Dangchang Kingdom

Dangchang, also known as the Dangchang Qiang (宕昌羌), was a state established by the Qiang ethnic group that existed during the Northern and Southern dynasties period in China. Its area was equivalent to the southern part of present-day Gansu Province, China. Its capital was Dangchang City (now in the west of Tanchang County, Gansu). Their rulers had the surname of Liang (梁), and the first recorded leader in history was Liang Qin.

History
Prior to becoming a unified polity, the Book of Wei and Book of Zhou states that the Dangchang region had been home to various different Qiang tribes, each led by their own chieftain. These tribes rarely interacted with each other, only doing so in times of war, and there were no laws and corvées. Their people raised yaks, cattle and pigs to provide themselves with food, living in houses covered with woven yak tails and goat wool and wearing fur and brown clothings. They did not have a written language, but did record the years by waiting for the growth and fall of plants and trees. Every three years, they would kill cattle and sheep as sacrifices to the sky. When their married men died, their wives were taken by their stepfathers, uncles, brothers or brothers-in-law for themselves.

A chieftain, Liang Qin later won the support of the Qiang nobles and unified the Dangchang Qiang, taking the title of king. The first recorded interaction between Dangchang and the neighbouring Northern and Southern dynasties was in 424, when Liang Mihu, grandson of Liang Qin, sent a petition to the Northern Wei offering his submission. To the west of them, Dangchang was threatened by the Tuyuhun of modern Qinghai. The Dangchang rulers paid tribute to the Northern Wei and the Southern dynasties of Liu Song, Southern Qi and Liang for titles and protection. According to the Book of Qi, tiger skin was a commodity in Dangchang at the time, as their people used them in funeral ceremonies.

In the 6th century, as the Northern Wei collapsed and split into two, Dangchang became more hostile as they allied with the Tuyuhun to carry out regular attacks on Northern Wei and then the Western Wei. While they were willing to resubmit after each defeat, the Northern Zhou, successor of the Western Wei, eventually launched a campaign to finally conquer Dangchang after their ruler Liang Miding repeatedly raided their territory in 564. Dangchang fell that same year, and Dang province was set up in its place.