The Sibe or Xibo[2] (ᠰᡞᠪᡝ, , IPA: [ɕivə]; [2] simplified Chinese: 锡伯; traditional Chinese: 錫伯; pinyin: Xībó) are a Tungusic-speaking East Asian ethnic group living mostly in Xinjiang, Jilin and Shenyang in Liaoning.[2] The Sibe form one of the 56 ethnic groups officially recognized by China, and had a recorded population of 190,481 in the 2010 Chinese Census, comprising just over 0.014% of China's total population.[3]

Sibe
ᠰᡞᠪᡝ
Sibo, Xibo
"Sibo military colonists", picture drawn by Henry Lansdell during his 1882 visit to what is now Qapqal Xibe Autonomous County
Total population
190,481
Regions with significant populations
 China (Liaoning · Xinjiang · Heilongjiang · Jilin · Inner Mongolia)
Languages
Mandarin Chinese and Sibe
Religion
Tibetan Buddhism and shamanism[1]
Related ethnic groups
Manchus, Daur, Nanai, Orok, Evenks and Solon

Nomenclature

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The Sibe are known by several variations of their name. The self-appellation of the Sibe people is pronounced Śivə, the official Chinese term is Xibo, in Russian literature the terms Сибинцы (sibintsy) and Шибинцы (shibintsy) are used, while in English works the name Sibe has been established, which corresponds to the written form.[2]

History

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A c. 1809 map of the Ili Region with south on top showing the Sibe Eight Banners (锡伯八旗) stationed across the Ili River from the Manchu Fort Huiyuan (惠远城), exactly where Qapqal Xibe Autonomous County is nowadays

According to the Russian scholar Elena P. Lebedeva, the Sibe people originated as a southern, Tungusic-speaking offshoot of the ancient Shiwei people. They lived in small town-like settlements, a portion of them nomadic, in the Songyuan and Qiqihar areas of what is now Jilin.[4]

When the Buyeo kingdom was conquered by the Xianbei in 286 AD, the southern Shiwei started practicing agriculture.[4] Some historians have theorized that the Xianbei were the direct progenitors of the Sibe,[1] a theory described by some as politically motivated.[5] Pamela Kyle Crossley writes the Xianbei might have undergone a language shift from an earlier Turkic or proto-Mongolian language to a Tungusic one. However, the name "Sibe" was not used in historical records during Xianbei times.[6]

The Han dynasty, Cao Wei and the Jin dynasty (266–420) at times controlled the Sibe until the advent of the Göktürks, who accorded the Sibe lower status than did the Chinese dynasties.[4] At the height of their territorial dispersion, the Sibe lived in an area bounded by Jilin to the east, Hulunbuir to the west, the Nen River to the north and the Liao River to the south.[1] After the fall of the Liao dynasty, the Sibe became vassals of the Khorchin Mongols who moved to the Nen and Songhua river valleys in 1438 after the Khorchin were defeated by the Oirats.[4]

Nurhaci, the first prominent figure of the Manchu people, routed the Sibe during the battle of Gure in 1593 on his way to founding the Qing dynasty of China. From that point, the Qing contracted the Sibe for logistical support against the Russian Empire's expansionism on China's northern border.[4] Crossley claims that the Sibe were so "well known to Russians moving toward the Pacific" that the Russians named Siberia after them.[6] In 1692, the Khorchin dedicated the Sibe, the Gūwalca and the Daur to the Kangxi Emperor in exchange for silver. The Sibe were incorporated into the Eight Banners and were stationed in Qiqihar and other cities in Northeast China.[7]

In 1700, some 20,000 Qiqihar Sibes were resettled in Hohhot (modern Inner Mongolia); 36,000 Songyuan Sibes were resettled in Shenyang, Liaoning. The relocation of the Sibe from Qiqihar is believed by Gorelova to be linked to the Qing's complete annihilation of the Manchu clan Hoifan (Hoifa) in 1697 and the Manchu tribe Ula in 1703 after they revolted against the Qing.[8] According to Jerry Norman, after a revolt by the Qiqihar Sibes in 1764, the Qianlong Emperor ordered an 800-man military escort to transfer 18,000 Sibe to the Ili River of Dzungaria.[4][9]

In Ili, the Xinjiang Sibe built Buddhist monasteries and cultivated vegetables, tobacco and poppies.[10] The Sibe population declined after the Qing used them to suppress the Dungan Revolt (1862–77) by the Hui[4] and to fight against the Russian occupation of Ili during the revolt.[1] The scarcity of provisions in Ili became such that the Governor at last saw himself obliged to dismiss his last auxiliaries, the Thagor Kalmuks. In the meantime both Solons and Sibos were being attacked and plundered and were obliged to make peace with the insurgents, so that only Ili, Khorgos, Losigun and Suidun, remained in the hands of the Mantchus. Ili was now entirely surrounded and it was resolved to reduce it by famine. The situation there was indeed frightful; all the provisions had been exhausted and the only food was horses, dogs and cats. Typhus so raged that from 50 to 100 men died daily.[11][12][13]

During the Republic of China (1912–49) period, many northeastern Sibe joined anti-Japanese volunteer armies, while northwestern Sibe fought against the Kuomintang during the Ili Rebellion. After the Chinese Communist Revolution in 1949 established the People's Republic of China (PRC), large-scale educational and hygiene campaigns increased Sibe literacy and resulted in the eradication of Qapqal disease (a form of type A botulism).

In 1954, the PRC established the Qapqal Xibe Autonomous County to replace Ningxi County in Xinjiang, in the group's area of highest ethnic concentration.

Culture

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Historical religions of the Sibe included shamanism and Buddhism. Customary Sibe attire included short buttoned jackets and trousers for men and close-fitting, long and lace-trimmed gowns for women. Arranged marriage was common and women had low social status, including no right to inherit property.[1] Nowadays almost all the Sibe wear modern clothing and the traditional clothing is worn by elders during festivals. Traditionally, the Sibe were divided into many hala, male-led clans consisting of people who shared the same surname. Until modern times, the dwellings of the Sibe housed up to three different generations from the same family, since it was believed that while the father was alive no son could break the family clan by leaving the house.[1]

The Sibe in Northeast China speak Mandarin Chinese as their first language. In Xinjiang, descendants of the Qing dynasty military garrison speak the Xibe language, a Southern Tungusic language that underwent morphophonological changes and the adoption of loanwords from languages spoken in Xinjiang including Mandarin Chinese, Russian, Uyghur, and Kazakh.

The different ethnicities of Northern Xinjiang have shared musical culture and adopted elements from each other's music.[14]

Distribution

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According to the 2010 Chinese Census, there were 190,481 Sibe people in China: 99,571 males and 90,910 females.[3] The largest Sibe population within China was in the province of Liaoning, home to 132,431 Sibe people, 69.52% of all Sibe people in China, but just 0.30% of Liaoning's total population.[3] The autonomous region of Xinjiang is also home to a sizable number of Sibe people: 34,399 in total, accounting for 18.06% of all Sibe people in China, and 0.16% of Xinjiang's total population.[3] Outside of these two, Heilongjiang, Jilin, and Inner Mongolia have the largest Sibe populations, totaling 7,608, 3,113, and 3,000, respectively.[3]

Distribution of Sibe people in China
Provincial-level division 2010[3]
Population Percent of total Sibe in China
Liaoning 132,431 69.52%
Xinjiang 34,399 18.06%
Heilongjiang 7,608 3.99%
Jilin 3,113 1.63%
Inner Mongolia 3,000 1.57%
Beijing 2,569 1.35%
Hebei 851 0.45%
Guangdong 705 0.37%
Shanghai 696 0.37%
Shandong 661 0.35%
Tianjin 536 0.28%
Jiangsu 433 0.23%
Shaanxi 416 0.22%
Sichuan 381 0.20%
Gansu 299 0.16%
Henan 273 0.14%
Hubei 228 0.12%
Zhejiang 200 0.10%
Guizhou 185 0.10%
Ningxia 184 0.10%
Shanxi 158 0.08%
Yunnan 158 0.08%
Guangxi 146 0.08%
Anhui 143 0.08%
Chongqing 143 0.08%
Fujian 142 0.08%
Hunan 136 0.07%
Qinghai 128 0.07%
Jiangxi 81 0.04%
Hainan 72 0.04%
Tibet 6 < 0.01%
Total 190,481 100.00%

Xinjiang

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Approximately 43,000 Sibe people live in the autonomous region of Xinjiang, of which, approximately 34,000 live in the Ili Kazakh Autonomous Prefecture, where the Qapqal Xibe Autonomous County is located.[15][16] As of 2018, 19,984 Sibe people live in the autonomous county, comprising 10.28% of its total population, which is dominated by larger groups, such as the Han Chinese, Uyghurs, and Kazakhs.[16] In 2015, 20,426 Sibe people lived in the autonomous county, comprising 10.38% of its total population.[15]

Distribution of Sibe people in Xinjiang
Prefecture-level division 2015[15] 2018[16]
Population Percent of total Sibe in Xinjiang Population Percent of total Sibe in Xinjiang
Ili Kazakh Autonomous Prefecture 34,457 80.18% 33,879 79.21%
Ürümqi 5,686 13.23% 5,767 13.48%
Karamay 986 2.29% 1,033 2.42%
Changji Hui Autonomous Prefecture 651 1.51% 666 1.56%
Bortala Mongol Autonomous Prefecture 196 0.46% 425 0.99%
Bayingolin Mongol Autonomous Prefecture 265 0.62% 226 0.53%
Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps 305 0.71% 202 0.47%
Aksu 126 0.29% 177 0.41%
Hami 158 0.37% 155 0.36%
Kashgar 100 0.23% 133 0.31%
Hotan 12 0.03% 55 0.13%
Kizilsu Kyrgyz Autonomous Prefecture 6 0.01% 33 0.08%
Turpan 26 0.06% 21 0.05%
Xinjiang Total 42,974 100.00% 42,772 100.00%

Notable individuals

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  • Tong Liya (佟丽娅) – actress
  • Wu Qian (吴谦) – retired basketball player

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f Huang Beibei, ed. (2011-11-12). "The Xibe ethnic minority". People's Daily. Retrieved 2012-11-29.
  2. ^ a b c d Zikmundová 2013, p. 10.
  3. ^ a b c d e f 1-6 各地区分性别、民族的人口 [1-6 Population by sex, ethnicity and region]. www.stats.gov.cn (in Chinese). National Bureau of Statistics of China. 2010. Archived from the original on 2021-06-11. Retrieved 2021-06-11.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Gorelova, Liliya. "Past and Present of a Manchu Tribe: The Sibe". In Atabaki, Touraj; O'Kane, John (eds.). Post-Soviet Central Asia. Tauris Academic Studies. pp. 325–327.
  5. ^ Zikmundová 2013, p. 11.
  6. ^ a b Crossley 1997, p. 213
  7. ^ Evelyn S. Rawski (15 November 1998). The Last Emperors: A Social History of Qing Imperial Institutions. University of California Press. pp. 242–. ISBN 978-0-520-92679-0.
  8. ^ Gorelova 2002, p. 36.
  9. ^ Gorelova 2002, p. 37.
  10. ^ Gorelova 2002, p. 37.
  11. ^ Turkistan: 2 (5 ed.). Sampson Low, Marston, Searle &Rivington. 1876. p. 181.
  12. ^ Schuyler, Eugene (1876). Turkistan: Notes of a Journey in Russian Turkistan, Khokand, Bukhara and Kuldja, Volume 2 (2 ed.). S. Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington. p. 181.
  13. ^ Schuyler, Eugene (1876). Turkestan: Notes of a Journey in Russian Turkistan, Khorand, Bukhara, and Kuldja (4 ed.). Sampson Low. p. 181.
  14. ^ Harris 2004, p. 194.
  15. ^ a b c 3-7 各地、州、市、县(市)分民族人口数 [3-7 Population by Nationality by Prefecture, State, City and County (City)]. www.xjtj.gov.cn (in Chinese). Statistic Bureau of Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. 2017-03-15. Archived from the original on 2017-10-11. Retrieved 2021-06-11.
  16. ^ a b c 3-7 各地、州、市、县(市)分民族人口数 [3-7 Population by Nationality by Prefecture, State, City and County (City)]. tjj.xinjiang.gov.cn (in Chinese). Statistic Bureau of Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. 2020-06-10. Archived from the original on 2020-11-01. Retrieved 2021-06-11.

Bibliography

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