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Representations and Uses of Yue Identity along the Southern Frontier of the Han, CA. 200–111 B.C.E.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 August 2014

Abstract

Through a detailed comparison of several great figures of the Southern Yue empire and kingdom, I highlight different types of interactions between Southern Yue and the Han imperial state. I examine the construction of elite identity in an attempt to measure how rulers of the Southern Yue viewed their own relationships to Yue culture and the people over whom they ruled. Rather than assume a simple model of sinicization, I present culture change and identity construction as complex processes contingent upon changing local conditions and international relations, especially with respect to how Southern Yue kings perceived the benefits of belonging to or resisting the Han imperial state. Moreover, I underscore instances in which individuals appropriated or implicitly accepted the values and political tools associated with local or foreign cultures, paying heed to their reasons for choosing certain values and tools over others.

通過對幾位南越國著名人物的細致分析對比,我突出南越和漢之間不 同種類的互動 。 我考察精英身份的建立以衡量南越的统治者如何看待 他們與越文化和被統治者的關係 。 我根據變化着的當地情况和國際關 係 , 展現了文化變遷和身份構建的復染過程 , 特别是涉及南越王對歸 順或者反抗漢朝的利害關係的判斷 , 而不是簡單地假設一個中國化的 模式 。 此外 , 我强調個人使用或暗中接受與當地或外域文化有關的加 價值觀和政治工具的案例 , 分析他們選擇某種價值觀和政治工具而非 其他的的原因 。

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Study of Early China 2011

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References

A version of this paper was given at the Association for Asian Studies, Atlanta, April 4–7, 2008; and also at the Critical Han Studies Conference and Workshop, Stanford University, Palo Alto, California; April 24–27, 2008. I would like to thank Magnus Fiskesjö, Michael Puett, and David Schaberg for their helpful comments as discussants on those panels. Robin Yates and the two anonymous reviewers for Early China also provided extremely constructive advice and remarks, for which I am grateful.

1. Note that the Han shu accounts are often virtually identical to those found in the Shi ji, with some extra information at times. When there are differences meriting comment, I shall duly note them.

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24. Because I will be addressing many different members of the same Zhao clan, I conveniently refer to each member not by the surname Zhao but by his individual name. For Zhao Tuo, I follow the Shi ji practice of simplifying his name to “Tuo.” For Lü Jia, I revert back to the practice of referring to him by surname only.

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54. It is worth noting that Burton Watson translates, and hence, understands this passage in a different way, depicting Zhao Tuo as saying, “[Empress Lü] is discriminating against me, treating me as one of the barbarians” Watson, Burton, Records of the Grand Historian of China, Vol. II: The Age of Emperor Wu 140 to Circa 100 B.C. (New York: Columbia University Press, 1961), 240Google Scholar. Shi ji, 113.2969Google Scholar.

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56. For a skeptic who claims the occupant to be Zhao Hu's father (and Zhao Tuo's son), Zhao Mei 趙昧, see Haigui, Wu 吳海貴, “Xianggang Nanyue wang mu zhu xin kao” 象崗南越王墓主新考, Kaogu Wenwu 考古輿文物 (2000), 3Google Scholar.

57. Presuming the tomb occupant is Hu, then some controversy ensues, as archaeological sources suggest the occupant was called Mo 眜, rather than Hu. The three main explanations for the discrepancy between the textual and archaeological sources are as follows: 1) “Hu” was a clerical error in the received texts, 2) “Hu” was the king's Han name, while “Mo” was his local, Yue name, and 3) “Hu” and “Mo” were both his names, and constituted one of many possible names for any given individual according to Yue custom, which might have had even more complicated methods of naming people than the customary ming 名 (name), zi 字 (style-name), and hao 號 (honorific-name) of the Central States region. See Guangzhou shi wenwu guanli weiyuanhui, et al., Xi-Han Nanyue wang mu 西漢南越王墓, 2 vols. (Beijing: Wenwu, 1991), 322Google Scholar.

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71. Handan was located in the former state of Zhao 趙, in Northern China, modern-day Hebei Province.

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84. Shi ji, 113.2972Google Scholar.

85. Shi ji, 113.2972Google Scholar. The extent to which “Yue ren” refers to the common people is unclear and is complicated by the simultaneous mention of the “masses.” It appears that Yue support for Lü extended beyond the elite leadership into the population somewhat.

86. Sima's account but vaguely refers here to the “Yue,” not “Yue people.” In this instance, the context seems to imply ordinary “Yue people,” as opposed to Lü Jia's military men, in order for the ruse to have been convincing to the Han soldiers.

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90. The Shi ji informs us that from that moment on, the Yue abandoned their old laws of branding and cutting off the noses of those convicted of certain crimes.

91. Such an identification of the Queen Dowager as a person from the “Central States” (zhong guo ren 中國人), and not the Han state or people, is intriguing. It suggests that a person's identity could be associated with historical, geographic regions, and not necessarily the current Empire or their specific hometown.

92. Shi ji, 113.2975Google Scholar. These would have been beneficiaries of Emperor Wudi's general amnesty. The Han shu states that all the Han generals led convicts. Han shu, 6.186Google Scholar–87.

93. Archaeological remains of the “Nanyue Palace” in former Panyu, now in downtown Guangzhou City, corroborate historical accounts of the burning of the city. See Allard, , “Frontiers and Boundaries,” 239Google Scholar. The flames had been so ferocious that they even burnt the stone sides of a canal. (Personal visit to the site, 5/2008.) See also Hongqi, Wu 吳宏岐, “Nanyue guo du Panyu cheng hui yu zhan huo kao shi” 南越國都番 禺城毁於戰火考實, Ji'nan xuebao 暨南學報, (2008), 5Google Scholar.

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95. Shi ji, 113.2976Google Scholar. The Han shu mentions a message from Han Wudi to the Xiongnu Shanyu 單于 shortly after his victory over Southern Yue, claiming that the “head of the King of Southern Yue already hangs from the northern Gate of the Han [Palace] 南越 王頭已縣於漢北闕矣.” Han shu, 6.189Google Scholar. If we are to take the emperor's words as more than an empty threat, then this could not have been the head of the king of Southern Yue (Lü Jia had previously murdered Zhao Xing) and was perhaps Lü Jia's head.

96. This says nothing of the persistence of Yue cultural values and practices at the local level. We know for certain that certain Yue ways continued to thrive throughout and beyond the Han, as there is evidence of later Han officials encountering and trying to change various Yue practices. See Hou Han shu 76, which describes the Chinese prefect, Xi Guang 錫光, and his policies of introducing Han-style marriage rites, the wearing of sandals and hats, and other rituals. Hou Han shu, 76.2457 and 76.2462. Cited in Taylor, , The Birth of Vietnam, 33Google Scholar. Yue political identity would also surface in waves throughout the Han, especially as evidenced in the rebellion by the Trung sisters from 41–44 C.E., which was quelled by Ma Yuan's successful expedition against it. Taylor, , The Birth of Vietnam, 3741Google Scholar.

97. A reviewer has rightfully noted that at least a non-negligible portion of the local elite forces had accepted the Zhao family as its rightful lords of the Southern Yue. Otherwise, it is difficult to explain why Lü Jia did not attempt to take the throne and assume Yue leadership after committing

98. Min, Liu 劉敏, “‘Kai guan’ ding lun—cong ‘Wendi xing xi’ kan Han-Yue guanxi” 開棺定論–––從文帝行璽看漢越關系, in Nanyueguo shiji yan tao hui, 26Google Scholar.