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Extraction code: tjbw title: Tusi politics and national history
Author: Chen Xianbo
Douban score: 7. 1
Publishing House: Life Reading Xinzhi Sanlian Bookstore
Publication year: 20 1 1
Page count: 274
Content introduction:
The evolution of Tusi politics and national history in the upper reaches of Duliujiang River is a microcosm of the gradual implementation of the dynasty-state border administrative system and the development of southwestern provinces in Guizhou after the Ming Dynasty. There are two main lines that run through the unique local history and social and cultural process. One is the preservation or abolition of the chieftain, the land control that supports the chieftain's political foundation, which promotes the change of the order structure in Konafu, and the other is the recognition and pursuit of the orthodox culture of the dynasty/country by different local nationalities in different times. At the beginning of the Ming Dynasty, the central dynasty infiltrated into the valleys and mountains south of the traffic line in central Guizhou, which led to the establishment of the rotten Tusi regime in the upper reaches of Duliujiang River. Tusi Zhang replaced the local "barbarian official" rule since the Yuan Dynasty, and also cultivated a new political and economic order in the local area. Tusi Zhang brought indigenous people into the service scope of Kona through the continuous occupation of land and the establishment of land ownership relationship centered on Tusi, and gradually formed a hierarchical structure of "indigenous people ()-Ministry (bud)-Tusi". This runs through the process of Tusi's expansion from south to north along the tributary of Duliujiang River from Ming Dynasty to early Qing Dynasty. This study is helpful for us to grasp the origin and trend of political process and cultural characteristics in ethnic areas, and to understand the historical development of southwest China more completely. It not only effectively promotes ethnic integration, but also constantly strengthens the dialectical relationship between ethnic differences in ethnic history and cultural concepts.
About the author:
Chen Xianbo, 1980, born in Chenghai, Guangdong. In June 2008, he graduated from Sun Yat-sen University with a doctorate in history. Now he is an assistant researcher at the Institute of History, Guangdong Academy of Social Sciences. His research interest is the social and economic history of Ming and Qing Dynasties.