Shopping on line can be easy, simple and save you lots of money. It can also take a lot of your time, frustrate you, and result in unwanted purchases. Now the same can be said for regular high street shopping, but with the vast opportunity presented by the Internet it will pay you to spend a few minutes reading this and understanding how to better optimize your Chinese Empire shopping experience:
1. Compare - without doubt the biggest advantage that the Chinese Empire offers shoppers today is the ability to compare thousands of Chinese Empire at a time. This is a great thing, but not necessarily all the time! Too much can be daunting at times so take advantage of the great comparison sites and where possible let them do the hard work for you.
2. Research - if it has been said it will be on the internet. Ignorance is no longer a justifiable reason for buying the wrong thing. Take the time to research in detail everything that you could possible want to know about
3. Testimonials - don't know anybody that has bought a Chinese Empire? Wrong! If the Chinese Empire is good the internet will let you know. Use the Internet as a friend and get testimonials before you buy.
4. Questions - Got a question about Chinese Empire then search the Forums, FAQ's, Blogs etc. Don't be afraid to ask .....
5. Reputation - Never heard of the company selling Chinese Empire? Don't worry, no reason why you should know every company in the world, but you know someone that does! Use the internet to find out what people are saying about Chinese Empire and build up a picture of their reputation for sales, returns, customer service, delivery etc.
6. Returns - still worried that even after all of the above your Chinese Empire wont be what you want? Check out the returns policy. There is so much competition now that someone, somewhere is bound to offer the terms that you are comfortable with.
7. Feedback - happy with your Chinese Empire then let people know, after all you are depending on others people input in your buying decision, so why not give a little back.
8. Security - check for the yellow padlock on the Chinese Empire site before you buy, and the s after http:/ /i.e. https:// = a secure site
9. Contact - got a question about Chinese Empire, or want to leave a comment then check out the sites contact page. Reputable companies have them and respond.
10. Payment - ready to pay for your Chinese Empire, then use your credit card or PayPal! Be aware of companies that don't accept them, there may be genuine reasons but given the huge amount of choice you have when buying online there is no reason at all not to buy via credit card or PayPal.
The
history of China is told in traditional history records that refer as far back as the Three Sovereigns and Five Emperors about 5,000 years ago, supplemented by archaeological records dating to the 16th century BC.
China is one of the world's oldest continuous civilizations. Turtle shells with markings reminiscent of ancient Chinese writing from the Shang Dynasty have been
carbon dated to around
1500 BC. Chinese civilization originated with city-states in the
Yellow River valley.The yellow river was named that because of the loess that would build up on the bank and down in the earth then it would sink creating a yellowish tint to the water.
221 BC is the commonly accepted year when China became unified under a large kingdom or empire. Successive
dynasties in Chinese history developed
Bureaucracy systems that enabled the Emperor of China to control the large territory.
China was first united by
Qin Shi Huang in 221 BC. China alternated between periods of political unity and disunity, occasionally becoming dominated by foreign peoples, most of whom were assimilated into the Chinese population. Cultural and political influences from many parts of Asia, carried by successive waves of immigration, expansion, and assimilation, merged to create Culture of China.
From hunter-gatherers to farmers
What is now China was inhabited by Homo erectus more than a million years ago. Recent study shows that the stone tools found at
Xiaochangliang site are magnetostratigraphically dated as 1.36 million years ago. The archaeological site of Xihoudu () in
Shanxi Province is the earliest recorded of use of fire by Homo erectus, which is dated 1.27 million years ago. The excavations at Yuanmou Man and later
Lantian Man show early habitation. Perhaps the most famous specimen of
Homo erectus found in China is the so-called Peking Man discovered in 1923. Two pottery pieces were unearthed at Liyuzui Cave in
Liuzhou,
Guangxi Province dated 16,500 and 19,000 BC. "The discovery of early pottery in China" by Zhang Chi, Department of Archaeology, Peking University, China Early evidence for proto-Chinese
millet agriculture is Radiocarbon dating to about 7,000 BC, and associated with the Jiahu site (also the site of the earliest playable music instruments). This period also includes the earliest stage of the Chinese written language (still under debate) and the earliest wine production in the world. Jiahu contains the Peiligang culture of
Xinzheng county, Henan, of which only 5% has been excavated as of 2006. With agriculture came increased population, the ability to store and redistribute crops, and to support specialist craftsmen and administrators. In late Neolithic times, the
Yellow River valley began to establish itself as a cultural center, where the first villages were founded; the most archaeologically significant of those was found at Banpo,
Xi'an.
Prehistory
and political history.The early history of China is complicated by the lack of a written language during this period coupled with the existence of documents from later time periods attempting to describe events that occurred several centuries before. The problem in some sense stems from centuries of introspection on the part of the Chinese people which has blurred the distinction between fact and fiction in regards to this early history. By 7000 BC, the Chinese were farming millet, giving rise to the
Jiahu culture. At
Damaidi in Ningxia, 3,172 cliff carvings dating to 6,000-5,000 BC have been discovered "featuring 8,453 individual characters such as the sun, moon, stars, gods and scenes of hunting or grazing." These pictographs are reputed to be similar to the earliest characters confirmed to be written Chinese. Later Yangshao culture was superseded by the Longshan culture around
2500 BC.
Archaeological sites such as
Sanxingdui and
Erlitou culture show evidence of a
Bronze Age civilization in China. The earliest bronze knife was found at Majiayao culture in Gansu and Qinhai province dated 3000 BC.
Three Sovereigns and Five Emperors
The earliest comprehensive history of China, the
Records of the Grand Historian written by Chinese historiographer
Sima Qian in the 2nd century BC, and the
Bamboo Annals trace Chinese history from about 2800 BC, with an account of the Three August Ones and the Five Emperors. These rulers were semi-mythical sage-kings and moral exemplars. Tradition regards one of them, the Yellow Emperor, as the ancestor of the Han Chinese people.
Sima Qian says that the system of inherited ruler-ship was established during the Xia Dynasty, and that this model was perpetuated in the recorded
Shang Dynasty and Zhou Dynasty dynasties. It is during this period of the Three Dynasties (Chinese language: 三代; pinyin:
sāndài) that the historical China emerges.
== Ancient era ==
Xia Dynasty
The historian Sima Qian (145 BC-90 BC) and the
Bamboo Annals's account dates the founding of the Xia Dynasty to 4,200 years ago, but this date has not been corroborated.
There were 17 kings of 14 generations during Xia Dynasty from
Yu the Great to Jie of Xia according to Sima Qian and other earlier records in the Spring and Autumn Period and
Warring States Period.
The Shang and Zhou people had existed with Xia Dynasty since the beginning of Xia. They were Xia’s loyal vassal. The exact time length of the Xia Dynasty is hard to define now, but mainly focused on two options, either 431 years or 471 years.
Most archaeologists now connect the Xia to excavations at
Erlitou culture in central Henan province, Bronze Age China at National Gallery of Art where a bronze smelter from around
2000 BC was unearthed. Early markings from this period, found on pottery and shells, have been alleged to be ancestors of modern Chinese characters. Scripts found on Erlitou pottery (written in Simplified Chinese) With few clear written records matching the Shang
oracle bones or the
Zhou Dynasty (1122 BC - 256 BC) bronze vessel writings, the Xia era remains poorly understood.
Shang Dynasty
of Shang for his mother Wu (戊),
Wu Ding (武丁)'s wife. Unearthed at Anyang in 1939.The earliest discovered written record of China's past dates from the
Shang Dynasty in perhaps the
13th century BC, and takes the form of inscriptions of divination records on the bones or shells of animals—the so-called
oracle bones. Archaeological findings providing evidence for the existence of the
Shang Dynasty, c
1600 BC–1040 BC is divided into two sets. The first set, from the earlier Shang period (c 1600–1300s BC) comes from sources at Erligang culture, Zhengzhou and Shangcheng. The second set, from the later Shang or Yin (殷) period, consists of a large body of oracle bone writings.
Anyang in modern day Henan has been confirmed as the last of the nine capitals of the Shang (c 1300–1046 BC). The Shang Dynasty featured 31 kings, from
Tang of Shang to
King Zhou of Shang; it was the longest dynasty in Chinese history.
The Records of the Grand Historian states that the Shang Dynasty moved its capital six times. The final and most important move to Yin in 1350 BC led to the golden age of the dynasty. The term Yin Dynasty has been synonymous with the Shang dynasty in history, although lately it has been used specifically in reference to the latter half of the Shang Dynasty.
Chinese historians living in later periods were accustomed to the notion of one dynasty succeeding another, but the actual political situation in early China is known to have been much more complicated. Hence, as some scholars of China suggest, the Xia and the Shang can possibly refer to political entities that existed concurrently, just as the early Zhou (successor state of the Shang), is known to have existed at the same time as the Shang.
Written records found at Anyang confirm the existence of the Shang dynasty. However, Western scholars are often hesitant to associate settlements contemporaneous with the Anyang settlement with the Shang dynasty. For example, archaeological findings at
Sanxingdui suggest a technologically advanced civilization culturally unlike Anyang. The evidence is inconclusive in proving how far the Shang realm extended from Anyang. The leading hypothesis is that Anyang, ruled by the same Shang in the official history, coexisted and traded with numerous other culturally diverse settlements in the area that is now referred to as China proper.
Zhou Dynasty
By the end of the 2nd millennium BC, the
Zhou Dynasty began to emerge in the
Yellow River valley, overrunning the Shang. The Zhou appeared to have begun their rule under a semi-feudal system. The Zhou were a people who lived west of Shang, and the Zhou leader had been appointed "Western Protector" by the Shang. The ruler of the Zhou,
King Wu of Zhou, with the assistance of his uncle, the
Duke of Zhou, as regent managed to defeat the Shang at the
Battle of Muye. The king of Zhou at this time invoked the concept of the
Mandate of Heaven to legitimize his rule, a concept that would be influential for almost every successive dynasty. The Zhou initially moved their capital west to an area near modern Xi'an, near the Yellow River, but they would preside over a series of expansions into the Yangtze River valley. This would be the first of many population migrations from north to south in Chinese history.
Spring and Autumn Period
design, Spring and Autumn Period.In the
8th century BC, power became decentralized during the
Spring and Autumn Period (春秋時代), named after the influential Spring and Autumn Annals. In this period, local military leaders used by the Zhou began to assert their power and vie for hegemony. The situation was aggravated by the invasion of other peoples from the northwest, such as the Qin, forcing the Zhou to move their capital east to
Luoyang. This marks the second large phase of the Zhou dynasty: the Eastern Zhou. In each of the hundreds of states that eventually arose, local strongmen held most of the political power and continued their subservience to the Zhou kings in name only. Local leaders for instance started using royal titles for themselves. The
Hundred Schools of Thought (諸子百家) of Chinese philosophy blossomed during this period, and such influential intellectual movements as Confucianism (儒家), Taoism (道家),
Legalism (philosophy) (法家) and Mohism (墨家) were founded, partly in response to the changing political world.The Spring and Autumn Period is marked by a falling apart of the central Zhou power. China now consists of hundreds of states, some only as large as a village with a fort.
Warring States Period
After further political consolidation, seven prominent states remained by the end of 5th century BC, and the years in which these few states battled each other is known as the Warring States Period. Though there remained a nominal Zhou Dynasty (1122 BC - 256 BC) king until 256 BC, he was largely a figurehead and held little real power.As neighboring territories of these warring states, including areas of modern Sichuan and
Liaoning, were annexed, they were governed under the new local administrative system of
commandery and
prefecture (郡縣). This system had been in use since the Spring and Autumn Period and parts can still be seen in the modern system of Political divisions of China (province and county, 省縣). The final expansion in this period began during the reign of Ying Zheng (嬴政), the king of Qin. His unification of the other six powers, and further annexations in the modern regions of Zhejiang, Fujian,
Guangdong and
Guangxi in
214 BC enabled him to proclaim himself the Qin Shi Huang (Qin Shi Huangdi, 秦始皇帝).
Imperial era
Qin Dynasty
.Historians often refer to the period from
Qin Dynasty to the end of
Qing Dynasty as Imperial China. Though the unified reign of the
Qin Shi Huang (秦) Emperor lasted only twelve years, he managed to subdue great parts of what constitutes the core of the
Han Chinese homeland and to unite them under a tightly centralized Legalism (philosophy) government seated at Xianyang (咸陽) (in modern Xi'an). The doctrine of legalism that guided the Qin emphasized strict adherence to a legal code and the absolute power of the emperor. This philosophy of
Legalism (Chinese philosophy), while effective for expanding the empire in a military fashion, proved unworkable for governing it in peace time. The Qin presided over the brutal silencing of political opposition, including the event known as the
To burn the classics and to bury the scholars. This would be the impetus behind the later Han Synthesis incorporating the more moderate schools of political governance.
The Qin Dynasty is well known for beginning the
Great Wall of China, which was later augmented and enhanced during the
Ming Dynasty (明朝). The other major contributions of the Qin included the concept of centralized government, the unification of the legal code, written language, measurement, and currency of China after the tribulations of the Spring and Autumn and Warring States Periods. Even something as basic as the length of axles for cartshad to be made uniform to ensure a viable trading system throughout the empire.
Han Dynasty
(206 BC-220 AD)
incense burner with a sliding shutter.The
Han Dynasty emerged in 206 BC. It was the first dynasty to embrace the philosophy of Confucianism, which became the ideological underpinning of all regimes until the end of imperial China. Under the Han Dynasty, China made great advances in many areas of the arts and sciences. Emperor Wu of Han China (Han Wudi 漢武帝) consolidated and extended the Chinese empire by pushing back the Xiongnu (sometimes identified with the
Huns) into the steppes of modern Inner Mongolia, wresting from them the modern areas of Gansu,
Ningxia and Qinghai. This enabled the first opening of trading connections between China and the West, the
Silk Road.
Nevertheless, land acquisitions by elite families gradually drained the tax base. In
9, the usurper Wang Mang (王莽) founded the short-lived Xin Dynasty (新朝) and started an extensive program of land and other economic reforms. These programs, however, were never supported by the land-holding families, for they favored the peasant and lesser gentry, and the instability they produced brought on chaos and uprisings.
Emperor Guangwu of Han (光武帝) reinstated the Han Dynasty with the support of land-holding and merchant families at
Luoyang, east of
Xi'an. This new era would be termed the
Eastern Han Dynasty. Han power declined again amidst land acquisitions, invasions, and feuding between
consort clans and
eunuchs. The Yellow Turban Rebellion (黃巾之亂) broke out in
184, ushering in an era of
warlords. In the ensuing turmoil, three states tried to gain predominance in the Period of the
Three Kingdoms. This time period has been greatly romanticized in works such as
Romance of the Three Kingdoms .
Jin Period
Though the three kingdoms were reunited temporarily in
278 by the Jin Dynasty (265-420), the contemporary non-Han Chinese (Wu Hu, 五胡) ethnic groups controlled much of the country in the early 4th century and provoked large-scale Han Chinese migrations to south of the
Yangtze River. In 303 the
Di (ethnic group) people rebelled and later captured
Chengdu, establishing the state of Cheng Han. Under Liu Yuan the
Xiongnu rebelled near today's Linfen County and established the state of
Han Zhao. His successor Liu Cong captured and
execution (legal) the last two Western Jin emperors.
Sixteen Kingdoms were a plethora of short-lived non-Chinese dynasties that came to rule the whole or parts of northern China in the 4th and 5th centuries. Many ethnic groups were involved--including ancestors of the Turkic people,
Mongols, and Tibetans. Most of these nomadic peoples had to some extent been "Sinicized" long before their ascent to power. In fact, some of them, notably the Ch'iang and the Xiong-nu, had already been allowed to live in the frontier regions within the Great Wall since late Han times.
Southern and Northern Dynasties
statue of the
Bodhisattva, from the Northern Qi, 570 AD, made in what is now modern
Henan province.Signaled by the collapse of East Jin (東晉) Dynasty in 420, China entered the era of the Southern and Northern Dynasties. The Han people managed to survive the military attacks from the nomadic tribes of the north, such as the Xian Bei (鲜卑), and their civilization continued to thrive.
An increasing number of nomadic people in Northern China adopted Confucianism as personal life guidance and state ideology while becoming gradually assimilated into the
Han Chinese civilization. During this rivalry between Northern and Southern China, Buddhism propagated throughout China for the first time, despite facing opposition from Taoist followers. Tuo Ba Tao (拓跋焘),a faithful Taoist believer and emperor of the Northern Wei (北魏) Dynasty (one of the Northern Dynasties), issued orders to eliminate Buddhism from the country.
In Southern China, fierce debates about whether Buddhism should be allowed to exist were held frequently by the royal court and nobles. Finally, near the end of the Southern and Northern Dynasties era, both Buddhist and Taoist followers compromised and became more tolerant of each other.
In 589, Sui (隋) annexed the last Southern Dynasty, Chen (陳), through military force, and put an end to the era of Southern and Northern Dynasties.
Sui Dynasty
The
Sui Dynasty (隋朝), which managed to reunite the country in
589 after nearly four centuries of political fragmentation, played a role more important than its length of existence would suggest. In the same way that the Qin rulers of the third century BC had unified China after the
Warring States Period, so the Sui brought China together again and set up many institutions that were to be adopted by their successors, the Tang. Like the Qin, however, the Sui overused their resources and collapsed. Also similar to the Qin, traditional history has judged the Sui somewhat unfairly; it has stressed the harshness of the Sui regime and the megalomania of its second emperor, giving little credit for the Dynasty's many positive achievements.
Tang Dynasty
tri-colored Ceramic glaze porcelain horse (ca. 700 AD).On
June 18, 618,
Emperor Gaozu of Tang China (唐高祖) took the throne, and the
Tang Dynasty (唐朝) was established, opening a new age of prosperity and innovations in arts and technology. Buddhism, which had gradually been established in China from the 1st century, became the predominant religion and was adopted by the royal family and many of the common people.
Chang'an (長安) (modern
Xi'an), the national capital, is thought to have been the world's biggest city at the time. The Tang and the Han are often referred to as the most prosperous periods of Chinese history.
The Tang, like the Han, kept the trade routes open to the west and south and there was extensive trade with distant foreign countries and many foreign merchants settled in China.
The Tang introduced a new system into the Chinese government, called the "Equal Field" System. This system gave families land grants from the Emperor based on their needs, not their wealth.
From about
860 the Tang Dynasty began to decline due to a series of rebellions within China itself, and in the previously subject Kingdom of
Nanzhao (南詔) to the south. One of the warlords, Huang Chao (黃巢), captured
Guangzhou in
879, killing most of the 200,000 inhabitants including most of the large colony of foreign merchant families there. In late
880 Luoyang surrendered to him and on 5 January, 881 he conquered Chang'an. The emperor
Xizong (唐僖宗) fled to Chengdu and Huang established a new temporary regime, which was eventually destroyed by Tang forces, but another time of political chaos followed.
Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms
The period of political disunity between the Tang and the Song, known as the
Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period (五代十国), lasted little more than half a century, from 907 to 960. During this brief era, when China was in all respects a multistate system, five regimes succeeded one another rapidly in control of the old Imperial heartland in northern China. During this same time, 10 more stable regimes occupied sections of southern and western China, so the period is also referred to as that of the Ten Kingdoms (十国).
Song Dynasty and Liao, Jin, Western Xia
Clock Tower of Kaifeng, designed and engineered by Su Song (1031-1095 AD).In 960, the Song Dynasty (宋朝) gained power over most of China and established its capital in Kaifeng (汴京/開封), starting a period of economic prosperity, while the Khitan people
Liao Dynasty (契丹族遼國) ruled over Manchuria and eastern
Mongolia. In
1115 the Jurchen
Jin Dynasty (1115-1234) (女真族金國) emerged to prominence, annihilating the Liao Dynasty in 10 years. Meanwhile, in what are now the northwestern Chinese provinces of Gansu, Shaanxi, and Ningxia, there emerged a Western Xia Dynasty (西夏) from 1032 up to 1227, established by Tangut tribes.
It also took power over northern China and Kaifeng from the Song Dynasty, which moved its capital to
Hangzhou (杭州). The Southern Song Dynasty also suffered the humiliation of having to acknowledge the Jin Dynasty as formal overlords. In the ensuing years China was divided between the Song Dynasty, the Jin Dynasty and the
Tangut Western Xia (西夏). Southern Song experienced a period of great technological development which can be explained in part by the military pressure that it felt from the north. This included the use of gunpowder weapons, which played a large role in the Song Dynasty naval victories against the Jin in the Battle of Tangdao and Battle of Caishi on the Yangtze River in 1161 AD. Furthermore, China's first permanent standing
navy was assembled and provided an admiral's office at Dinghai in 1132 AD, under the reign of Emperor Renzong of Song.
The Song Dynasty is considered by many to be classical China's high point in science and technology, with innovative figures such as Su Song (1020-1101 AD) and Shen Kuo (1031-1095 AD). There was court intrigue with the political rivals of the Reformers and Conservatives, led by the chancellors Wang Anshi and Sima Guang, respectively. By the mid to late 13th century the Chinese had adopted the dogma of Neo-Confucian philosophy formulated by Zhu Xi. There were enormous literary works compiled during the Song Dynasty, such as the historical work of the
Zizhi Tongjian. Culture and the arts flourished, with grandiose artworks such as
Along the River During Qingming Festival and
Eighteen Songs of a Nomad Flute, while there were great Buddhist painters such as Lin Tinggui.
Yuan Dynasty
Mounting a Horse, by
Qian Xuan (1235-1305 AD).Jurchens Jin Dynasty, 1115–1234, whose names are also rendered "Jin" in pinyin, was defeated by the Mongols, who then proceeded to defeat the Southern Song in a long and bloody war, the first war where firearms played an important role. During the era after the war, later called the
Pax Mongolica, adventurous Westerners such as
Marco Polo travelled all the way to China and brought the first reports of its wonders to Europe. In the Yuan Dynasty, the Mongols were divided between those who wanted to remain based in the steppes and those who wished to adopt the customs of the Chinese.
Kublai Khan (忽必烈/元世祖), grandson of Genghis Khan (成吉思汗), wanting to adopt the customs of China, established the Yuan Dynasty (元朝). This was the first dynasty to rule the whole of China from Beijing (北京) as the capital. Beijing had been ceded to Liao in AD
938 with the Sixteen Prefectures of Yan Yun (燕雲十六州). Before that, it had been the capital of the
Jin Dynasty, 1115–1234, who did not rule all of China.
Before the
Mongol invasion, Chinese dynasties reportedly had approximately 120 million inhabitants; after the conquest was completed in 1279, the 1300 census reported roughly 60 million people.Ping-ti Ho, "An Estimate of the Total Population of Sung-Chin China", in
Études Song, Series 1, No 1, (1970) pp. 33-53. The 14th century epidemics of plague is estimated to have killed 30% of the population of China. Course: Plague Black Death - Consequences
Ming Dynasty
(1470-
1523).Throughout a short-lived Yuan Dynasty, there was strong sentiment, among the populace, against the rule of the foreigners, which finally led to peasant revolts. The Mongolians were pushed back to the steppes and replaced by the Ming Dynasty (明朝) in
1368.
Urbanization increased as the population grew and as the division of labor grew more complex. Large urban centers, such as
Nanjing and Beijing, also contributed to the growth of private industry. In particular, small-scale industries grew up, often specializing in paper, silk, cotton, and porcelain goods. For the most part, however, relatively small urban centers with markets proliferated around the country. Town markets mainly traded food, with some necessary manufactures such as pins or oil.
Despite the
xenophobia and intellectual introspection characteristic of the increasingly popular new school of neo-Confucianism, China under the early Ming Dynasty was not isolated. Foreign trade and other contacts with the outside world, particularly
Japan (倭國), increased considerably. Chinese merchants explored all of the
Indian Ocean, reaching
East Africa with the voyages of Zheng He (鄭和, original name Ma Sanbao 馬三保).
Zhu Yuanzhang (朱元璋) or (Hongwu Emperor of China, 洪武皇帝/明太祖), the founder of the dynasty, laid the foundations for a state interested less in commerce and more in extracting revenues from the agricultural sector. Perhaps because of the Emperor's background as a peasant, the Ming economic system emphasized agriculture, unlike that of the Song and the Mongolian Dynasties, which relied on traders and merchants for revenue. Neo-feudal landholdings of the Song and Mongol periods were expropriated by the Ming rulers. Great landed estates were confiscated by the government, fragmented, and rented out. Private slavery was forbidden. Consequently, after the death of
Yongle Emperor of China (永樂皇帝/明成祖), independent peasant landholders predominated in Chinese agriculture. These laws might have paved the way to removing the worst of the poverty during the previous regimes. The laws against the merchants and the restrictions under which the craftsmen worked remained essentially as they had been under the Song, but now the remnants of the older foreign merchant class also fell under these new Ming laws. Their influence quickly dwindled.The dynasty had a strong and complex central government that unified and controlled the empire. The emperor's role became more autocratic, although Zhu Yuanzhang necessarily continued to use what he called the "Grand Secretaries" to assist with the immense paperwork of the bureaucracy, including memorials (petitions and recommendations to the throne), imperial edicts in reply, reports of various kinds, and tax records. It was this same bureaucracy that later prevented the Ming government from being able to adapt to changes in society, and eventually led to its decline.
Emperor Yong-le strenuously tried to extend China's influence beyond its borders by demanding other rulers send ambassadors to China to present tribute. A large navy was built, including four-masted ships displacing 1,500 tons. A standing army of 1 million troops (some estimate as many as 1.9 million) was created. The Chinese armies conquered Annam (安南) while the Chinese fleet sailed the China seas and the Indian Ocean, cruising as far as the east coast of Africa. The Chinese gained influence in Eastern
Turkestan. Several maritime Asian nations sent envoys with tribute for the Chinese emperor. Domestically, the Grand Canal of China was expanded, and proved to be a stimulus to domestic trade. Over 100,000 tons of iron per year were produced. Many books were printed using movable type. The imperial palace in Beijing's Forbidden City reached its current splendor. The Ming period seems to have been one of China's most prosperous. It was also during these centuries that the potential of south China came to be fully exploited. New crops were widely cultivated and industries such as those producing porcelain and textiles flourished.
During the Ming dynasty the last construction on the Great Wall was undertaken to protect China from foreign invasions. While the Great Wall had been built in earlier times, most of what is seen today was either built or repaired by the Ming. The brick and granite work was enlarged, the watch towers were redesigned, and cannons were placed along its length.
Qing Dynasty
The
Qing Dynasty (清朝, 1644–1911) was founded after the defeat of the Ming Dynasty, the last Han Chinese dynasty, by the Manchus (滿族). The Manchus were formerly known as the
Jurchen and invasion from the north in the late seventeenth century. An estimated 25 million people died during the Death toll#Wars (1616-1644). Twentieth Century Atlas - Historical Body Count Even though the Manchus started out as alien conquerors, they quickly adopted the Confucian norms of traditional Chinese government. They eventually ruled in the manner of traditional native dynasties.
The Manchus enforced a 'queue order' forcing the Han Chinese to adopt the Manchu queue and Manchu-style clothing. The Manchus had a special hair style: the "Queue (hairstyle)". They cut hair off the front of their heads and made the remaining hair into a long pigtail. The traditional Chinese clothing, or
Hanfu (漢服) was also replaced by Manchu-style clothing. Qipao (bannermen dress (旗袍) and
Tangzhuang (唐裝)), usually regarded as traditional Chinese clothing nowadays, are actually Manchu-style clothing. The penalty for not complying was death.
Kangxi Emperor of China (康熙皇帝/清聖祖) ordered the creation of Kangxi Dictionary of Chinese characters ever put together at the time. Under Qianlong Emperor of China, the compilation of a catalogue of the important works on Chinese culture was made.
The Manchus set up the "Eight Banners" system (八旗制度) in an attempt to avoid being assimilated into Chinese society. The "Eight Banners" were military institutions, set up to provide a structure with which the Manchu "bannermen" were meant to identify. Banner membership was to be based on traditional Manchu skills such as archery, horsemanship, and frugality. In addition, they were encouraged to use the Manchu language, rather than Chinese. Bannermen were given economic and legal privileges in Chinese cities.
Over the next half-century, the Manchus consolidated control of some areas originally under the
Ming Dynasty, including Yunnan. They also stretched their sphere of influence over
Xinjiang,
Tibet and
Mongolia.
During the nineteenth century, Qing control weakened. China suffered massive social strife, economic stagnation, and increased Western involvement including the destructive trade in
opium and the new influence of
19th Century Protestant Missions in China. Britain's desire to continue its opium trade with China collided with imperial edicts prohibiting the addictive drug, and the
First Opium War erupted in 1840. Britain and other Western powers, including the
United States,
France,
Russia, and
Germany thereupon forcibly occupied "concessions" and gained special commercial privileges. Hong Kong was ceded to Britain in 1842 under the Treaty of Nanjing . The Taiping Rebellion (1851–1864) was the largest civil war in China.
In addition, more costly rebellions in terms of human lives and economics followed the Taiping Rebellion such as the Punti-Hakka Clan Wars, Nien Rebellion,
Dungan revolt, Panthay Rebellion and the
Boxer Rebellion.Damsan Harper, Steve Fallon, Katja Gaskell, Julie Grundvig, Carolyn Heller, Thomas Huhti, Bradley Maynew, Christopher Pitts. Lonely Planet China. 9. 2005. ISBN 1-74059-687-0 In many ways, the rebellions and the treaties the Qing were forced to sign with the imperialist powers are symptomatic of the inability of the Chinese government to respond adequately to the challenging conditions facing China in the nineteenth century.
Modern era
The two Opium wars and the opium trade were costly outcomes for the Qing dynasty and the Chinese people. The Qing imperial treasury was declared bankrupt twice arising from indemnities incurred in the
Opium wars and the large outflow of silver due to the opium trade (in tens of billions of ounces). China suffered two extreme famines exactly twenty years after each opium war in the 1860s and 1880s, and the Qing imperial dynasty was ineffective in helping the population. Socially these events had a profound impact as it challenged the hegemony that the Chinese had enjoyed in Asia for centuries. As a result, the country was in a state of turmoil.A large
List of revolutions and rebellions, the
Taiping Rebellion, involved around a third of China falling under control of the Taiping Tianguo, a quasi-Christian religious movement led by the "Heavenly King" Hong Xiuquan. Only after fourteen years were the Taipings finally crushed - the Taiping army was destroyed in the Third Battle of Nanking in 1864. In total between twenty million and fifty million lives were lost, making it the second deadliest war in human history.
The Qing officials were slow to adopt modernity and suspicious of social and technological advances that they viewed as a threat to their absolute control over China. Therefore, the dynasty was ill-equipped to handle the Western encroachment. Western powers did intervene militarily to quell domestic chaos, such as the Taiping Rebellion and the anti-imperialist
Boxer Rebellion (義和團起義). Charles George Gordon, later killed in the siege of
Khartoum, Sudan, was often credited with having involved to help the Qing dynasty to defeat the Taiping insurrection.
By the 1860s, the Qing Dynasty had put down the rebellions at enormous cost and loss of life. This undermined the credibility of the Qing regime and, spearheaded by local initiatives by provincial leaders and gentry, contributed to the rise of warlordism in China. The Qing Dynasty under the Emperor Guangxu (光緒皇帝/清德宗) proceeded to deal with the problem of modernization through the Self-Strengthening Movement (自強運動). However, between 1898 and
1908 the Empress Dowager Cixi had the reformist Guangxu imprisoned for being 'mentally disabled'. The Empress Dowager (慈禧太后), with the help of conservatives, initiated a military coup, effectively removed the young Emperor from power, and overturned most of the more radical reforms. He died one day before the death of the Empress Dowager (some believe Guangxu was poisoned by Cixi). Official corruption, cynicism, and imperial family quarrels made most of the military reforms useless. As a result, the Qing's "New Armies" were soundly defeated in the
Sino-French War (1883-1885) and the
Sino-Japanese War (1894-1895).
At the start of the
20th century, the Boxer Rebellion threatened northern China. This was a conservative anti-imperialist movement that sought to return China to old ways. The Empress Dowager, probably seeking to ensure her continued grip on power, sided with the Boxers when they advanced on Beijing. In response the
Eight-Nation Alliance invaded China. Consisting of British, Japanese, Russian, Italian, German, French, US and Austrian troops, the alliance defeated the Boxers and demanded further concessions from the Qing government.
Republic of China
Frustrated by the Qing court's resistance to reform and by China's weakness, young officials, military officers, and students—inspired by the revolutionary ideas of
Sun Yat-sen (孫中山) —began to advocate the overthrow of the Qing Dynasty and creation of a republic. A revolutionary military uprising, the Wuchang Uprising, began on October 10, 1911 in Wuhan (武漢). The provisional government of the Republic of China (中華民國) was formed in Nanjing on March 12, 1912 with Sun Yat-sen as President of the Republic of China, but Sun was forced to turn power over to
Yuan Shikai (袁世凱), who commanded the
New Army and was Prime Minister under the Qing government, as part of the agreement to let the
Ai-xin-jue-luo Pu-yi abdicate (a decision he would later regret). Yuan Shikai proceeded in the next few years to abolish the national and provincial assemblies and declared himself emperor in 1915. Yuan's imperial ambitions were fiercely opposed by his subordinates, and faced with the prospect of rebellion, Yuan abdicated and died shortly afterwards in
1916, leaving a power vacuum in China. His death left the republican government all but shattered, ushering in the era of the "
warlords" when China was ruled by shifting coalitions of competing provincial military leaders.
A little noticed event (to the rest of the world) in 1919 would have long-term repercussions for the rest of Chinese history in the 20th century. This was the
May Fourth Movement (五四運動). This movement began as a response to the insult imposed on China by the Treaty of Versailles ending
World War I but became a protest movement about the domestic situation in China. The discrediting of liberal Western philosophy amongst Chinese intellectuals was followed by the adoption of more radical lines of thought. This in turn planted the seeds for the irreconcilable conflict between the left and right in China that would dominate Chinese history for the rest of the century.
In the 1920s, Sun Yat-Sen established a revolutionary base in south China, and set out to unite the fragmented nation. With Soviet assistance, he entered into an alliance with the fledgling
Communist Party of China (CPC, 中國共產黨). After Sun's death from cancer in 1925, one of his protégés, Chiang Kai-shek (蔣介石), seized control of the Kuomintang and succeeded in bringing most of south and central China under its rule in a military campaign known as the
Northern Expedition (北伐). Having defeated the warlords in south and central China by military force, Chiang was able to secure the nominal allegiance of the warlords in the North. In 1927, Chiang turned on the CPC and relentlessly chased the CPC armies and its leaders from their bases in southern and eastern China. In 1934, driven from their mountain bases such as the Chinese Soviet Republic (中華蘇維埃共和國), the CPC forces embarked on the
Long March (長征) across China's most desolate terrain to the northwest, where they established a guerrilla base at Yan'an in
Shanxi Province (陝西省延安市).
During the
Long March, the communists reorganized under a new leader,
Mao Zedong (Mao Tse-tung, 毛澤東). The bitter struggle between the KMT and the CPC continued, openly or clandestinely, through the 14-year long Japanese invasion (
1931-1945), even though the two parties nominally formed a united front to oppose the Japanese invaders in
1937, during the Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945) portion of World War II. The war between the two parties resumed following the Japanese defeat in 1945. By 1949, the CPC occupied most of the country.
(see Chinese Civil War)Chiang Kai-shek fled with the remnants of his government to Taiwan in 1949 and his Nationalist Party would control the island as well as a few neighboring islands until democratic elections in the early 1990s. Since then, the
political status of Taiwan has always been under dispute.
Present
With the proclamation of the People's Republic of China (PRC) (中華人民共和國) on
October 1,
1949, China was divided once again according to the claims of that government. However, the actual Political status of Taiwan is disputed. Since the 1990s, the Republic of China government that governs
Taiwan along with associated islands as well as some small islands off the coast of Fujian has been pushing to gain international recognition, while the People's Republic of China vehemently opposes foreign involvement, and insists that foreign relations not deviate from the One-China policy.
See also
References
From hunter-gatherers to farmers
- Magnetostratigraphic dating of early humans in China, by Rixiang zhu, Zhisheng An, Richard Potts, Kenneth A. Hoffman.
- The Discovery of Early Pottery in China, by Zhang Chi, Department of Archaeology, Peking University, China.
Prehistory
- Discovery of residue from fermented beverage consumed up to 9,000 years ago in Jiahu, Henan Province, China. By Dr. Patrick E McGovern, University of Pennsylvania archaeochemist and colleagues from China, Great Britain and Germany.
Xia Dynasty
- David S. Nivison (1993), “Chu shu chi nien”, Early Chinese Texts: a bibliographical guide (editor—Loewe M.) p.39–47 (Berkeley: Society for the Study of Early China).
- James Legge (1865), The Chinese Classics III: The Shoo King Prolegomena (Taipei: Southern Materials Center). (This contains an English translation of the Bamboo Annals.)
Shang Dynasty
- Stephen W. Durrant (1995), The Cloudy Mirror: Tension and Conflict in the Writings of Sima Qian. Albany : State University of New York Press.
Han Dynasty
- Rafe de Crespigny. 1977. The Ch’iang Barbarians and the Empire of Han: A Study in Frontier Policy. Papers on Far Eastern History 16, Australian National University. Canberra.
- de Crespigny, Rafe. 1984. Northern Frontier. The Policies and Strategies of the Later Han Empire. Rafe de Crespigny. 1984. Faculty of Asian Studies, Australian National University. Canberra.
- de Crespigny, Rafe. 1989. "South China under the Later Han Dynasty" (Chapter One from Generals of the South: the Foundation and early history of the Three Kingdoms state of Wu by Rafe de Crespigny, in Asian Studies Monographs, New Series No. 16 Faculty of Asian Studies, The Australian National University, Canberra 1989)
- de Crespigny, Rafe. 1996. "Later Han Military Administration: An Outline of the Military Administration of the Later Han Empire." Rafe de Crespigny. Based on the Introduction to Emperor Huan and Emperor Ling being the Chronicle of Later Han for the years 189 to 220 AD as recorded in Chapters 59 to 69 of the Zizhi tongjian of Sima Guang, translated and annotated by Rafe de Crespigny and originally published in the Asian Studies Monographs, New Series No. 21, Faculty of Asian Studies, The Australian National University, Canberra 1996.
- Dubs, Homer H. 1938. The History of the Former Han Dynasty by Pan Ku. Vol. One. Baltimore. Waverly Press, Inc.
- Dubs, Homer H. 1944. The History of the Former Han Dynasty by Pan Ku. Vol. Two. Baltimore. Waverly Press, Inc.
- Dubs, Homer H. 1955. The History of the Former Han Dynasty by Pan Ku. Vol. Three. Ithaca, New York. Spoken Languages Services, Inc.
- Hill, John E. 2004. The Western Regions according to the Hou Hanshu. Draft annotated English translation.
- Hill, John E. 2004. The Peoples of the West from the Weilue ?? by Yu Huan ??: A Third Century Chinese Account Composed between AD 239 and 265. Draft annotated English translation.
- Hirth, Friedrich. 1875. China and the Roman Orient. Shanghai and Hong Kong. Unchanged reprint. Chicago, Ares Publishers, 1975.
- Hulsewé, A. F. P. and Loewe, M. A. N. 1979. China in Central Asia: The Early Stage 125 BC – AD 23: an annotated translation of chapters 61 and 96 of the History of the Former Han Dynasty. Leiden: E. J. Brill.
- Twitchett, Denis and Loewe, Michael, eds. 1986. The Cambridge History of China. Volume I. The Ch’in and Han Empires, 221 BC – AD 220. Cambridge University Press.
The
history of China is told in traditional history records that refer as far back as the Three Sovereigns and Five Emperors about 5,000 years ago, supplemented by archaeological records dating to the
16th century BC. China is one of the world's oldest continuous
civilizations. Turtle shells with markings reminiscent of ancient Chinese writing from the Shang Dynasty have been carbon dated to around 1500 BC. Chinese civilization originated with city-states in the
Yellow River valley.The yellow river was named that because of the loess that would build up on the bank and down in the earth then it would sink creating a yellowish tint to the water.
221 BC is the commonly accepted year when China became unified under a large kingdom or empire. Successive
dynasties in Chinese history developed Bureaucracy systems that enabled the Emperor of China to control the large territory.
China was first united by Qin Shi Huang in 221 BC. China alternated between periods of political unity and disunity, occasionally becoming dominated by foreign peoples, most of whom were assimilated into the Chinese population. Cultural and political influences from many parts of
Asia, carried by successive waves of immigration, expansion, and assimilation, merged to create Culture of China.
From hunter-gatherers to farmers
What is now China was inhabited by
Homo erectus more than a million years ago. Recent study shows that the stone tools found at Xiaochangliang site are magnetostratigraphically dated as 1.36 million years ago. The archaeological site of
Xihoudu () in Shanxi Province is the earliest recorded of use of fire by Homo erectus, which is dated 1.27 million years ago. The excavations at
Yuanmou Man and later
Lantian Man show early habitation. Perhaps the most famous specimen of
Homo erectus found in China is the so-called Peking Man discovered in 1923. Two pottery pieces were unearthed at Liyuzui Cave in Liuzhou, Guangxi Province dated 16,500 and 19,000 BC. "The discovery of early pottery in China" by Zhang Chi, Department of Archaeology, Peking University, China Early evidence for proto-Chinese
millet agriculture is Radiocarbon dating to about 7,000 BC, and associated with the Jiahu site (also the site of the earliest playable music instruments). This period also includes the earliest stage of the
Chinese written language (still under debate) and the earliest wine production in the world. Jiahu contains the
Peiligang culture of Xinzheng county,
Henan, of which only 5% has been excavated as of 2006. With agriculture came increased population, the ability to store and redistribute crops, and to support specialist craftsmen and administrators. In late
Neolithic times, the Yellow River valley began to establish itself as a cultural center, where the first villages were founded; the most archaeologically significant of those was found at Banpo, Xi'an.
Prehistory
and political history.The early history of China is complicated by the lack of a written language during this period coupled with the existence of documents from later time periods attempting to describe events that occurred several centuries before. The problem in some sense stems from centuries of introspection on the part of the Chinese people which has blurred the distinction between fact and fiction in regards to this early history. By
7000 BC, the Chinese were farming millet, giving rise to the
Jiahu culture. At
Damaidi in Ningxia, 3,172 cliff carvings dating to 6,000-5,000 BC have been discovered "featuring 8,453 individual characters such as the sun, moon, stars, gods and scenes of hunting or grazing." These pictographs are reputed to be similar to the earliest characters confirmed to be written Chinese. Later
Yangshao culture was superseded by the Longshan culture around
2500 BC.
Archaeological sites such as Sanxingdui and
Erlitou culture show evidence of a
Bronze Age civilization in China. The earliest bronze knife was found at
Majiayao culture in Gansu and Qinhai province dated 3000 BC.
Three Sovereigns and Five Emperors
The earliest comprehensive
history of China, the
Records of the Grand Historian written by Chinese historiographer
Sima Qian in the
2nd century BC, and the
Bamboo Annals trace Chinese history from about
2800 BC, with an account of
the Three August Ones and the Five Emperors. These rulers were semi-mythical sage-kings and moral exemplars. Tradition regards one of them, the
Yellow Emperor, as the ancestor of the
Han Chinese people.
Sima Qian says that the system of inherited ruler-ship was established during the
Xia Dynasty, and that this model was perpetuated in the recorded
Shang Dynasty and Zhou Dynasty dynasties. It is during this period of the Three Dynasties (Chinese language: 三代;
pinyin:
sāndài) that the historical China emerges.
== Ancient era ==
Xia Dynasty
The historian Sima Qian (145 BC-90 BC) and the
Bamboo Annals's account dates the founding of the Xia Dynasty to 4,200 years ago, but this date has not been corroborated.
There were 17 kings of 14 generations during Xia Dynasty from Yu the Great to Jie of Xia according to Sima Qian and other earlier records in the Spring and Autumn Period and Warring States Period.
The Shang and Zhou people had existed with Xia Dynasty since the beginning of Xia. They were Xia’s loyal vassal. The exact time length of the Xia Dynasty is hard to define now, but mainly focused on two options, either 431 years or 471 years.
Most archaeologists now connect the Xia to excavations at
Erlitou culture in central Henan province, Bronze Age China at National Gallery of Art where a bronze smelter from around
2000 BC was unearthed. Early markings from this period, found on pottery and shells, have been alleged to be ancestors of modern Chinese characters. Scripts found on Erlitou pottery (written in Simplified Chinese) With few clear written records matching the Shang
oracle bones or the Zhou Dynasty (1122 BC - 256 BC) bronze vessel writings, the Xia era remains poorly understood.
Shang Dynasty
of Shang for his mother Wu (戊), Wu Ding (武丁)'s wife. Unearthed at Anyang in 1939.The earliest discovered written record of China's past dates from the
Shang Dynasty in perhaps the
13th century BC, and takes the form of inscriptions of divination records on the bones or shells of animals—the so-called
oracle bones. Archaeological findings providing evidence for the existence of the Shang Dynasty, c 1600 BC–1040 BC is divided into two sets. The first set, from the earlier Shang period (c 1600–
1300s BC) comes from sources at Erligang culture,
Zhengzhou and Shangcheng. The second set, from the later Shang or Yin (殷) period, consists of a large body of oracle bone writings. Anyang in modern day Henan has been confirmed as the last of the nine capitals of the Shang (c 1300–1046 BC). The Shang Dynasty featured 31 kings, from
Tang of Shang to
King Zhou of Shang; it was the longest dynasty in Chinese history.
The Records of the Grand Historian states that the Shang Dynasty moved its capital six times. The final and most important move to Yin in 1350 BC led to the golden age of the dynasty. The term Yin Dynasty has been synonymous with the Shang dynasty in history, although lately it has been used specifically in reference to the latter half of the Shang Dynasty.
Chinese historians living in later periods were accustomed to the notion of one dynasty succeeding another, but the actual political situation in early China is known to have been much more complicated. Hence, as some scholars of China suggest, the Xia and the Shang can possibly refer to political entities that existed concurrently, just as the early Zhou (
successor state of the Shang), is known to have existed at the same time as the Shang.
Written records found at Anyang confirm the existence of the Shang dynasty. However, Western scholars are often hesitant to associate settlements contemporaneous with the Anyang settlement with the Shang dynasty. For example, archaeological findings at Sanxingdui suggest a technologically advanced civilization culturally unlike Anyang. The evidence is inconclusive in proving how far the Shang realm extended from Anyang. The leading hypothesis is that Anyang, ruled by the same Shang in the official history, coexisted and traded with numerous other culturally diverse settlements in the area that is now referred to as China proper.
Zhou Dynasty
By the end of the 2nd millennium BC, the Zhou Dynasty began to emerge in the
Yellow River valley, overrunning the Shang. The Zhou appeared to have begun their rule under a semi-feudal system. The Zhou were a people who lived west of Shang, and the Zhou leader had been appointed "Western Protector" by the Shang. The ruler of the Zhou,
King Wu of Zhou, with the assistance of his uncle, the
Duke of Zhou, as regent managed to defeat the Shang at the Battle of Muye. The king of Zhou at this time invoked the concept of the
Mandate of Heaven to legitimize his rule, a concept that would be influential for almost every successive dynasty. The Zhou initially moved their capital west to an area near modern Xi'an, near the Yellow River, but they would preside over a series of expansions into the Yangtze River valley. This would be the first of many population migrations from north to south in Chinese history.
Spring and Autumn Period
design, Spring and Autumn Period.In the
8th century BC, power became decentralized during the Spring and Autumn Period (春秋時代), named after the influential
Spring and Autumn Annals. In this period, local military leaders used by the Zhou began to assert their power and vie for
hegemony. The situation was aggravated by the invasion of other peoples from the northwest, such as the Qin, forcing the Zhou to move their capital east to Luoyang. This marks the second large phase of the Zhou dynasty: the Eastern Zhou. In each of the hundreds of states that eventually arose, local strongmen held most of the political power and continued their subservience to the Zhou kings in name only. Local leaders for instance started using royal titles for themselves. The
Hundred Schools of Thought (諸子百家) of Chinese philosophy blossomed during this period, and such influential intellectual movements as Confucianism (儒家), Taoism (道家),
Legalism (philosophy) (法家) and
Mohism (墨家) were founded, partly in response to the changing political world.The Spring and Autumn Period is marked by a falling apart of the central Zhou power. China now consists of hundreds of states, some only as large as a village with a fort.
Warring States Period
After further political consolidation, seven prominent states remained by the end of 5th century BC, and the years in which these few states battled each other is known as the Warring States Period. Though there remained a nominal Zhou Dynasty (1122 BC - 256 BC) king until 256 BC, he was largely a figurehead and held little real power.As neighboring territories of these warring states, including areas of modern Sichuan and Liaoning, were annexed, they were governed under the new local administrative system of commandery and
prefecture (郡縣). This system had been in use since the Spring and Autumn Period and parts can still be seen in the modern system of Political divisions of China (province and county, 省縣). The final expansion in this period began during the reign of Ying Zheng (嬴政), the king of Qin. His unification of the other six powers, and further annexations in the modern regions of Zhejiang, Fujian, Guangdong and
Guangxi in 214 BC enabled him to proclaim himself the Qin Shi Huang (Qin Shi Huangdi, 秦始皇帝).
Imperial era
Qin Dynasty
.Historians often refer to the period from Qin Dynasty to the end of Qing Dynasty as Imperial China. Though the unified reign of the Qin Shi Huang (秦) Emperor lasted only twelve years, he managed to subdue great parts of what constitutes the core of the
Han Chinese homeland and to unite them under a tightly centralized
Legalism (philosophy) government seated at Xianyang (咸陽) (in modern Xi'an). The doctrine of legalism that guided the Qin emphasized strict adherence to a legal code and the absolute power of the emperor. This philosophy of Legalism (Chinese philosophy), while effective for expanding the empire in a military fashion, proved unworkable for governing it in peace time. The Qin presided over the brutal silencing of political opposition, including the event known as the To burn the classics and to bury the scholars. This would be the impetus behind the later Han Synthesis incorporating the more moderate schools of political governance.
The Qin Dynasty is well known for beginning the Great Wall of China, which was later augmented and enhanced during the
Ming Dynasty (明朝). The other major contributions of the Qin included the concept of centralized government, the unification of the legal code, written language, measurement, and currency of China after the tribulations of the Spring and Autumn and Warring States Periods. Even something as basic as the length of axles for cartshad to be made uniform to ensure a viable trading system throughout the empire.
Han Dynasty
(206 BC-220 AD)
incense burner with a sliding shutter.The
Han Dynasty emerged in
206 BC. It was the first dynasty to embrace the philosophy of Confucianism, which became the ideological underpinning of all regimes until the end of imperial China. Under the Han Dynasty, China made great advances in many areas of the arts and sciences. Emperor Wu of Han China (Han Wudi 漢武帝) consolidated and extended the Chinese empire by pushing back the Xiongnu (sometimes identified with the Huns) into the steppes of modern
Inner Mongolia, wresting from them the modern areas of Gansu,
Ningxia and Qinghai. This enabled the first opening of trading connections between China and the West, the
Silk Road.
Nevertheless, land acquisitions by elite families gradually drained the tax base. In 9, the usurper Wang Mang (王莽) founded the short-lived
Xin Dynasty (新朝) and started an extensive program of land and other economic reforms. These programs, however, were never supported by the land-holding families, for they favored the peasant and lesser gentry, and the instability they produced brought on chaos and uprisings.
Emperor Guangwu of Han (光武帝) reinstated the Han Dynasty with the support of land-holding and merchant families at
Luoyang, east of Xi'an. This new era would be termed the Eastern Han Dynasty. Han power declined again amidst land acquisitions, invasions, and feuding between
consort clans and
eunuchs. The Yellow Turban Rebellion (黃巾之亂) broke out in
184, ushering in an era of
warlords. In the ensuing turmoil, three states tried to gain predominance in the Period of the Three Kingdoms. This time period has been greatly romanticized in works such as
Romance of the Three Kingdoms .
Jin Period
Though the three kingdoms were reunited temporarily in 278 by the Jin Dynasty (265-420), the contemporary non-Han Chinese (Wu Hu, 五胡) ethnic groups controlled much of the country in the early 4th century and provoked large-scale Han Chinese migrations to south of the Yangtze River. In 303 the Di (ethnic group) people rebelled and later captured
Chengdu, establishing the state of
Cheng Han. Under
Liu Yuan the Xiongnu rebelled near today's
Linfen County and established the state of Han Zhao. His successor Liu Cong captured and execution (legal) the last two Western Jin emperors.
Sixteen Kingdoms were a plethora of short-lived non-Chinese dynasties that came to rule the whole or parts of northern China in the 4th and 5th centuries. Many ethnic groups were involved--including ancestors of the Turkic people,
Mongols, and Tibetans. Most of these nomadic peoples had to some extent been "Sinicized" long before their ascent to power. In fact, some of them, notably the Ch'iang and the Xiong-nu, had already been allowed to live in the frontier regions within the Great Wall since late Han times.
Southern and Northern Dynasties
statue of the
Bodhisattva, from the Northern Qi, 570 AD, made in what is now modern Henan province.Signaled by the collapse of East Jin (東晉) Dynasty in 420, China entered the era of the Southern and Northern Dynasties. The Han people managed to survive the military attacks from the nomadic tribes of the north, such as the Xian Bei (鲜卑), and their civilization continued to thrive.
An increasing number of nomadic people in Northern China adopted Confucianism as personal life guidance and state ideology while becoming gradually assimilated into the Han Chinese civilization. During this rivalry between Northern and Southern China, Buddhism propagated throughout China for the first time, despite facing opposition from Taoist followers. Tuo Ba Tao (拓跋焘),a faithful Taoist believer and emperor of the Northern Wei (北魏) Dynasty (one of the Northern Dynasties), issued orders to eliminate Buddhism from the country.
In Southern China, fierce debates about whether Buddhism should be allowed to exist were held frequently by the royal court and nobles. Finally, near the end of the Southern and Northern Dynasties era, both Buddhist and Taoist followers compromised and became more tolerant of each other.
In 589, Sui (隋) annexed the last Southern Dynasty, Chen (陳), through military force, and put an end to the era of Southern and Northern Dynasties.
Sui Dynasty
The Sui Dynasty (隋朝), which managed to reunite the country in 589 after nearly four centuries of political fragmentation, played a role more important than its length of existence would suggest. In the same way that the Qin rulers of the third century BC had unified China after the
Warring States Period, so the Sui brought China together again and set up many institutions that were to be adopted by their successors, the Tang. Like the Qin, however, the Sui overused their resources and collapsed. Also similar to the Qin, traditional history has judged the Sui somewhat unfairly; it has stressed the harshness of the Sui regime and the megalomania of its second emperor, giving little credit for the Dynasty's many positive achievements.
Tang Dynasty
tri-colored
Ceramic glaze porcelain horse (ca. 700 AD).On
June 18, 618, Emperor Gaozu of Tang China (唐高祖) took the throne, and the Tang Dynasty (唐朝) was established, opening a new age of prosperity and innovations in arts and technology. Buddhism, which had gradually been established in China from the 1st century, became the predominant religion and was adopted by the royal family and many of the common people.
Chang'an (長安) (modern
Xi'an), the national capital, is thought to have been the world's biggest city at the time. The Tang and the Han are often referred to as the most prosperous periods of Chinese history.
The Tang, like the Han, kept the trade routes open to the west and south and there was extensive trade with distant foreign countries and many foreign merchants settled in China.
The Tang introduced a new system into the Chinese government, called the "Equal Field" System. This system gave families land grants from the Emperor based on their needs, not their wealth.
From about 860 the Tang Dynasty began to decline due to a series of rebellions within China itself, and in the previously subject Kingdom of
Nanzhao (南詔) to the south. One of the warlords,
Huang Chao (黃巢), captured Guangzhou in 879, killing most of the 200,000 inhabitants including most of the large colony of foreign merchant families there. In late 880 Luoyang surrendered to him and on 5 January, 881 he conquered
Chang'an. The emperor
Xizong (唐僖宗) fled to Chengdu and Huang established a new temporary regime, which was eventually destroyed by Tang forces, but another time of political chaos followed.
Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms
The period of political disunity between the Tang and the Song, known as the
Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period (五代十国), lasted little more than half a century, from 907 to 960. During this brief era, when China was in all respects a multistate system, five regimes succeeded one another rapidly in control of the old Imperial heartland in northern China. During this same time, 10 more stable regimes occupied sections of southern and western China, so the period is also referred to as that of the Ten Kingdoms (十国).
Song Dynasty and Liao, Jin, Western Xia
Clock Tower of Kaifeng, designed and engineered by
Su Song (1031-1095 AD).In 960, the
Song Dynasty (宋朝) gained power over most of China and established its capital in Kaifeng (汴京/開封), starting a period of economic prosperity, while the Khitan people
Liao Dynasty (契丹族遼國) ruled over
Manchuria and eastern Mongolia. In 1115 the Jurchen Jin Dynasty (1115-1234) (女真族金國) emerged to prominence, annihilating the Liao Dynasty in 10 years. Meanwhile, in what are now the northwestern Chinese provinces of
Gansu, Shaanxi, and
Ningxia, there emerged a Western Xia Dynasty (西夏) from 1032 up to 1227, established by Tangut tribes.
It also took power over northern China and Kaifeng from the Song Dynasty, which moved its capital to
Hangzhou (杭州). The Southern Song Dynasty also suffered the humiliation of having to acknowledge the Jin Dynasty as formal overlords. In the ensuing years China was divided between the Song Dynasty, the Jin Dynasty and the Tangut Western Xia (西夏). Southern Song experienced a period of great technological development which can be explained in part by the military pressure that it felt from the north. This included the use of gunpowder weapons, which played a large role in the Song Dynasty naval victories against the Jin in the
Battle of Tangdao and Battle of Caishi on the Yangtze River in 1161 AD. Furthermore, China's first permanent standing
navy was assembled and provided an admiral's office at
Dinghai in 1132 AD, under the reign of
Emperor Renzong of Song.
The Song Dynasty is considered by many to be classical China's high point in science and technology, with innovative figures such as
Su Song (1020-1101 AD) and Shen Kuo (1031-1095 AD). There was court intrigue with the political rivals of the Reformers and Conservatives, led by the chancellors
Wang Anshi and Sima Guang, respectively. By the mid to late 13th century the Chinese had adopted the dogma of
Neo-Confucian philosophy formulated by
Zhu Xi. There were enormous literary works compiled during the Song Dynasty, such as the historical work of the
Zizhi Tongjian. Culture and the arts flourished, with grandiose artworks such as
Along the River During Qingming Festival and
Eighteen Songs of a Nomad Flute, while there were great Buddhist painters such as Lin Tinggui.
Yuan Dynasty
Mounting a Horse, by
Qian Xuan (1235-1305 AD).Jurchens Jin Dynasty, 1115–1234, whose names are also rendered "Jin" in pinyin, was defeated by the Mongols, who then proceeded to defeat the Southern Song in a long and bloody war, the first war where firearms played an important role. During the era after the war, later called the
Pax Mongolica, adventurous Westerners such as Marco Polo travelled all the way to China and brought the first reports of its wonders to Europe. In the Yuan Dynasty, the Mongols were divided between those who wanted to remain based in the steppes and those who wished to adopt the customs of the Chinese.
Kublai Khan (忽必烈/元世祖), grandson of Genghis Khan (成吉思汗), wanting to adopt the customs of China, established the
Yuan Dynasty (元朝). This was the first dynasty to rule the whole of China from Beijing (北京) as the capital. Beijing had been ceded to Liao in AD
938 with the Sixteen Prefectures of Yan Yun (燕雲十六州). Before that, it had been the capital of the
Jin Dynasty, 1115–1234, who did not rule all of China.
Before the Mongol invasion, Chinese dynasties reportedly had approximately 120 million inhabitants; after the conquest was completed in 1279, the 1300 census reported roughly 60 million people.Ping-ti Ho, "An Estimate of the Total Population of Sung-Chin China", in
Études Song, Series 1, No 1, (1970) pp. 33-53. The 14th century epidemics of plague is estimated to have killed 30% of the population of China. Course: Plague Black Death - Consequences
Ming Dynasty
(1470-1523).Throughout a short-lived Yuan Dynasty, there was strong sentiment, among the populace, against the rule of the foreigners, which finally led to peasant revolts. The Mongolians were pushed back to the steppes and replaced by the Ming Dynasty (明朝) in 1368.
Urbanization increased as the population grew and as the division of labor grew more complex. Large urban centers, such as
Nanjing and
Beijing, also contributed to the growth of private industry. In particular, small-scale industries grew up, often specializing in paper, silk, cotton, and porcelain goods. For the most part, however, relatively small urban centers with markets proliferated around the country. Town markets mainly traded food, with some necessary manufactures such as pins or oil.
Despite the
xenophobia and intellectual introspection characteristic of the increasingly popular new school of neo-Confucianism, China under the early Ming Dynasty was not isolated. Foreign trade and other contacts with the outside world, particularly
Japan (倭國), increased considerably. Chinese merchants explored all of the
Indian Ocean, reaching East Africa with the voyages of Zheng He (鄭和, original name
Ma Sanbao 馬三保).
Zhu Yuanzhang (朱元璋) or (Hongwu Emperor of China, 洪武皇帝/明太祖), the founder of the dynasty, laid the foundations for a state interested less in commerce and more in extracting revenues from the agricultural sector. Perhaps because of the Emperor's background as a peasant, the Ming economic system emphasized agriculture, unlike that of the Song and the Mongolian Dynasties, which relied on traders and merchants for revenue. Neo-feudal landholdings of the Song and Mongol periods were expropriated by the Ming rulers. Great landed estates were confiscated by the government, fragmented, and rented out. Private slavery was forbidden. Consequently, after the death of Yongle Emperor of China (永樂皇帝/明成祖), independent peasant landholders predominated in Chinese agriculture. These laws might have paved the way to removing the worst of the poverty during the previous regimes. The laws against the merchants and the restrictions under which the craftsmen worked remained essentially as they had been under the Song, but now the remnants of the older foreign merchant class also fell under these new Ming laws. Their influence quickly dwindled.The dynasty had a strong and complex central government that unified and controlled the empire. The emperor's role became more autocratic, although Zhu Yuanzhang necessarily continued to use what he called the "Grand Secretaries" to assist with the immense paperwork of the bureaucracy, including memorials (petitions and recommendations to the throne), imperial edicts in reply, reports of various kinds, and tax records. It was this same bureaucracy that later prevented the Ming government from being able to adapt to changes in society, and eventually led to its decline.
Emperor Yong-le strenuously tried to extend China's influence beyond its borders by demanding other rulers send ambassadors to China to present tribute. A large navy was built, including four-masted ships displacing 1,500 tons. A standing army of 1 million troops (some estimate as many as 1.9 million) was created. The Chinese armies conquered
Annam (安南) while the Chinese fleet sailed the China seas and the Indian Ocean, cruising as far as the east coast of Africa. The Chinese gained influence in Eastern
Turkestan. Several maritime Asian nations sent envoys with tribute for the Chinese emperor. Domestically, the
Grand Canal of China was expanded, and proved to be a stimulus to domestic trade. Over 100,000 tons of iron per year were produced. Many books were printed using movable type. The imperial palace in Beijing's Forbidden City reached its current splendor. The Ming period seems to have been one of China's most prosperous. It was also during these centuries that the potential of south China came to be fully exploited. New crops were widely cultivated and industries such as those producing porcelain and textiles flourished.
During the Ming dynasty the last construction on the Great Wall was undertaken to protect China from foreign invasions. While the Great Wall had been built in earlier times, most of what is seen today was either built or repaired by the Ming. The brick and granite work was enlarged, the watch towers were redesigned, and cannons were placed along its length.
Qing Dynasty
The
Qing Dynasty (清朝, 1644–1911) was founded after the defeat of the
Ming Dynasty, the last Han Chinese dynasty, by the Manchus (滿族). The Manchus were formerly known as the
Jurchen and
invasion from the north in the late seventeenth century. An estimated 25 million people died during the
Death toll#Wars (1616-1644). Twentieth Century Atlas - Historical Body Count Even though the Manchus started out as alien conquerors, they quickly adopted the Confucian norms of traditional Chinese government. They eventually ruled in the manner of traditional native dynasties.
The Manchus enforced a 'queue order' forcing the Han Chinese to adopt the Manchu queue and Manchu-style clothing. The Manchus had a special hair style: the "
Queue (hairstyle)". They cut hair off the front of their heads and made the remaining hair into a long pigtail. The traditional Chinese clothing, or
Hanfu (漢服) was also replaced by Manchu-style clothing.
Qipao (bannermen dress (旗袍) and
Tangzhuang (唐裝)), usually regarded as traditional Chinese clothing nowadays, are actually Manchu-style clothing. The penalty for not complying was death.
Kangxi Emperor of China (康熙皇帝/清聖祖) ordered the creation of
Kangxi Dictionary of Chinese characters ever put together at the time. Under
Qianlong Emperor of China, the compilation of a catalogue of the important works on Chinese culture was made.
The Manchus set up the "Eight Banners" system (八旗制度) in an attempt to avoid being assimilated into Chinese society. The "Eight Banners" were military institutions, set up to provide a structure with which the Manchu "bannermen" were meant to identify. Banner membership was to be based on traditional Manchu skills such as archery, horsemanship, and frugality. In addition, they were encouraged to use the Manchu language, rather than Chinese. Bannermen were given economic and legal privileges in Chinese cities.
Over the next half-century, the Manchus consolidated control of some areas originally under the
Ming Dynasty, including Yunnan. They also stretched their sphere of influence over Xinjiang, Tibet and
Mongolia.
During the nineteenth century,
Qing control weakened. China suffered massive social strife, economic stagnation, and increased Western involvement including the destructive trade in
opium and the new influence of
19th Century Protestant Missions in China. Britain's desire to continue its opium trade with China collided with imperial edicts prohibiting the addictive drug, and the
First Opium War erupted in 1840. Britain and other Western powers, including the
United States,
France,
Russia, and
Germany thereupon forcibly occupied "concessions" and gained special commercial privileges. Hong Kong was ceded to Britain in 1842 under the Treaty of Nanjing . The
Taiping Rebellion (1851–1864) was the largest
civil war in China.
In addition, more costly rebellions in terms of human lives and economics followed the Taiping Rebellion such as the Punti-Hakka Clan Wars, Nien Rebellion, Dungan revolt, Panthay Rebellion and the
Boxer Rebellion.Damsan Harper, Steve Fallon, Katja Gaskell, Julie Grundvig, Carolyn Heller, Thomas Huhti, Bradley Maynew, Christopher Pitts. Lonely Planet China. 9. 2005. ISBN 1-74059-687-0 In many ways, the rebellions and the treaties the Qing were forced to sign with the imperialist powers are symptomatic of the inability of the Chinese government to respond adequately to the challenging conditions facing China in the nineteenth century.
Modern era
The two Opium wars and the opium trade were costly outcomes for the
Qing dynasty and the Chinese people. The Qing imperial treasury was declared bankrupt twice arising from indemnities incurred in the Opium wars and the large outflow of silver due to the opium trade (in tens of billions of ounces). China suffered two extreme famines exactly twenty years after each opium war in the 1860s and 1880s, and the Qing imperial dynasty was ineffective in helping the population. Socially these events had a profound impact as it challenged the hegemony that the Chinese had enjoyed in Asia for centuries. As a result, the country was in a state of turmoil.A large
List of revolutions and rebellions, the
Taiping Rebellion, involved around a third of China falling under control of the Taiping Tianguo, a quasi-Christian religious movement led by the "Heavenly King" Hong Xiuquan. Only after fourteen years were the Taipings finally crushed - the Taiping army was destroyed in the Third Battle of Nanking in 1864. In total between twenty million and fifty million lives were lost, making it the second deadliest war in human history.
The Qing officials were slow to adopt modernity and suspicious of social and technological advances that they viewed as a threat to their absolute control over China. Therefore, the dynasty was ill-equipped to handle the Western encroachment. Western powers did intervene militarily to quell domestic chaos, such as the Taiping Rebellion and the anti-imperialist Boxer Rebellion (義和團起義). Charles George Gordon, later killed in the siege of
Khartoum, Sudan, was often credited with having involved to help the Qing dynasty to defeat the Taiping insurrection.
By the 1860s, the Qing Dynasty had put down the rebellions at enormous cost and loss of life. This undermined the credibility of the Qing regime and, spearheaded by local initiatives by provincial leaders and gentry, contributed to the rise of warlordism in China. The Qing Dynasty under the Emperor Guangxu (光緒皇帝/清德宗) proceeded to deal with the problem of modernization through the Self-Strengthening Movement (自強運動). However, between
1898 and 1908 the
Empress Dowager Cixi had the reformist Guangxu imprisoned for being 'mentally disabled'. The Empress Dowager (慈禧太后), with the help of conservatives, initiated a military coup, effectively removed the young Emperor from power, and overturned most of the more radical reforms. He died one day before the death of the Empress Dowager (some believe Guangxu was poisoned by Cixi). Official corruption, cynicism, and imperial family quarrels made most of the military reforms useless. As a result, the Qing's "
New Armies" were soundly defeated in the
Sino-French War (1883-1885) and the
Sino-Japanese War (1894-1895).
At the start of the
20th century, the Boxer Rebellion threatened northern China. This was a conservative anti-imperialist movement that sought to return China to old ways. The Empress Dowager, probably seeking to ensure her continued grip on power, sided with the Boxers when they advanced on Beijing. In response the
Eight-Nation Alliance invaded China. Consisting of British, Japanese, Russian, Italian, German, French, US and Austrian troops, the alliance defeated the Boxers and demanded further concessions from the Qing government.
Republic of China
Frustrated by the Qing court's resistance to reform and by China's weakness, young officials, military officers, and students—inspired by the revolutionary ideas of Sun Yat-sen (孫中山) —began to advocate the overthrow of the Qing Dynasty and creation of a republic. A revolutionary military uprising, the
Wuchang Uprising, began on October 10,
1911 in Wuhan (武漢). The provisional government of the Republic of China (中華民國) was formed in Nanjing on March 12, 1912 with
Sun Yat-sen as President of the Republic of China, but Sun was forced to turn power over to Yuan Shikai (袁世凱), who commanded the
New Army and was Prime Minister under the Qing government, as part of the agreement to let the
Ai-xin-jue-luo Pu-yi abdicate (a decision he would later regret). Yuan Shikai proceeded in the next few years to abolish the national and provincial assemblies and declared himself emperor in
1915. Yuan's imperial ambitions were fiercely opposed by his subordinates, and faced with the prospect of rebellion, Yuan abdicated and died shortly afterwards in 1916, leaving a power vacuum in China. His death left the republican government all but shattered, ushering in the era of the "warlords" when China was ruled by shifting coalitions of competing provincial military leaders.
A little noticed event (to the rest of the world) in 1919 would have long-term repercussions for the rest of Chinese history in the 20th century. This was the May Fourth Movement (五四運動). This movement began as a response to the insult imposed on China by the Treaty of Versailles ending World War I but became a protest movement about the domestic situation in China. The discrediting of liberal Western philosophy amongst Chinese intellectuals was followed by the adoption of more radical lines of thought. This in turn planted the seeds for the irreconcilable conflict between the left and right in China that would dominate Chinese history for the rest of the century.
In the 1920s, Sun Yat-Sen established a revolutionary base in south China, and set out to unite the fragmented nation. With Soviet assistance, he entered into an alliance with the fledgling
Communist Party of China (CPC, 中國共產黨). After Sun's death from cancer in 1925, one of his protégés,
Chiang Kai-shek (蔣介石), seized control of the Kuomintang and succeeded in bringing most of south and central China under its rule in a military campaign known as the
Northern Expedition (北伐). Having defeated the warlords in south and central China by military force, Chiang was able to secure the nominal allegiance of the warlords in the North. In
1927, Chiang turned on the CPC and relentlessly chased the CPC armies and its leaders from their bases in southern and eastern China. In 1934, driven from their mountain bases such as the
Chinese Soviet Republic (中華蘇維埃共和國), the CPC forces embarked on the
Long March (長征) across China's most desolate terrain to the northwest, where they established a guerrilla base at
Yan'an in
Shanxi Province (陝西省延安市).
During the
Long March, the communists reorganized under a new leader, Mao Zedong (Mao Tse-tung, 毛澤東). The bitter struggle between the KMT and the CPC continued, openly or clandestinely, through the 14-year long Japanese invasion (
1931-
1945), even though the two parties nominally formed a united front to oppose the Japanese invaders in
1937, during the
Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945) portion of World War II. The war between the two parties resumed following the Japanese defeat in 1945. By 1949, the CPC occupied most of the country.
(see Chinese Civil War)Chiang Kai-shek fled with the remnants of his government to
Taiwan in 1949 and his Nationalist Party would control the island as well as a few neighboring islands until democratic elections in the early 1990s. Since then, the political status of Taiwan has always been under dispute.
Present
With the proclamation of the People's Republic of China (PRC) (中華人民共和國) on October 1, 1949, China was divided once again according to the claims of that government. However, the actual Political status of Taiwan is disputed. Since the 1990s, the Republic of China government that governs Taiwan along with associated islands as well as some small islands off the coast of Fujian has been pushing to gain international recognition, while the People's Republic of China vehemently opposes foreign involvement, and insists that foreign relations not deviate from the
One-China policy.
See also
References
From hunter-gatherers to farmers
- Magnetostratigraphic dating of early humans in China, by Rixiang zhu, Zhisheng An, Richard Potts, Kenneth A. Hoffman.
- The Discovery of Early Pottery in China, by Zhang Chi, Department of Archaeology, Peking University, China.
Prehistory
- Discovery of residue from fermented beverage consumed up to 9,000 years ago in Jiahu, Henan Province, China. By Dr. Patrick E McGovern, University of Pennsylvania archaeochemist and colleagues from China, Great Britain and Germany.
Xia Dynasty
- David S. Nivison (1993), “Chu shu chi nien”, Early Chinese Texts: a bibliographical guide (editor—Loewe M.) p.39–47 (Berkeley: Society for the Study of Early China).
- James Legge (1865), The Chinese Classics III: The Shoo King Prolegomena (Taipei: Southern Materials Center). (This contains an English translation of the Bamboo Annals.)
Shang Dynasty
- Stephen W. Durrant (1995), The Cloudy Mirror: Tension and Conflict in the Writings of Sima Qian. Albany : State University of New York Press.
Han Dynasty
- Rafe de Crespigny. 1977. The Ch’iang Barbarians and the Empire of Han: A Study in Frontier Policy. Papers on Far Eastern History 16, Australian National University. Canberra.
- de Crespigny, Rafe. 1984. Northern Frontier. The Policies and Strategies of the Later Han Empire. Rafe de Crespigny. 1984. Faculty of Asian Studies, Australian National University. Canberra.
- de Crespigny, Rafe. 1989. "South China under the Later Han Dynasty" (Chapter One from Generals of the South: the Foundation and early history of the Three Kingdoms state of Wu by Rafe de Crespigny, in Asian Studies Monographs, New Series No. 16 Faculty of Asian Studies, The Australian National University, Canberra 1989)
- de Crespigny, Rafe. 1996. "Later Han Military Administration: An Outline of the Military Administration of the Later Han Empire." Rafe de Crespigny. Based on the Introduction to Emperor Huan and Emperor Ling being the Chronicle of Later Han for the years 189 to 220 AD as recorded in Chapters 59 to 69 of the Zizhi tongjian of Sima Guang, translated and annotated by Rafe de Crespigny and originally published in the Asian Studies Monographs, New Series No. 21, Faculty of Asian Studies, The Australian National University, Canberra 1996.
- Dubs, Homer H. 1938. The History of the Former Han Dynasty by Pan Ku. Vol. One. Baltimore. Waverly Press, Inc.
- Dubs, Homer H. 1944. The History of the Former Han Dynasty by Pan Ku. Vol. Two. Baltimore. Waverly Press, Inc.
- Dubs, Homer H. 1955. The History of the Former Han Dynasty by Pan Ku. Vol. Three. Ithaca, New York. Spoken Languages Services, Inc.
- Hill, John E. 2004. The Western Regions according to the Hou Hanshu. Draft annotated English translation.
- Hill, John E. 2004. The Peoples of the West from the Weilue ?? by Yu Huan ??: A Third Century Chinese Account Composed between AD 239 and 265. Draft annotated English translation.
- Hirth, Friedrich. 1875. China and the Roman Orient. Shanghai and Hong Kong. Unchanged reprint. Chicago, Ares Publishers, 1975.
- Hulsewé, A. F. P. and Loewe, M. A. N. 1979. China in Central Asia: The Early Stage 125 BC – AD 23: an annotated translation of chapters 61 and 96 of the History of the Former Han Dynasty. Leiden: E. J. Brill.
- Twitchett, Denis and Loewe, Michael, eds. 1986. The Cambridge History of China. Volume I. The Ch’in and Han Empires, 221 BC – AD 220. Cambridge University Press.
Empire of China - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Empire of China may refer to: History of China, China was an empire from the Qin Dynasty until the Qing Dynasty; Empire of China (1915–1916), the short-lived, self-proclaimed ...
History of China - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The recorded history of China began in the 15th century BC when the Shang Dynasty started to use markings that evolved into the present Chinese characters. Turtle shells with ...
The Chinese Empire
The Great Unification: The Ch'in, 256-206 BC The Former Han, 206 BC-25 AD The Later Han, 25-220 The Han Synthesis The Sui, 589-618 The T'ang, 618-970
The Chinese Empire: Contents
The Great Unification: The Ch'in, 256-206 BC The Former Han, 206 BC-25 AD The Later Han, 25-220 The Han Synthesis The Sui, 589-618 The T'ang, 618-970
Wing Yip Store - Chinese and Oriental Food Made Easy - Online
The Ideal One-Stop Shop For All Your Oriental Grocery Needs
Chinese Empire - Definition at the #1 Online Dictionary
empire in E Asia, from the founding of its first dynasty (c. 2200 ) to the revolution of 1911, including China, Manchuria, Mongolia, Tibet, & Turkestan
Chinese State Circus tickets Sunderland Empire Sunderland ...
Find and buy Chinese State Circus tickets Sunderland Empire Sunderland, at Ticketmaster.co.uk ... Note: Tickets may not be available in all price levels and sections.
Secrets of the Lost Chinese Empire
Impressive Inventions, Terra-Cotta Soldiers, The Story of Tea, Buddhism, and the Great Wall of China.
Chinese Empire
Chinese Empire: BEHIND THE VEIL OF THE FORBIDDEN CITY PRICE: $24.00: BIOGRAPHIES O/T DALAI LAMAS Biographies by a Chinese Lamaist Monk (now on CP party Committe for Religion) on ...
Amazon.com: The New Chinese Empire: Bejing's Political Dilemma And ...
Amazon.com: The New Chinese Empire: Bejing's Political Dilemma And What It Means For The United States: Ross Terrill: Books ...