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They think CCP is selling Han's interests to western countries
Most Han nationalists admire Hitler.
But thousands years before Hitler, in China's history, there was a leader much better than Hitler in terms of nationalism
His name is Ran Min
Ran Min (simplified Chinese: 冉闵; traditional Chinese: 冉閔; pinyin: Rǎn Mǐn; died 352),
was a military leader during the era of Sixteen Kingdoms in China and the only emperor of the short-lived state Ran Wei (冉魏). Ran (冉) is an uncommon Chinese family name. He was known for committing the genocide of the Jie people under Later Zhao.
Ran Min is now mostly known for his order to execute all of the Wu Hu, particularly the Jie.
Five Barbarians (Wu Hu):
The Uprising of the Five Barbarians (Chinese: 五胡亂華; pinyin: Wǔhú luànhuá; literally: "Five Barbarians throw China into disorder") refers to a series of uprisings between 304 and 316 by non-Han Chinese peoples living in North China against the Jin dynasty (265–420).
The uprisings helped topple Emperor Huai of Jin in Luoyang and ended the Western Jin dynasty.
Rulers from five minority ethnic groups, the Xiongnu (Huns), Xianbei, Jie, Qiang and Di, then established a series of independent kingdoms in northern China. This period of Chinese history, known as the Sixteen Kingdoms, (五胡十六國, 'sixteen kingdoms of the five barbarians')
Jie people
The Jié (Chinese: 羯; Wade–Giles: Chieh; Middle Chinese: [ki̯at][1]:246) were members of a small tribe in Northern China in the 4th century CE. Chinese sources state that the Jie originated among the Yuezhi. Under Shi Le they established the Later Zhao state.
The Jie were completely exterminated by Ran Min in the Wei–Jie war following the fall of the Later Zhao.
In 319, Jie general Shi Le established the state of Later Zhao in northern China, which supplanted the Xiongnu-led Han Zhao (304-329) state. However, the Later Zhao state collapsed in 351. In the period between 350 and 352, during the Wei-Jie war, General Ran Min ordered the complete extermination of the Jie, and their Europoid features (high noses and full beards) led to large numbers being killed.
According to the Book of Jin, the ancestors of Shi Le, the founder of Later Zhao, were a separate tribe of Xiongnu known as Qiāngqú (羌渠).[14] Pulleyblank identified Qiangqu with Kangju, who might be Tocharian in origin.:247 The Jie have been traced to the Little Yuezhi, who remained in China as subjects of the Xiongnu.
Some have linked the Jie with the Sogdians, and suggest that the family name of Shi from Jie who ruled the Later Zhao state originated in the Sogdian statelet of Tashkent, which was later also known as the Kingdom of Shi.
Some historians conjecture the Jie to have been be a medieval tribe related to the modern Kets
Wei–Jie war
The Wei–Jie war was a conflict in North China in 350. Following the fall of the ethnic-Jie Later Zhao regime in 350 by the Chinese state of Ran Wei, tensions were high.
The Jie people, who had formed the Later Zhao Dynasty, did not accept Ran Min's rule and rose against him, and they were joined by many other five barbarian nations. The resulting war was a decisive victory for Ran Min, who then proceeded to issue his famous "extermination order", which resulted in the extermination of virtually all of the Jie and most of the Wu Hu.
Following the victory at Xiangguo, Ran Min's forces proceeded northwards and defeated two Later Zhao border armies. Wherever he captured territory from the rebels, Ran Min's forces massacred any Wu Hu living there, burying them in large pits. Some 100,000 were reputedly killed in this way. Thousands of Wu Hu fled China or were killed.
The Jie were particularly hard hit; they were virtually completely wiped out
But after the uprising of Wu hu and sixteen kingdom period from the year of 304 to the year of 440 , a lot of nomads people from central Asia and Northern Asia integrated into China and becomes many today's northern Han Chinese people's ancestors.
Today's many northern Han Chinese actually may have bloodlines from Xiongnu, Jie, and other Wu hu people.
Most Han nationalists admire Hitler.
But thousands years before Hitler, in China's history, there was a leader much better than Hitler in terms of nationalism
His name is Ran Min
Ran Min (simplified Chinese: 冉闵; traditional Chinese: 冉閔; pinyin: Rǎn Mǐn; died 352),
was a military leader during the era of Sixteen Kingdoms in China and the only emperor of the short-lived state Ran Wei (冉魏). Ran (冉) is an uncommon Chinese family name. He was known for committing the genocide of the Jie people under Later Zhao.
Ran Min is now mostly known for his order to execute all of the Wu Hu, particularly the Jie.
Five Barbarians (Wu Hu):
The Uprising of the Five Barbarians (Chinese: 五胡亂華; pinyin: Wǔhú luànhuá; literally: "Five Barbarians throw China into disorder") refers to a series of uprisings between 304 and 316 by non-Han Chinese peoples living in North China against the Jin dynasty (265–420).
The uprisings helped topple Emperor Huai of Jin in Luoyang and ended the Western Jin dynasty.
Rulers from five minority ethnic groups, the Xiongnu (Huns), Xianbei, Jie, Qiang and Di, then established a series of independent kingdoms in northern China. This period of Chinese history, known as the Sixteen Kingdoms, (五胡十六國, 'sixteen kingdoms of the five barbarians')
Jie people
The Jié (Chinese: 羯; Wade–Giles: Chieh; Middle Chinese: [ki̯at][1]:246) were members of a small tribe in Northern China in the 4th century CE. Chinese sources state that the Jie originated among the Yuezhi. Under Shi Le they established the Later Zhao state.
The Jie were completely exterminated by Ran Min in the Wei–Jie war following the fall of the Later Zhao.
In 319, Jie general Shi Le established the state of Later Zhao in northern China, which supplanted the Xiongnu-led Han Zhao (304-329) state. However, the Later Zhao state collapsed in 351. In the period between 350 and 352, during the Wei-Jie war, General Ran Min ordered the complete extermination of the Jie, and their Europoid features (high noses and full beards) led to large numbers being killed.
According to the Book of Jin, the ancestors of Shi Le, the founder of Later Zhao, were a separate tribe of Xiongnu known as Qiāngqú (羌渠).[14] Pulleyblank identified Qiangqu with Kangju, who might be Tocharian in origin.:247 The Jie have been traced to the Little Yuezhi, who remained in China as subjects of the Xiongnu.
Some have linked the Jie with the Sogdians, and suggest that the family name of Shi from Jie who ruled the Later Zhao state originated in the Sogdian statelet of Tashkent, which was later also known as the Kingdom of Shi.
Some historians conjecture the Jie to have been be a medieval tribe related to the modern Kets
Wei–Jie war
The Wei–Jie war was a conflict in North China in 350. Following the fall of the ethnic-Jie Later Zhao regime in 350 by the Chinese state of Ran Wei, tensions were high.
The Jie people, who had formed the Later Zhao Dynasty, did not accept Ran Min's rule and rose against him, and they were joined by many other five barbarian nations. The resulting war was a decisive victory for Ran Min, who then proceeded to issue his famous "extermination order", which resulted in the extermination of virtually all of the Jie and most of the Wu Hu.
Following the victory at Xiangguo, Ran Min's forces proceeded northwards and defeated two Later Zhao border armies. Wherever he captured territory from the rebels, Ran Min's forces massacred any Wu Hu living there, burying them in large pits. Some 100,000 were reputedly killed in this way. Thousands of Wu Hu fled China or were killed.
The Jie were particularly hard hit; they were virtually completely wiped out
But after the uprising of Wu hu and sixteen kingdom period from the year of 304 to the year of 440 , a lot of nomads people from central Asia and Northern Asia integrated into China and becomes many today's northern Han Chinese people's ancestors.
Today's many northern Han Chinese actually may have bloodlines from Xiongnu, Jie, and other Wu hu people.