CHINA AND THE MANCHUSI
THE NÜ-CHÊNS AND KITANS
The Manchus are descended from a branch of certain
wild Tungusic nomads, who were known in the ninth
century as the Nü-chêns, a name which has been said
to mean "west of the sea." The cradle of their race lay at the base
of the Ever-White Mountains, due north of Korea, and was fertilised by the head
waters of the Yalu River.
In an illustrated Chinese work of the fourteenth
century, of which the Cambridge University Library possesses the only known
copy, we read that they reached this spot, originally the home of the Su-shên tribe, as fugitives from Korea; further, that
careless of death and prizing valour only, they carried naked knives about
their persons, never parting from them by day or night, and that they were as
"poisonous" as wolves or tigers. They also tattooed their faces, and
at marriage their mouths. By the close of the ninth century the Nü-chêns had become subject to the neighbouring Kitans, then under the rule of the vigorous Kitan chieftain, Opaochi, who, in
907, proclaimed himself Emperor of an independent kingdom with the dynastic
title of Liao, said to mean "iron," and who at once entered upon that
long course of aggression against China and encroachment upon her territory
which was to result in the practical division of the empire between the two
powers, with the Yellow River as boundary, K`ai-fêng as the Chinese capital, and Peking, now for the first time raised to the status
of a metropolis, as the Kitan capital. Hitherto, the Kitans had recognised China as their suzerain; they are
first mentioned in Chinese history in A.D. 468, when they sent ambassadors to
court, with tribute.
Turning now to China, the famous House of Sung, the
early years of which were so full of promise of national prosperity, and which
is deservedly associated with one of the two most brilliant periods in Chinese
literature, was founded in 960. Korea was then forced, in
order to protect herself from the encroachments of China, to accept the
hated supremacy of the Kitans; but being promptly
called upon to surrender large tracts of territory, she suddenly entered into
an alliance with the Nü-chêns, who were also ready to
revolt, and who sent an army to the assistance of their new friends. The Nü-chên and Korean armies, acting in concert, inflicted a
severe defeat on the Kitans, and from this victory
may be dated the beginning of the Nü-chên power.
China had indeed already sent an embassy to the Nü-chêns,
suggesting an alliance and also a combination with
Korea, by which means the aggression of the Kitans might easily be checked; but during the eleventh century Korea became alienated
from the Nü-chêns, and even went so far as to advise
China to join with the Kitans in crushing the Nü-chêns. China, no doubt, would have been glad to get rid of
both these troublesome neighbours, especially the Kitans,
who were gradually filching territory from the empire, and driving the Chinese
out of the southern portion of the province of Chihli.
For a long period China
weakly allowed herself to be blackmailed by the Kitans,
who, in return for a large money subsidy and valuable supplies of silk,
forwarded a quite insignificant amount of local produce, which was called
"tribute" by the Chinese court.
Early in the twelfth century, the Kitan monarch paid a visit to the Sungari River, for the purpose of fishing, and was
duly received by the chiefs of the Nü-chên tribes in
that district. On this occasion the Kitan Emperor,
who had taken perhaps more liquor than was good for him, ordered the younger
men of the company to get up and dance before him. This command was ignored by
the son of one of the chiefs, named Akutêng (sometimes, but wrongly, written Akuta), and it was
suggested to the Emperor that he should devise means
for putting out of the way so uncompromising a spirit. No notice, however, was
taken of the affair at the moment; and that night Akutêng, with a band of followers, disappeared from the
scene. Making his way eastward, across the Sungari, he started a movement which
may be said to have culminated five hundred years later in the conquest of
China by the Manchus. In 1114 he began to act on the offensive,
and succeeded in inflicting a severe defeat on the Kitans.
By 1115 he had so far advanced towards the foundation of an independent kingdom
that he actually assumed the title of Emperor. Thus was presented the rare spectacle of three contemporary
rulers, each of whom claimed a title which, according to the Chinese theory,
could only belong to one. The style he chose for his dynasty was Chin (also
read Kin), which means "gold," and which some say was intended to
mark a superiority over Liao (= iron), that of the Kitans,
on the ground that gold is not, like iron, a prey to rust. Others, however,
trace the origin of the term to the fact that gold was found in the Nü-chên territory.
A small point which has given rise to some confusion,
may fitly be mentioned here. The tribe of Tartars hitherto spoken of as Nü-chêns, and henceforth known in history as the "Golden
Dynasty," in 1035 changed the word chên for chih, and were called Nü-chih Tartars. They did this because at that date the word chên was part of the personal name of the reigning Kitan Emperor, and therefore taboo. The necessity for such change would of course
cease with their emancipation from Kitan rule, and
the old name would be revived; it will accordingly be continued in the
following pages.
The victories of Akutêng over the Kitans were most welcome to the Chinese
Emperor, who saw his late oppressors humbled to the dust by the victorious Nü-chêns; and in 1120 a treaty of alliance was signed by the
two powers against the common enemy. The upshot of this move was that the Kitans were severely defeated in all directions, and their
chief cities fell into the hands of the Nü-chêns, who
finally succeeded, in 1122, in taking Peking by assault, the Kitan Emperor having already sought safety in flight. When,
however, the time came for an equitable settlement of territory between China
and the victorious Nü-chêns, the Chinese Emperor
discovered that the Nü-chêns, inasmuch
as they had done most of the fighting, were determined to have the
lion's share of the reward; in fact, the yoke imposed by the latter proved if
anything more burdensome than that of the dreaded Kitans.
More territory was taken by the Nü-chêns, and even
larger levies of money were exacted, while the same old farce of worthless
tribute was carried on as before.
In 1123, Akutêng died, and
was canonised as the first Emperor of the Chin, or Golden Dynasty. He was
succeeded by a brother; and two years later, the last Emperor of the Kitans was captured and relegated to private life, thus
bringing the dynasty to an end.
The new Emperor of the Nü-chêns spent the rest of his life in one long struggle with China. In 1126, the Sung
capital, the modern K`ai-fêng Fu in Honan, was twice
besieged: on the first occasion for thirty-three days, when a heavy ransom was
exacted and some territory was ceded; on the second occasion for forty days,
when it fell, and was given up to pillage. In 1127, the feeble Chinese Emperor
was seized and carried off, and by 1129 the whole of China north of the Yang-tsze was in the hands of the Nü-chêns.
The younger brother of the banished Emperor was proclaimed by the Chinese at Nanking, and managed to set up what is known as the southern
Sung dynasty; but the Nü-chêns gave him no rest,
driving him first out of Nanking, and then out of Hangchow, where he had once
more established a capital. Ultimately, there was peace of a more
or less permanent character, chiefly due to the genius of a notable
Chinese general of the day; and the Nü-chêns had to
accept the Yang-tsze as the dividing line between the
two powers.
The next seventy years were freely marked by raids,
first of one side and then of the other; but by the close of the twelfth
century the Mongols were pressing the Nü-chêns from
the north, and the southern Sungs were seizing the
opportunity to attack their old enemies from the south. Finally, in 1234, the
independence of the Golden Dynasty of Nü-chêns was
extinguished by Ogotai, third son of the great
Genghis Khan, with the aid of the southern Sungs, who
were themselves in turn wiped out by Kublai Khan, the first Mongol Emperor to
rule over a united China.
The name of this wandering people, whose territory
covers such a huge space on the map, has been variously derived from (1) moengel, celestial, (2) mong, brave, and (3) munku, silver, the last mentioned being favoured by some
because of its relation to the iron and golden dynasties of the Kitans and Nü-chêns respectively.
Three centuries and a half must now pass away before
entering upon the next act of the Manchu drama. The Nü-chêns had been scotched, but not killed, by their Mongol conquerors, who, one hundred
and thirty-four years later (1368), were themselves driven out of China, a pure
native dynasty being re-established under the style of Ming,
"Bright." During the ensuing two hundred years the Nü-chêns were scarcely heard of, the House of Ming being
busily occupied in other directions. Their warlike spirit, however, found scope
and nourishment in the expeditions organised against Japan and Tan-lo, or Quelpart, as named by the Dutch, a large island to the
south of the Korean peninsula; while on the other hand the various tribes
scattered over a portion of the territory known to Europeans as Manchuria,
availed themselves of long immunity from attack by the Chinese to advance in civilization
and prosperity. It may be noted here that "Manchuria" is unknown to
the Chinese or to the Manchus themselves as a geographical expression. The
present extensive home of the Manchus is usually spoken of as the Three Eastern
Provinces, namely, (1) Shêng-king, or Liao-tung, or Kuan-tung, (2) Kirin, and (3) Heilungchiang or Tsitsihar.
Among the numerous small independent communities above
mentioned, which traced their ancestry to the Nü-chêns of old, one of the smallest, the members of which inhabited a tract of
territory due east of what is now the city of Mukden, and were shortly to call
themselves Manchus,—the origin of the name is not known,—produced, in 1559, a
young hero who altered the course of Chinese history to such an extent that for
nearly three hundred years his descendants sat on the throne of China, and
ruled over what was for a great portion of the time the largest empire on
earth. Nurhachu, the real founder of the Manchu
power, was born in 1559, from a virile stock, and was soon recognised to be an
extraordinary child. We need not linger over his dragon face, his phoenix eye,
or even over his large, drooping ears, which have always been associated by the
Chinese with intellectual ability. He first came into prominence in 1583, when,
at twenty-four years of age, he took up arms, at the head of only one hundred
and thirty men, in connection with the treacherous murder by a rival chieftain
of his father and grandfather, who had ruled over a petty principality of
almost infinitesimal extent; and he finally succeeded three years later in
securing from the Chinese, who had been arrayed against him, not only the
surrender of the murderer, but also a sum of money and some robes of honour. He
was further successful in negotiating a treaty, under the terms of which Manchu
furs could be exchanged at certain points for such Chinese commodities as
cotton, sugar, and grain.
In 1587, Nurhachu built a
walled city, and established an administration in his tiny principality, the
even-handed justice and purity of which soon attracted a
large number of settlers, and before very long he had succeeded in
amalgamating five Manchu States under his personal rule. Extension of territory
by annexation after victories over neighbouring States followed as a matter of
course, the result being that his growing power came to be regarded with
suspicion, and even dread. At length, a joint attempt on the part of seven
States, aided by two Mongol chieftains, was made to crush him; but, although
numerical superiority was overpoweringly against him, he managed to turn the
enemy's attack into a rout, killed four thousand men, and captured three
thousand horses, besides other booty. Following up this victory by further
annexations, he now began to present a bold front to the Chinese, declaring
himself independent, and refusing any longer to pay tribute. In 1604, he built
himself a new capital, Hingking, which he placed not
very far east of the modern Mukden, and there he received envoys from the
Mongolian chieftains, sent to congratulate him on his triumph.
At this period the Manchus, whose spoken words were
polysyllabic, and not monosyllabic like Chinese, had no written language beyond
certain rude attempts at alphabetic writing, formed from Chinese characters,
and found to be of little practical value. The necessity for something more
convenient soon appealed to the prescient and active mind of Nurhachu; accordingly, in 1599, he gave orders to two
learned scholars to prepare a suitable script for his rapidly increasing
subjects. This they accomplished by basing the new script upon Mongol, which
had been invented in 1269, by Baschpa, or 'Phagspa, a Tibetan lama, acting under the direction of
Kublai Khan. Baschpa had based his script upon the
written language of the Ouigours, who were
descendants of the Hsiung-nu, or Huns. The Ouigours, known by that name since the year 629, were once
the ruling race in the regions which now form the khanates of Khiva and
Bokhara, and had been the first of the tribes of Central Asia to have a script
of their own. This they formed from the Estrangelo Syraic of the Nestorians, who appeared in China in the
early part of the seventh century. The Manchu written language, therefore, is
lineally descended from Syraic; indeed, the family
likeness of both Manchu and Mongol to the parent stem is quite
obvious, except that these two scripts, evidently influenced by Chinese,
are written vertically, though, unlike Chinese, they are read from left to
right. Thirty-three years later various improvements were introduced, leaving
the Manchu script precisely as we find it at the present day.
In 1613, Nurhachu had
gathered about him an army of some forty thousand men; and by a series of raids
in various directions, he further gradually succeeded in extending considerably
the boundaries of his kingdom. There now remained but one large and important
State, towards the annexation of which he directed all his efforts. After
elaborate preparations which extended over more than two years, at the
beginning of which (1616) the term Manchu (etymology unknown) was definitively
adopted as a national title, Nurhachu, in 1618, drew
up a list of grievances against the Chinese, under which he declared that his
people had been and were still suffering, and solemnly committed it to the
flames,—a recognised method of communication with the spirits of heaven and
earth. This document consisted of seven clauses, and was addressed to the Emperor of China; it was, in fact, a declaration of war.
The Chinese, who were fast becoming aware that a dangerous enemy had arisen, and
that their own territory would be the next to be threatened, at length decided
to oppose any further progress on the part of Narhachu;
and with this view dispatched an army of two hundred thousand men against him.
These troops, many of whom were physically unfit, were divided on arrival at
Mukden into four bodies, each with some separate aim, the achievement of which
was to conduce to the speedy disruption of Nurhachu's power. The issue of this move was certainly not expected on either side. In a
word, Nurhachu defeated his Chinese antagonists in
detail, finally inflicting such a crushing blow that he was left completely
master of the situation, and before very long had realised the chief object of
his ambition, namely, the reunion under one rule of those states into which the
Golden Dynasty had been broken up when it collapsed before the Mongols in 1234.
II
THE FALL OF THE MINGS
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