Chinese - Chinese-tw - ENGLISH - FRANGAIS
加为收藏 -设为首页
  Home | CEUA News | About CEUA | CEUA Statute | CEUA Leaders | CEUA Members | Contact US | About the WebSite  
   

    Ethnic minorities
    Exhibitions
    Laws and Policies
    Important Contacts
    Education
    Culture
    Member Forum
    NGOs
    The Chinese Government
    News
    Association
    Business in China

China Org
China National Women Federation
China Development Brief
State Intellectual Property Office of P.R.C
State Econ. and Trade Commission
Ministry of Commerce (P.R.C)
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of P.R.C
State Environmental Protection Administration SEPA
China Council for Promotion of International Trade
In the spotlight
The Top:   Second Hig...   Press Even...   Visit of E...   The China-...   Sport: Com...
     Culture
TheArtofChangjiaoMiaoPeople
日期:2008-03-27 19:20     点击:

The Changjiao Miao people, who live in the mountainous region of Western Guizhou Province, were formerly a closed nation, and these days their culture still preserves some of its pre-industrial components.

Despite the fact that the Changjiao Miao people have developed rapidly in the industrial era, they have maintained many facets of their pre-industrial, agricultural lifestyles. Because they do not write with characters, a lot of their history is recorded orally and through the usage of their own figures. The figures were developed over time and helped the Changjiao Miao people record their own culture more permanently, facilitating communication over the generations.

Although figures aid in the transmission of Changjiao Miao people's culture, their oral histories,including songs, mythological tales and poems, are more detailed and developed.

Figure symbols

Most of the Changjiao Miao people's decorative symbols were integrated into their clothing, rather than adorning their tools or architecture, as is common in many other societies. The reason for this lies in the fact that the Changjiao Miao people were formerly a nomadic society, meaning that accumulating a large number of tools or constructing permanent buildings would have been pointless, since these things would have had to be left behind when the people moved.

Clothing was decorated as a way to preserve the people's history, in a format that was portable, as clothing would be taken when the group moved. Various symbols had different meanings, such as a square, which represented a field that had been ploughed; a stripe, which stood for a river that had been crossed; and various depictions of food they had eaten and tools they had used. These representations allowed the group to visibly wear the symbols of their common history and outlook on the world.

Embroidery was a skill passed down from mothers to their young daughters, who were typically 6 years old when they started learning the craft. The people made most of their clothes themselves and the symbols were a medium for the communication of their world views. Modernization has meant that the traditional meanings of some of these symbols has been forgotten.

Quick links

中国人民对外友好协会

中国欧盟友好协会

中国东盟友好协会

中国阿盟友好协会

中韩友好协会

欧盟代表团

欧盟研究中心项目

阿拉伯信息交流中心

 

Copyright © 2004 ceua.org All rights reserved 中国欧盟协会 版权所有
经营许可证:京ICP证050181号 备案序号:京ICP备05004365号
服务电话:(+8610) 65060955