Buyantai

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born1791 (1791)
Died1880(1880-00-00) (aged 88–89)
EducationBeijing banner school
OccupationPolitician, military commander
Buyantai
Official portrait, 1837
Personal details
Born1791 (1791)
Died1880(1880-00-00) (aged 88–89)
EducationBeijing banner school
OccupationPolitician, military commander
Military service
Battles/warsAfaqi Khoja revolts

Buyantai (Mandarin Chinese: 布彥泰, Manchu: ᠪᡠᠶᠠᠨᡨᠠᡳ, Möllendorf: Buyantai; 1791–1880), courtesy name Ziqian, was a Manchu and Mongol official of the Qing Dynasty of China. He was from the Borjigit clan, and was part of the Plain Yellow Banner of the Manchu Eight Banners. He is perceived as one of the most competent and effective Qing governors during the reign of the Daoguang Emperor, due to his pragmatic governance, agricultural development, and astute personnel management in Xinjiang. He is known for his term in Ili as General of Ili, and his negotiations with Ivan Zakharov and Yegor Kovalevsky of the Russian Empire alongside Yishan in 1851 which resulted in the signature of the Treaty of Kulja.

Buyantai is also known for his close connection with Lin Zexu, a Han Chinese scholar and Qing official known for starting the First Opium War by burning 1,018 tons of opium in Humen. They met when Lin was exiled to Xinjiang in 1843.

Buyantai was part of the Borjigit (博尔济吉特氏; Bó'ěrjìjítè shì) clan and he and his family belonged to the Plain Yellow Banner (正黄旗; Xiāng Huáng Qí) of the Eight Banners of the Qing Dynasty. The Borjigit clan was seen as one of the most prestigious and powerful lineages of Inner Asia, as it was the clan of infamous Mongol leader Genghis Khan. Buyantai's Borjigit clan was incorporated into the Qing Dynasty through a strategic alliance between the Mongols and the Manchu people. During the rise of the Manchus under Nurhaci and Hong Taiji, the first and second emperors of the Later Jin Empire in the early 17th century, forming alliances with Mongol tribes was a strategic imperative to avoid a two-front war against the Ming dynasty and the Mongols. The Manchu Aisin Gioro clan actively intermarried with Buyantai's Borjigit nobility to secure this alliance.[1]

Official banner of the Plain Yellow Banner

According to the Secret History of the Mongols, the first Mongol was born from the union of a blue-grey wolf and a fallow doe. Their 11th generation descendent, Alan Gua, was impregnated by a ray of light and gave birth to five sons, the youngest being Bodonchar Munkhag, progenitor of the Borjigids. According to Rashid al-Din Hamadani, many of the older Mongolian tribes were founded by members of the Borjigin clan, including the Barlas, Urud, Manghud, Taichiud, Chonos, and Kiyat. Bodonchar's descendant Khabul Khan founded the Khamag Mongol confederation around 1131. His great-grandson Temüjin ruled the Khamag Mongol and unified the other Mongol tribes under him. He was declared Genghis Khan in 1206, thus establishing the Mongol Empire. His descendants are the Chinggisids.[2][3][4]

The etymology of the word Borjigin is uncertain. Members of the Borjigin clan ruled over the Mongol Empire, dominating large lands stretching from Java to Iran and from Mainland Southeast Asia to Novgorod in northwestern Russia.[5] Many of the ruling dynasties that took power following the disintegration of the Mongol Empire were of Chinggisid, and thus Borjigid, ancestry. These included the Chobanids, the Jalayirid Sultanate, the Barlas, the Manghud, the Khongirad, and the Oirats. In 1368, the Borjigid Yuan dynasty of China was overthrown by the Ming dynasty. Members of this family continued to rule over north China and the Mongolian Plateau into the 17th century as the Northern Yuan. Descendants of Genghis Khan's brothers Qasar and Belgutei surrendered to the Ming in the 1380s. By 1470, the Borjigids' power had been severely weakened, and the Mongolian Plateau was on the verge of chaos.[6][7]

Early life

Plaque at the Forbidden City in Beijing, in both Mandarin Chinese (left, 乾清門; qián qīng mén) and Manchu (right, kiyan cing men)

Buyantai was born in 1791, during the final years of the Qianlong Emperor's reign and the end of the High-Qing Period, a period of financial stability and military strength for the Qing.[8] Being a child of a banner, Buyantai's education was bilingual and bicultural.

The Qing Dynasty had established official banner schools in Beijing, which Buyantai attended. During his early years, Buyantai became fluent in Manchu as it was the national language of the Qing Dynasty, and the language was important for communication within the banner system and for handling government documents in the future. Fluency was also essential for handling military reports and confidential edicts.[9] He consistently practiced translating text from Mandarin Chinese to Manchu, and he was well-educated in discipline, learning archery and horsemanship. Under private tutors, Buyantai studied the Four Books and Five Classics of Confucianism, an important aspect of traditional Chinese education.[10]

In his early career, Buyantai also had a Yin privilege, a system of where sons of high-ranking Qing officials were granted official titles or direct access to government posts by virtue of their father's status and service, as Buyantai was a young nobleman and part of a banner. This also meant that Buyantai did not need to take the standard Imperial examination, and could instead enter the Qing bureaucracy automatically.[11]

Early career

Appointments in Ili

References

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