Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Maps, Figures, and Tables
- Dynasties, Qing Dynasty Emperors' Reign Dates, and Weights and Measures
- Acknowledgments
- Tigers, Rice, Silk, and Silt
- Introduction
- 1 “Firs and Pines a Hundred Spans Round”: The Natural Environment of Lingnan
- 2 “All Deeply Forested and Wild Places Are Not Malarious”: Human Settlement and Ecological Change in Lingnan, 2–1400 CE
- 3 “Agiriculture Is the Foundation”: Economic Recovery and Development of Lingnan During the Ming Dynasty, 1368–1644
- 4 “All the People Have Fled”: War and the Enviroment in the Mid-Seventeenth Century Crisis, 1644–83
- 5 “Rich Households Compete to Build Ships”: Overseas Trade and Economic Recovery
- 6 “It Never Used to Snow”: Climatic Change and Agricultural Productivity
- 7 “There Is Only a Certain Amount of Grain Produced”: Granaries and the Role of the State in the Food Supply System
- 8 “Trade in Rice Is Brisk”: Market Integration and the Environment
- 9 “Population Increases Daily but the Land Does Not”: Land Clearance in the Eighteenth Century
- 10 “People Said that Extinction Was Not Possible”: The Ecological Consequences of Land Clearance
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
2 - “All Deeply Forested and Wild Places Are Not Malarious”: Human Settlement and Ecological Change in Lingnan, 2–1400 CE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Maps, Figures, and Tables
- Dynasties, Qing Dynasty Emperors' Reign Dates, and Weights and Measures
- Acknowledgments
- Tigers, Rice, Silk, and Silt
- Introduction
- 1 “Firs and Pines a Hundred Spans Round”: The Natural Environment of Lingnan
- 2 “All Deeply Forested and Wild Places Are Not Malarious”: Human Settlement and Ecological Change in Lingnan, 2–1400 CE
- 3 “Agiriculture Is the Foundation”: Economic Recovery and Development of Lingnan During the Ming Dynasty, 1368–1644
- 4 “All the People Have Fled”: War and the Enviroment in the Mid-Seventeenth Century Crisis, 1644–83
- 5 “Rich Households Compete to Build Ships”: Overseas Trade and Economic Recovery
- 6 “It Never Used to Snow”: Climatic Change and Agricultural Productivity
- 7 “There Is Only a Certain Amount of Grain Produced”: Granaries and the Role of the State in the Food Supply System
- 8 “Trade in Rice Is Brisk”: Market Integration and the Environment
- 9 “Population Increases Daily but the Land Does Not”: Land Clearance in the Eighteenth Century
- 10 “People Said that Extinction Was Not Possible”: The Ecological Consequences of Land Clearance
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Late imperial Lingnan was dominated by Han Chinese, and it was the Chinese who mostly remade the natural environment into one that supported the settled agricultural practices and cultures commonly understood as Chinese: irrigated paddy fields from which two or more crops of rice could be harvested from the same plot of land with little or no fallow period. But if the Han Chinese predominated, they were not the only ethnic group to inhabit Lingnan: Yao, Miao, Li, and Zhuang are all peoples (now called “national minorities”) who also lived in Lingnan. By the late imperial period, the Han Chinese had come to occupy the richest farmland in the river valleys and the Pearl River delta, while the non-Chinese held lands in the hills of northern and eastern Guangdong and in the western half of Guangxi. But while this ethnic mix and distribution of people in Lingnan is the one we have become most accustomed to thinking about, it was the result of a long and interesting historical process.
Tracing that process is the purpose of this chapter. What we will see is that for centuries before the late-thirteenth-century Mongol conquest, the pattern of settlement was reversed from the late imperial pattern, with Chinese inhabiting the northern hill regions around Guilin in Guangxi and in Nanxiong and Shaozhou in Guangdong.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Tigers, Rice, Silk, and SiltEnvironment and Economy in Late Imperial South China, pp. 53 - 83Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1998