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HISTORY 3501C Alien Dynasties: Ethnicity and Women

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Title: HISTORY 3501C Alien Dynasties: Ethnicity and Women


1
HISTORY 3501C Alien Dynasties Ethnicity and
Women
  • Venue Humanities Building, New Asia College 12
    (NAH 12)
  • Time Wednesday (230pm-415 pm)
  • Medium of Instruction English
  • Professor Dr. Priscilla (Ching) Chung ???
  • prischung_at_cuhk.edu.hk
  • Tutor Amy Chung
  • amychung_at_arts.cuhk.edu.hk
  • Required readings for each week can be found on
    the website http//ihome.cuhk.edu.hk/7Eb109197/
  • Students should complete these readings before
    the lecture.

2
Conquest Dynasties Ethnicity and Women
  • Central Asia Today
  • Central Asia in World History
  • Central Asia and China
  • The Military Fronts of the Nomads
  • Sites of Nomadic Invasions
  • Periods of Nomadic Invasions
  • Nomad Empires of Central Asia
  • Course description
  • Course Description
  • Course Goals
  • Course Format
  • Student Assessment
  • Schedule of Courses
  • Major Readings
  • Reading for Next Week

3
Background Central Asia Today
  • Central Asia has been in the news since the
    breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991.
  • Soviet Union had been a federation 15 republics
    -- Soviet Socialist Republics (SSR).
  • The republics became independent countries, with
    some still loosely organized under the heading
    Commonwealth of Independent States.
  • There were four main groupings Eastern Europe,
    Baltic States, Caucasus, and Central Asia.
  • The republics in Central Asia are Kyrgyzstan,
    Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and
    Uzbekistan.
  • Most of the Central Asians were nomads who
    originated from Eastern Asia Mongolia
    (especially the Turkic Mongols).
  • General movement took these people westward
    2/3C AD.
  • Waves of Invasions
  • Europe spared by the Mongols who returned to
    their homeland at the death of Genghis Khan.
  • Middle East
  • India
  • China

4
Background Central Asia Today (2)
  • China is very concerned about how the
    independence of these republics will affect the
    politics of Chinas ethnic minorities as there
    are many minorities in China. The major ones are
  • 8 million Uighur Turks live in Xinjiang old
    Chinese Turkestan.
  • The Tibetans are struggling with independence
    issues.
  • More than a million Kazakhs live in China (total
    population in Kazakhstan 12 million).
  • 3,000 people in Xinjiang (China) speak Uzbek and
    Uzbekistan is encouraging the migration of Uzbek
    speakers to Uzbekistan
  • There are also Kyrgyz speakers in China and the
    Kyrgyz have been involved in trade along the Silk
    Road since the 8th century.

5
Background Central Asia Today (3)
6
Central Asia Today (4)
  • Basic Demographic and Economic Indictors for the
    Central Asian Republics
  • (Source World Development Report, 1993
    Nationalities from The Economist, December 1992).

7
Central Asia Today Tajikistan
  • Single non-Turkic republic but surrounded by
    Turks except in the south.
  • Shares culture with Iran but Muslim in faith.
  • Tajik language is dialect of Persian
  • Mountainous, landlocked no ports
  • Has been inhabited continuously since 4,000 BC.
  • Under the rule of different empires mostly the
    Persian Empire.
  • Arabs brought Islam in the 7th century.
  • The Mongols later took partial control of Central
    Asia, and later the land that today comprises
    Tajikistan became a part of the emirate of
    Bukhara.
  • A small community of Jews displaced from the
    Middle East after the Babylonian captivity,
    migrated to the region and settled there after
    600 BC, though the majority of Jews did not
    migrate to Tajikistan until the 20th century.

8
Central Asia Today Kazakhstan
  • Turkic and Muslim character.
  • Kazakhs are a minority in their own republic
    (40) close to a quarter of population lost
    during collectivization.
  • Unspoken policy of encouraging peoples of Kazakh
    origin to return from China, Mongolia,
    Uzbekistan, Russia, Turkey, Europe and elsewhere.
  • Large numbers of Uzbeks live in the south along
    the Uzbek border.
  • Economic power in hands of Russians, Koreans and
    other Muslim nationalities.
  • Anguish at having had their land, dignity,
    language and culture stripped away by the
    Russians.

9
Central Asia Today Kyrgyzstan
  • Kyrgyzstan means the "Land of the Kyrgyz."
  • Mountainous and somewhat isolated.
  • Borders Kazakhstan to the north, Uzbekistan to
    the west, Tajikistan to the southwest and the PRC
    to the southeast.
  • Limited economic prospects
  • Large Uzbek minority.
  • Kyrgyz people are closest to the Kazakhs but are
    thought of as mountain Kazakhs by the Kazakhs.
  • The first known homeland of the Kyrgyz in
    southern Siberia.
  • Their first appearance in written documents
    appears in the Sima Qians Records of the Grand
    Historian (compiled 109 BC to 91 BC).
  • The Kyrgyz were once under the rule of the
    Göktürks and Uyghur, the latter tribe being
    defeated and migrating to Xinjiang.
  • Currently, the Kyrgyz (in China) form one of the
    56 ethnic groups officially recognized by the PRC.

10
Central Asia Today Turkmenistan
  • Isolated from the other Central Asian republics
    by a large desert expanse.
  • Linguistically, they are Oghuz (Western Turk) as
    the Azerbaijanis and the Turks of Turkey.
  • Turkmen land is located in the centre of Asia, on
    the crossroads of the ancient caravan routes and
    modern transcontinental communication lines.
  • It is on the only land corridor leading into Iran
    and to the Persian Gulf and Turkey.
  • It was a land through which armies marched to
    conquer other lands Alexander the Greater,
    Genghis Khan and others.
  • Possesses major oil and gas reserves that make it
    the richest per capita state of central Asia.
  • Turkmenistan is one of the few countries of the
    world in which there is almost no HIV sufferers
    due to preventive work of the government.

11
Central Asia Today Uzbekistan
  • Tashkent, its capital, was the Asian capital of
    the Soviet Union.
  • Uzbeks possess a high degree of education,
    technical know-how and advanced scientific and
    technological institutes.
  • Chief rival with Kazakhstan for regional
    influence.
  • Possible conflict with Tajikistan due to the
    large number of Tajiks (20.5 of Tajiks in the
    former Soviet Union live in Uzbekistan).
  • Tajiks form a majority in Samarqand.
  • Widespread use of Tajik language.
  • Large Uzbek population in Tajikistan concentrated
    in the north.
  • (1.5 million according to Uzbeks forming 7 of
    the Uzbek population)

12
Background Central Asia in World History
  • For 2,000 years, from 4C BC to 15C Ad, the steppe
    areas of Central Asia, from the borders of
    Manchuria to Ukraine, lived peoples who
    threatened settled peoples from China to Russia
    and Hungary, including Iran, India, the Byzantine
    empire, and even Egypt.
  • Central Asians were originally people without a
    common language, most without writing.
  • They were mounted archers, using harassment and
    indirect maneuver, before delivering the blow
    enabled them to attack from bases far away and
    overcome problems of logistics.
  • They were of different ethnic origins but
    belonging to major branches (Turks, Mongols,
    Manchus and their ancestors).
  • Periodically, they would be united by a common
    strategic culture the culture of the steppe
    under a charismatic leader.
  • They were empire destroyers when they managed to
    unite under the leadership of a brilliant
    commander.

13
Background Central Asia in World History (2)
  • They contributed to exchanges on the Silk Road
    and their heirs laid the basis of the Ottoman
    (Turkey) and Mughal (India) Empires.
  • Most originated from Eastern Asia Mongolia
    (especially the Turkic Mongols) but the general
    movement took these people westward 2/3C AD
  • At times, they would assimilate the knowledge and
    culture of settled societies China, Iran, and
    Byzantine and rule over empires.
  • Nomadic populations of Eurasia were
  • Indo-Iranians Sythians eliminated in 1C AD.
    -- Turkic-speaking peoples drove out or absorbed
    the Indo-Iranians and occupied the area known as
    Turkestan.
  • Ancestors of Turkic speaking peoples -- Mongols,
    Manchus, Uralo-Altaic peoples Finns and
    Hungarians.

14
Central Asia and China
  • Central Asia and China (northern China except for
    the Mongols (Yuan) and Manchus (Qing) dynasties
  • Xiongnu (Turkic Mongols) 3-5 C BC- 2C AD
  • Tuoba (proto-Turks) 5C
  • Rouran (Mongols) 5-6 C.
  • Qidans (Mongols) 10-12C.
  • Jurchens (Manchus) 12-13C.
  • Yuan dynasty (Mongols)
  • Oirots (Mongols) 15C.
  • Qing dynasty (Manchus) 17C.
  • Oirots (Mongols) 17C.

15
Sites of Nomadic InvasionsEurope
  • Europe (mainly Russia, central Europe and the
    Balkans)
  • Middle East (Mainly Iran, Afganistan, Asia Minor,
    Mesopotamia), Egypt (and Syria) remain under
    Mamluk control (13-16C) military slaves mostly
    Turkish speaking.
  • India -- the Hephthalite Huns White Huns --
    (480) destroyed the Gupta empire Babur, driven
    out of Samarkand by the Uzbeks, created the
    Mughal dynasty (1525-1857).
  • China (northern China except for the Mongol and
    Manchu dynasties)
  • Origin of Huns disputed some say they are
    descended of the Xiongnu but others question
    this.

16
Periods of Nomadic Invasions
  • First Phase
  • Groups of Iranian origin (Sythians, Sarmatians,
    Alans from the 8C BC- 2C AD -- the Turkish
    speaking element gradually occupied western
    central Asia (Turkistan) and eliminated or
    assimilated the Iranian element.
  • Manchus
  • Uralo-Altaic peoples Finns and Hungarians
  • Second Phase
  • The Xiongnu (Turkic-Mongols) occupy greater
    Mongolia.
  • Active against China from 4th C BC.
  • They form an empire in the 3rd-2nd C BC.
  • The Xiongnu drive the Yuezhi(Indo-Europeans)
    westward in 2 C BC.
  • The Yuezhi founded the Kushan empire (1st C
    BC-2nd C AD) from Iran to India.
  • Ancestors of Turkic speaking peoples Mongols

17
Periods of Nomadic Invasions (2)
  • Third Phase
  • In the 4th-5th centuries, the nomads of Central
    Asia flood over the entire world theater.
  • The Tuoba (4C) overran northern China and founded
    the Northern Wei dynasty (368-534).
  • The Rouran (4C) was a standing threat to the
    Northern Wei.
  • Expansion of Black Huns (5C) towards the Near
    East and Western Europe.
  • The Hephthalite (White) Huns -- displaced the
    Sythians and conquered Sogdiana before 425 then
    drove towards the Gupta empire (India) which they
    destroyed, and ravaged Iran.
  • Fourth Phase
  • Tujue defeats Rouran (6-7C) which soon
    disintegrates.
  • Tuhue allied with the Sassanids, they annihilate
    the Hephthalite (White) Huns then alliend with
    Byzantium against the Sassanids.
  • China fights Tujue.
  • In the 6C and the following two centuries, the
    Avars (Rouran?) attack the Byzantine empire and
    Russia and conquer Hungary where they partly
    succeed in establishing themselves.
  • They end up being crushed in the 9th century by
    the Carolingians.

18
Periods of Nomadic Invasions (3)
  • The Bulgars, emerging from central Asia, cross
    the Danube (5th C) some become Slavized and
    clashed heavily with the Byzantium Empire
    another section of the Bulgars settle on the
    Volga.
  • The Khazar Turks (7C) in western Asia and the
    Uighur Turks in the east form states.
  • One of the Khazar Khaghans converts to Judaism,
    allies with the Byzantium the Uighur converts to
    Manichaeism, often allies with China.
  • Fifth Phase
  • The 10-11C was a time of turbulence in the
    steppes of Central Asia, doubtless for
    demographic reasons, and nomad waves pour out in
    all directions.
  • The Qidan took northern China (10C) and founded
    the Liao.
  • The Seljukid Turks occupied Iran as far as the
    border with India (11C) and penetrate into
    Anatolia.
  • The Pechenegs clash with the Byzantine empire and
    Kievan Russia (11C).
  • Soon they are followed by the Kipchaks who are
    unable to overcome the Byzantine Empire and
    harass Kievan Russia.
  • Pressure from the Turkish speakers, first the the
    Ghaznavids (10C) in eastern Iran, is soon felt as
    far as northern India.
  • Establishment of the Mamluk sultanate of Delhi
    (1206).

19
Periods of Nomadic Invasions (4)
  • From Manchuria, the Jurchen conquer northern
    China (12C) while a sector of the Qidans flee and
    found the empire of Qara Qidan further west
    (12C).
  • Sixth Phase
  • Mongols form the largest international empire in
    history (13-14C) -- all the areas held by the
    nomads, as well as much of the Eurasian continent
    come under their domination.
  • Timur (Tamerlane) extends the heritage of Genghis
    Khan in his own way, but after his death (1405),
    his successors are unable to retain it for long.
  • His direct descendant, Babur, conquers India in
    1525 and founds the Mughal dynasty (1526-1857)
    Last sultan exiled to Burma by the British in
    1862.
  • At its greatest territorial extent ruled most of
    the Indian subcontinent then known as Hindustan
    and parts of what is now Afghanistan and
    Pakistan.
  • Seventh Phase
  • The decline of the warrior nomad societies in
    central Asia from mid-16C - mid-18 C.
  • China is conquered by the Manchus (1644).
  • The khanate of the Crimea is annexed in 1783 and
    the Manchus defeated the Oirot Mongols in the mid
    18-19C.

20
Nomad Empires of Central Asia
  • 6-2 C BC Scythian empire (Iranians)
  • 3-2 C BC Xiongnu (Turkic Mongols)
  • 1-s C AD Xianbei Empire (Mongols)
  • 4-6 C Rouran (Mongols)
  • 6C (552-c.582) Tujue (Turkic)
  • 6-7C Division into Eastern Turks (582-657)
    Western Turks (582-630)
  • 7-8C Second Khaghnate of the Eastern Turks
    (682-744)
  • 7-9 C Tibetan expansion in central Asia zenith
    of the Tibetan empire (755-797) Collapse of
    the Tibetan empire (842).
  • 8-10C Uighur (Turkic), Manichaean by religion
    (740-840), destroyed by the Kirghiz (Turks).
  • 840-924 Kirghiz empire of Mongolia.
  • 1130/1135-1211 Empire of the Qara-Khitai
    (Mongols, Buddhist by religion).
  • 13-14 C Ghenghiskhanid empire
  • 15-16C Uzbek (Turkic) empire founded by Abul
    Khayr (1428-1468) consolidated by Sgaybani
    Khan (1451-1510)
  • 15C First Oirot Empire (Mongols) reaching its
    zenith (1439-1455)
  • 15 C Second Oirot empire-- declined after
    attacks from the Manchu emperors (1699).

21
Course Description
  • For about half of recorded history, China was
    ruled either in part or wholly by peoples of
    non-Han origin from Central/Central Asia.
  • The course will look at
  • The history of these peoples.
  • Their interest in China -- conquest or economic
    exploitation.
  • Sincization/Sinicization/sinification (hanhua ??)
    or Barbarization (yihua ??)?
  • What is Chineseness?
  • The role of women during alien dynasties.
  • The degree of power exercised by palace women.
  • The way these dynasties coped with palace women
    and maternal relatives.
  • Students will learn about the relationships of
    the peoples of Central/Central Asian peoples and
    their contributions to China and stimulate better
    understanding of the migrations of peoples,
    especially that of the nomads of Central/Central
    Asia.

22
Course Goals
  • Why is it important to be more knowledgeable
    about Central Asia?
  • In the post-Cold War era, Central Asia is an area
    struggling to achieve a sense of national
    identity.
  • It is a mess of historical cultural influences,
    tribal and clan loyalties, and religious fervor
    and so prone to instability and conflicts.
  • Influence in the area is no longer just Russia,
    but also Turkey, Iran, China, Pakistan, India and
    the United States.
  • China, already controlling Xinjiang (Eastern
    Turkistan) and Tibet is an important power in the
    region, especially in energy/oil politics.
  • China is also concerned about the possibility of
    the independence of these peoples from the Soviet
    Union will encourage independence movement of the
    same peoples within China.
  • Russia continues to dominate political
    decision-making throughout the Caucasus, and
    former Soviet republics.
  • As these countries shed their post-Soviet
    authoritarian systems, Russia's influence is
    slowly being reduced.
  • Turkey has some influence because of the ethnic
    and linguistic ties with the Turkic peoples of
    Central Asia, as well as serving as one of the
    oil pipeline routes to the Mediterranean.

23
Course Goals (2)
  • Iran, the seat of historical empires which
    controlled parts of Central Asia, has historical
    and cultural links to the region, and is vying to
    construct an oil pipeline from the Caspian Sea to
    the Persian Gulf.
  • Pakistan, a large and nuclear-armed state, helped
    to sustain Taliban rule in Afghanistan, and is
    capable of exercising some influence.
  • For some Central Asian nations, the shortest
    route to the ocean is through Pakistan.
  • Pakistan needs natural gas from Central Asia, and
    supports the development of pipelines from its
    countries.
  • India, as a nuclear-armed rising power, exercises
    some influence in the region, especially in Tibet
    as it has cultural affinities.
  • India is also perceived as a potential
    counterweight to China's regional power.
  • The United States with its military involvement
    in the region, and oil diplomacy, is also
    significantly involved in the region's politics.

24
Course Format
  • The course is in seminar format with both the
    instructor and students doing presentations and
    leading discussions.
  • Lectures on the topics will be chronological as
    well as topical.
  • Each lecture will be a discrete entity,
    complete in itself.
  • The lectures will give the historical backgrounds
    and the stories of the men and women who lived
    during those times.
  • Lecture notes and biographies of women will be
    available on the website for students reference.
  • Student participation and discussion during class
    is expected.
  • The tutorial will be in presentation, discussion
    and report format with the topics based on
    lectures and readings.
  • The Tutor will also advise the students on
    research for their Final Project.

25
Student Assessment
  • Final Project 40
  • Oral presentation in PowerPoint which is then
    converted into term paper
  • Class participation 30
  • Quiz 15
  • Paper on Chapter or Book Review 15
  • Tutorial 30

26
Student Assessment Final Project Converted to
Written Paper 40
  • Students work in groups on a final project which
    is then presented to class in PowerPoint about
    topic within the course.
  • The student will identify his/her part within the
    Project so that grades will be allotted
    individually.
  • The presentation will then be converted and
    expanded into a written paper of no less than
    1,500 words.
  • Examples of topics
  • The histories of the different alien
    dynasties/kingdoms in China
  • The biographies of the persons of historical
    importance (either male or female)
  • Can be narrative, analytical, discussions of
    ethnicity or of women

27
Student Assessment Final Project (2)
  • Deadlines
  • Two possible topics handed in mid February for
    approval.
  • Presentations begin March 1.
  • Papers due April 12.
  • Materials for use for preparation of presentation
    and paper
  • English readings
  • Lecture notes
  • Dynastic Histories)
  • Hui yao ??
  • Zhao ling ??
  • Zizhitongjian, Xu Zizhigongjian ???? ?????
  • Houfei cidian ????
  • Waiqi Zhuan ???

28
Student Assessment Final Project (3)
  • The paper must conform to the following style
  • Footnotes with page numbers.
  • Bibliography
  • Dates of person when first mentionedex
    (500-560) (r.500-560) (d.560) (b.500) (c.500)
  • Romanization must be in correct pinyin (followed
    by Chinese term)
  • For translation of titles use Hucker, Charles
    O., A Dictionary of Official Titles in Imperial
    China

29
Student Assessment Final Project and Paper
Example on Footnotes
  • Dame of Rongguo (????), surnamed Guan (?),
    (1103-1175), died at the age of 72. She was the
    wife of Li Anjian (???)also known as Li Kuang
    (??) who assisted in the administration of the
    local government of Huiji (??) in present day
    Jiangsu (??).
  • At that time, Qin Gui. (??), (1090-1155)1 was
    in power. He had the Emperors favor. Li was
    known for his uprightness and after he
    persistently criticized Qin in Lingnan (??), he
    was maligned and was exiled to Hainan (??).
  • 1 Franke, Herbert, Sung Biographies, p. 241.

30
Student Assessment Final Project Example on
Bibliography
  • Bibliography
  • Barfield, Thomas. The perilous frontier nomadic
    empires and China .CambridgeBlackwell,1989.
  • Tuotuo, Song-shi, (Beijing Zhonghua shuju
    Shanghai Xinhua shudian Shanghai faxingsuo
    faxing, 1977), 242/8612-6
  • Wang, Cheng, Dongdu shilue (Taibei Wenhai
    chubanshe, 1971), 13/4b-5a Djang, Chu Djang,
    Jane C., trans., A Compilation of Anecdotes of
    Sung Personalities (Collegeville, Minn. St.
    Johns University Press, 1989) 24-32.

31
Class Participation
  • Paper on Chapter or Book Review 15
  • Paper should be written following same format as
    the term paper.
  • Additional credit will be given for reviews that
    use other works on the same topic as the reading.
  • Quiz 15
  • Unannounced Quiz(es) will be given.
  • Students absent from the class will not be able
    to make up for the missed quiz.

32
Tutorials (30 )
  • 1)      Students are required to attend all the
    four tutorials .
  • 2)      Students need to hand in a 500-word
    written report for each tutorial . The written
    report should be be put into Tutors mailbox in
    1/F Fung King Hey Building FIVE working days
    before the tutorial . Please do not hand in
    reports through email .
  • 3)      Students can select either Topic 1 or 2
    international students may prefer to do Topic 1
    and local students may prefer to do Topic 2.
  • 5) Arrangements of tutorials will be made
    after the add/drop periods.
  • 5)      Should you have any enquiries, please
    feel free to contact Tutor .

33
Schedule of Courses
  • Introduction
  • Background
  • The Xiongnu Federation
  • The Xiongnu and the Sixteen Kingdoms
  • Other non-Han kingdoms such as the Qiang/Di
  • The Xianbei and its Kingdoms
  • The Xianbei, the Rouran and the Northern
    Dynasties
  • The Turks, the Uighurs and China
  • The Qidans and the Liao Dynasty
  • The Jurchens and the Jin Dynasty
  • The Tunguts and the Xi Xia
  • The Mongols and the Yuan
  • The Manchus and the Qing
  • Ethnicity and Women in Alien Dynasties

34
Background
  • Barfield, Thomas, The Perilous Frontier, Ch. 1,
    Introduction, pp. 1-8 16-28 OR
  • Challiand, Gerard, Nomadic Empires From Mongolia
    to the Danube, 2004, pp105-124. OR
  • Pulleyblank, Edwin G., Central Asia and
    Non-Chinese Peoples of Ancient China, Part IV,
    411-466. OR
  • Sinor, Denis, Cambridge History of Early Asia,
    Ch. 2, 3.

35
The Xiongnu Federation
  • Barfield, Thomas, The Perilous Frontier, Ch.
    2, "The Xiongnu Empire", Ch. 3, The collapse of
    Central Order, OR
  • Sinor, Denis, Cambridge History of Early Asia, Ch
    5, pp 118-149 OR
  • Sinor, Denis, Central Asia, a Syllabus, The
    Xiongnu, Ch. 11.

36
The Xiongnu and the Sixteen Kingdoms
  • Barfield, Thomas, The Xiongnu Confederacy
    Organization and Foreign Policy, Journal of
    Asian Studies, Vol 41, No. 1, Nov, 1981, pp
    45-61 OR
  • Eberhard, Wolfram, Conquerors and Rulers, Ch. 4
    Formation of a new dynasty Ch. 5 Problems of
    Nomadic rule. OR
  • Sinor, Denis, Central Asia, a Syllabus, The
    Xiongnu, Ch. 12.

37
Other non-Han kingdoms such as the Qiang/Di
  • Barfield, Thomas, The Perilous Frontier, Ch. 3,
    The collapse of Central Order, pp. 101-10 OR
  • Holcombe, Charles, In the Shadow of the Han, Ch
    2, Refugee State A Brief Chronicle of the
    Eastern Chin, pp 25-33 OR
  • Kleeman, Terry F., Great Perfection, pp 87-107
    OR pp 117-210.

38
The Xianbei and its Kingdoms
  • Barfield, Thomas, The Perilous Frontier, Ch. 3,
    The collapse of Central Order, pp. 101-10 OR
  • Holcombe, Charles, In the Shadow of the Han, Ch
    2, Refugee State A Brief Chronicle of the
    Eastern Chin, pp 25-33. OR
  • Sinor, Denis, Central Asia, a Syllabus, Ch 12.

39
The Xianbei, the Rouran and the Northern
Dynasties
  • Barfield, Thomas, The Perilous Frontier, Ch 4
    pp131-163 OR
  • Klein, Kenneth Douglas, The contributions of the
    fourth century Xianbei States to the
    Reunification of the Chinese Empire OR
  • Sinor, Denis, Sending princesses to nomads,
    Uighur Empire in Studies in Medieval Central
    Asia, Part V.

40
The Turks, the Uighurs and China
  • Barfield, Thomas, The Perilous Frontier, Ch 4
    pp131-163 OR
  • Di Cosmo, Nicola, Warfare in Central Asian
    History (500-1800), pp73-96.OR
  • Sinor, Denis, Sending princesses to nomads,
    Uighur Empire in Studies in Medieval Central
    Asia, Part V, pp18-1 OR
  • Drompp, Michael, The Uighur Chinese Conflict of
    840-848, in Di Cosmo, Nicola, Warfare in Central
    Asian History (500-1800), pp73-96. OR
  • Sinor, Denis, Central Asia, a Syllabus, Ch. 13-14.

41
The Qidans and the Liao Dynasty
  • Barfield, Thomas, The Perilous Frontier, pp
    164-176 OR
  • Holmgren, Jennifer, Marriage, Kinship and
    Succession under the Chi-tan Rulers of the Liao
    Dynasty (907-1125) in Marriage, Kinship and Power
    in Northern China, Part V, pp 44-91. OR
  • Sinor, Denis, Central Asia, a Syllabus, Liao

42
The Jurchens and the Jin Dynasty
  • Barfield, Thomas, The Perilous Frontier,, pp
    177-186, OR
  • Chan, Hok-lam, Legitimation in Early China,
    discussions under the Jurchen-Chin dynasty
    (1115-1234), Ch. 2.
  • Franke, Herbert and Chan, Hok-lam, Studies on the
    Jurchens and the Jin Dynasty,
  • Tao, Jing-shen. The Jurchen in twelfth-century
    China study of sinicization. Seattle University
    of Washington Press, 1976, pp38-52,68-84.

43
The Tunguts and the Xi Xia
  • Twitchett, Denis Fairbank, John K., The
    Cambridge History of China The Alien Dynasties,
    (v6). pp 189-214 (Chinese edition available).
  • Chinese translation available.

44
The Mongols and the Yuan
  • Barfield, Thomas, The Perilous Frontier,, Ch. 6,
    "The Mongol Empire, pp 164-222 OR
  • Chan, Hok-lam, China and the Mongols history
    and legend under the Yuän and Ming. OR
  • Sinor, Denis, Central Asia, a Syllabus, Ch 20-24
    OR
  • Holmgren, Jennifer, Observations on Marriage and
    Inheritance Practices in Early Mongol and Yuan
    Society with particular reference to the
    Levirate in Marriage, Kinship and Power in
    Northern China, Part III, pp 127-192.

45
The Manchus and the Qing
  • Barfield, Thomas, The Perilous Frontier, Ch. 7,
    "Steppe Wolves and Forest Tigers," pp.  250-294
    OR
  • Pamela Crossley, Thinking about Ethnicity in
    Early Modern China, Late Imperial China 11.1
    (1990) OR
  • Rawski, Evelyn S., Imperial Women in The Last
    Emperors, pp. 127-159 OR
  • Lee, Lily Xiao and Stefanowska, A.D.,
    Biographical Dictionary of Chinese Women The
    Qing Period, 1644-1911.

46
Ethnicity and Women in Alien Dynasties
  • Ebrey, Patricia, Women and the Family in Chinese
    History, pp 165-176pp 165-176 OR
  • Holcombe, Charles, The Genesis of East Asia,
    221BC-907AD, The Sinicization of China, pp
    18-173 OR
  • Rawski, Evelyn S., Reenvisioning the Qing,
    Journal of Asian Studies, vol. 55, No. 4, Nov.,
    1996, 829-850 OR
  • Ho, Ping-ti, In Defense of Sinicization,
    Journal of Asian Studies, 57.1, 1998, pp.
    123-155 OR
  • Billy So, Negotiating Chinese Identity in Five
    Dynasties Narratives From the Old History to the
    New History, in Billy K. L. So et al. eds.,
    Power and Identity in the Chinese World Order
    Festschriften In Honour of Professor Wang Gungwu
    (Hong Kong University Press, 2003) OR
  • Imperial marriage in the Native Chinese and
    non-Han State, Han to Ming in Holmgren,
    Jennifer, Marriage, Kinship and Power in Northern
    China OR
  • Same Chapter in Watson, Rubie S. Ebrey,
    Patricia Buckley, ed., Marriage and Inequality in
    Chinese Societies, pp 58-90.

47
Major Readings
  • Barfield, Thomas, The Perilous Frointer
  • Chan, Hok-lam, China and the Mongols history
    and legend under the Yuän and Ming
  • Chan, Hok-lam, Legitimation in Early China,
    discussions under the Jurchen-Chin dynasty
    (1115-1234).
  • Crossley, Pamela, Thinking about Ethnicity in
    Early Modern China, Late Imperial China 11.1
    (1990)
  • Crossley, Pamela, Thinking about Ethnicity in
    Early Modern China, Late Imperial China 11.1
    (1990)
  • Di Cosmo, Nicola, Warfare in Central Asian
    History (500-1800)
  • Franke, Herbert and Chan, Hok-lam, Studies on the
    Jurchens and the Jin Dynasty
  • Ebrey, Patricia, Women and the Family in Chinese
    History, pp 165-176pp 165-176 OR
  • Ho, Ping-ti, In Defense of Sinicization,
    Journal of Asian Studies, 57.1, 1998, pp. 123-155
    Holcombe, Charles, The Genesis of East Asia,
    221BC-907AD
  • Holcombe, Charles, In the Shadow of the Han
  • Holmgren, Jennifer, Marriage, Kinship and Power
    in Northern China.

48
Major Readings (2)
  • Kleeman, Great Perfection (16 Kingdoms)
  • Lee, Lily Xiao and Stefanowska, A.D.,
    Biographical Dictionary of Chinese Women The
    Qing Period, 1644-1911
  • Poon, Kwok Kin (Dissertation), The Northern Wei
    State and the Juan-Juan Nomadic Tribe (A Summary)
  • Rawski, Evelyn S., Reenvisioning the Qing,
    Journal of Asian Studies, vol. 55, No. 4, Nov.,
    1996, 829-850
  • Rawski, Evelyn S., The Last Emperors
  • Sinor, Denis, Central Asia, a Syllabus
  • Sinor, Denis, The Cambridge history of Early
    Central Asia
  • Sinor, Denis, Uighur Empire in Studies in
    Medieval Central Asia
  • So, Billy, Power and Identity in the Chinese
    World Order Festschriften In Honour of Professor
    Wang Gungwu (Hong Kong University Press, 2003).
  • Twitchett, Denis Fairbank, John K., The
    Cambridge History of China The Alien Dynasties
  • Watson, Rubie S. Ebrey, Patricia Buckley, ed.,
    Marriage and Inequality in Chinese Societies

49
Next Week
  • Readings
  • Barfield, Thomas, The Perilous Frontier, Ch. 1,
    Introduction, pp. 1-8 16-28
  • OR
  • Sinor, Denis, Cambridge History of Early Asia,
    Ch. 2, pp19-40
  • OR
  • Pulleyblank, Edwin G., Central Asia and
    Non-Chinese Peoples of Ancient China, Part IV,
    411-466.
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