The
Manchu people (
Manchu:
Manju; ,
Mongolian: Манж, ) are a
Tungusic people who originated in
Manchuria (today's northeastern China). During their rise in the seventeenth century, with the help of Ming rebels (such as general
Wu Sangui), they conquered the
Ming Dynasty and founded the
Qing Dynasty, which ruled
China until the
Xinhai Revolution of 1911, which established
a republican government in its place.
The Manchu ethnicity has largely been assimilated with the
Han Chinese. The
Manchu language is almost extinct, now spoken only among a small number of elderly people in remote rural areas of northeastern China and a few scholars; there are around ten thousand speakers of
Sibe (Xibo), a Manchu dialect spoken in the
Ili region of
Xinjiang. In recent years, however, there has been a resurgence of interest in Manchu culture among both ethnic Manchus and Han. The number of Chinese today with some Manchu ancestry is quite large, and the adoption of favorable policies towards ethnic minorities (such as preferential university admission and government employment opportunities) has encouraged some people with mixed Han and Manchu ancestry to re-identify themselves as Manchu.
Culture
Aspects of Manchu customs and traditions can be seen in local cuisines, language and customs in today's Manchuria as well as cities in that region. After the fall of the Ming Dynasty, Manchus also adopted many
Han customs and traditions.
They traditionally coiled their hair in high tufts on top of their heads and wore earrings, long gowns and embroidered shoes. The women with higher social standing wore silk and satin clothing while cotton clothing was worn by women of lower social standing. Variants of such costumes (including
qi pao and
ma gua,
Mandarin dress) are still popular all over China. The man's clothing once consisted of a short and adjusted jacket over a long gown with a belt at the waist to facilitate horse-riding and hunting. Unlike the Han, the Manchu did not practice
foot binding.
The traditional Manchu dwellings were made up of three quarters. In the center of the house was the kitchen while the wings contained the dormitory and the living room. The unique Manchu tradition did not allow people to die on
nahan (

) to the west or north. Believing that doors were made for living souls, the Manchus allowed dead bodies to be taken out only through windows and ground burial was the general practice.
The Manchu language is a member of the
Tungusic language group, itself a member of the proposed
Altaic language family.
Origins

One of the
Qianlong Emperor's Manchu First Grade Bodyguards, Baturu Zhanyinbao (1760).
The first ancestors of the Manchu were the
Sushen, a people who lived during the second and first millennia BC. They were followed by the
Yilou people, who were active from AD 202 to 220. The
Wuji followed in the fifth century and the tribes of the
Mohe in the sixth century. One of the tribes of the Mohe, the
Heishui (
Black Water) tribe, eventually became the ancestors of the
Jurchens, from whom the Manchu originated.
[Huang, P.: "New Light on the origins of the Manchu," Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies, vol. 50, no.1 (1990): 239-82. Retrieved from JSTOR database July 18, 2006.]The Jurchens under the Wanyan clan established the
Jin Dynasty (literally Golden Dynasty) that ruled the northern half of China (1115–1234) and rivaled the Song Dynasty in southern China. The Jin were conquered by the Mongols under Genghis Khan.
Before the seventeenth century, the ancestors of the Manchus were generally a pastoral people, hunting, fishing and engaging in limited agriculture and pig-farming.
Traditional society
One of the old tradition of Manchu is the system of bondservants, boo-i or
nucai, another Manchu word with similar meaning, was adopted into Han Chinese culture and is used in everyday life.
The Jurchen tribes employed Chinese agricultural
boo-i as early as the 1400s, and it was common practice for Manchu military commanders to have their field and house bondservants serving in
boo-i units during military campaigns. The Manchu masters treated their slaves in much harsher terms than their Han Chinese counterparts, and punished their slaves with much stiffer terms, such as to have their face tattooed, then send to remote regions doing hard labour for life.
In 1673 the killing of a 'Boo-i's slaves to accompany their dead master to the grave was outlawed.
Founding of the Qing Dynasty
In 1616 a Manchu leader,
Nurhaci (1559-1626) broke away from the power of the decaying Ming Dynasty and established the Later Jin Dynasty (後金 Hòu Jīn) /
Amaga Aisin Gurun (

), domestically called the State of Manchu (
manju gurun) (

), and unified Manchu tribes, establishing (or at least expanding) the Manchu
Banner system, a military structure which made their forces quite resilient in the face of superior Ming Dynasty numbers in the field. Nurhaci later conquered
Mukden (modern-day Shenyang) and built it into the new capital in 1621. In 1636 Nurhaci's son
Huang Taiji, reorganized the Manchus, including those other groups (such as Hans and Mongols) who had joined them, changed the nation's name to
Qing Dynasty, and formally changed the name of the ethnic designation to Manchu.
The early significance of
Manchu has not been established satisfactorily. It may have been an old term for the Jianzhou Jurchens. One theory claims that the name came from the
Bodhisattva Mañjuśrī (the Bodhisattva of Wisdom), of which Nurhaci claimed to be an incarnation. Another theory is that the Manchus, like a number of other Tungusic peoples, take their name from the common Tungusic word *
mangu(n), 'a great river'.
When Beijing was captured by
Li Zicheng's peasant rebels in 1644, the last
Ming Emperor
Chongzhen committed suicide. The Manchu then allied with Ming Dynasty general
Wu Sangui and seized control of Beijing, which became the new capital of the Qing dynasty. Over the next two decades, the Manchu took command of all of China.
For political purposes, the early Manchu emperors took wives descended from the Mongol Great Khans, so that their descendants (such as the
Kangxi Emperor) would also be seen as legitimate heirs of the Mongol-ruled
Yuan dynasty. During the Qing Dynasty, the Manchu government made efforts to preserve Manchu culture and language. These efforts were largely unsuccessful in that Manchus gradually adopted the customs and language of the surrounding Han Chinese and, by the nineteenth century, spoken Manchu was rarely used even in the Imperial court. Written Manchu, however, was still used for the keeping of records and communication between the emperor and the Banner officials until the collapse of the dynasty. The Qing dynasty also maintained a system of dual appointments in which all major imperial offices would have a Manchu and a Han Chinese member. Because of the small number of Manchus, this insured that a large fraction of them would be government officials.
Near the end of the Qing Dynasty,
Manchus were portrayed as outside colonizers by
Chinese nationalists such as
Sun Yat-Sen, even though the Republican revolution he brought about was supported by many reform-minded Manchu officials and military officers. This portrayal dissipated somewhat after the 1911 revolution as the new Republic of China now sought to include Manchus within its
national identity. Until 1924, the government continued to pay stipends to Manchu bannermen; however, many cut their links with their banners and took on Han-style names in an attempt to hide their Manchu origins and avoid widespread discrimination. The official total of Manchu people fell by more than half during this period, as they refused to admit their ethnicity when asked by government officials or other outsiders.
Manchukuo
In 1931, the
Empire of Japan created a puppet state in Manchuria called
Manchukuo. The new state was nominally ruled by Emperor
Puyi. By this time the population of Manchuria was overwhelmingly Han Chinese, and though Manchukuo was intended to be a state for Manchus, the way its borders were drawn produced a state that had a majority
Han population. Manchukuo was abolished at the end of World War II, with its territory incorporated back into China.
People's Republic of China
The People's Republic of China recognised the Manchu as one of the country's official minorities in 1952. In the 1953 census, 2.5 million people identified themselves as Manchu. The Communist government also attempted to improve the treatment of Manchu people; some Manchu people who had hidden their ancestry during the period of KMT rule thus became more comfortable to reveal their ancestry, such as the writer
Lao She, who began to include Manchu characters in his fictional works in the 1950s (in contrast to his earlier works which had none). Between 1982 and 1990, the official count of Manchu people more than doubled from 4,299,159 to 9,821,180, making them China's fastest-growing ethnic minority. In fact, however, this growth was not due to natural increase, but instead people formerly registered as Han applying for official reclassification as Manchu.
Autonomous Areas designated for Manchus
Famous Manchu
Pre-Qing Dynasty era
The Qing Dynasty era
Emperors
Nobility and aristocrats
- Dodo (多鐸) - a son of Nurhachi. Titled Prince Yu (豫親王), and a military commander.
Others
- Super Nana - also know as Qiqi, the greatest and most beautiful Manchu in the history of China.
Military officers in the Sino-Japanese War
Politicians
- Pujie (溥傑) - younger brother of Puyi. Served as a politician.
Martial artists
- Wu Jing (吳京) - famous martial artist and film actor.
Athletes
Writers and Poets
Artists
Musicians
- Na Ying (那英) - famous singer and pop star.
Media and entertainment industry
- Tong Dawei (佟大为) - famous actor from the Mainland.
- Hu Jun (胡軍) - famous actor from the Mainland.
Others
See also
- Fu Manchu, a fictional character of Manchu ancestry