Tunpu culture: A collision of civilizations
Share - WeChat
Fudan University professor Ge Jianxiong said Guizhou's Tunpu culture emerged from exchanges and collisions between different cultures.
Tunpu, literally meaning fortified villages, refers to settlements created when Ming-era (1368-1644) soldiers were sent to guard and farm in Guizhou.
"They had relatively little contact with the outside world, so their culture endured and became a living relic," Ge said.
He added that the traditions the Tunpu people brought with them changed as they adapted to local conditions and, through interactions with Guizhou's many ethnic groups, evolved into the distinctive Tunpu culture seen today.
- Senior enterprise official facing probe
- China's anti-graft authorities reveal extent of year's work
- Former Haikou Party chief gets death sentence with reprieve
- Purchase of US-made weapons to push Taiwan closer to the peril of war: spokesman
- WIC calls for submission of cultural heritage digitalization cases
- China calls for global opposition to Japanese neo-militarism
































