Ethnic Chinese in Mongolia

Ethnic Chinese in Mongolia can be subdivided into three groups: Mongolian citizens of ethnic Chinese background, temporary residents with Chinese citizenship, and permanent residents with Chinese citizenship. Mongolia's 1956 census counted ethnic Chinese as 1.9% of the population; the United States government estimated their proportion to be 2% in 1987, or roughly 40,000 people.[1] The 2000 census showed 1,323 permanent residents of Chinese descent; this figure does not include naturalised citizens, temporary residents, nor illegal immigrants.[2] Illegal immigrants from China were estimated at 10,000 in the 1990s; some use Mongolia as a transit point into Russia.[3]

Ethnic Chinese in Mongolia
Total population
40,000 (1987 est.)
2% of the Mongolian population
Regions with significant populations
No data
Languages
Chinese, Mongolian
Related ethnic groups
Overseas Chinese

Turkic Khaganate

Chinese artists were hired by Bilge Khagan of the Second Turkic Khaganate.[4][5] Chinese text on a silk piece of yellow color was found in a Turkic tomb.[6]

Liao Dynasty

During the Liao dynasty Han Chinese lived in Kedun, situated in present-day Mongolia.[7] Han farmers migrated in.[8] Chinese migrated to cities under Liao rule.[9]

Yuan dynasty

Han Chinese officials and colonists were sent by the Mongol Yuan dynasty to areas of Lingbei province (和宁路 益蘭州 謙州).[10] The Yenisei area had a community of weavers of Chinese origin and Samarkand and Outer Mongolia both had artisans of Chinese origin seen by Changchun.[11]

Ming dynasty

The Liaodong Han Chinese military frontiersmen were prone to mixing and acculturating with (non-Han) tribesmen.[12]

Han Chinese soldiers served in the Yuan army against the Ming, and the Mongols were joined by many Chinese defectors. The Mongol Mangui served in the Ming military and fought the Manchus, dying in battle against a Manchu raid. Some Chinese who lived among the Mongols of Inner Mongolians, while in their youth, adopted Mongol culture and married a Mongol women but when he became old he would come back and lived with the Han Chinese again. One Han Chinese military officer who defected to the Mongols was "Monkey Li" (Li Huai) who fought against the Ming.[13][14][15]

Qing Dynasty

Chinese temple in Maimachin, 1885

Historically, the Gobi served as a barrier to large-scale Chinese settlement in what was, before 1921, called Outer Mongolia; the unsuitability of most of the territory for agriculture made settlement less attractive. Some Chinese settlements in Mongolia were founded in 1725, when farmers moved there by decree of the Qing Dynasty to grow food for soldiers fighting the Dzungars. They were established in the Orkhon and Tuul river basins, and in 1762, in the Khovd region. After the fighting ended, the Qing closed off Mongolia to immigration[16] and occasionally evicted Chinese merchants.

Despite those restrictions, Chinese trade firms continually penetrated the country, concentrating mainly in Ikh Khüree, Uliastai, Khovd and Kyakhta. Their trade practices and the lifestyle of the Mongolian nobility lead to an ever-increasing indebtedness of the banners, nobles, and ordinary people, and Chinese businesses became a target of public discontent as early as Chingünjav's uprising in 1756. The spill-over from the Dungan rebellions of the 1870s into Mongolia also saw a number of Chinese businesses in Khovd and Uliastai destroyed. Many of the Chinese merchants lived in Mongolia only seasonally or until they had made enough money to return to China. Others took Mongolian wives, at least for the time of being in Mongolia.

In 1906, the Qing Dynasty began to implement policies aimed at a Han-Chinese colonization of Outer Mongolia along the lines of those in Inner Mongolia, but these policies never took full effect because the Dynasty collapsed and Mongolia declared independence in 1911. The total Han Chinese population at that time, mainly consisting of traders and artisans, but also of some colonists, can be estimated to have been at some ten thousand.

Since 1911

A 1915 cover, red band from Urga to Beijing, written by Chinese merchant.

Upon Mongolia's declaration of independence, many Chinese became victims of atrocities, particularly in Khovd. However, after 1912, Chinese businesses were able to continue their operations, including collection of debts, largely unimpeded. It was only the establishment of communism that meant an end to Chinese trade in Mongolia. Ever-increasing obstacles to commerce were created, and the closure of the border to China for imports in 1928 meant an end for Chinese enterprise in the country.

With the People's Republic of China development aid projects of the 1950s, many Han Chinese entered Mongolia, beginning in 1955. By 1961, they had reached a number of 20,000. However, after the Sino-Soviet split in the early 1960s, in which Mongolia sided with the Soviets, China eventually withdrew most of its workers.[17] At the same time, Mongolian politicians or academicians with alleged links to China (e.g. Ts. Lookhuuz or G. Sükhbaatar) became victims of political purges. In the early 1980s, Ulan Bator was reported to have a small Chinese community, which published a Chinese-language newspaper and which looked to the Chinese embassy there for moral support. However, in 1983, Mongolia systematically began expelling some of the remaining 7,000 Chinese contract workers in Mongolia to China. At the same time, ethnic Chinese who had become naturalized citizens were reported to be unaffected. Because the presence and the status of Chinese residents in Mongolia were politically sensitive subjects, Mongolian sources usually avoided mentioning the Chinese at all.[1]

After the introduction of democracy, another wave of Chinese immigrants has entered the country. Many of the migrants work in the construction sector, while others run small or medium enterprises. Negative sentiment against Chinese migrants remains;[18] China is seen as a potential threat to Mongolia's security and cultural identity.[19] However, not all recent immigrants from China are ethnic Han Chinese; in particular, there is a number of Inner Mongolians.[20]

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See also

References

Notes

 This article incorporates public domain material from the Library of Congress Country Studies website http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/.

  1. LOC 1989, Ch. 2.3.2
  2. Batbayar 2006, p. 221
  3. Bedeski 1999, Mongolia--A Demographic Buffer?
  4. Ross, E. Denison; Thomsen, Vilhelm (1930). "The Orkhon Inscriptions: Being a Translation of Professor Vilhelm Thomsen's Final Danish Rendering". Bulletin of the School of Oriental Studies, University of London. 5 (4): 861–876. JSTOR 607024.
  5. Scharlipp, Wolfgang-Eckhard. "China and Tibet as Referred to in the Old Turkic Inscriptions". Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. Tsagaan Törbat; Dunbüree Batsükh; Jan Bemmann; Thomas O. Höllmann; Peter Zieme. A rock tomb of the ancient Turkic period in the Zhargalant Khairkhan Mountains, Khovd Aimag, with the oldest preserved horse-head fiddle in Mongolia – A preliminary report (PDF) (Report). pp. 369, 379–380.
  7. Michal Biran (15 September 2005). The Empire of the Qara Khitai in Eurasian History: Between China and the Islamic World. Cambridge University Press. pp. 27–. ISBN 978-0-521-84226-6.
  8. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-08-07. Retrieved 2016-07-26.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) http://www.china10k.com/trad/history/5/51/51.htm "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-09-10. Retrieved 2016-07-26.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) http://blog.renren.com/share/229436183/9016553483
  9. Denis C. Twitchett; Herbert Franke; John King Fairbank (25 November 1994). The Cambridge History of China: Volume 6, Alien Regimes and Border States, 907-1368. Cambridge University Press. pp. 59–. ISBN 978-0-521-24331-5.
  10. History of Yuan 《 元史 》,
  11. Jacques Gernet (31 May 1996). A History of Chinese Civilization. Cambridge University Press. pp. 377–. ISBN 978-0-521-49781-7.
  12. Frederic E. Wakeman (1985). The Great Enterprise: The Manchu Reconstruction of Imperial Order in Seventeenth-century China. University of California Press. pp. 39–. ISBN 978-0-520-04804-1.
  13. Frederic E. Wakeman (1985). The Great Enterprise: The Manchu Reconstruction of Imperial Order in Seventeenth-century China. University of California Press. pp. 41–. ISBN 978-0-520-04804-1.
  14. Frederic E. Wakeman (1985). The Great Enterprise: The Manchu Reconstruction of Imperial Order in Seventeenth-century China. University of California Press. pp. 41–. ISBN 978-0-520-04804-1.
  15. Oriens extremus. Kommissionverlag O. Harrasowitz. 1959. p. 137.
  16. Batbayar 2006, p. 216
  17. Sergey Radchenko. "The Soviets' Best Friend in Asia" (PDF). p. 14.
  18. Bille, Franck (2014-12-30). Sinophobia: Anxiety, Violence, and the Making of Mongolian Identity. Univ of Hawaii Pr. ISBN 9780824839826.
  19. "Anti-Chinese sentiment swelling in Mongolia", Asian Economic News, 2005-04-11, retrieved 2007-02-23
  20. Uradyn 1998, p. 188

Sources

  • Rupen, Robert A. (May 1973), "The Fiftieth Anniversary of the Mongolian People's Republic: 1921-1971", Asian Survey, 13 (5): 458, doi:10.1525/as.1973.13.5.01p0332s
  • Mongolia, Country Studies, United States Library of Congress, June 1989, retrieved 2007-02-28
  • Uradyn, Erden Bulag (1998), "Inner Mongols as 'Other' to Mongols", Nationalism and hybridity in Mongolia, Oxford studies in social and cultural anthropology, pp. 171–214, ISBN 978-0-19-823357-2
  • Bedeski, Robert (November 1999), The Chinese Diaspora, Mongolia and the Sino-Russian Frontier, JPRI Working Papers, 62, retrieved 2007-02-23
  • Batbayar, Tsedendamba (2006), "Foreign migration issues in Mongolia", in Akaha, Tsuneo (ed.), Crossing National Borders: Human Migration Issues in Northeast Asia, United Nations University Press, pp. 215–235, ISBN 92-808-1117-7
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