The Bai ethnic group has a population of around 2 million, 90
percent of which live in the Bai Autonomous County west of Yunnan
Province. Only a small part of their community are scattered in
Sichuan, Guizhou, and Hunan Provinces. 
The language of Bai belongs to the Yi branch of Zang-Mian Austronesian
of Han-Zang Phylum. They have also invented their own written characters
by referring to the Han's characters. Thus, you will find that many
words are in fact taken from the Han language. However, Chinese
is the most widely use language among the Bai people today.
The Bai ethnic group has had a long history. Its ancestors used
to be called "Kunming" in the Han and Jin dynasties. In
successive dynasties, they were named "Heman", "Baiman"
and "Bairen". Since the founding of the P.R.C, they have
been formally named the "Bai" ethnic group because of
their worship of the color white.
The Bai ethnic group mainly deals with agriculture and fishery.
Main crops are rice, winter wheat, beans, millet, cotton, rape,
sugar-cane and tobacco. People living in plains take rice and wheat
as their staple food and those in mountain areas mostly depend on
corn, yam and buckwheat. Pork is their everyday basic meat. Pickles,
brawns, and bean sauce are famous snacks of Bai people.
The Bai people mainly believe in "Benzhu" (village god).
In each village and region, the Benzhu has a different meaning attached
to it. Some are referred to as the God of Nature, others as national
heroes, famous officers, and as loyal women. A small group of them
also believe in ghosts and Buddhism.
The Bai people prefer the color white. Men like to wear white shirts
while Women's clothing differs from place to place. Women in the
Dali region wear white shirts, and red waistcoats. All Bai people
wear a piece of sheepskin. Women in areas east of Erhai Lake are
fond of the hairstyle "Fengdiantou", meaning phoenix lowers
head whereby the head is bound with a black or embroidered cloth.
You will find that the Bai people are good singers and dancers.
The "Lion Dance", created during the Nanzhao regime, was
appreciated in the central plains during the Tang Dynasty. Bai opera,
known as chuichui, is an art form combining folk music and dancing.
It has also absorbed some of the characteristics of Han operas.
The traditional festivals of Bai ethnic group include: the March
Fair and the Torch Festival.
The March Fair, which falls between March 15 and 20 of the lunar
calendar, is a grand festival of the Bai ethnic group. It is celebrated
every year at the foot of the Diancang Hill to the west of Dali
city. It is a fair as well as an occasion for sporting contests
and theatrical performances. People gather there to enjoy dances,
horse racing and other games.
The Torch Festival is held on June 25. Torches are lit everywhere
to usher in a bumper harvest and to bless the people with good health
and fortune. Streamers bearing auspicious words are hung in doorways
and at village entrances alongside the flaming torches. Villagers,
holding aloft torches, walk around in the fields to drive insects
away.
Origins and History
Archaeological finds from Canger and Haimenkou show that the Erhai
area was inhabited as early as the Neolithic Age, and artifacts
of that period indicate that the people of the region used stone
tools, engaged in farming, livestock rearing, fishing and hunting,
and dwelt in caves. Possibly, they began to use bronze knives and
swords and other metal tools about 2,000 years ago.
The people in the Erhai area developed closer ties with the Han
majority in inland provinces in the Qin (221-207 B.C.) and Han (206
B.C.-A.D. 220) dynasties. In 109 B.C. the Western Han Dynasty set
up county administrations and moved a large number of Han people
to this border area. These people brought more advanced production
techniques and iron tools, contributing to the economic development
of the area. During the Sui (581-618) and Tang (618-907) dynasties,
the farming there had reached a level close to that of the central
plains.
Bai aristocrats backed by the Tang court unified the people of
the Erhai area and established the Nanzhao regime of Yis and Bais.
Its first chief, Piluoge, was granted the title of King of Yunnan
by a Tang emperor.
Slaves were used to do heavy labor, while "free" peasants
were subject to heavy taxation and forced to render various services
including conscription into the army. Some of them, who lost their
land, were made slaves.
The Nanzhao regime lasted for 250 years. During that period of
time, while maintaining a good relationship with the central government,
the rulers cruelly oppressed the slaves and mercilessly plundered
other ethnic nationalities through warfare. Productivity was thus
seriously harmed. This caused slave rebellions and uprisings. Nanzhao's
power came to an end in the year 902. Then a regime based on a feudal
lord system, known as the Kingdom of Dali, was established. The
kingdom adopted a series of measures such as abolishing exorbitant
taxes and removing conservative ministers. As a result, social productivity
was restored.
The kingdom lasted for over 300 years (937-1253) as a tributary
to the Song Dynasty (960-1279) court. It sent war-horses, handicrafts
and precious medicines to the court, and in return received science
and technology, as well as books in the Han language. Economic and
cultural exchanges with the Hans contributed greatly to the development
of this border area.
The kingdom was conquered by the Mongols in the 13th century,
and Yuan Dynasty (1206-1368) rule was established there. The Mongols
designated Yunnan a province while establishing Dali and Heqing
as prefectures. In order to strengthen their control over Dali,
the Yuan rulers offered former chieftains official posts and granted
their families hereditary privileges. Though land was mainly concentrated
in the hands of the local aristocracy at that time, the feudal lord
system began to give way to a landlord system.
The Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) took power from the Yuan rulers in
1381. The Ming court removed local chieftains and replaced them
with court officials. This kind of reform resulted in the weakening
of the political and economic privileges of the local lords, brought
freedom to the slaves and raised the enthusiasm of the peasants
for farming. Those Bais and Hans who had emigrated were encouraged
to return, while Hans from other areas were persuaded to settle
there. This measure accelerated the development of the landlord
economy of Bai society.
In addition to the continuation of the Ming policy of dispatching
officials from the central government, the Qing (1644-1911) court
also appointed local officials and chieftains to rule over the Bais.
Some Bai people in remote areas still suffered feudal exploitation
and oppression at the time of liberation.
Culture and Folklore
Over the centuries, the Bais have created a science and culture
of their own. Agriculture was dominant in the Erhai area as early
as the Neolithic Age. People then knew how to dig ditches for irrigation.
During the Nanzhao regime, they began the cultivation of rice, wheat,
broomcorn, millet and several other crops, and built the Cangshan
water-conservancy project which could bring water to tens of thousands
of hectares of land. To their credit are inventions and advances
in meteorology, astronomy, calendar, architecture, medical science,
literature, music, dancing, carving and painting. Among the representative
works of the Bai people are Transit Star Catalogue for Time Determination
by the Ming Dynasty scholar Zhou Silian, Collection of Secret Prescriptions
by Chen Dongtian and Tested Prescriptions by Li Xingwei. These classics
recorded and summarized in detail the valuable experience of the
Bai people in astronomy and medicine.
The superb architectural skill of the Bai people is represented
by the three pagodas at the Chongsheng Temple in Dali. Built during
the Tang Dynasty, the 16-storey main tower is 60 meters high and
still stands erect after more than 1,000 years. It bears a resemblance
to the Dayan Pagoda (Wild Goose) in Xi'an, an ancient Chinese capital
city in today's Shaanxi Province. Figurines in the Shibaoshan Grottoes
in Jianchuan County are lifelike, possessing both the common features
of figure creation in China and the unique features of the Bai artists.
The architectural group in the Jizushan Temple, with bow-shaped
crossbeams, bracket-inserted columns, and gargoyles representing
people, flowers and birds created with the open carving method,
shows the excellent workmanship of the Bai people. The Bais also
have high attainments in lacquerware.
They have created a wealth of literary works reflecting their
life, work, and struggles against nature and oppression. The epic,
Genesis, sings the praises of the communal life of Bai primitive
society. Some poems by Bai poets have been included in the Complete
Poems of Tang Dynasty. The History of the Bais, Anecdotes of Nanzhao
and Kingdoms of Southwest China are among the best historical works
written by Bai historians. They provide important data for the study
of the history of the Erhai area.
The Bai people are good singers and dancers. The "Lion Dance,"
created during the Nanzhao regime, was appreciated in the central
plains during the Tang Dynasty. Bai opera, known as chuichui, is
an art form combining folk music and dancing. It has also absorbed
some of the characteristics of Han operas.
The famous painting depicting the Resurgence of the Nanzhao was
created in 899 A.D. by Bai painters Zhang Shun and Wang Fengzong.
This masterpiece was stolen by foreign imperialists in 900 from
Beijing.
Customs and Habits
The Bais are Buddhists and worshippers of "communal god."
Dotted with monasteries and temples, Dali has been known as a "Scented
Wonderland." Abbots who held huge amount of land and other
property in the past were big landlords and usurers. The ordinary
people were heavily burdened by this caste and by religious activities
which required sacrifices of cattle and other valuables.
Monogamous families have been the basic social cells of the Bais,
with a very few people who practiced polygamy. Parents live with
their unmarried children, but only in big landlord families did
four generations live together. Before the founding of the People’s
Republic of China in 1949, matches between young men and young women
of the same surname or clan were not permitted, while marriages
between cousins were encouraged, and were arranged by the parents.
High bride prices caused many poor families to fall into debt. Women
were discriminated against, and only men had the right to inherit
family property. But all such feudal practices and customs have
been fading away since 1949. Young people now enjoy the freedom
to choose their lovers.
The "March Fair," which falls between March 15 and 20
of the lunar calendar, is a grand festival of the Bais. It is celebrated
every year at the foot of the Diancang Hill to the west of Dali
city. It is a fair and an occasion for sporting contests and theatrical
performances. People gather there to enjoy dances, horse racing
and other games. June 25 is the "Torch Festival." On that
day, torches are lit everywhere to usher in a bumper harvest and
to bless the people with good health and fortune. Streamers bearing
auspicious words are hung in doorways and at village entrances alongside
the flaming torches. Villagers, holding aloft torches, walk around
in the fields to drive insects away.
Economy
Before 1949, the feudal landlord economy was dominant in most
Bai areas. Incipient capitalism had developed in a few cities and
towns, while vestiges of the primitive communalism and remnants
of the slave system were still in existence.
About 90 per cent of the people were farmers who possessed only
20 per cent of the arable land.
In areas where the lord system prevailed, peasants were all serfs,
who owned neither land nor personal freedom.
In the communal setup in Bijiang and Fugong areas, class distinctions
were not clear. There was land which was tilled collectively and
the harvest distributed equally among the people. Private ownership
of land also was practiced on a small scale. There were also land
sales and leasing.
Commercial capitalism found its way into some Bai areas at the
beginning of the modern times. Trading companies owned by bureaucrat
landlords emerged, shipped in commodities such as yarns and cloth
from the United States, Britain and France via India, Burma and
Vietnam, and exported gold, silver, and farm and sideline produce.
The Bai people had staged numerous uprisings against the Qing
rulers and foreign imperialists. In one of these uprisings, which
took place in the mid-19th century, they set up their own political
power, the Dali Administration. The new government adopted measures
to promote industrial and agricultural production, reduce land taxation
and stamp out discrimination against the various nationalities.
New Life
Democratic reform and socialist transformation proceeded in the
Bai areas in much the same way as in the Han inhabited areas, but
the reforms were carried out in a more gradual manner in those areas
with vestiges of pre-capitalist economic organization. Cooperatives
were set up to boost production on the basis of abolishing class
exploitation and the remnants of primitive communalism.
The Dali Bai Autonomous Prefecture was founded in November 1956
after the completion of the democratic reform and socialist transformation.
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