Global Information Lookup Global Information

Luandi information


The Luandi (simplified Chinese: 挛鞮; traditional Chinese: 攣鞮; pinyin: Luándī; Wade–Giles: Luan-ti; alternatively written as Xulianti simplified Chinese: 虚连题; traditional Chinese: 虛連題; pinyin: Xūliántí) was the ruling clan of the ancient Xiongnu that flourished between 3rd century BCE to 4th century CE. The form Luandi comes from the Book of Han,[1] while the form Xulianti comes from the Book of Later Han.[2]

Lanhai Wei and Hui Li reconstruct the Old Chinese pronunciation of 挛鞮 as *lyuan-tlïγ, evolving from an earlier 虚连题 (*Hala-yundluγ), as a result of a historical sound shift involving the initial dropping of *h- by demonstrating its occurrence in several historical sources. Furthermore, the conjugation of the roots *hala, meaning colorful; *yund meaning horse, *-luγ as the participle suffix would have resulted in the semantic meaning "tribe with skewbald horses" in an early Turkic dialect, allowing it to be further identified with the historical Ulayundluğ tribe.[3] Moreover, the authors argue that the conquest of the same clan by the Xue in the 4th century CE eventually gave birth to the Xueyantuo.[3][4][5]

Anna Dybo on the other hand reconstructs the Old Chinese pronunciation of 攣鞮 as *r(h)wan-de and posits that the clan's name, among other lexemes, were borrowed from "one of the Eastern Middle Iranian languages which was similar to a kind of archaic Khotanese Saka", and thus comparable to Khotanese Saka runde, plural of rre from *rwant- "king".[6] There were four other noble tribes: Huyan, Xubu, Qiulin and Lan. The Huyan belonged to the dominating left wing, and the Lan and the Xubu belonged to the right wing.[7] A source also considered Lan and Luandi as two variants of the same word due to their phonetic similarity.[8] This was also attributed to the way the name Lan was used to identify Xiongnu's supreme rulers.[8]

The Luandi was a clan that held some of the highest positions in the Xiongnu society, including the title of chanyu within the Xiongnu confederacy. In the confederation, Luandi was a paternal dynastic tribe, Huyan was an initially maternal dynastic tribe, and Xubu was a subsequently maternal dynastic tribe. They were the three most prominent tribes ("Houses" in N. Bichurin)[9] in the Xiongnu.

The earliest prominent figure from the clan itself was perhaps their leader Touman. He would be succeeded by his son Modu Chanyu. Later on, the branch of the Luandi clan that founded the Han-Zhao dynasty changed their surname to Liu (劉), the surname of the Han dynasty emperors, while the branch that established the Hu Xia dynasty changed their surname to Helian (赫連).[citation needed]

  1. ^ Hanshu, chapter 94a, l. 7a
  2. ^ Hou Hanshu, chapter 89, l. 7b
  3. ^ a b Lanhai, Wei; Li, Hui. "About the names of Chanyu family and branch tribes of Xiongnu".
  4. ^ Wen-sheng, Bao (2010). "Name and Origin of Xueyantuo Tribe". Journal of Inner Mongolia University. S2CID 163563213.
  5. ^ "舊唐書/卷199下 - 维基文库,自由的图书馆". zh.wikisource.org (in Chinese). Retrieved 2022-09-28.
  6. ^ Dybo, Anna (2014), “Early contacts of Turks and problems of Proto-Turkic reconstruction”, in Tatarica, 2, p. 9
  7. ^ Taskin B.S., "Materials on Sünnu history", Science, Moscow, 1968, p. 130 (In Russian)
  8. ^ a b Wang, Penglin (2018). Linguistic Mysteries of Ethnonyms in Inner Asia. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books. p. 34. ISBN 9781498535274.
  9. ^ Bichurin N.Ya., "Collection of information on peoples in Central Asia in ancient times", vol. 1, Saint Petersburg, 1851, p. 15 ( note 1: Huyan and Xubu always were in marital relationship with Chanyu. Xubu had a post of the State Judge. The custom of taking for the Khan maidens only from the same houses also survived in the Chingis-khan's house.)

and 13 Related for: Luandi information

Request time (Page generated in 0.5419 seconds.)

Luandi

Last Update:

The Luandi (simplified Chinese: 挛鞮; traditional Chinese: 攣鞮; pinyin: Luándī; Wade–Giles: Luan-ti; alternatively written as Xulianti simplified Chinese:...

Word Count : 691

Modu Chanyu

Last Update:

"Account of the Xiongnu A" quote: "單于姓攣鞮氏"; tr: "The chanyu's surname is Luandi." Schuessler 2014, p. 277. Di Cosmo, Nicola (2002). Ancient China and its...

Word Count : 2894

Zhizhi

Last Update:

transcription was Luandi Hutuwusi (Chinese: 攣鞮呼屠吾斯; pinyin: Luándī Hūtúwúsī), i.e. one of the Worthy Princes of the East (of the Luandi clan). When Hutuwusi's...

Word Count : 927

Chanyu

Last Update:

title "Khagan" in 402 CE. The title was most famously used by the ruling Luandi clan of the Xiongnu during the Qin dynasty (221–206 BCE) and Han dynasty...

Word Count : 806

Qiulin

Last Update:

Northern Wei. Xiongnu included part of five tribes: Luandi, Xubu, Huyan, Lan and Qiulin. Luandi tribe produced rulers of Xiongnu, while other tribes...

Word Count : 130

Dynasties of China

Last Update:

Han-Zhao and Hu Xia The Han-Zhao and the Hu Xia were ruled by the House of Luandi (later renamed the House of Liu and the House of Helian respectively) The...

Word Count : 14205

Xubu

Last Update:

maternal dynastic tribe of the dynastic union with the paternal dynastic tribe Luandi. The traditional system of conjugal unions is a form of the nomadic exogamic...

Word Count : 534

Huyan

Last Update:

the upper stratum of the Xiongnu was made up of five aristocratic houses, Luandi (house of the Chanyu and the Tuqi King of the east and west), Huyan, Xubu...

Word Count : 557

Alat tribe

Last Update:

Turkic tribe known from Chinese annals. Alats were possibly identical to Luandi or Xueyantuo; or Khalajes, a Central Asian people known to medieval Arab...

Word Count : 2504

List of dynasties

Last Update:

dynasty (230 BC–AD 10) – Greco-Bactrian Kingdom and Indo-Greek Kingdom Luandi clan (209 BC–AD 93) – Xiongnu confederation (209 BC–AD 48) and Northern...

Word Count : 58098

Lyun

Last Update:

Nian (輦) Lyun, common the[clarification needed] Chinese Lian (surname) (連) Luandi (攣鞮), Base Family of Liu Yuan (劉淵) the Han Zhao Lyn (singer), South Korean...

Word Count : 88

Qubei

Last Update:

background. The Book of Wei indicates that he was a member of the ruling-Luandi clan of the Southern Xiongnu, with the History of the Northern Dynasties...

Word Count : 440

Liu Bao

Last Update:

dynasty during the Sixteen Kingdoms period. Liu Bao was a member of the Luandi clan as the son of the Southern Xiongnu chanyu, Yufuluo. When Yufuluo died...

Word Count : 899

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net