typeface
large
in
Small
Turn off the lights
Previous bookshelf directory Bookmark Next

206【People in the Mountains】

Ganzhou.

Chen Maosheng first went to see Fei Ruhe, then went to see the prefect Liu Anfeng, and finally summoned the missionary officer and the backbone of the farmers' association.

The news I got is very troublesome. Hakka is not that easy to learn!

The Hakka dialects in the southern Jiangxi region alone can be roughly divided into three types. Although they can communicate with each other, they are very unfriendly to outsiders who have just started learning.

"In charge of missionary work," said Li Xiaoyi, who is in charge of missionary work in Ganzhou, "we should learn the Hakka language, but we must also recruit local Hakkas. Within one or two years, the missionary work in southern Gansu and the distribution of land will have to be

We can make progress by relying on the Hakka people. Some of the Hakka people can already speak Jiangxi dialect, and they can also read and write."

Chen Maosheng asked: "In addition to wealthy tenants and low-level tenants, are there other small Hakka landowners and homesteaders in Southern Jiangxi?"

"Yes, and there are quite a lot of them," Li Xiaoyi said. "I would like to suggest that some small Hakka landowners should not divide their fields for the time being, even if they exceed one hundred acres."

"Why is that so?" Chen Maosheng frowned.

Li Xiaoyi said: "I have discovered a very unexpected phenomenon after visiting the countryside. In many villages, the whole village is full of Hakka people. Especially those remote villages, they have moved from Fujian and Guangdong for decades, and they have earned their property entirely by clearing wasteland.

.These lands are relatively barren. They used to be barren mountains and ridges. They carved them out with hoeing and hoeing, and there was no attempt to exploit the tenants."

Well, this is different from what Wei Jiaju said. It seems that the situation in Nangan is more complicated than imagined.

"Are there any big landowners in these remote villages?" Chen Maosheng asked.

Li Xiaoyi shook his head and said: "There are no big landowners. They migrated from Fujian and Guangdong, and the roads were rough and the mountains and rivers were poor. It only took a hundred years to open up wasteland. How can there be any big landowners? Most of the remote villages in the mountains are homesteaders and small landowners, and there is no such thing as landowners."

It is necessary to divide the land. Moreover, there are very few landowners with an area of ​​more than 100 acres, and they can almost be ignored."

Chen Maosheng said: "I have to send someone to ask the general town for instructions."

After chatting with the missionary officer, Chen Maosheng went to see Zou Weilian and Liu Huan again.

In the original time and space, Zou Weilian should have died of illness last year. He made great achievements in Fujian, but was falsely accused by Wen Tiren and dismissed from office. After Wen Tiren fell, Emperor Chongzhen remembered him, and when he inquired, he found that Wen Tiren had passed away.

Many ministers are like this. They live a good life without resigning from office, but they die of illness within a year or two after resigning and returning home.

The same was true for Wen Tiren, who was active and lively when he was in court, but died of illness the year after he was dismissed from office.

At least now it seems that Zou Weilian is free from illness and pain, and can live for at least ten or eight years.

Zou Liangyi introduced: "Father, this is Mr. Chen Maosheng, the missionary secretary."

"Mr. Zou, nice to meet you!" Chen Maosheng said with cupped hands.

Zou Weilian raised his hand to return the salute, his movements were a little forced, and his smile was also a little forced.

Chen Maosheng raised his hand again and said, "I have met Mr. Liu."

"Nice to meet you." Liu Huan was very natural and his attitude was ambiguous. He never said whether he was willing to join him or not.

The only trace left by Liu Huan, the magistrate of Ganzhou in the Ming Dynasty, in historical materials is the inscription on the plaque of Kongtong Temple in Ganzhou.

While drinking tea and chatting, Zou Weilian was always in a low mood.

Finally, Chen Maosheng asked: "I would like to ask you two gentlemen, what is the situation of the Hakka people in southern Jiangxi?"

Zou Weilian pointed at Liu Huan: "You should ask him about this."

Liu Huan smiled and said: "I am not talented. I am originally from Guangdong and I am a Hakka."

Chen Maosheng said quickly: "Please give me some advice, Mr. Liu."

Liu Huan recounted: "The migration of Hakkas to the south began in the Jin Dynasty. Many of the Hakkas in southern Jiangxi moved from Fujian and Guangdong in the late Song Dynasty. After the founding of the Ming Dynasty, a large number of Hakkas in southern Jiangxi moved back to Fujian and Guangdong.

"

"Why did they move back in the past hundred years?" Chen Maosheng asked.

Liu Huan explained: "During the Jiajing period, Japanese pirates attacked and a large number of coastal people moved inland, resulting in more people and less land in eastern Guangdong and western Fujian. Coincidentally, due to war in southern Jiangxi, a large number of people were dispersed. The Hakka people in eastern Guangdong and western Fujian

, so they moved in groups to southern Gansu."

There is another situation that Wei Jiaju has not explained clearly.

After Wang Yangming and other ministers suppressed the bandits, especially the invasion of foreign soldiers from other provinces, many villages in southern Jiangxi were deserted, and landowners fled to settle in counties.

Hakkas moved in from whole villages, and some of them became rich as tenants, and mainly opposed customers, forming today's wealthy tenants. After hundreds of years of development, many wealthy tenants have turned into large landowners, so there are also conflicts between landlords and tenants among the Hakkas.

Some of the Hakkas who immigrated during the middle and late Jiajing period became tenant farmers, while more went to open up wasteland and cultivate land and became small landowners and self-cultivators.

The conflict between natives and guests at this time was actually not particularly intense, because until the Qianlong period, Hakkas from Fujian and Guangdong had been moving back to southern Jiangxi.

As for the reason why a large number of Hakka people moved to Jiangxi in the early Qing Dynasty, it was certainly caused by the war.

The natives of Southern Jiangxi and the Hakkas, landlords and tenants put aside their conflicts and fought against the Qing Dynasty. Take Shangyou County as an example. The anti-Qing movement lasted until the Kangxi period, and the people here were almost wiped out!

According to the "Shangyou County Chronicle": "From the 13th year of Kangxi to the present (Qianlong), the people have been extinct, the four walls are empty, and the lonely city is a barren mountain."

Therefore, after the middle and late Qing Dynasty, more and more Hakkas moved in, and it was then that the conflict between natives and Hakkas reached its peak.

At the end of the Ming Dynasty, many Hakka people in southern Jiangxi were still working hard to get rich and reclaiming wasteland deeper into the mountains.

And it caused a series of environmental problems. They cut down forests, cut rocks and mined rocks, causing serious water and soil erosion.

Liu Huan reminded: "There are many mountains in southern Jiangxi but little land. If you just open up the mountains, you won't be able to grow much food. Instead, after the rains, landslides occur frequently. When you govern southern Jiangxi, you should order the mountain people to plant more tobacco, camellia oleifera, tung oil, and lacquer trees."

Waiting for crops.”

"I've learned a lesson," Chen Maosheng said with his hands in hand.

In Jiangxi at the end of the Ming Dynasty, the Hakka people developed barbarically and opened up wasteland everywhere to grow food, which gave the government a constant headache.

However, the Hakka people did not abide by the government's ban. It was not until disasters occurred frequently that they paid attention to it, thus forming an economic zone for camellia oleifera, tung oil, and tobacco in southern Jiangxi, using artificial forests to replace natural mountain forests.

Zou Weilian did not want to serve Zhao Han, but he could not serve as an official in the Ming Dynasty, so he went to teach in Ji'an Prefecture.

However, Liu Huan, the prefect of Ganzhou in the Ming Dynasty, changed his name to Liu Yu and stayed, and was specially hired by Chen Maosheng as an aide.

As an official of the Ming Dynasty, Liu Huan could not do anything and could not implement policies. He could only chant scriptures and study Buddhism all day long.

After being hired by Chen Maosheng, I felt like I had a second life, and I offered more than ten suggestions that month.

This man could also speak Hakka and became Chen Maosheng's portable translator.

Zhao Han also gave a reply. If the Hakka people in remote villages really get rich by hard work and reclaiming wasteland, each person can reserve one hundred acres of land. However, the upper limit of one hundred acres must not be exceeded, and families with more than ten people must

Divide the family and property!

Because of Liu Huan's help, Chen Maosheng recruited many local poor people into the missionary team, and the work of dividing the fields around Ganzhou City went very smoothly.

But after entering the mountainous area, you will encounter many difficulties immediately.

Those Hakka people did not want to settle down at all. They had always been in a state of refugees, and they banded together to resist the imperial tax collection.

To them, Ming Dynasty was the imperial court, and Zhao Han was also the imperial court.

The peasant association was unable to carry out its work because they owned their own land and obtained it from land reclamation, so they did not need Zhao Han's favor at all.

what to do?

To put it crudely, it would be to directly kill people to establish authority and use force to forcefully establish household registers, but this seems to conflict with the Datong theory.

Chen Maosheng can only continue to ask Zhao Han for instructions, and policy adjustments must be approved.

Zhao Han's reply was very direct. Since the Hakkas in the mountains refused to settle in the government and pay taxes to the government, then they did not belong to the people under the rule.

All trade can be cut off. Anyone who buys salt must show their household registration. If a private salt dealer is caught, he will be beheaded immediately and the whole family will sit together! If a salt shop is found selling salt to an homeless person, he will be severely fined and the salt will be permanently cancelled.

Sales qualifications.

Merchants are prohibited from purchasing any goods in the mountains and will be severely fined if discovered!

In the market at the foot of the mountain, people are regularly patrolled and the household registrations are randomly checked. Once a person is found to have no household registration, he is immediately arrested and made into a slave laborer, and the family members are asked to spend their own money to redeem them.

It seems like tyranny, but compared to directly sending troops, it already seems very benevolent.

Who made those mountain people refuse to even register for residence?

The civil affairs work in the southern Jiangxi area will probably last two or three years, and will most likely lead to riots, so troops must be stationed for a long time.

"well!"

Zhao Han put down the letter sent by Chen Maosheng and felt a pain in his head.

This is the first time since the incident that rural work has encountered setbacks. Zhao Han even agreed not to divide the land of the mountain people, allowing them to keep one hundred acres of land, but they still refused to surrender and just wanted to live in the mountains for generations.

Be a "savage".

Zhao Han tried to analyze the main contradiction and found it ridiculous.

The main contradiction is that the Hakka people who have moved into the mountains to reclaim wasteland have only moved to Jiangxi for a few decades. Although their lives are very difficult, their lives are relatively stable. Moreover, they can continue to reclaim wasteland. For the time being, there is no contradiction between man and land, and there is no class oppression.

.Zhao Han's rule over them is the greatest oppression and the biggest contradiction. They are unwilling to pay taxes to Zhao Han!

However, there are mountains everywhere in southern Jiangxi, and there are mountain people everywhere.

Even if the missionary officers learn the Hakka language, and even if Hakkas join the missionary team, they can only effectively rule in the mountainous areas near the city and the flat areas along the river for the time being.

In the mountains, we can't control it for the time being.

No wonder Southern Gansu gave the Ming Dynasty a headache, and no wonder Southern Gansu left the Qing Dynasty helpless. The situation here is too complicated.

We cannot just rely on economic sanctions, we must also induce them with benefits and show them kindness. Only in this way can we achieve results by combining kindness and force.

After Zhao Han thought carefully, he wrote another letter to Chen Maosheng, which read: Select mountain residents who are willing to settle down, issue them a license, and allow them to buy fifty kilograms of salt per month and sell two hundred kilograms of mountain goods every month.

If these people get rich, it depends on whether other mountain people can sit still!

Blind sanctions will only make the mountain people share the same hatred, and they must be divided internally.

Southern Gansu must be managed well, because Zhao Han's development route is to occupy the entire territory of Jiangxi and then capture Fujian and Guangdong, and Southern Gansu is a must-pass area connecting Fujian and Guangdong.

This chapter has been completed!
Previous Bookshelf directory Bookmark Next