The Chuge (Chinese: 屠各; pinyin: Chúgè; Wade–Giles: Ch'u-ko), also known as Xiuchuge (Chinese: 休屠各; pinyin: Xiūchúgè; Wade–Giles: Hsiu-ch'u-ko) or Xiuchu (Chinese: 休屠; pinyin: Xiūchú; Wade–Giles: Hsiu-ch'u) were a Xiongnu tribe and later ethnic group that lived in ancient China. They were described as the most influential among the Xiongnu tribes that resettled within the Great Wall, and a branch of them, the Liu clan, founded the Han-Zhao dynasty in 304 AD during the Sixteen Kingdoms period. The Chuge's influence were as such that by the 4th century, they were seen as a distinct ethnic group from the rest of the Xiongnu, and they continued to appear in history until the late Northern Wei period of the 6th century. Their name can also be transcribed as Tuge, Xiutuge, and Xiutu.

History

Origins and theories

According to the Book of Jin, the Chuge were one of the nineteen recorded Xiongnu tribes that resettled in northern China. By the Jin dynasty period, they rose to be the most honored and prestigious among the Xiongnu, and members of the Chuge were elected by the tribes to become chanyus.[1] They were spread out in the north and most prevalent in the areas around modern-day Shanxi and eastern Gansu.

One common theory among modern Chinese historians is that the Chuge were descendants of the Xiutu (休屠), also transcribed as Xiuchu, who lived around Wuwei in the Hexi Corridor and were among the earliest of the Xiongnu to surrender to the Han dynasty in 121 BC. The Xiuchu were relocated into five commanderies, namely Longxi, Beidi, Shang, Shuofang and Yunzhong. The tribes that lived around Longxi retained the "Xiuchu" name, while those living in the commanderies of Bing province (present-day Shanxi) eventually added the "ge" (各) suffix, perhaps as a result of a language habit of the regional dialect at the time. They thus became known as the "Xiuchuge" (休屠各), and their name was then shortened to "Chuge" (屠各).[2][3][4]

End of the Han dynasty

The Xiuchuge people rose to power during the late-2nd century, after the Northern Xiongnu of the steppe had been defeated and were being supplanted by the Xianbei, and when the Southern Xiongnu, a vassal state of the Han, was experiencing a steady decline. The Xiuchuge were first mentioned in 156 rebelling with the Wuhuan of Shuofang Commandery against the Han dynasty, but were defeated by the Han general, Zhang Huan. They later acted as auxiliaries for the Han general, Xia Yu who attacked the marauding Xianbei at Beidi Commandery in 174.

In 188 AD, the Xiuchuge rebelled in Bing and killed the Han provincial inspector, Zhang Yi (張懿). While their rebellion was happening, a group within the Southern Xiongnu were disgruntled with the chanyu, Qiangqu, who was sending their people as soldiers to help the Han in quelling revolts elsewhere. The rebellious group allied themselves with the Xiuchuge and killed Qiangqu. Though the Han court appointed Qiangqu's son, Yufuluo as the new chanyu, the Xiuchuge and their allies rejected him, forcing Yufuluo into exile and electing a marquis from the Xubu clan in his place.

After the marquis of Xubu's death, the chanyu position was abolished and a nominal king was installed instead in the rebel's territory, although Yufuluo still claimed to hold the title. The Southern Xiongnu state began to disintegrate, and while the other tribes distanced themselves from the chaos of the ongoing Han civil war, the Xiuchuge or Chuge were drawn into the conflicts instead. In the 190s, the Chuge allied with Zhang Yan of the Heishan bandits, who controlled the Taihang Mountains, and they later killed Gongsun Xu (公孫續), the son of the defeated Jizhou warlord, Gongsun Zan.[1]

The Chuge eventually retreated west as Cao Cao and Yuan Shao established control in the north. In 214, they were attacked and defeated at Gaoping County (高平縣; present-day Guyuan, Ningxia) by Cao Cao's general Xiahou Yuan. In 216, Huchuquan, Yufuluo's brother and successor, was detained by Cao Cao at Ye while the last vestiges of the Southern Xiongnu in Bing province were reorganized into the Five Divisions (五陪) in Taiyuan Commandery.

Sixteen Kingdoms and Northern dynasties

In the 250s, the Five Divisions were unified by one of their leaders, Liu Bao before being forced to divide again by the Cao Wei and Western Jin courts. In 304, Bao's son, Liu Yuan led the Southern Xiongnu to rebel against the Jin and founded the Han-Zhao dynasty, one of the first of the Sixteen Kingdoms. Several passages in records refer to Liu Yuan and his family members as "Chuge", but at the same time, he claimed to be the grandson of Yufuluo and a direct descendant of the Southern Xiongnu chanyus, who were of the Luandi clan. Modern scholars such as Tang Changru have cast their doubt on Liu Yuan's lineage from the Southern Xiongnu chanyus and believe it to be a fabrication for legitimacy.[1][5][6]

Aside from the Liu clan of Han-Zhao, there were many recorded Chuge leaders during the Sixteen Kingdoms and as far as the late Northern Wei period. The Chuge outlasted most of their Xiongnu counterparts and became a major ethnic group. They had various Chinese surnames such as Bi (畢), Zhang (張), Li (李), Guo (郭), Dong (董), Cheng (成) and Huang (黃). Wang Zhuo, a general notable for serving five different dynasties, was a Xiuchu from Qin province in the northwest, and his sons, Wang Tong and Wang Guang became officials for the Former Qin dynasty. The Chuge eventually became subjects of the Northern Wei dynasty and were mentioned during Northern Zhou dynasty in the late 6th-century before disappearing from history, presumably assimilating into the rest of Chinese society.[6]

References

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