Yelang

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Yelang (Chinese: 夜郎; pinyin: Yèláng), initially known as Zangke (Chinese: 牂柯), was an ancient political entity first described in the 3rd century BC that was centered in what is now western Guizhou province, China. Estimated to have been active for over 200 years,[1] it was an alliance of tribes, rather than a conventional state.[2]

Name

According to Geoff Wade, the inhabitants of Yelang called themselves Zina, and it is possibly the source of Sanskrit Cīna (चीन)."[3]

Geography

Expanse

Yelang is believed to have been an alliance of tribes covering parts of modern day Guizhou, Hunan, Sichuan and Yunnan.[4]

Location

The ancient Chinese historian Sima Qian described Yelang as west of the Mimo and Dian, south of Qiongdu (in what is now southern Sichuan), and east of the nomadic Sui and Kunming.[5] Some people have identified the seat of the kingdom as Bijie (Chinese: 毕节) in today's Liupanshui area, in modern Guizhou province, whilst others suggest the capital moved throughout the region over time.[6]

Culture

Subsistence

The Yelang were a farming people.[2]

Appearance and dress

Yelang people wore their hair up[2] and decorated themselves with jewellery such as bracelets and necklaces.

Material culture

Archaeologists have retrieved relics from Yelang graves including "bronze swords, U-shaped bronze hairclips, turquoise bracelets and jade necklaces",[1] as well as "various bronze, porcelain and stone vessels visibly different from those belonging to other cultures studied in China, like the Han, Dian and Bashu cultures".[2]

Burial rites

Tomb excavations show a unique burial custom in some Yelang tombs, in which the head of the deceased is placed into a bronze pot. This custom is unknown elsewhere in China.[2]

Military

According to Chinese records the Yelang had strong armies.[2]

Government

In 2007 a Miao man publicly disclosed his possession of an ancient seal, said to be that of the Yelang kingdom, and claimed to be the 75th descendant of the King of Yelang.[7]

Political Relations

Han China

Han envoy Tang Meng met with Yelang ruler Duotong to negotiate a military alliance against the Southern Yue of Guangdong.[citation needed] At this time, Yelang was said to be capable of fielding 100,000 crack soldiers.[citation needed] The outcome of these negotiations is not known. Later, a "marquis of Yelang" is recorded as visiting the Han capital Changan. In 27 BC, there was an uprising in which King Xing was defeated and killed by Han soldiers.

Nanyue

Yelang had a close relationship with Nanyue ("Southern Yue") kingdom and used the Zangke River (now known as the Beipan River) as a means of inter-polity communications.[8] The kingdom of Yelang declared their allegiance to Nanyue rule from the start of 183 BC until the end of 111 BC.

The Yi people are possibly modern-day descendants of the Yelang kingdom.[9][10]

In Chinese culture

Yelang is best known to modern Chinese because of an incident said to have occurred in the 120s BC. According to the story the king of Yelang, convinced that his kingdom was the greatest in all the world, inquired rhetorically of the Han emperor's envoy, "Which is greater, Yelang or Han?" This gave rise to the Chinese idiom "Yelang thinks too highly of itself" (夜郎自大, Yèláng zì dà). Other sources suggest that Yelang's king was simply copying an earlier statement by a ruler of the adjacent Kingdom of Dian.[11] Other Chinese sources describe the Yelang people as possessing supernatural powers.[2]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Ancient Sites Open Windows on the Past". China Daily. 2002-04-12. Retrieved 2010-08-19.  Unknown parameter |mirror1= ignored (help)
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 "Chinese Archeologists Search for Clues on Lost Kingdom". People's Daily Online. 2002-10-25. Retrieved 2010-08-19. 
  3. Wade, Geoff, "The Polity of Yelang and the Origin of the Name 'China'", Sino-Platonic Papers, No. 188, May 2009.
  4. Gao, Wenchuan (January 2005). "Xinhuang County, the Site of Ancient Yelang Kingdom". China Pictorial. Retrieved 2010-08-19. 
  5. Jacques Gernet (1996). 'un-ming%201956&f=false A history of Chinese civilization. Cambridge University Press. p. 124. ISBN 0-521-49781-7. Retrieved 15 May 2011. 
  6. "古国沉睡湖南沅陵?--打探"夜郎国"的秘密" (in Chinese). Beijing Youth Daily. 2001-04-26. Retrieved 2011-04-26. "贵州民族学院的王子尧教授告诉记者,从研究来看,夜郎的国都好像到处都是,除了沅陵、广顺、茅口等3个地方,牵涉到贵州省境的还有安顺、镇宁、关岭、贞丰、桐梓、贵阳、石阡、黄平、铜仁和云南省的宣威、沾益、曲靖,以及湖南省的麻阳等地方。于是有的学者就独辟蹊径,指出:既然在各地都发现有相关文物,证明该地为夜郎古都,这是否说明夜郎都邑处在一个不断变迁的过程,没有一个固定的地点。" 
  7. "Seal of ancient king made public". CRI.cn. 2007-11-01. Retrieved 2010-08-19. 
  8. Yang, Bin. "3". Between Winds and Clouds: The Making of Yunnan, Second Century BCE to Twentieth Century CE (Project Gutenberg Online Edition ed.). 
  9. http://en.cnki.com.cn/Article_en/CJFDTOTAL-GZMZ200501007.htm
  10. http://www.dictall.com/indu57/51/575155902FE.htm
  11. Huo, Newmann (2005-03-10). "Relics reveal the mystery of Dian Kingdom". Shenzhen Daily online edition via Guangdong Culture News. Retrieved 2010-08-19. 

Coordinates: 27°31′40″N 108°29′37″E / 27.52778°N 108.49361°E / 27.52778; 108.49361

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