included the so-called fish tax, water
tax, firewood tax, death tax, and passer-by
tax.
Under the manorial lord, the commoners
were second-class citizens. Generally, the commoners did not
own any land, and only after they had accepted merciless
exploitation, such as heavy taxes and corvees, were they
given a small piece of land. In this way they actually
became serfs tied to the land of the lords. If they failed
to pay their debts or committed crimes, they could be
reduced to the status of household slaves. Completely under
their masters' disposal, they could be sold, bought,
exchanged or given as presents.
During the War
of Resistance Against Japan in the 1930s and 1940s, foreign
trade in China's southeastern coastal area came to a
standstill and transport between China and