The Qiang ethnic minority mostly
inhabits hilly to mountainous areas of the Maowen County in the Aba-Tibetan
Qiang Autonomous Prefecture in western Sichuan Province. It has a population of
198,252 (by 1990); a small number lives with the Tibetan, Han and Hui ethnic
groups in Ganzi Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture.
The language of the Qiang people consists of
a northern and southern dialect. The dialects used by the Qiangs who belong to
the Qiang branch of the Tibeto-Burman Austronesian of the Chinese-Tibetan
Phylum. Due to their close contact with the Han people, many Qiangs speak
Chinese. The Qiangs have no written scripts and the Chinese characters are in
common use.
The Qiang people call themselves Erma,
meaning aboriginals. Some inscriptions on tortoise shells, dating back 3,000
years ago, show that the ancestors of the Qiang people were already very active
in the northwest and central plains of China during the Shang Dynasty (16-11BC).
During the western Han Dynasty (206BC-220AD), an administrative prefecture was
established in the Hexi Corridor, and some Qiangs lived in this area then
gradually moved into the inland provinces, living together with the Han people.
During 600 to 900AD when the Tibetan Regime gradually expanded its rule over the
region, some Qiangs were assimilated by the Tibetans and others by the Hans. A
small Qiang population remained indigenous which developed into the distinctive
ethnic minority of today.
The Qiangs are mainly engaged in agriculture
which is complemented with stockbreeding, hunting and other economic activities
such as paper-making, timber-processing and leather-manufacturing, etc. The
Qiang people have created a unique culture, and the deft Qiang women are expert
in embroidery and crafts.
Most Qiangs are believers of Animism, except
that those who lived near the Tibetan communities are followers of Lamaism. They
also worship their ancestors.
October 1 of the lunar calendar is the New
Year of the Qiang people. Suspend a Dog to Sacrifice Mountains is a traditional
festival of the Qiang people, which is held in January on every lunar agenda and
lasts seven days.
In addition, the Qiangs occupy a fertile
land of mild climate and adequate rain. Deep in the forests are such rare
animals as giant pandas, golden monkeys and flying foxes,
etc.