,
Jiangxi, 1898. The historic homeland of Gan speakers, Jiangxi, was outside the sphere of influence of early Chinese civilization during the
Shang dynasty (16th to 11th centuries BCE). Information about this era is scarce, but it is likely that peoples collectively known as the Yue inhabited the region. The
unification of China by the
Qin dynasty saw the incorporation of Jiangxi into the Qin empire. The
First Emperor of Qin established seven counties in Jiangxi, all of them administered from the commandery seat of Jiujiang, located north of the Yangzi in modern
Anhui. All of the commandery seats were located along the
Gan River system. Military settlements were known to have existed at least two of the counties. The Qin colonisation formed the earliest settlement structure in Jiangxi and which for the most part, has survived to the present day. During the early
Ming dynasty, there was a forced massive population transfer of Gan speakers living in Jiangxi to depopulated northern and eastern parts of both
Hunan and
Hubei provinces. This large-scale resettlement caused the formation of the
New Xiang dialect in Hunan. Gan speakers were again forcefully resettled into parts of Hunan and Hubei due to war caused depopulation during the early period of the
Qing dynasty known as "江西填湖广" in Chinese. ==Culture==