Most of China's 2,548,300 Bouyei people live in
several Bouyei-Miao autonomous counties in Xingyi and Anshun
prefectures and Qiannan Bouyei-Miao Autonomous Prefecture in
Guizhou Province. Others are distributed in counties in the
Qiandongnan Miao-Dong Autonomous Prefecture or near Guiyang,
the capital of Guizhou.
The Bouyei region is on
the Yunnan-Guizhou Plateau, which slopes from an altitude of
1,000 meters in the north to 400 meters in the south. The
Miaoling Mountains stretch across the plateau, forming part
of its striking landscape.
The famous
Huangguoshu Falls cascade down more than 60 meters near the
Yunnan-Guizhou highway in Zhenning Bouyei-Miao Autonomous
County. The thunder of water can be heard several kilometers
away, and mists from the falls contribute to a magnificent
view.
The Bouyeis are blessed with fertile land
and a mild climate. The average annual temperature is 16
degrees Centigrade, and an essentially tropical environment,
receiving between 100 and 140 centimeters of rain a year, is
ideal for farming. Local crops include paddy rice, wheat,
maize, dry rice, millet, sorghum, buckwheat, potatoes and
beans. Farmers also grow cotton, ramie, tobacco, sugar cane,
tung oil, tea and oil-tea camellia as profitable cash
crops.
As the Red River valley is low-lying and
tropical, paddy rice yields two harvests annually. Silk,
hemp, bamboo shoots and bananas complement the local
economy, and coffee and cocoa have also been planted there
recently.
The valley is also rich in trees,
yielding a variety of timber, which is good for
construction, such as pines and China firs. The remote,
heavily-forested mountain and river areas provide a habitat
for tigers, leopards, bears, musk deer, foxes, golden
pheasants and others. Medicinal herbs are abundant in the
woods, and the area is also rich in mineral resources, such
as coal, iron, zinc, antimony, copper, petroleum, asbestos
and mercury.
The Bouyei language is of the
Zhuang-Dai branch of the Zhuang-Dong group belonging to the
Chinese-Tibetan family of languages. In the past, the
Bouyeis had no written language of their own, and used Han
characters instead. After 1949, the government helped
formulate a Bouyei writing system based on Latin
letters.
This ethnic group possesses a rich
folk literature, which includes fairy tales, fables, folk
songs, proverbs and poems. During weddings, scores of young
men and women are invited to join in antiphonal singing of a
rich ethnic quality. In the Biandan Mountain area of
Zhenning County, old women are invited to sing songs of
blessing by firesides. They can sing day and night for up to
a week without repeating the words of their ballads. Popular
musical instruments of the Bouyeis include the suona horn,
yueqin, dongxiao, short xiao, and sister xiao (all vertical
bamboo flutes) and a copper drum. Their favorite dances
include the weaving dance and the lion
dance.
The Bouyeis are skilled in arts and
crafts. Their colorful and beautifully-patterned batik dates
far back to ancient times. In 1953, a batik factory was
built in the city of Anshun with the help of the local
authorities, and traditional technology was improved. Now,
batik has become one of their best-selling handicrafts,
popular both on domestic and foreign markets. In addition,
their colorful embroidery, exquisite summer sleeping mats
and bamboo hats are not only durable and attractive, but
also highly artistic.
They live mostly on
plains or in river valleys in villages composed of families
from several different clans, in two-storied houses,
bungalows or a combination of the two. Often people live on
an upper floor, and keep livestock on the
lower.
Young Bouyei males generally wear short
buttoned jackets and long trousers, with scarves on their
heads. Women wear jackets buttoned on the right (although
some young women prefer lace-trimmed jackets buttoning down
the middle), and long trousers or pleated skirts. They also
wear scarves and a variety of silver
jewelry.
They are monogamous, but young people
of opposite sexes mix freely. When they go to fairs or other
festivities, unmarried young men and women get together to
sing songs. If a woman is attracted to a man, she will throw
him a ball made of silk strips which she has embroidered
herself. If the man is agreeable, they then make a date at
which they will sing love songs to each other. After several
dates, they may announce their engagement. Under the feudal
system of the past, however, most marriages were arranged by
parents.
In the past, the Bouyeis believed in
spirits and worshipped ancestors, although many living near
missionary outposts were converted to Christianity. In
general, they observe the same festivals as the Hans. On
June 6 and April 8, however, they celebrate their own
festivals in commemoration of the leaders of ancient
uprisings and their ancestors. On "Ox King
Festival," April 8, special cakes and glutinous rice
dyed in five different colors are made and offered to
ancestors. After the ceremony, half of these offerings are
given to their cattle, which are also granted a day of rest
as a reward for their hard
work.
History
Studies of the language, names and
geographical distribution of the Bouyeis indicate that they
have a common ancestry with the Zhuangs. The ancient Yue
people, who were widely distributed, were composed of such
ethnic groups as the Xiou and Louyue in Guangdong and
Guizhou provinces and Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region. The
similarity between the modern Zhuang and Bouyei languages
and the ancient Louyue tongue is a strong indication of the
origin of the Bouyeis. In addition, many habits and customs
of the Yues still prevail among the
Bouyeis.
For several centuries before the Tang
Dynasty (A.D. 618-907), both the Zhuang and Bouyei peoples
were referred to as "the alien barbarians," but
long separation eventually led to development of different
cultures and lifestyles. After A.D. 900, they became
recognized as separate minority groups.
After
the second century B.C., increasing contacts between the
Bouyeis and the Hans boosted the former's productivity, and
feudal economic relationships were
established.
By the Tang Dynasty, the central
imperial court had established in the Bouyei region an
administrative system, under which local feudal lords were
appointed prefectural governors, and land became their
hereditary property. The system lasted for more than 1,000
years, until the Qing court forced minority officials to
surrender their powers. Under the rule of minority headmen,
the Bouyei society had retained its feudal lord presence
until 1911. Feudal lords and local officials owned all the
land, but not literally the peasants or serfs within their
territories. Lords still subjected peasants to cruel
exploitation, but were no longer allowed to kill them at
will. Each peasant household was given a piece of land to
support itself, but was forbidden to purchase it. Peasants
and serfs were thus bound to the land and made to work for
the feudal lords for generations.
During the
Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), the imperial court abolished the
rule of minority headmen, and appointed officials with
limited tenures. As a result, the feudal lord economy
collapsed and a landlord economy took its place. As most
land was owned by the rich few and exploitation of the
peasants by landlords became even crueler, class conflicts
intensified and led to many peasant uprisings, the biggest
of which was the Nanlong Uprising in
1797.
Post-1949 Development
In the early years of the People's Republic,
few Bouyeis took part in management. By 1981, however, there
were 8,220 Bouyei administrators, accounting for 65 per cent
of the total minority managerial staff in the
area.
Before 1949, Bouyei agriculture was
backward, especially in remote mountain areas, where
slash-and-burn farming methods still dominated. Since
liberation, tremendous changes have taken place. By 1982,
grain output totaled 720,000 tons, nearly twice as much as
the 1949 figure, and 12,880 water conservancy projects had
been built. These stored 200 million cubic meters of water,
and brought 6,600 hectares of land under irrigation -- a
six-fold increase over the 1949 area.
Before
1949, there was virtually no industry in the Bouyei region.
Since then, however, many industries have been developed,
including iron and steel, coal, machine building, chemicals,
electronic products, building materials and
plastics.
In 1949, the total length of roads
came to only 296 kilometers in what is now Qiannan
Prefecture. By 1981, 6,100 kilometers of new roads had been
built. And three main railway lines (Guizhou-Guangxi,
Yunnan-Guizhou and Hunan-Guizhou) run through Bouyei areas
in Qiannan, Anshun and Guiyang. In addition, air services
now link Guiyang with Beijing, Shanghai and other big
Chinese cities.
Education and medical care have
also improved greatly since 1949. By 1981, the numbers of
secondary and primary schools had already risen to 150 and
3,789 respectively, compared with hardly any in 1949.
Teacher training schools and colleges teaching modern
farming methods have also been established.
In
the past, medical facilities in the area were very poor.
Epidemic diseases, such as smallpox, cholera and dysentery
were rampant, with malaria alone affecting 58 per cent of
the local population. After 1949, the government supplied
financial aid, equipment and large numbers of medical
workers to help the Bouyeis improve health care. Now,
besides major hospitals at prefectural level, every county
has its own hospital, epidemic prevention station and
maternal health center, and every district has a clinic.