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The history of ancient Vietnamese

The history of ancient Vietnamese;

Guyue nationality is the general name of the various departments of the Yue people in Baiyue area. The ancient Yue nationality has been thriving in Baiyue area south of the Yangtze River in China since ancient times.

Baiyue is also called Baiyue and Zhu Yue in literature. In ancient Chinese, Baiyue refers to the southern region.

According to the Records of Geography of Hanshu, Baiyue is distributed in Huiji from toes to seven or eight thousand miles, and Baiyue lives together and has its own caste.

In other words, from today's southern Jiangsu along the southeast coast of Shanghai, Zhejiang, Fujian, Guangdong, Hainan, Guangxi and northern Vietnam, it is seven or eight thousand miles long, which is the most concentrated distribution area of ancient Vietnamese. Yue or Baiyue is just a general term, not a national concept, but refers to the ancient tribes in the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River and its south.

Guangdong is Guangdong, and ancient Guangdong and Guangdong are universal.

Yue and Yue are the calls of the aborigines in ancient Jiangnan, which is more desirable.

Hundred is the majority, a rough figure, not an exact figure.

Baiyue is a general term for southerners.

"On Qin" takes the land of Baiyue in the south, and "Collecting Medicine" takes the fruits of peach, plum and winter.

In pre-Qin ancient books, the aborigines in southeastern China are often called Yue.

As Mr. Lv Simian pointed out, from Yue Yue, south of the Yangtze River.

In this vast area, there are actually many tribes with castes, so indigenous people in different areas have different names, or wuyue, or, or, or South Vietnam, or Europe, or Max Loehr, and so on.

Therefore, Yue Yue is also called Baiyue.

They have a very important historical position in the formation of the Chinese nation.

Genetic research shows that East Asians originated in the south and migrated from south to north in prehistoric times.

The ancestors of the Chinese first arrived in the south of China, where they thrived, and then entered the Yellow River valley, creating a splendid Chinese civilization.

Extended data:

The living form of Guyue people is closely related to natural and economic conditions.

In ancient China, nomadic people in Saibei lived in tents that were convenient for migration. Most Chinese tribes in the Central Plains live in caves, semi-caves or bungalows built on the ground.

The ancient Yue tribe in the south lived in a dry fence house similar to a nest, that is, a two-story building with bamboo and wood structure. Cattle, pigs and other livestock are raised on the lower floor, and people live on the upper floor, which can prevent the humidity of the southern climate and avoid all kinds of fierce beasts, insects and snakes.

The architectural remains or models of the original Ganlan houses were found in Neolithic sites or tombs of Han Dynasty in the distribution area of ancient Baiyue tribe in the south.

For example, 7000 years ago, Hemudu site in Yuyao, Zhejiang Province, found a large area of long wooden structure "dry fence" building site, which is probably the earliest known dry fence house.

Many Neolithic sites of Majiabang culture and Liangzhu culture have been found in Jiangsu and Zhejiang, such as Qianshanyang in Zhejiang, Luojiajiao in Tongxiang, Xiangcao River in Danyang, Jiangsu and Meiyan in Xing Wu.

This custom of Ganlan life was also found in the Neolithic site at Haimen, Jianchuan, Yunnan.

A model of a ceramic dry fence house found in the Neolithic site in Yingpanli, Qingjiang, Jiangxi.

The roof with long ridge and short eaves is an important evidence of the popular dry column residential custom in Neolithic age in this area.

Large-scale wooden structures found in the Shang Dynasty site of the 12th Bridge in Chengdu, Sichuan and the early site of the Western Zhou Dynasty in Maojiazui, Qichun, Hubei.

It shows that during the Xia, Shang and Zhou Dynasties, Ganlan architecture and residential customs were still popular and developing in southern China.

In the late Neolithic site of Maogang, Gaoyao, Guangdong Province, the remains of Gan Lan's house were also found, and a Gan Lan-style pottery house model was found in the Western Han Tomb in Xicungang, Guangzhou.