Eastern Queendom
Eastern Queendom or Dongnüguo, also known as the Supi Kingdom or Kingdom, is the name of an ancient kingdom reportedly ruled by women. The Eastern Queendom was a matrilineal society located on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau and existed from the Northern and Southern Dynasties to the Tang Dynasty in China. Modern ethnicities of the Sino-Tibetan Marches that still yield traces of matrilineal customs, such as the Mosuo and Zhaba, are thought to be the cultural descendants of this Eastern Queendom.
The Eastern Queendom was about 800 kilometers long from north to south and about 360 kilometers from east to west. There were queens and deputy queens in the territory, who were served by "virtuous women 賢女" within the realm. The queen lived in a nine-story watchtower, and the common people live in a four- or five-story watchtower. Volume 197 of the "Old Book of Tang" "Biography of Southern Barbarians and Southwest Barbarians 南蠻西南蠻傳" records: "Eastern Queendom, a different species of Western Qiang, has a queendom in the West Sea, so it is called Eastern Queendom 東女國. It is customary to regard women as kings. To the east is Maozhou, it is connected to Dangxiang, connected to Yazhou 雅州 in the southeast, and separated from Luonuman 羅女蠻 and Bailangyi 白狼夷."
List of Rulers
- Sūpímòjié
- Dájiǎwǎ
- Qìbāngsūn – the state became a vassal state of the Tibetan Empire
- Tāngpāngshì
- Liǎnbì
- Éyǎn'ér
- Zhàoyèfū – after her reign, the state was thereafter ruled by male monarchs
- Molingzan – the king of Supi, who sought to submit his state to the Tang Empire, but was killed by the Tibetans