The Tuoba (Chinese language) or Tabgatch (, Tabγač), also known by other names, was an influential Xianbei clan in early imperial China. During the Sixteen Kingdoms after the fall of Han and the Three Kingdoms, the Tuoba established and ruled the Dai state in northern China. The dynasty ruled from 310 to 376 and was restored in 386. The same year, the dynasty was renamed Wei, later distinguished in Chinese historiography as the Northern Wei. This powerful state gained control of most of northern China, supporting Buddhism while increasingly sinicization. As part of this process, in 496, the Emperor Xiaowen changed the imperial clan's surname from Tuoba to Yuan (). The empire split into Eastern Wei and Western Wei in 535, with the Western Wei's rulers briefly resuming use of the Tuoba name in 554.
A branch of the Tangut people also bore a surname transcribed as Tuoba before their chieftains were given the Chinese surnames Li () and Zhao () by the Tang dynasty and Song dynasty dynasties respectively. Some of these Tangut Tuobas later adopted the surname Weiming (), with this branch eventually establishing and ruling the Western Xia in northwestern China from 1038 to 1227.
Tuoba is the Chinese tones pinyin romanization of the Mandarin pronunciation of the Chinese language ( Tuòbá), whose pronunciation at the time of its transcription into Middle Chinese has been reconstructed as * tʰak-bɛt or * Thak-bat. The same name also appears with the first character transcribed as or and with the second character transcribed as ; it has also been anglicized as T'o-pa. and as Toba. The name is also attested as Tufa (, Tūfà or Tūfǎ),. whose Middle Chinese pronunciation has been reconstructed as * tʰuwk-pjot, * T'ak-bwat, or * T'ak-buat. The name is also sometimes clarified as the Tuoba Xianbei (拓跋, Tuòbá Xiānbēi).
Alexander Vovin (2007) identifies the Tuoba language as a Mongolic language. On the other hand, Juha Janhunen proposed that the Tuoba might have spoken an Oghur languages. René Grousset, writing in the early 20th century, identifies the Tuoba as a Turkic peoples. According to Peter Boodberg, a 20th-century scholar, the Tuoba language was essentially Turkic with Mongolic admixture. Chen Sanping observed that the Tuoba language contains both elements. Liu Xueyao stated that the Tuoba may have had their own language which should not be assumed to be identical with any other known languages. Andrew Shimunek (2017) classifies Tuoba (Tabghach) as a "Serbi" (i.e., para-Mongolic) language. Shimunek's Serbi branch also consists of the Tuyuhun language and Khitan language languages.
The Northern Wei started to arrange for Chinese elites to marry daughters of the Xianbei Tuoba royal family in the 480s. More than fifty percent of Tuoba Xianbei princesses of the Northern Wei were married to southern Chinese men from the imperial families and aristocrats from southern China of the Southern dynasties who defected and moved north to join the Northern Wei. Some Chinese exiled royalty fled from southern China and defected to the Xianbei. Several daughters of the Xianbei Tuoba Emperor Xiaowen of Northern Wei were married to Chinese elites: the Han Chinese Liu Song royal married of the Northern Wei; married , a descendant of Jin dynasty (266–420) royalty; married ; and married Xiao Baoyin (萧宝夤), a member of Southern Qi royalty. Emperor Xiaozhuang of Northern Wei's sister the Shouyang Princess was wedded to Emperor Wu of Liang dynasty's son . One of Emperor Xiaowu of Northern Wei's sisters was married to Zhang Huan, a Han Chinese, according to the Book of Zhou. His name is given as Zhang Xin in the Book of Northern Qi and History of the Northern Dynasties which mention his marriage to a Xianbei princess of Wei. His personal name was changed due to a naming taboo on the emperor's name. He was the son of Zhang Qiong.
When the Eastern Jin dynasty ended, Northern Wei received the Han Chinese Jin prince as a refugee. A Northern Wei Princess married Sima Chuzhi, giving birth to Sima Jinlong (司馬金龍). Northern Liang Xiongnu King Juqu Mujian's daughter married Sima Jinlong.
Zhou (2014) obtained mitochondrial DNA analysis from 17 Tuoba Xianbei, which indicated that these specimens were, similarly, completely East Asian in their maternal origins, belonging to haplogroups D, C, B, A and haplogroup G.
The Orkhon inscriptions in the Orkhon Valley in modern-day Mongolia from the 8th century identify Tabgach as China.
In the 11th century text, the Dīwān Lughāt al-Turk ("Compendium of the languages of the Turks"), Turkic scholar Mahmud al-Kashgari, writing in Baghdad for an Arabic audience, describes Tawjach as one of the three components comprising China.
At the time of his writing, China's northern fringe was ruled by Khitan-led Liao dynasty while the remainder of China proper was ruled by the Northern Song dynasty. Arab sources used Sīn to refer to northern China and Māsīn to represent southern China. In his account, al-Kashgari refers to his homeland, around Kashgar, then part of the Kara-Khanid Khanate, as Lower China. The rulers of the Karakanids adopted Tamghaj Khan (Turkic: the Khan of China) in their title, and minted coins bearing this title. Much of the realm of the Karakhanids including Transoxania and the western Tarim Basin had been under the rule of the Tang dynasty prior to the Battle of Talas in 751, and the Karakhanids continued to identify with China, several centuries later.
The Tabgatch name for the political entity has also been translated into Chinese as Taohuashi (). This name has been used in China in recent years to promote ethnic unity.
Ethnicity and language
History
Genetics
Chieftains of Tuoba Clan 219–376 (as Princes of Dai 315–376)
神元 Shényuán 拓拔力微 Tuoba Liwei 219–277 Temple name: 始祖 Shízǔ 章 Zhāng 拓拔悉鹿 Tuoba Xilu 277–286 平 Píng 拓拔綽 Tuoba Chuo 286–293 思 Sī 拓拔弗 Tuoba Fu 293–294 昭 Zhāo 拓拔祿官 Tuoba Luguan 294–307 桓 Huán 拓拔猗㐌 Tuoba Yituo 295–305 穆 Mù 拓拔猗盧 Tuoba Yilu 295–316 None 拓拔普根 Tuoba Pugen 316 None 拓拔 TuòbáNo known given name survives. 316 平文 Píngwén 拓跋鬱律 Tuòbá Yùlǜ 316–321 惠 Huì 拓拔賀傉 Tuoba Heru 321–325 煬 Yáng 拓拔紇那 Tuoba Hena 325–329 and 335–337 烈 Liè 拓拔翳槐 Tuoba Yihuai 329–335 and 337–338 昭成 Zhaōchéng 拓拔什翼健 Tuoba Shiyijian 338–376 Regnal name: 建國 Jiànguó
Legacy
See also
Citations
Sources
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