|
Shirnuut Sodbilig
Inner Mongolia University/Tokyo University of Foreign Studies
1.
The process of immigration and reclamation
Chahar is
the name of a Mongol tribe settled in the southern part of
central Inner Mongolia. After the Chahar's resistance was
suppressed by the Qing dynasty in 1675, this tribe was moved
from East Inner Mongolia to the outside of Xuanhua and Datong
beyond the Great Wall. The Qing rulers abolished their former
nobility system and divided the Chahar tribe into eight banners,
imitating the Eight Banner system of the Manchu. The eight
banners were separated into two wings (gar/yi). The left
(i.e. east) wing consisted of the Bordered Yellow, Plain White,
Bordered White, and Plain Blue banners, and the right (west)
wing included the Plain Yellow, Plain Red, Bordered Red, and
Bordered Blue Banners. After being enlisted into the eight
banner system, the Chahar tribe lost its autonomy and was put
under the direct control of the Manchu commander-in-chief of
Chahar who was appointed by the Qing Court. Besides the eight
banners, the Qing government also established four "herds" (sureg
or imperial pasture) in Chahar, including the Livestock Herd,
the Shangdu Herd, the Right-wing Herd and the Left-wing Herd.
These herds were responsible for supplying various kinds of
dairy products and military horses for the Qing court. In
addition, there were also private pastures for members of the
imperial lineage and other Manchu nobilities.
During the
first half century of the Qing period, i.e. from the mid
seventeenth to the eighteenth century, Chahar had remained the
Mongolian banner grazing land and imperial pastures, where there
were very few Han cultivators. The Qing laws prohibited the Han
people from freely entering the Chahar territory and reclaiming
the land, in order to protect the pastureland. As a result, the
livestock husbandry was flourishing during that period.
According to the Kangxi Emperor's edict in 1697,"During the Song
and Ming periods, there lacked effective policies on raising the
horses. The best grazing land lies beyond the Great Wall. Now
the pasture has been well developed and the number of the
livestock has increased to one hundred thousand of horses, sixty
thousand of cattle and two hundred thousand of sheep. If driven
to the inland, it would cost enormous money daily to feed these
animals. But outside the Great Wall, the fertile grassland would
sustain them naturally at no extra cost. Hereafter the number of
the livestock should be limited to one hundred thousand of
horses, sixty thousand of cattle and two hundred thousand of
sheep." This number may only indicate the livestock of the four
herds, not including that of the eight banners. It is estimated
that during the Kangxi period, the number of horses, camels,
cows and sheep in Chahar exceeded three million in total. (Koubei
santing zhi)
(1) The
immigration and reclamation from the 18lh to 19th century
After the
eighteenth century, the number of Han farmers settling down in
Chahar has increased. According to an official land survey in
Chahar in 1724, there were 4,752 acres of cultivated land in the
right wing of Chahar alone, and over ten thousand Han Chinese
had settled down in the area between Zhangjiakou and the western
boundary of Bordered Blue Banner. In order to manage these Han
immigrants, the Qing government established three prefectural
departments (ting) in the left wing of Chahar, namely,
Zhanyiakou, Doloonnuur, and Dushikou, which were under the
supervision of the Zhili province, and two in the right wing,
i.e., Fengzheng and Ningyuan, which were administrated by the
Shanxi province. From then on, the number of Han immigrant
expanded steadily. According to rough statistics, the acreage of
reclaimed land mounted to 18,800 acres in 1755. And by 1758,
there had been 513 villages in Zhangjiakou and Dushikou, and Han
immigrants totaled 8,133 households.
The mid
nineteenth century witnessed great unrest in inland China, where
the rural economy was on the brink of bankruptcy, and peasants
from the northern provinces rushed into the Mongolian
territories. In 1854, the Qing government had to start opening
up the pastures in Chahar to the Han settlers. Since then, the
number of immigrants multiplied. By 1881, in Fengzhen alone the
Han population had soared up to 21,819 households and 145,830 in
total. Under such circumstances, the Qing government set up the
Fengning Reclamation Bureau in the right wing of Chahar in 1882,
so as to manage land reclamation and land prices. A similar
institution was established in the left wing in the previous
year, and by 1889, the reclaimed pastures had mounted to 43,600
acres. These official moves indicate the de facto renouncement
of the ban against reclamation of Mongolian pastureland by the
Han farmers. As a result, by the end of the nineteenth century,
over 80% of the cultivatable lands in Chahar had been reclaimed,
and there was literally no land left uncultivated other than the
grazing lands of the banners and herds.
(2) Rapid
expansion of immigration and reclamation in the first half of
the 20th century
In 1901,
Qing government under the New Policies (xin zheng)
changed its traditional policies toward the Mongols by
abolishing the age-old prohibition against trespass and
cultivation by the Han Chinese, and opened up the pastureland
for reclamation in both eastern and western Inner Mongolia. By
1905, the Minister of Reclamation appointed by the Qing
government managed to open up approximately 99,200 acres of land
in the four right-wing banners, and 80,000 acres in the four
left-wing banners in Chahar for reclamation. Consequently, the
pastureland of the Chahar banners shrank considerably, and the
Chahar Mongols were forced to move from the southern area near
the Great Wall to the northern highland, which brought about
great changes in the territorial redistribution of the Chahar
banners in the Qing Dynasty.
In 1912,
following the collapse of the Qing Dynasty and the founding of
the Republic of China, the Beijing regime changed the
administrative units in Chahar from the previous prefectural
departments (ting) into counties (xian), same as
those in inland China, so as to reinforce its political control.
In 1914, the Chahar Special Region was established to supervise
the banners and counties in Chahar, as well as the Shilingol
League. In order to elevate this special region to the
provincial status, the Beijing government actively carried out
policies of immigration and reclamation. It promulgated the
"Regulations in Rewarding Reclamation of Mongol Past Lire land"
to encourage the Mongol banners to open up their pastures and
the Man farmers to cultivate these lands. The new Special Region
government reorganized the previous reclamation agencies to
establish the Chahar General Supervision Bureau of Reclamation
and formulate specific reclamation plans. It also set up a new
bureau to promote immigration, reclamation, and administrative
establishment. According to the statistics of the Ministry of
Agriculture and Economy of the Beijing government, the reclaimed
pastureland in Chahar had soared from 263,949 acres in 1914 to
452,866 acres in 1920. Along with the steady growth of
immigrants and expansion of reclaimed areas, from 1918 to 1925,
four more counties were established in northern Chahar that is,
Shangdu, Jining, Baochang, and Kangbao. By 1928, the reclaimed
area of the six counties (excluding Jining) in northern
Chahar had almost doubled and totaled 795,270 acres.
In 1928,
soon after the unification of China and founding of the Nanjing
National Government, the Chahar special region was promoted to a
province, and policies of immigration and reclamation were
further implemented. The Chahar provincial Department of
Industry formulated the "Six Regulations Concerning Reclamation
in the Mongol Banners" in 1929, followed by the "Measures in
Rewarding the Mongols for Cultivation in Chahar Province" in
1930, so as to promote cultivation among the Han settlers, and
encourage the Mongols to shift from animal to crop husbandry.
Thus the reclamation accelerated in Chahar. According to a
survey of peasant households and land possession conducted by
the Chahar provincial Department of Construction in 1934, the
situation of reclaimed land in the five counties to the north of
the Great Wall was shown in the following table (the unit of
area is mu. 1 mu =0.16 acre):
Table 1.
County
Name |
Area of cultivated
land |
Number of peasant
households |
Average area of
household possession |
population |
average area of land
possession per capita |
Zhangbei |
3,249,500 |
25,064 |
129.64 |
105,669 |
30.75 |
Guyuan |
549,440 |
7,679 |
71.55 |
39.457 |
13.92 |
Shangdu |
2,500,200 |
12,949 |
193.08 |
57,163 |
43.73 |
Kangbao |
954,559 |
9,230 |
103.73 |
38,683 |
24.67 |
Baochang |
598,454 |
6,595 |
90.41 |
52,569 |
18.37 |
We can see
from the above table that Zhangbei County was leading by
possessing approximately 51,000 acres of cultivated land,
followed by Shangdu and Kangbao. Besides, according to a survey
of Ministry of Domestic Affairs, there were also 31,334 acres of
cultivated land in Duolun County, which was excluded in the
earlier survey due to the Japanese occupation. The total area of
cultivated land in 1934 was about 1,287,678 acres, almost
doubling that in 1928. From the above numbers, we can see the
rapid expansion of land reclamation in Chahar, so rapid that
additional administrative establishment soon became necessary.
In 1934, three new immigration agencies were found: Huade,
Shangyi and Chongli, which were elevated to county level in 1936
and 1937 successively. These counties were all established on
the territories of the left-wing banners, where the increase of
cultivated lands means the decrease of pasturelands. As the
majority of the grazing lands were reclaimed, those herdsmen who
were unable to get accustomed to farming life were forced to
move to the northern area.
Table 2. Counties established in Chahar during the
Republication period
Banner name and herd
name |
County name and year
establishment |
Plain Blue banner |
Duolun(1912) |
Bordered White banner |
Baochang(1925) |
Plain White banner |
Bordered Yellow banner |
Zhangbei(1912)
Shangdu(1918) Kangbao(1925), ChongliQ 936) Huade( 1937) |
Plain Yellow banner |
Fengzhen(1912)Xinghe(1912)Jining(1923) |
Plain Red banner |
Fengzhen Jining |
Bordered Red banner |
Ningyuan(1912,later
liangcheng) Taolin(1912) |
Bordered Blue banner |
Ningyuan Jining |
Shangdu herd |
Duolun
Dushikou(1912,laterGuyuan) Baochang Kangbao Huade Shangyi |
cattle and sheep herd |
Zhangbei Guyuan
Shangdu |
herd of left wing |
Baochang Zhangbei
Kangbao Guyuan |
herd of right wing |
Baochang Duolun |
(3) The
reclamation of pastureland in the latter half of the 20th
century
By 1949
when People's Republic of China was found, not only all
cultivatable lands had been reclaimed, but also over half of the
pasturelands in Chahar had become farmlands. The remnant
pastures and semi-pastoral areas became the last habitation left
for the Chahar Mongols. The government of the Inner Mongolia
Autonomous Region had briefly prohibited reclamation to protect
the pastures after its founding in 1947. But starting from the
late 1950s, new waves of reclamation spread through Inner
Mongolia under the "principle of grains."
The first
climax arrived during the period of 1958-1959, when agriculture
was highlighted as the lifeline of economy, and the pastures was
reclaimed blindly. The second peak came in 1961, when the
national economy reached its nadir, and a number of bases of
crops and non-staple food were built in the semi-pastoral and
even pure pastoral areas. The third wave came during the height
of the Cultural Revolution in 1966-1976, when the government
organized military construction corps and state-run farms to
reclaim large amount of pastures Dozens of state-operated
pasture farms and military horse farms were also established in
the Chahar banners.
In this
way, even the main part of the northern Chahar pastures, where
the Mongols had sustained their traditional nomadic lifestyle,
were destroyed. By the end of the 1970s, grazing land in Chahar
had shrunk substantially so that no single Chahar banner was
able to remain purely pastoral in character. At the same time,
all counties in Chahar became purely agricultural areas, and the
grasslands were unlimitedly reclaimed; after the grasslands on
the plains were wiped out, even those on the mountain slopes
were cultivated.
Starling
from the late 1980s the government of the Inner Mongolia
Autonomous Region decided to curb reclamation again. In 1984,
the "Regulations of Pasture Land Management in Inner Mongolia
Autonomous Region" was promulgated as the legal protection of
the grassland. Since then the unlimited reclamation of
pastureland was checked. However, due to the significant loss of
pastureland, the herdsmen had no choice but to settle down in
one place to raise their livestock. It marks the final demise of
the traditional nomadic life of the Chahar Mongols.
2.
Reclamation and the changes of the environment
Two
centuries of immigration and reclamation have incurred
significant changes in the cultural and natural landscapes in
the Chahar region.
First, the
pure pastureland was divided into three distinct forms:
agricultural, semi-agricultural, and herding area. By the early
twentieth century, due to the establishment of counties, the
southern part of Chahar had already become the haven of Han
immigrants, with very few Mongols left as either farmers or half
herdsmen. With the expansion of the reclaimed area from the edge
of the Great Wall toward the northern highland area, over half
of the Chahar grazing lands had been turned into agricultural or
semi-agricultural areas in the 1940s. By the 1970s, croplands
have dominated even the northern edge of the Chahar region.
Compared with the early Qing period, less than one third of the
Chahar pasturelands were left, and seven out of the eight
banners remained. The four herds, which had been incorporated
into either the banners or the counties, were no longer
existent. The remnant seven banners are all part of the Inner
Mongolia Autonomous Region. These are the Front, Middle and Rear
Banners of the right-wing Chahar, and Bordered Yellow, Plain
White, Plain Blue, and Taipusi Banners of the left wing. Among
them all three right-wing banners, except part of the Rear
Banner, had become largely farming area. Among the four
left-wing banners, the majority of the Taipusi Banner and a
large part of the Plain White Banner had turned agricultural. It
is notable that despite the waves of reclamation during the past
two centuries, most Chahar Mongols had chosen to move to the
north rather than giving away their pastoral life to farming.
Although the environment has become increasingly harsh for
leading a herding life, most of them showed indomitable will in
sustaining their ethnic lifestyle and culture.
Second,
the flows of Han immigrants and reclamation policies of the
government have resulted in the continuous swelling of Han
population in Chahar which led to the great change of population
ratio. In southern Chahar, early in the beginning of the 20th
century, the number of Han Chinese had exceeded that of the
native Mongols, who counted for only a tiny percentage of the
entire population, and lived dispersedly. As mentioned earlier,
by 1881 the Han population in Fengzhen alone had reached
145,830, which exceeded the total number of Mongols in both
wings of Chahar. Since the 1930s, the population of Han Chinese
multiplied and the ratio of Mongol population in all counties
dropped dramatically. For instance, in Fengzhen, Jining, Taolin,
Xinghe and Liangcheng counties, Mongols counted for a mere 1% of
the total population in 1935.
By the
latter half of the twentieth century, even the original
monoethnic Mongol inhabitations in the northern Chahar banners
had become mixed areas of Han and Mongols, where the Man
population again counted for the majority, as seen in the
following Table:
Table
3. Ratio of Mongols and Han population in counties and
cities on former Chahar territory in 1992
Counties in present
Hebei province |
counties and cities |
total
population |
Mongols |
ratio of
Mongols |
former banners and
herds |
Zhangbei |
350900 |
1116 |
0.03% |
B.Y. banner, P.Y.
banner |
Guyaun |
222805 |
|
|
Shangdu herd,
livestock herd, left-wing herd |
Kangbao |
263500 |
214 |
0.008% |
B.Y. banner Shangdu
and left wing herds |
Chongli |
117699 |
3881 |
0.3% |
livestock herd,
left-wing herd |
Shangyi |
183058 |
387 |
0.02% |
B.Y. banner, Shangdu
herd |
Counties and cities in
Inner Mongolia |
Jining |
193084 |
6950 |
0.36% |
P.Y. banner, B.R.
banner, B.B. banner |
Fengzhen |
300155 |
720 |
0.02% |
P.Y. banner, P.P.
banner |
Xinghe |
299090 |
8009 |
0.26% |
P.Y. banner, P.R.
banner |
Zuozixian |
226664 |
|
|
P.R. banner, B.R.
banner, B.B. banner |
Shangdu |
336370 |
2928 |
0.09% |
B.Y. banner, Shangdu
herd |
Liangcheng |
229137 |
1378 |
0.06% |
B.R. banner, B.B.
banner |
Huade |
159876 |
1748 |
0.11% |
B.Y. banner, Shangdu
herd |
Duolun |
99313 |
|
|
P.B. banner, B.W.
banner |
Table 4. Ratio of Mongols and Han population in existent
Chahar banners in 1992
Banners |
Mongols |
Chinese |
ratio of Mongols |
original banners and
herds |
Front banner of right
Chahar |
5169 |
255042 |
0.2% |
P.Y. banner |
Middle banner of right
Chahar |
4172 |
224863 |
0.18% |
B.R. banner B.B.banner |
Back banner of right
Chahar |
10096 |
189607 |
0.53% |
P.R. banner P.Y.
banner |
Taipus banner |
4800 |
203900 |
0.24% |
Right and left wing
herds |
Plain Bordered white
banner |
20189 |
48964 |
41% |
P.W.banner B.W. banner
Left-wing herd |
Bordered blue banner |
26000 |
76446 |
34% |
P.B.banner Right and
left wing herds |
Bordered yellow banner |
18027 |
10734 |
60% |
B.Y.banner Shangdu
herd |
Third, as
a result of the loss of a communal living environment, the
traditional lifestyle of the Chahar Mongols had been changed
significantly, and a large number of Lhcm have lost their native
language.
Since the
thirteenth century, as one of the distinguished Mongol tribes,
the Chahar Mongols had galloped across the Mongolian plateau,
while maintaining their tribal identity. In the long span of
time since the seventeenth century, in spite of their
subordination to the Qing rulers and relocation to the north of
the Great Wall beyond Xuanhua and Datong, the Chahar Mongols had
managed to preserve their integrity and traditional lifestyle.
But starting from the end of the nineteenth century, along with
the flows of Han immigration into the region, the common living
area of the Mongols had been gradually separated by the
agricultural regions, and communications across the banners had
become increasingly difficult. Especially after 1928, when the
left and right wings of the Chahar eight banners were divided
and incorporated into the two provinces of Chahar and Suiyuan
respectively, the connections between them had diminished.
Today, although both belong to the Inner Mongolia Autonomous
Region, they are still divided by different administrative
units. The three right-wing banners are part of the Ulanchabu
League, while the four left-wing banners have joined the
Shilingol League. In the three right-wing banners that are mixed
with the Han counties, the Mongols not only count for the
extreme minority but also live dispersedly. Therefore they have
begun to adopt a way of living and production that is similar to
the Han Chinese. Very few of them are able to preserve their
traditional lifestyle and native language. In the four left-wing
banners that joined the Shiiingol League where Mongols remain
the majority group, thanks to the continual bonds and exchanges,
most of them have managed to sustain their traditional culture
and custom. But due to the shrinking pastureland, they had to
give up the nomadic life for settled livestock husbandry, or to
engage in small-scaled agricultural production. As a result they
also began to resemble the Han Chinese in daily lifestyle.
As far as
the natural environment is concerned, first of all, the soaring
population during a very short time has largely destroyed the
balance between human and the nature. Before the settlement of
the Han Chinese, the Chahar region was the haven for the herding
Mongols as well as wild animals who shared a harmonized natural
environment. Since the nineteenth century, great number of Han
immigrants had poured into the region. Their unrestrained land
reclamation was accompanied by devastating felling of trees,
destruction of forests and plants, misuse of water resources,
which have strained the natural resources such as soils, rivers,
animals and plants, and damaged the ecological balance. Along
with the cultivation of lands, many animals and plants have
become extinct. Typically, the countless Mongolian gazelles that
used to dominate the landscape of the Chahar grasslands have
entirely vanished. Now apart from the mice, it is hard to find
any rare wild animals in the Chahar region. The species of
plants have also decreased, and in particular, the rapid
diminishing in kind and yield of forage grass has become one of
the major problems endangering the development of animal
husbandry.
Further,
excessive land cultivation has speeded up desertification. As
mentioned above, the government-initiated reclaiming movement in
Chahar had begun in the early twentieth century. Out of
considerations of national defense and frontier development, the
various regimes in China have advocated and supported the land
reclamation. Ordinary Farmers, who were keen to boost yields by
expansion of field area, paid no attention whatsoever to the
improvement of method and technology of production, not to
mention the protection of vegetation and consciousness of
maintaining the ecological balance. As noted by a witness in the
1930s, "Beyond the Great Wall there are abundant lands and few
people, and the crops are mainly coarse grains. Farmers rarely
use fertilizers in cultivation, but rather depend on the nature.
Once the soil becomes barren they would abandon the field and
shift to another." Such phenomenon is extremely common in all
the counties outside the Great Wall. Until the 1980s, people had
paid no heed to the severe consequences of the exploitation of
pastureland, and excessive reclamation continued. Take the
example of the Huade County in the Chahar region. During the
three decades from 1950 to 1980, the farming area in Huade has
rocketed from 33,300ha. to 113,700ha., which resulted in
desertification of 50% of the farming land, and degeneration of
more than 70% of the grassland. The environmental devastation
has caused natural disasters to occur frequently;
desertification has not only deprived many people of their
homeland, but also threatened their survival as farmers. This is
but a typical sketch of the somber reality facing the southern
Chahar region, now the bordering region between Inner Mongolia
and Hebei Province.
Table
5. Desertification in the bordering region between Hebei
Province and Inner Mongolia
|
County name |
Desertification area
in 1980 |
Hebei province |
Zhangbei |
24.2% |
Kangbao |
39.2% |
Shangyi |
27.4% |
Inner Mongolia |
Huade |
67.5% |
Shangdu |
60.5% |
Duolun |
37% |
Third,
excessive herding has caused the degeneration of the grassland.
As the front of reclamation was pushed north during the early
half of the twentieth century, many nomadic Mongols emigrated
from the southern Chahar near the Great Wall to the northern
area hundreds of miles away, and hence increased the population
density of the northern grassland. After the mid twentieth
century, new flows of settlers pouring into the northern area
have caused the pastoral area to reduce rapidly. The rising
population density, combined with the shrinking grassland, has
resulted in the ever-increasing excessive herding and
degeneration of the grassland. It is worth noting that
immigrants often occupied the best pastures for cultivation, and
only the poor grazing land was left to raise livestock. While
the number of the domestic animals increased, the vegetation
became degenerated rapidly. Thus the immigration and reclamation
has triggered the chain reaction of dual desertification as a
result of excessively farming and grazing: the more the farming
area is expanded, the more the pasture faces the danger of
desertification. Throughout the twentieth century, excessive
herding in the Chahar region has been closely related to the
limitless immigration and reclamation. As the example of the
Shilingol League shows, degeneration and desertification of the
grassland have been greatly alarming. In 2001, it was reported
that over 72% of the grassland has been de.sertificd, which
causes the decrease and even extinction of fine forage grass
that results in further loss of herbage and drop of husbandry
production.
Forth,
excessive reclamation and misuse of land have led to the
frequent natural disasters. Since the 1950s droughts and
sandstorms in the Chahar region have considerably multiplied.
After the 1980s, frequent severe sandstorms that have broken out
in Inner Mongolia at springtime have not only greatly
jeopardized the living condition of local people, but have also
affected large cities such as Beijing and Tianjin. The
desertification has led to the soil degeneration by damaging the
soil structure and causing the loss of soil nutrients, which
endangered the survival of human beings themselves. In today's
Inner Mongolia, people are forced to reduce the farming area.
However, the recovery of vegetation requires several decades at
the least, or even several centuries. If measures are to be
taken to recover the desertified land, the investment needed
might be beyond calculation.
Finally,
excessive reclamation and consequent damages to the ecology
environment have greatly restricted the economic development of
the Chahar region. Rather than wealth and profit, two centuries
of reclamation have brought poverty and natural disasters to the
Han immigrants and native Mongol herdsmen. As early as in 1935,
a survey of the Zhangbei County had pointed out that "this
county locating beyond the Great Wall is inapt for agriculture
because of its barren soil, cold weather, and lack of water,
which is why the poor farmers there could barely make a living."
After the
founding of the People's Republic of China, the living standard
of the Chahar people has been improved a great deal, and the
local economy has been developed to a certain extent. However,
compared with other inland areas, its economy remains
underdeveloped, and its people are still battling against
poverty. Southern Chahar counties such as Zhangbei, Guyuan,
Kangbao, Chongli and Shangyi that had switched from grazing to
farming, are now classified as the "state-acknowledged destitute
counties" of Hebei Province, which refer to those in which the
average income per capita per year is below 625 yuan
(approximately 80 US dollars). To the same category also belong
the counties of Inner Mongolia such as Huade, Shangdu, Duolun.
Seeing
from the history of reclamation in Chahar, we might say that to
maintain the balance between human and nature is the critical
element if the economic and social development of the Mongolian
plateau is ever to be accomplished. The rapid growth of
population necessarily strains the contradiction between men and
the land, which restricts not only the development of
agriculture, but also that of animal husbandry. It might be
concluded that reclamation at the cost of ecological environment
leads to nowhere but permanent poverty. This is the lesson we
have learned from the two centuries of reclaiming pastureland in
the Chahar region. |