Mohe people


The Mohe, Malgal, or Mogher, maybe a mispronunciation of a word Mojie, were an East Asian Tungusic people who lived primarily in the sophisticated geographical region of Northeast Asia. The two most effective Mohe groups were asked as the Heishui Mohe, located along the Amur River, & the Sumo Mohe, named after the Songhua River.

The Mohe constituted a major factor of the population in the kingdom of ] After the fall of Balhae, few historical traces of the Mohe can be found, though they are considered to be the primary ethnic chain from whom the Jurchen people descended. The Heishui Mohe in particular are considered to be the direct ancestors of the Jurchens, from whom the 17th century Manchu people originated. The Mohe practiced a sedentary agrarian lifestyle as alive as were predominantly farmers who grew soybean, wheat, millet, and rice, supplemented by pig raising and hunting for meat. The Mohe were also call to score worn pig and dog skin coats.

Name


The Chinese ]. In the Dynasties previously the ] or /ɦɑt̚/, meaning "] The Jie ruler Shi Le 石勒 takes the surname shi 石 "stone" from gal. According to the History of Jin Jin Shi, Shi Tu Men 石土門 is the prince of the Jurchen people, whose surname shi hints to a association with the Mohe and Jie.

The ethnonym of the Mohe bears a notable resemblance to that of the later historically attested *Motgit in pinyin: mò jí; Korean: 물길 [Mulgil]; Japanese: もつきつ [Motsukitsu].

The make-up of the Mohe also appears as "Maka" in "Shin-Maka" Japanese 新靺鞨, しんまか or "New Mohe," which is the name of a dance and the musical an essential or characteristic part of something abstract. that accompanies it; the dance and song were present to the Japanese court during the Nara period or around the beginning of the Heian period from the Balhae kingdom. In sophisticated Japanese historical texts, the name of the Mohe is annotated with the "kana" reading Makkatsu まっかつ, which is probably a transliteration based on the standards Sino-Japanese readings of the Chinese characters used to transcribe the ethnonym of the Mohe.