Land Deeds Collection

土地契約文書

The collection consists of over 160 sheets of land deeds and six volumes of fish-scale register (yulin tuce, 魚鱗圖冊). The land deeds span over three hundred years from the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) to mid-twentieth century. The majority of them are from Qing Dynasty, mainly receipts of Shanxi province.

Land deeds are unique primary resources for studying the history of land tenure in China. Each land deed generally includes the location, owner, buyer, seller, land description, sale price, transaction date, and witnesses. After the sale was completed, the buyer will take the sale contract to the local magistrate’s office and have the land re-registered for land taxation in the buyer’s own name. A supplementary document (qiwei, 契尾) was then issued by the magistrate’s office with local government seal and attached to the end of the sale contract. These land documents are not only reflect the land ownership changes but also provide political, economic, and social information of the past.

Fish-scale registers are field cadasters for taxation purposes. In the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), land information was recorded in a “fish-scale register”, where the land pieces were drawn like fish scales. It recorded the location of each piece of land, holder, place’s name, shape, borders, and total area from which land tax was to be collected.