There was a lot of noise in the book review section.

There was a lot of noise in the book review section. I have two attitudes.

First, there is no human right to watch piracy.

Second, the plot I wrote is basically historical.

I am a Hanist, and I think Han culture is the best in the world. But I also think that there are too many angry and bad things in the history of the Han family, so I don't mind exposing the scars of my own people.

And for the Manchus, I would like to clarify a fact first.

After the Manchu Qing Dynasty entered the customs, he compiled the "Eight Banners Compilation and Examination of Men's Book", and his own statistics on the population showed that the number of Manchu men was less than 60,000. This is not my nonsense, this is the data compiled by the Manchus themselves about 400 years ago. Pay attention to the slaves and what Han Eight Banners, the Eight Banners of the Meng are not Manchurian.

By the end of the Qing Dynasty, the Manchus surveyed their own population. Beijing Municipal Chronicles. According to the Civil Affairs Chronicles, the Manchu population in Beijing is about 1 million and tens of thousands. This includes the Han and Mongolian Eight Banners, and the real Eight Banners are less than 700,000.

It should be noted here that due to the limitations of demographic capacity at that time, there was no way to accurately know the number of Manchu population in the country at that time. However, at that time, about half of the Manchu population lived in Beijing. That's for sure.

For a long time, the Manchus and Han did not intermarry, and the Manchu population has not increased much in the past 400 years. During the Xinhai Revolution, the contradictions between Han and Manchu were intensified, and the revolutionary armies in Xi'an, Fuzhou, Nanjing, Hangzhou, Jingzhou and other places consciously carried out large-scale revenge on Manchu in various places. Except for Beijing, few Manchurians from other places actually survived.

I really didn't survive a few, so I don't shy away from that. That is, at that time, most of the Manchus in the country were in Beijing, and there were very few in the northeast, because life there was too hard.

Then comes the most important point.

After the victory of the Anti-Japanese War, Beijing still insisted that it was Manchu, and there were only about 2,000 people left. Most of them are the royal relatives of the Manchu Qing Dynasty, Beile, Beizi, Zongjia, Jueluo and the like. They have no way to deny it, they can only call themselves Manchurian. Those were the old and the young, and their reputation was very bad at the time.

And what about the other Manchurians? They all call themselves Han Chinese.

There are three reasons for this, the first is the fear of persecution. Because the Han-Manchu contradiction was still quite serious at that time. Second, ordinary Manchus are basically sinicized.

I can't speak Manchu, I can't write Manchu, and you tell me that you are a Manchurian, just because you said your surname is Aixin Jueluo? I don't believe it either!

During the Republic of China, the Manchus were generally regarded as Han Chinese, because in terms of language, culture, and customs, the Manchus were no different from the Han people, and even their surnames were changed.

The third reason for this is also very important, that is, many Manchus have found a reality that is difficult to accept in the national cultural movement - Lao Tzu was not a master, but a slave. I don't want to be a dog, I'm crazy!

Now many people think that they are Manchus, but in fact, they just have a Manchu surname, and if they really want to open the family tree, they are all clothed minions. Nurhachi is a high-ranking slave owner, and he will consider the clothed minions as his own descendants?

The Manchus almost disappeared, and it was the great party that saved the Manchus!

After the liberation, out of the system of ethnic identity and regional autonomy, the party turned many Han people into Manchus. In fact, many people themselves are confused - after doing it for a long time, I am full again?

At the end of the fifties of the last century, a large number of Han Chinese became Manchurian again. This is what our 'great' Ethnic and Religious Affairs Committee has done. Not only are there more Manchurians, but there are also many other ethnic minorities. Only the Han people are less.

Maintaining national unity has become politically correct.

Manchu and Manchu were once dead words and languages, and no one except the academic community could use them.

In the 90s of the last century, there were less than 500 people who could still use Manchu in their daily lives, and all of them lived in remote northeastern villages. It was the party that saved the Manchu language again. Many Manchus who have used Han Chinese names for several generations have 'restored' Manchu names.

The above information is not made up by me, but facts, and those who do not believe can check it for themselves.

I want to say something politically incorrect - the current Manchus have nothing to do with the Manchu branch of Nurhachi back then, and it is entirely the party that has created a nation that has already died out. In essence, the current Manchus are a branch of the Han people.

I can understand that some people feel that their origins are very historical, and they can even be connected to the royal family of the past, and they are anxious to maintain the image of their own nation.

But I'm not going to ridicule anyone, I really suggest that some Manchu compatriots go and look at their genealogy to see what their ancestors are from - if it is from the Han nationality, forget it, in case it is a clothed slave, but it is not good - the real Manchus did not treat slaves as human beings.

When I was writing "The Wasteland," there was a similar joke about a so-called Christian who was fighting Mormonism. At that time, I felt that there was something wrong with this man's brain, and that Christianity and Mormonism were mortal enemies. In the Middle Ages, this brainless heresy was absolutely burned to death.

I hope you read more.