The
Wusun were one of several nomadic or semi-nomadic peoples in Asia who were
literally pushed around by a powerful nomadic confederation known as the
Xiongnu. Shanyu Maodun, leader of the Xiongnu from approximately 209 and
174 BCE, was said to have indirectly caused chaos for the Wusun people by
driving a group known as the Yuezhi into Wusun territory near the end of his
reign. The then khan, or kunmo, of the Wusun was reportedly named
Nandoumi, and he fought back against the Yuezhi incursion into his land. Nandoumi,
however, died in battle and the Wusun people had to flee to the Xiongnu for protection.
During the retreat, possibly due to politics after the kunmo’s death,
Nandoumi’s young son, Liejiaomi, was reportedly left behind to face the wild
alone.
Yet—as
folkloric origin stories of kingly or heroic figures often go—mother nature and
her animals took pity of young Liejiaomi and cared for the abandoned boy during
this vulnerable time. Grand Historian Sima Qian (c. 145-90 BCE), citing an
explorer who interacted with the Wusun, wrote that Liejiaomi, “then only a
baby, was cast out in the wilderness to die. But the birds came and flew over
the place where he was, bearing meat in their beaks, and the wolves suckled
him, so that he was able to survive” (Shi Ji 123). Living on bird
regurgitation and wolf milk, Liejiaomi stayed alive long enough to be
rediscovered by the Xiongnu, who were impressed by his survival skills. By this
time Shanyu Jizhu was reportedly in power, a position he would have over the
Xiongnu from around 174 to 159/158 BCE. As the stories go, Jizhu gave shelter to
Liejiaomi and took interest in raising the boy, encouraging his education in
the ways of leadership and war.
When
Liejiaomi grew to adulthood, he was given a military command and eventually was
supported by the shanyu in becoming the next kunmo of the Wusun. In conjunction
with the Xiongnu, Kunmo Liejiaomi was able to have his revenge against the
Yuezhi, pushing them westward toward the region of modern Uzbekistan, allowing
for the Wusun to claim the vacated land left by the Yuezhi. Despite this
partnership, Kunmo Liejaomi and the Wusun would eventually be recruited by the
expansionist Emperor Wu of Han China (r. 141-87 BCE) to combat the Xiongnu.
Written
by C. Keith Hansley
Picture
Attribution: (Painting from the Xiongnu exhibit in Henan Provincial Museum,
Zhengzhou, photographed by Gary Todd for worldhistorypics.com, [Public Domain]
via Creative Commons).
Sources:
- Records of the Grand Historian (Shi ji) by Sima Qian, translated by Burton Watson. New York: Columbia University Press, 1993.
- http://www.chinaknowledge.de/History/Altera/wusun.html
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