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Qinqiang
Also dubbed Luantan, Qinqiang Opera is a local Chinese opera that mainly
thrives in North China's Shaanxi
Province, as well as its neighboring northwestern regions, like Gansu and Qinghai
provinces and the Ningxia Hui and Xinjiang
Uygur autonomous regions.
It is said that the opera was called "Emperor Qin
Shihuang 's Opera" during the Tang period (618-907) and was later renamed
Qinqiang Opera, which boasts the most ancient, affluent, and largest musical
system of all Chinese operas.

The opera first originated from local folk songs and dance forms in the Yellow
River Valley of Shaanxi and Gansu
provinces -- the birthplaces of Chinese culture. As an opera art form,
Qinqiang evolved in ancient China's political, economic, and cultural center -
Chang'an (today's Xian) -- with the persistent efforts of the local people over
generations.
According to historical records, the opera "first appeared in the Qin
Dynasty (221-206BC), experienced great refinement in the Han
Dynasty (206BC-220AD), flourished in the Tang, was integrated as an opera
form in the Yuan
Dynasty, (1271-1368) matured in the Ming
Dynasty (1368-1644), and became widespread in the Qing
Dynasty." Its time-honored history has endowed Qinqiang with a reputation as
"the forefather of Chinese operas."
Its repertoires usually feature such themes as anti-aggression wars, the
fight between the loyal and the treacherous, and the struggles against
oppression, as well as a number of other topics of strong human interest that
reflect the honest, diligent, brave, and upright characteristics of the local
people. The number of the Qinqiang works at one time topped 10,000, ranking
first on the list of more than 300 local operas in China. But only about 4,700
works remain today.
Qinqiang is also one of the earliest operatic musical systems to reflect the
emotions of human beings. Equipped with a set of performing skills created by
the artists, Qinqiang has greatly influenced other operatic forms. During the
Qing Dynasty, Qinqiang Opera entered Beijing
and directly affected the formation of Beijing Opera.
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