Webster's Online Dictionary
with Multilingual Thesaurus Translation

 
   English     All Languages     Choose Language   
Earth's largest dictionary with more than 1226 modern languages and Eve!
Login

Definition: Zhuang

Part of Speech Definition
Noun 1. A branch of the Tai languages.[Wordnet].

Source: WordNet 3.0 Copyright © 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.

Top

"Zhuang" is a common misspelling or typo for: Hang, Hung, Shaun, Suing, Chuan, Shooing, Shebang, Shauna, Bhang.

Date "Zhuang" was first used in popular English literature: sometime before 1609. (references)

Common Expressions: Zhuang

Expressions Definition
Duke Zhuang of Zheng Duke Zhuang of Zheng (鄭莊公) (757 BC-701 BC) was the third ruler of the State of Zheng during the Spring and Autumn Period in ancient China. His name was Wusheng (姬寤生), which means "a difficult birth". In 743 BC, he became the duke of Zheng, and later defeated his brother Gongshu Duan, who had led a rebellion against him. Duke Zhuang led military campaigns in the name of the Zhou king against the Rong people and other Zhou states. (references)
Guangxi Zhuang national football team The Guangxi Zhuang national football team was the team of the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region of the People's Republic of China. Between 1956 to 1982 it played only four international matches as an individual team, namely, with Laos, Burundi, North Vietnam and Nepal. (references)
King Zhuang of Chu King Zhuang of Chu (楚莊王) (died 591 BC) was leader in the state of Chu in the Spring and Autumn Period of Chinese history. His name was Mi Lǚ (羋侶). He took his throne in 613 BC. After wasting his first few years as a king, he appointed Gongshu Ao Prime Minister and started a reform. The cultivating situation in his state was much better under his reign. In 611 BC he annexed the state of Yong and made Chu much stronger. After some brilliant victories with his army, he attempted to take the place of the King of Zhou. In the battle of Bi, his army defeated the state of Jin, another strong state at that time. Later he got hegemony among some other states. (references)
King Zhuang of Zhou King Zhuang of Zhou (d.682 BC) (ch. 周莊王 zhōu zhuāng wáng) or King Chuang of Chou was the fifthteenth sovereign of the Chinese Zhou Dynasty and the third of Eastern Zhou Dynasty. (references)
Xin Zhuang Xin Zhuang (莘庄) is a metro station in the city of Shanghai. (references)
Zhan zhuang The health postures are so called, because the body is allowed to become very relaxed while maintaining the posture. This relatively relaxed state is beneficial to health due to the calming effect on the mind and due to other effects such as the lowering of blood pressure and of heart rate. The health benefits are discussed in Traditional Chinese Therapeutic Exercises: Standing Pole. (references)
Zhuang characters Zhuang characters are characters used by the Zhuang language. There are three kinds of Zhuang characters: the Zhuang ideographic characters, old Zhuang characters and new Zhuang characters. (references)
Zhuang language The Zhuang language (autonym: Cueŋь/Cuengh; ) is used by the Zhuang people in the People's Republic of China. Most of them live in the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region. Zhuang, which belongs to the Tai language group, is an official language in that region. However, use of the language is rapidly declining as the Zhuang assimilate to the Han Chinese. (references)

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

Top

Extended Definition: Zhuang


Zhuang

Zhuang
Zhuang people in traditional dress, Guilin, China.
Total population

18 million

Regions with significant populations
Flag of the People's Republic of China China

Flag of Vietnam Vietnam

Language(s)
Zhuang, Mandarin Chinese
Religion(s)
Predominantly animist with ancestor-worship; some Buddhists, Christians, Taoists, and Muslims.
Related ethnic groups
Buyei
Tày and Nung (Vietnam)

The Zhuang (in the Zhuang language: Bouчcueŋь/Bouxcuengh; simplified Chinese: 壮族; traditional Chinese: 壯族; pinyin: Zhuàngzú) are an ethnic group of people who mostly live in the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region in southern China. They form one of the 56 ethnic groups officially recognized by the People's Republic of China. Their population, estimated at 18 million people, puts them second only to the Han Chinese and makes the Zhuang the largest minority in China.

Geography

The Zhuang are one of the 56 ethnic groups officially recognized by the People's Republic of China. They live mostly in the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region in southern China. Some also live in the Yunnan, Guangdong, Guizhou and Hunan provinces.

Culture

Language

Main article: Zhuang language

There is an indigenous Zhuang language, which has been written with Zhuang logograms based on Chinese characters for over a thousand years, and now is officially written in Roman letters.

Religion

Most Zhuang follow a traditional animist/ancestor-oriented religion, however, there are a number of Buddhists, Daoists, Christians, and Muslims in Guangxi as well.

History

Prehistory

The Zhuang are of Tai origin, a people who migrated south from central China roughly 5000 years ago. The Zhuang settled in what is now Guangxi while other Tai peoples moved to Yunnan. It is suggested the Tai peoples migrated for food purposes, as the culture developed a unique irrigation system which was useful for growing rice. As the soil was terrible for this purpose in Central China, the Tai sought out more fertile plains. However, it is highly probable that struggles with emerging Chinese states that rapidly gained power with Mesolithic (Bronze Age) weapons had something to do with this. Long struggles with China to avoid destruction (as they were "barbarians") led Tais around 1100 AD to migrate south from Southern China to create the Lao, Thai and Shan peoples of Indochina, and even as far away as Assam, India.

The dynasties

The Zhuang did not record their history until the Eastern Zhou dynasty (475-221 BC) of China. The Chinese referred to the area as Bai-Yue 百越/百粵 (the Hundred Yue - referring to the aborigines of southern China). Eastern Guangxi was conquered by the Han people under the Qin Dynasty in 214 BC. The Hans, to bring the area firmly in their control, built the Ling Canal to link the Xiang and Lijiang rivers and form a North-South waterway.

An independent state known as Nan Yue (Southern Yue, or Vietnam) around Canton was created by General Zhao Tuo when the Qin Dynasty collapsed. This Kingdom was supported by the Zhuang until its collapse in 111 BC. The Han Dynasty (206 BC to 220 AD) thought the Zhuang culture unproductive, so they reduced local authority and consolidated their authority with Military posts at Guilin, Wuzhou, and Yulin.

In 42 AD, the Trung Sisters uprising was quelled by an army under General Ma Yuan, who sought not only victory on the battlefield but felt true concern for the Zhuang people. He reorganized the Zhuang Local Authority, improved public works, dug canals and reclaimed land to increase production. His work brought the Zhuang into a more modern condition, and temples in his honor can still be seen to this day.

An influx of immigrant Yao people from Hunan after the collapse of the Han Dynasty caused the region to become unstable as the Yao showed hostility to assimilation. The Guiping area of Guangxi, where the Yao settled, would become a hotbed of revolution against Han rule, causing the Zhuang people to suffer terribly, despite their passive stance on assimilation.

Under the Tang Dynasty Guangxi became part of Ling-nan Tao (large province) with present day Hainan and Guangdong. The noted scholar Liu Zongyuan was prefectural administrator at Liuzhou. Irked by Chinese expansion, however, the Zhuang moved to support the Tai kingdom of Nanchao in Yunnan. Guangxi was then divided into an area of Zhuang ascendancy west of Nanning and an area of Han ascendancy east of Nanning.

After the collapse of the Tang a new Chinese kingdom known as Nan Han (Southern Han), based in Guangdong, gained minimal control over the Zhuang, but the Nan Han Kingdom was plagued by instability and it was annexed by the Song Dynasty of China in 971. The Nan Han rule of the Zhuang was marked by minimal interference in Zhuang affairs by the Chinese rulers.

The Song developed a new way of dealing with the Zhuang that was a combination of force and appeasement, a policy that neither satisfied the aspirations of the Zhuang nor ended the savage warfare brought to the region by the Yao against the Chinese. In 1052 a Zhuang leader, Nong Zhigao, led a revolt and set up an independent kingdom in the Southwest. The revolt was crushed, and the Song rule became more brutal, causing the region to spasm in revolt against the Chinese.

After the Yuan Dynasty liquidated the Song, they spent several years deciding what to do with the Zhuang. Weary of the bad relationship previous Chinese rulers had with the region, they decided to make it a full province of China rather than let it remain an occupied territory. This only caused greater stress as the Zhuang and Yao felt alienated, and hated direct rule from the Chinese government. Further complicating Zhuang aspirations, another aboriginal people, the Miao, left Guizhou and Hunan for the Zhuang lands.

The area continued to be unruly, forcing the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) to impose an underhanded way of dealing with it: the Ming would give tribal leaders of the Zhuang an army to attack the Yao. Once the Yao were devastated, the Ming used the armies they had given the Zhuang leaders to kill the Zhuang leaders, and force a leaderless Zhuang society under their heavy handed rule. This resulted in perhaps the bloodiest period of history in a relatively calm region. At the Battle of Rattan Gorge, in 1465, 20,000 deaths were reported. The Ming policy failed, but the larger cities in the region did prosper under Ming economic reform.

The Qing Dynasty (1644-1912) let the region remain in chaos until 1726 when they imposed direct rule as the Yuan had. This was also a failed venture as a Yao revolution took place in 1831. Twenty years later, in 1850, the same area witnessed the Taiping Rebellion break out. The execution of a French missionary led to the Second Opium war in 1858. The Franco-Chinese War of 1885 put Vietnam under French supremacy and opened up the area to foreign encroachment. All of this caused a constant economic depression through the nineteenth century.

Modern times

Together with neighboring Guangdong, Guangxi became an area of Sun Yat-sen (孫逸仙)'s Nationalist (國民黨) revolution. With the fall of the Qing, the Zhuang sent representatives to the central government to campaign for Guangxi autonomy, but when years of protocol failed, the "Guangxi Clique" turned to open revolt in 1927. Maintaining a defiant self-rule stance for two years, the Zhuang leaders of Li Tsung-jen and Li Chi-shen modernized Guangxi, but Chiang Kai-shek ruthlessly crushed their revolt in 1929. Despite the Clique's failure, Chiang could not put Guangxi under direct provincial rule, and it remained unruly until 1950. The Kuomintang's suppression of Guangxi led to widespread support of Communism.

During World War II Guangxi was a major target of Japanese attacks, as they invaded the coast in 1939. The famous patriotic newspaper National Salvation Daily was printed at Guilin. In 1944, the Japanese launched a major offensive to take the western half of Guangxi, but with relentless Zhuang guerrillas and a Chinese counterattack, the Japanese were routed..

Etymological note

The name of the Zhuang minority used to be written 獞. However, the character also refers to a variety of wild dogs, so it was considered an ethnic slur. In 1949, the "animal" radical was replaced by the "human" radical, and the character became 僮. Eventually, the character was replaced with 壮, a character already in existence meaning "sturdy" or "strong".

Notables

  • Li Ning, Chinese gymnast and entrepreneur.
  • Shi Dakai, Taiping leader.

See also

  • Zhuang studies

External links

Notes and references

  1. Defrancis, John (1984). The Chinese Language: Fact and Fantasy, p. 117. University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 0-8248-0866-5.



Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Zhuang"



Topics by Level of Interest: Zhuang

Topics sorted by level of Interest Level (1=low, 600=high)     Topics sorted Alphabetically Level (1=low, 600=high)
Zhuang 24     David Zhuang 3
Guangxi Zhuang national football team 20     Duke Zhuang of Zheng 6
Zhuang language 19     Guangxi Zhuang national football team 20
Zhuang logogram 18     Imperial Noble Consort Zhuang Shun 3
Zhuang Zedong 13     Jian-Hua Zhuang 3
Xiao Zhuang 10     King Zhuang of Chu 4
Zhuang Yong 9     King Zhuang of Zhou 4
Zhan zhuang 9     Lianshan Zhuang and Yao Autonomous County 3
Duke Zhuang of Zheng 6     Shonglin Zhuang 2
Zhuang (surname) 5     Wei Zhuang 4
King Zhuang of Chu 4     Wenshan Zhuang and Miao Autonomous Prefecture 4
King Zhuang of Zhou 4     Xiao Zhuang 10
Wei Zhuang 4     Zhan zhuang 9
Wenshan Zhuang and Miao Autonomous Prefecture 4     Zhuang 24
David Zhuang 3     Zhuang (surname) 5
Jian-Hua Zhuang 3     Zhuang language 19
Zhuang studies 3     Zhuang logogram 18
Imperial Noble Consort Zhuang Shun 3     Zhuang studies 3
Lianshan Zhuang and Yao Autonomous County 3     Zhuang Yong 9
Shonglin Zhuang 2     Zhuang Zedong 13

Source: the editor, created by/for EVE to gauge likely levels of human interest in linguistically triggered topics (compiled across various sources, such as Wikipedia and specialty expression glosses).

Translations: Zhuang

Language Translations (or nearest inflections or synonyms, in parentheses)
Chinese Pidgin English 广西壮族自治区 (location of the Zhuang minority peoples). Additional references: Chinese Pidgin English, Nauru, Zhuang. (volunteer & more translations)
Chinese Simplified 壮族 (Zhuang), 广西壮族自治区 (Guangxi, location of the Zhuang minority peoples). Additional references: Chinese Simplified, China, Brunei, Zhuang. (volunteer & more translations)
Chinese Traditional 壯族 (Zhuang), 廣西壯族自治區 (Guangxi, location of the Zhuang minority peoples). Additional references: Chinese Traditional, China, Brunei, Zhuang. (volunteer & more translations)
Dutch Zhuang (Zhuang). Additional references: Dutch, Netherlands, Aruba, Zhuang. (volunteer & more translations)
Georgian ჯუანური ენა (Zhuang language). Additional references: Georgian, Georgia, Iran, Zhuang. (volunteer & more translations)
Gruzinski ჯუანური ენა (Zhuang language). Additional references: Gruzinski, Georgia, Iran, Zhuang. (volunteer & more translations)
Hanguk Mal 좡족 (Zhuang). Additional references: Hanguk Mal, Korea, South, Korea, Zhuang. (volunteer & more translations)
Hanguohua 좡족 (Zhuang). Additional references: Hanguohua, Korea, South, Korea, Zhuang. (volunteer & more translations)
Hebrew נבחרת גְװַאנְג-שִי בכדורגל (Guangxi Zhuang national football team). Additional references: Hebrew, Israel, Zhuang. (volunteer & more translations)
Ivrit נבחרת גְװַאנְג-שִי בכדורגל (Guangxi Zhuang national football team). Additional references: Ivrit, Israel, Zhuang. (volunteer & more translations)
Japanese チワン族 (Zhuang), チワン語 (Zhuang language), 荘王 (King Zhuang of Chu). Additional references: Japanese, Japan, Taiwan, Zhuang. (volunteer & more translations)
Kartuli ჯუანური ენა (Zhuang language). Additional references: Kartuli, Georgia, Iran, Zhuang. (volunteer & more translations)
Korean 좡족 (Zhuang). Additional references: Korean, Korea, South, Korea, Zhuang. (volunteer & more translations)
Source: Eve, based on a combination of meta analysis and graph theory (for near and back translations). Top

Constructed Language Translations: Zhuang

Language Translations for “Zhuang” or closest synonym(s); back translations in parentheses.
Pig Latin Uangzhay (Zhuang). Additional references: Pig Latin, Zhuang. (volunteer)
Terran B Zhuang (Zhuang, Zhuangzi). Additional references: Terran B, Zhuang. (volunteer)
Source: compiled by the editor. Top


Web Search Results: Zhuang
Google
  Web www.websters-online-dictionary.org