Across Forest, Steppe, and Mountain_ Environment, Identity, and Empire in Qing China\'s Borderlands

(Ann) #1

foraging and manchu identity


Qing authorities sought to preserve ecological ties to their northeastern

homeland among the Manchu diaspora despite the physical separation

entailed by the conquest of China proper. Foraging was integral to the

ongoing formation of a distinct, unified, and imperial Manchu identity

across the Great Wall that dynastic authorities considered the apex of

their state’s ethnic hierarchy.

In the view of Qing rulers such as the Yongzheng emperor, Manchus

were of the“greatest concern”because they were the“root of the state”

and, as such,“comparable to no others.”^6 The formation of Manchu

identity was, moreover, not a passive process for the participants. The

dynasty’s ethnic exemplars, bannermen, were thus commanded“to do

their utmost to become studied in Manchu frugality, the Qing [i.e.

Manchu] language, mounted archery, labor service [and] the arts of drill

and ritual usage.”^7 Many of these practices, including foraging skills like

archery, could be pursued only under certain social and ecological condi-

tions that required maintenance of amenable spaces sufficiently isolated

from the empire’s Han Chinese majority.

Manchuria’s eastern and northern expanses inevitably became

the empire’s main reserve for Manchus to be insulated from“contam-

ination,”by“Han customs,”including the drinking, gambling, cock-

fighting, and profligate expenditures, so decried by Qing rulers.^8

Hybridization into a new composite identity through proximity to

Han culture distinguished diasporic from borderland Manchus.^9 Unlike

Fengtian (modern Liaoning province)and its capital Shengjing to the

south, Jilin and Heilongjiang hadnot been subjected to large-scale

Han migration and were considered relatively pristine, if endangered

from the mid–eighteenth century.^10

Even before the Qing conquest of China proper dynastic authorities

sought control over the forage resources of the Jurchen/Manchu home

territory, roughly centered in southeastern Jilin around the Korean

border. Nurhaci formulated one of the earliest dynastic rationales for

such control on March 3 , 1623 :

Formerly, all sorts of pelts, eastern pearls, and sable were foraged by one
hundred men sent out by the eightBeilePrinces’households, each of which
retained its own respective catches. So for fear of internal disorder, all sorts
of forage from the year 1622 like eastern pearls, sable, lynx pelts, tiger pelts,
wolf pelts, otter pelts, and squirrel pelts were all equally divided into eight
portions.^11


66 Across Forest, Steppe, and Mountain
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