久久精品30_一本色道久久精品_激情综合视频_欧美日韩一区二区高清_好看的av在线不卡观看_国产自产精品_91久久黄色_午夜亚洲福利_欧美黄在线观看_国内自拍一区

--- SEARCH ---
WEATHER
CHINA
INTERNATIONAL
BUSINESS
CULTURE
GOVERNMENT
SCI-TECH
ENVIRONMENT
SPORTS
LIFE
PEOPLE
TRAVEL
WEEKLY REVIEW
Learning Chinese
Learn to Cook Chinese Dishes
Exchange Rates
Hotel Service
China Calendar


Hot Links
China Development Gateway
Chinese Embassies

Online marketplace of Manufacturers & Wholesalers

The Kazak Ethnic Group

Population: 1,250,458

Major areas of distribution: Xinjiang, Gansu and Qinghai

Language: Kazak

Religion: Islam

 

 

The Kazak ethnic group, with a population of 1.25 million, mainly lives in the Ili Kazak Autonomous Prefecture, Mori Kazak Autonomous County and Barkol Kazak Autonomous County in the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region. Some are also located in the Haixi Mongolian, Tibetan and Kazak Autonomous Prefecture in Qinghai Province and the Aksay Kazak Autonomous County in Gansu Province.

 

The Kazak language belongs to the Turkic branch of the Altaic language family. As the Kazaks live in mixed communities with the Hans, Uygurs and Mongolians, the Kazaks have assimilated many words from these languages. They had a written language based on the Arabic alphabet, which is still in use, but a new Latinized written form was evolved after the founding of the People’s Republic of China.

 

Ethnic identity 

 

Except for a few settled farmers, most of the Kazaks live by animal husbandry. They migrate to look for pasturage as the seasons change. In spring, summer and autumn, they live in collapsible round yurts and in winter build flat-roofed earthen huts in the pastures. In the yurt, living and storage spaces are separated. The yurt door usually opens to the east, the two flanks are for sleeping berths and the center is for storing goods and saddles; in front are placed cushions for visitors. Riding and hunting gear, cooking utensils, provisions and baby animals are kept on both sides of the door.

 

The pastoral Kazaks live off their animals. They produce a great variety of dairy products. For instance, Nai Ge Da (milk dough) Nai Pi Zi (milk skin) and cheese. Butter is made from cow's and sheep's milk. They usually eat mutton stewed in water without salt – a kind of meat eaten with the hands. By custom, they slaughter animals in late autumn and cure the meat by smoking it for the winter. In spring and summer, when the animals are putting on weight and producing lots of milk, the Kazak herdsmen put fresh horse milk in shaba (barrels made of horse hide) and mix it regularly until it ferments into the cloudy, sour horse milk wine, a favorite summer beverage for the local people. The richer herdsmen drink tea boiled with cow's or camel's milk, salt and butter. Rice and wheat flour confections also come in a great variety: Nang (baked cake), rice cooked with minced mutton and eaten with the hands, dough fried in sheep's fat, and flour sheets cooked with mutton. Their diet contains few vegetables.

 

The horse-riding Kazak herdsmen are traditionally clad in loose, long-sleeved furs and garments made of animal skins. The garments vary among different localities and tribes. In winter, the men usually wear sheepskin shawls, and some wear overcoats padded with camel hair, with a belt decorated with metal patterns at the waist and a sword hanging at the right side. The trousers are mostly made of sheepskin. Women wear red dresses and in winter they don cotton-padded coats, buttoned down the front. Girls like to sport embroidered cloth leggings bedecked with silver coins and other silver ornaments, which jangle as they walk. Herdsmen in the Altay area wear square caps of baby-lamb skin or fox skin covered with bright-colored brocade, while those in Ili sport round animal-skin caps. Girls used to decorate their flower-patterned hats with owl feathers, which waved in the breeze. All the women wear white-cloth shawls, embroidered with red-and-yellow designs.

 

The Kazak family and marriage in history fully showed the characteristics of the patriarchal feudal system. The male patriarch enjoyed absolute authority at home; the wife was subordinate to the husband, and the children to the father. The women had no right to property. The marriage of the children and the distribution of property were all decided by the patriarch. When the man came of age and got married he received some property from his parents and began to live independently in his own yurt. Only the youngest brother eventually stayed with the family. Herdsmen with close blood relations formed an "Awul" (a nomadic clan). Rich herd owners or venerated elders were considered the "Awulbas" (chiefs of the community).

 

The Kazak people usually practiced monogamy, but in the old society, polygamy was quite common among the feudal lords and tribal chiefs, in accordance with their Islamic faith.

 

The feudal mercenary marriage system deprived young men and women of their independence in matrimonial affairs and high bride prices were charged. Hence richer people married up to four wives each and poor herdsmen were unable economically to establish a family. Among the latter, a system of "barter marriage" was practiced. Two families, for example, could exchange their daughters as each other's daughter-in-law without asking for betrothal gifts. This often gave rise to a large disparity in age of the matrimonial partners, let alone mutual affection.

 

The Kazaks are warm-hearted, sincere and hospitable. They entertain all guests, invited and uninvited alike, with the best things they have – usually a prize sheep. At dinner, the host presents a dish of mutton with the sheep's head to the guest, who cuts a slice off the right cheek and puts it back on the plate as a gesture of appreciation. He then cuts off an ear and offers it to the youngest among those sitting round the dinner table. He then gives the sheep's head back to the host.

 

The Kazaks are Muslims. Though there are not many mosques in the pastures, Islam exercises a great influence upon their social life in all aspects. Their religious burdens used to be heavy. They had to deliver religious food grain and animal taxes in accordance with Islamic rules. If they wanted to invite mullahs for prayers on occasions of festivals, wedding, burial ceremonies or illnesses, they had to present given amounts of money or property.

 

The Kazaks' festivals and ceremonies are related to religion. The Corban and Id El-fitr festivals are occasions for feasts of mutton and mutual greetings. The Nawuruz Festival in the first month of the lunar calendar is a grand occasion to say good-bye to the old, usher in the new, and hope for a better year in stockbreeding. Every family entertains with "kuji," a food made of mutton, milk dough, barley, wheat and other delicacies. They give feasts when there are births, engagements or weddings.

 

The Kazaks, men and women alike, are good horse riders. Young men like wrestling and a game in which horsemen compete for a sheep. There are horsemanship displays on the grasslands during festivals. The young people like to play a "girl-running-after-boy" game. The boys and girls ride their horses to an appointed place; the boys can flirt with the girls on the way. However, on the way back, the girls chase the boys and are entitled to whip them if they can as a way of "vengeance." Such merry-making more often than not terminates with love and marriage.

 

This ethnic minority has its own rich literary heritage. As there were many illiterates, folk literature handed down orally was quite developed. After liberation, ballad singers, or "Akens," made great efforts to collect, study and re-create old verses, tales, proverbs, parables and maxims. Many outstanding Kazak classic and contemporary works have been published in the Kazak language.

 

Kazak music and dance also have their own unique features and are very popular. The Kazaks like summer the best, terming it merry-making time. They often sing and dance throughout summer nights on the pastures. The two-stringed instrument is their favorite.

 

History 

 

There are many records on the origin of the Kazak ethnic minority in Chinese history. In the more than 500 years since Zhang Qian of the Western Han Dynasty (206 BC-AD 25) went as a special envoy to Wusun in 119 BC, the inhabitants of the Ili River valley and round the Issyk Kul were mainly Wusun people and part of the Saizhong and Yueshi ethnic people, the forefathers of the Kazaks. As early as the reign of Emperor Wu Di (140-88 BC) of the Western Han Dynasty, Wusun established tributary relations of alliance with the Han court through the marriage of Xijun and Xieyou princesses and woman official Feng Liao with the Wusun King of Kunmo and senior generals.

 

In the mid-sixth century, the Turkomans founded a Turkic khanate in the Altay Mountains. As a result, they mixed with the Wusun people, and the forefathers of the Kazaks later mixed with the nomadic or semi-nomadic Uighurs, Geluolus, Qidans (Khitans), Kelies, Naimans and Mongols of the Kipchak and Jagatai khanates. The fact that some of the Kazak tribes still retained the names of Wusun, Kelie and Naiman into later centuries sufficiently proves that the Kazak ethnic minority is an old ethnic group in China.

 

In the early 13th century, as Genghis Khan marched westward, the Wusun, Kelie and Naiman tribes had to move likewise. Part of the Kipchak, Jagatai and Wuokuotai khanates of the Mongol Empire were Kazak pastures. In the 1460s, some of the herdsmen in the lower reaches of the Syr-Darya, under the leadership of Jilai and Zanibek, returned to the Chuhe River valley south of Lake Balkhash. As they went eastward to escape the rule of the Ozbek Khanate, they were named "Kazak," meaning "refugees" or "runaways." They then mixed with southward-moving Ozbeks and the settled Mongols of the Jagatai Khanate. As the population grew, they extended their pastures to northwest of Lake Balkhash, the Chu River valley and to Tashkent, Andizan and Samarkand in Central Asia, gradually evolving into the Kazak ethnic group.

 

From the mid-18th century, Tsarist Russia began to invade Central Asia and eat up Kazak grasslands and areas east and south of Lake Balkhash – part of China's territory. After the mid-19th century, owing to aggression by the Tsar, the Middle and Little hordes and the western branch of the Great Horde were cut off from China. Russian Cossacks infiltrated the area, driving the Kazaks into the deserts where men and animals could hardly survive.

 

From 1864 to 1883, the Tsarist government compelled the Qing court to sign a number of unequal treaties, forcing the principle of "people go with the land" on the "Tacheng Protocol on the Delimitation of Sino-Russian Boundary." This met with strong opposition from the local minority nationalities. Many Mongolians, Kazaks and Kirgiz migrated back to Chinese-controlled territory. Twelve Kazak Kelie clans grazing near Zhaysang Lake moved their animals south of the Altay Mountains in 1864. More than 3,000 families of the Kazak Heizai clan moved to Ili and Bortala in 1883. Many others followed suit after the delimitation of the border.

 

The Ili Uprising during the Revolution of 1911 overthrew Qing rule in Xinjiang. However, it did not shake the foundation of feudal system, as warlords Yang Zengxin, Jin Shuren and Sheng Shicai gained control of the region. The Chinese Communist Party began to carry out revolutionary activities among the Kazaks in 1933. Fearful that their feudal privileges might be encroached upon, the feudal rulers within the ethnic group boycotted the establishment of schools and the development of farming, and other economic and cultural undertakings. Under warlord Sheng Shicai's rule, some Kazaks had to flee their homes, and others, because of threats and cheating by chieftains, moved to Gansu and Qinghai provinces from 1936 to 1939. There, they were plundered and massacred by warlord Ma Bufang. Ma also sowed dissension among the Kazaks, Mongolians and Tibetans, and instigated them to fight each other. As a result, the Kazaks launched an uprising in Golmud in 1939. Those in Gansu and Qinghai had to lead a vagrant life until China’s national liberation in 1949.

 

A revolution against Kuomintang rule took place in Ili, Tacheng and Altay in 1944. Kazaks, who constituted the majority, and the Uygurs of Nilka County formed three armed guerrilla units to start it. During the period of the Liberation War in the later 1940s, the Kuomintang tore to shreds the "Eleven Articles on Peace" it had signed with the revolutionary government of the three districts. It instigated Usman, a Kazak political turncoat, to start an armed uprising to smash the revolution. He attacked Altay twice, in October of 1946 and in September of 1947, looting and burning the houses of the local people. The Kazaks and people of other ethnic groups beat him off in the end.

 

(China.org.cn June 21, 2005)

Print This Page | Email This Page
About Us SiteMap Feedback
Copyright © China Internet Information Center. All Rights Reserved
E-mail: webmaster@china.org.cn Tel: 86-10-68326688
久久精品30_一本色道久久精品_激情综合视频_欧美日韩一区二区高清_好看的av在线不卡观看_国产自产精品_91久久黄色_午夜亚洲福利_欧美黄在线观看_国内自拍一区
jvid福利写真一区二区三区| 91精品久久久久久久久99蜜臂| 欧美精品在线观看一区二区| 一道本一区二区| 亚洲午夜精品福利| 欧美午夜不卡视频| 国产精品第13页| 黑人精品欧美一区二区蜜桃| 国产精品国产精品| 欧美色精品在线视频| 国产精品亲子伦对白| 久久国产精品免费| 亚洲午夜精品久久久久久app| 色欧美日韩亚洲| 国产精品乱码久久久久久| 美女一区二区视频| 亚洲小说区图片区| 欧美一区二区三区影视| 一区二区三区四区在线播放 | 国产欧美日韩综合精品二区| 欧美一区二区三区成人| 亚洲精品综合在线| 成人污污视频在线观看| 亚洲午夜电影| 精品国产免费久久| 免费观看在线色综合| 亚洲婷婷在线| 2022国产精品视频| 国产一二三精品| 性高湖久久久久久久久| 中文字幕高清不卡| 大白屁股一区二区视频| 老司机精品久久| 亚洲色图.com| 91网站视频在线观看| 欧美一区二区视频观看视频| 日韩av电影免费观看高清完整版在线观看 | 91久久久久| 国产午夜亚洲精品午夜鲁丝片| 精品午夜久久福利影院| 亚洲一区激情| 亚洲三级视频在线观看| 欧美/亚洲一区| 日韩女优av电影| 国内精品久久久久影院一蜜桃| 国产农村妇女毛片精品久久莱园子| 日本一区二区动态图| 97精品国产97久久久久久久久久久久| 欧美精品少妇一区二区三区| 久久精品国产在热久久| 久久久国产精品一区二区三区| 亚洲欧美一区二区三区国产精品 | 亚洲激情六月丁香| 伊人蜜桃色噜噜激情综合| 国产精品久久久久久久裸模| 99riav久久精品riav| 久久只精品国产| 99久久精品情趣| 久久欧美一区二区| 色综合一区二区| 久久久久久久久97黄色工厂| 成人va在线观看| 久久久久国色av免费看影院| 99热99精品| 国产女主播视频一区二区| 91视频精品在这里| 国产精品美日韩| 日韩视频在线播放| 亚洲制服丝袜一区| 玖玖视频精品| 国产在线精品一区二区三区不卡| 欧美高清hd18日本| 国产精品18久久久久久久久久久久 | 久久99精品国产麻豆婷婷| 欧美精品三级日韩久久| 高清不卡在线观看av| 精品少妇一区二区三区视频免付费| www.欧美精品一二区| 国产欧美一区二区在线观看| 激情另类综合| 亚洲成av人片在线观看无码| 在线视频一区二区三区| 国产91清纯白嫩初高中在线观看| 精品日韩99亚洲| 亚洲激情黄色| 日韩激情中文字幕| 欧美一级黄色大片| 欧美日韩三级| 午夜精品久久久久久久蜜桃app| 色爱区综合激月婷婷| 国产成人综合在线播放| 日本一区二区三区四区在线视频| 99国产精品自拍| 蜜桃视频在线观看一区二区| 精品日韩一区二区三区| 亚洲精品人人| 免费黄网站欧美| 久久久精品一品道一区| 亚洲一区二区三区涩| 国产一区二区视频在线播放| 国产日韩欧美精品一区| 国产欧美三级| 国产乱子伦视频一区二区三区 | 久久久久久精| 成人免费观看视频| 亚洲精品伦理在线| 欧美久久久一区| 黄色av日韩| 极品少妇xxxx精品少妇| 中文字幕不卡在线播放| 色先锋资源久久综合| 色综合天天狠狠| 美腿丝袜亚洲综合| 中文字幕一区二区三区精华液| 欧美专区一区二区三区| 成人黄色片在线观看| 亚洲午夜一区二区| 欧美v亚洲v综合ⅴ国产v| 国产日韩欧美亚洲一区| bt7086福利一区国产| 亚洲成人1区2区| 久久日韩精品一区二区五区| 久久久久国产精品一区二区| 欧美 亚欧 日韩视频在线| 久久激情综合网| 欧美aa在线视频| 国产福利91精品| 理论片日本一区| 久久精品一区二区三区四区| 葵司免费一区二区三区四区五区| 91亚洲永久精品| 国产一区在线观看麻豆| 亚洲精品欧美激情| 国产目拍亚洲精品99久久精品| 欧美视频在线观看一区| 一本不卡影院| 99这里只有精品| 国产精品99久久久久久有的能看| 亚洲va欧美va人人爽| 国产精品久久一卡二卡| 精品久久久久久亚洲综合网| 在线精品视频一区二区三四| 日韩午夜免费| 欧美日韩一区二区三区在线视频| 国产在线精品免费av| 日本不卡视频在线| 亚洲丶国产丶欧美一区二区三区| 国产欧美综合色| 久久午夜免费电影| 日韩三级视频在线看| 欧美日韩精品二区第二页| 色视频成人在线观看免| 欧美一二三区精品| 亚洲嫩草精品久久| 午夜亚洲性色视频| 亚洲成人原创| 国产精品啊啊啊| 午夜天堂精品久久久久| 成人免费高清在线观看| 国产一区二区三区在线看麻豆| 日韩精品午夜视频| 亚洲v中文字幕| 亚洲1区2区3区视频| 亚洲一级不卡视频| 一区二区三区四区蜜桃| 亚洲精选一二三| 一区二区三区日韩精品| 亚洲精品中文字幕乱码三区| 亚洲日本va午夜在线影院| 136国产福利精品导航| 国产精品对白交换视频| 中文字幕一区二区三区色视频| 中文字幕五月欧美| 亚洲日本免费电影| 亚洲国产精品尤物yw在线观看| 亚洲精品免费在线播放| 亚洲图片自拍偷拍| 视频在线在亚洲| 免费观看在线综合| 韩国女主播一区二区三区| 国产精品资源站在线| 麻豆成人在线播放| 免费美女久久99| 亚洲成人免费在线| 亚洲午夜一区二区三区| 日韩av成人高清| 韩国三级在线一区| 成人国产在线观看| 国产精品av久久久久久麻豆网| 欧美午夜精品久久久久免费视| 亚洲午夜黄色| 久久青青草原一区二区| 欧美日韩一区二区三区视频| 日韩欧美国产综合一区| 久久久久久夜精品精品免费| 18欧美亚洲精品| 日本不卡一二三| 不卡的av电影在线观看| 狠狠色综合网站久久久久久久| 亚洲综合欧美|