The Man were described in the
Book of Rites as one of the
Four Barbarians associated with the south. They tattooed their foreheads, had inwards pointing feet, and ate raw food. Although various stereotypes and accounts are recorded in the
Book of Rites, little detail is actually known about their inner social hierarchies, their social customs, and the social interdependence among the tribes at that time. During the
Spring and Autumn period,
King Wu of Chu (r. 741—690 BC) undertook many campaigns against the Man, who rebelled during the reign of
King Zhuang of Chu (r. 613–591 BC). During the reign of
King Dao of Chu, the general
Wu Qi also conducted campaigns against the Man. When the state of
Qin conquered
Chu, they found that the
commandery of Qianzhong, corresponding to modern
Hubei,
Hunan, and
Guizhou, was still inhabited by Man people. Under the
Han dynasty, the Man were recognized as three distinct groups: the Pangu, Linjun, and Bandun. The Pangu worshiped dog totems and lived in the commanderies of Wuling and Changsha. They were also known as the Man of the Five Creeks. The Pangu had no unified leader but individual chiefs were acknowledged as local administrators by the Han. They wore clothes woven from tree bark, used dotted patterns for their robes, wore short skirts, and painted their legs red. The Linjun lived further west in the commanderies of Ba and Nan, around modern
Chongqing. Linjun was actually the name of a chief, who according to Linjun mythology, turned into a white tiger upon his death. Thus the Linjun worshiped the tiger. The Bandun Man (literally "board shield" barbarians) lived further west of the Linjun and were known for their music and heroic conduct in war. They supported
Liu Bang after the fall of the
Qin dynasty and contributed troops to Han campaigns against the
Qiang people. According to legend, they killed a white tiger during the reign of
King Zhaoxiang of Qin (r. 306–251 BC) and were therefore spared from taxes. The Bandun Man rebelled in 179 due to unrest caused by the
Yellow Turban Rebellion, but when amnesty was issued by Cao Qian in 182, the rebellion was ended. There was another brief uprising in 188 which amounted to nothing. Related to the Bandun were the neighboring Cong () people, who became interested in the mysticism of the
Celestial Master Zhang Lu and moved north to the border of his territory. When
Cao Cao attacked Zhang Lu in the summer of 215, he fled to Duhu of the Cong and Fuhu of the Bandun for refuge. However Duhu and Fuhu surrendered to Cao Cao in the autumn and received appointment, with Zhang Lu following in the winter. The Bandun and Cong were settled in what is now modern
Gansu province. In 219,
Liu Bei's officer
Huang Quan attacked them and drove several non-Chinese peoples north into Cao Cao's territory. The Cong from the
Ba region in particular mingled with the tribal
Di people in
Guanzhong. These people became known as the
Ba-Di, and they later founded one of the
Sixteen Kingdoms, the
Cheng-Han (304—347). In southwest China, the Nanman tribes rebelled after the death of
Shu Han's founder, Liu Bei, in 223.The Shu Han chancellor,
Zhuge Liang, led a
successful expedition to quell the rebellion in 225. One of the leaders of the Nanman,
Meng Huo, was captured seven times before he surrendered. The campaign was retold in the famous 14th-century historical novel,
Romance of the Three Kingdoms, which provides a heavily romanticized narrative of the events that happened. After the fall of the Han dynasty, the Man became more integrated into Han Chinese society. A notable example was
Zhang Chang, a
Jin dynasty rebel from one of the Man tribes in Hubei who was allowed to serve as a county official prior to his rebellion. During the period of
Northern and Southern dynasties, the Man were able to remain independent by switching sides out of political expedience. The southern courts appointed Man chiefs as tax collectors for their regions. Many Man chiefs taxed their subjects lightly which resulted in some Han Chinese pretending to be Man people. On one occasion, a Han Chinese called Huan Dan () even became a Man chieftain. The Man also rebelled at times. Defeated tribes were resettled at border garrisons or became slaves in the metropolitan area. Generally speaking, the trend was for the Nanman to migrate ever northward. By the 7th century, the ethnic character of Man society was decidedly mixed. ==Culture==