. Shanxi Museum. Early in Northern Wei history, the state inherited a number of traditions from its initial history as a Xianbei tribe, and some of the more unusual ones, from a traditional Chinese standpoint, were: • The officials did not receive
salaries until
Empress Dowager Feng took power, but were expected to requisition the necessities of their lives directly from the people they governed. As Northern Wei Empire's history progressed, this appeared to be a major contributing factor leading to corruption among officials. Not until the second century of the empire's existence did the state begin to distribute salaries to its officials. • Empresses were not named according to imperial favors or
nobility of birth, but required that the candidates submit themselves to a ceremony where they had to personally forge golden statues, as a way of discerning divine favor. Only an imperial consort who was successful in forging a golden statue could become the empress. • All men, regardless of ethnicity, were ordered to tie their hair into a single braid that would then be rolled and placed on top of the head, and then have a cap worn over the head. • When a
crown prince is named, his mother, if still alive, must be forced to commit suicide. According to some historians, this may not have been a Tuoba traditional custom, but believed it to be a tradition instituted by the founding emperor
Emperor Daowu based on
Emperor Wu of Han's execution of his favorite
concubine Consort Zhao, the mother of his youngest son
Liu Fuling (the eventual Emperor Zhao), before naming Prince Fuling crown prince. • As a result, because emperors would not have mothers, they often honored their
wet nurses with the honorific title, "
Nurse Empress Dowager" (保太后,
bǎo tài hòu). As
Sinicization of the Northern Wei state progressed, these customs and traditions were gradually abandoned. After building a Chinese-style capital at Ye, Tuoba Gui sought to break the autonomy of the tribes. He reorganised the people into eight artificial tribes forcibly settled around the capital, which served as military units. He also removed the traditional tribal leaders. These reforms helped to change tribal loyalties and strengthen their loyalty to the dynasty. These tribes served as the Emperor's personal professional military caste which helped to sustain the dynasty against any threats.
The Reform under Empress Dowager Feng After securing Xianbei hegemony in the hinterland of China, the North Wei regime, under the rule of
Empress Dowager Feng (438–490; also known as Empress Dowager Wenming) implemented a package of reforms in 485-486 AD, greatly solidifying its fiscal foundations and strengthening state penetration to the local society. This reform introduced two far-reaching policies, namely, the "equal-field landholding system", and the "three-elder system". In the new "equal-filed system" (
juntian zhi) unveiled in 485, the state redistributed abandoned or uncultivated land to commoner subjects attached with obligations of tax duty in the forms of grain, cloth, and labor service. In principle, each household was entitled to lands proportional to its labor power. Specifically, two types of land with tenure were assigned to a household: the first was open land for crop cultivation () for each adult male in the household, and half those amounts for adult females which was returnable after the recipient reached a specific advanced age or died. The second was the land to support textile production (10 or 20 mu, with the same gender distribution principle as open land) in one of two forms, namely, "mulberry lands" in silk-producing areas, and "hemp lands" in regions where sericulture was infeasible. Importantly, mulberry land was inheritable because of the long-term investment and care mulberry orchards required. Households possessing slaves and plow oxen were entitled to substantially larger allocations. The open land allocations would be doubled or tripled in areas where the land was less fertile or the population sparse. Sale of these land grants was forbidden, although subleasing was permitted under some circumstances. Land allocations would be adjusted annually to account for changes in the composition of the household and its number of oxen. Another policy was the establishment of the three-elders system (sanzhang-zhi) in 486, which was designed to compile accurate population registers and to integrate village society into the state administration. In this system, five households were to make up one neighborhood (li), headed by one neighborhood elder (linzhang) while five neighborhoods were grouped into a village and headed by one village elder (lizhang). Finally, over five villages, there was one ward elder (dangzhang). The three elders, appointed by the government, were responsible for detecting and re-registering population outside of state accounts, requisitioning corvee labor and taxes, and taking care of the poor and orphaned under their jurisdiction. This policy significantly bolstered the state's control over the common people. The reforms of Empress Dowager Feng boosted agricultural production and tax receipts on a long-term basis, and broke the economic power of local aristocrats who sheltered residents under their control living in fortified villages that dotted the rural landscape of the North from taxation. The Northern Wei dynasty had doubled the registered population to more than 5 million households since the reforms. These institutional infrastructures erected by the Northern Wei state survived the fall of the dynasty and paved the way for China's eventual unification in 589 AD under the Sui dynasty.
Later reforms The Northern Wei used the previous dynasties' Nine-rank system as a way of assigning official positions to wealthy and prestigious Han Chinese families, according to hereditary rank. Officials were also given considerable autonomy, such as appointing subordinate officials.
Deportations During the reign of
Emperor Daowu (386–409), the total number of deported people from the regions east of
Taihangshan (the former Later Yan territory) to
Datong was estimated to be around 460,000.
Deportations typically took place once a new piece of territory had been conquered. The Northern Wei started to arrange for Han Chinese elites to marry daughters of the
Xianbei Tuoba royal family in the 480s. More than fifty percent of Tuoba Xianbei princesses of the Northern Wei were married to southern Han Chinese men from the imperial families and aristocrats from southern China of the
Southern dynasties who defected and moved north to join the Northern Wei. Some Han Chinese exiled royalty fled from southern China and defected to the Xianbei. Several daughters of the Xianbei
Emperor Xiaowen of Northern Wei were married to Han Chinese elites, the
Liu Song royal Liu Hui 劉輝), married Princess Lanling (蘭陵公主) of the Northern Wei, Princess Huayang (華陽公主) to Sima Fei (司馬朏), a descendant of
Jin dynasty (266–420) royalty,
Emperor Xiaozhuang of Northern Wei's sisters, the Shouyang Princess, was wedded to the
Liang dynasty ruler
Emperor Wu of Liang's son Xiao Zong
蕭綜. One of
Emperor Xiaowu of Northern Wei's sisters was married to Zhang Huan, a Han Chinese, according to the
Book of Zhou (Zhoushu). His name is given as Zhang Xin in the
Book of Northern Qi (Bei Qishu) and
History of the Northern Dynasties (Beishi) which mention his marriage to a Xianbei princess of Wei. His personal name was changed due to a
naming taboo on the emperor's name. He was the son of Zhang Qiong. (483-515 CE). When the Eastern Jin dynasty ended Northern Wei received the Han Chinese Jin prince Sima Chuzhi (
司馬楚之) as a refugee. A Northern Wei Princess married Sima Chuzhi, giving birth to
Sima Jinlong (
司馬金龍).
Northern Liang Xiongnu King
Juqu Mujian's daughter married Sima Jinlong. The Northern Wei's Eight Noble
Xianbei surnames (
八大贵族) were the Buliugu (步六孤), Helai (賀賴),
Dugu (
獨孤), Helou (賀樓), Huniu (忽忸), Qiumu (丘穆), Gexi (紇奚), and Yuchi (
尉遲). They adopted Chinese last names. The Tuoba emperors claimed themselves to be descendants of the mythical
Yellow Emperor, and Emperor Mingyuan honored the
Han dynasty emperors along with
Emperor Yao,
Emperor Shun and the
Shang dynasty noble,
Bi Gan.
Confucianism was upheld by the Northern Wei, with
Confucius being honored in sacrifices by
Emperor Mingyuan and
Emperor Xiaowen. Two scions from the lineage of
Yan Hui, the favourite disciple of Confucius, and four scions from Confucius's lineage had ranks bestowed on them in
Shandong in 495. A fief of ten households and rank of
Grandee who venerates the sage (崇聖大夫) was bestowed on Kong Sheng (孔乘) in 472, while a fief of 100 households and the rank of
Marquis who worships the sage (崇聖侯) was bestowed on Kong Lingzhen (孔靈珍) in 495; both men were Confucius's scions in the 28th generation and were enfeoffed during the reign of Emperor Xiaowen. An anti-Buddhist plan was concocted by the Celestial Masters under
Kou Qianzhi along with
Cui Hao under the Taiwu Emperor. The Celestial Masters of the north urged the persecution of Buddhists under the Taiwu Emperor in the Northern Wei, attacking Buddhism and the Buddha as wicked and as anti-stability and anti-family. In 446, 100,000 men were put to work building an inner wall from
Yanqing, passing south of the Wei capital
Pingcheng, and ending up near Pingguan on the eastern bank of the Yellow River. The two walls of Northern Wei formed the basis of the double-layered
Xuanfu–
Datong wall system that protected Beijing a thousand years later during the Ming dynasty.
Governance Local society in northern China was not governed by civil bureaucrats but by military clientage during the reign of the Northern Wei Xianbei emperors, with the local Han Chinese aristocratic families jointly ruling and controlling power with them. The Han Chinese aristocrat families ruled over their private fiefs (home jurisdictions) with large military authority and civil authority as entrusted to them by the Xianbei emperor. The Xianbei emperor also turned their own Xianbei nomad warriors into a hereditary military caste and extinguish their tribal loyalties. To the consternation of the Xianbei nobles, Han Chinese aristocrats started to be appointed to government positions by the Northern Wei emperors when the Central Plains population regrew in the middle of the 5th century. Han Chinese commoners started pledging their allegiance as buqu (部曲) (armed retainers) to elite Han Chinese aristocratic magnates in their wubao (塢堡) (fortified settlements) when the local communities relied on the magnates to direct their defense after the
311 sack of Luoyang. Oaths were pledged in alliances between paramount commanders who joined their fortress villages together in leagues. == Disunity and breakup ==