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China among equals : the Middle Kingdom and its neighbors, 10th-14th centuries / edited by Morris Rossabi.

De Gruyter University of California Press eBook-Package Archive Pre-2000 Available online

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Format:
Book
Contributor:
Rossabi, Morris, editor.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
China--Foreign relations--960-1644.
China.
China--History--960-1644.
Physical Description:
1 online resource : illustrations
Edition:
First edition.
Place of Publication:
Berkeley, California : University of California Press, [1983]
Summary:
Scholars have long accepted China's own view of its traditional foreign relations: that China devised its own world order and maintained it from the second century B.C. to the nineteenth century. China ruled out equality with any nation: foreign rulers and their envoys were treated as subordinates or inferiors, required to send periodic tribute embassies to the Chinese emperor. The Chinese court was otherwise uninterested in foreign lands. Its principal interests were to maintain peace with what it perceived to be barbarian neighbors and to coax or coerce them into admitting China's superiority and accepting the Chinese emperor as the Son of Heaven. But Chinese foreign policy was not monolithic. Court officials in traditional times were much more realistic and pragmatic than is commonly assumed. They did not scorn foreign trade, nor were ignorant of foreign lands. Challenging the accepted view of Chinese foreign relations, the authors of China among Equals contribute to a clearer assessment of Chinese foreign relations and policy. From the tenth to the thirteenth centuries, China did not dogmatically enforce its own world order. Chinese were eager for foreign trade and knowledgeable about their neighbors. The Sung (960-1279), the principal dynasty during that era, was flexible in its dealings with foreigners. Its officials recognized the military and political weakness of the dynasty, and in general they adopted a realistic and pragmatic foreign policy. They were compelled to accept foreign states as equals, and the relations between China and other states were defined by diplomatic parity.
Contents:
Introduction / Morris Rossabi
Part I: China in disarray
Diplomacy for survival: domestic adn foreign relations of Wu Yüeh, 907-978 / Edmund H. Worthy, Jr.
Part II: The Sung dynasty in a multi-state system
The rhetoric of a lesser empire: Early Sung relations with its neighbors / Wang Gungwu
Barbarians or Northerners: Northern Sung images of the Khitans / Tao Jing-Shen
Part III: Institutions for foreign relations in the multi-state system
Sung foreign trade: its scope and organization / Shiba Yoshinobu
Sung embassies: some general observations / Herbert Franke
Part IV: Foreign lands and the Sung
National consciousness in Medieval Korea: the impact of Liao and Chin on Koryŏ / Michael C. Rogers
Tibetan relations with Sung China and with the Mongols / Luciano Petech
Old illusions and new realities: Sung foreign policy, 1217-1234 / Charles A. Peterson
Part V: The Mongol Hegemony
The Yüan dynasty and the Uighurs of Turfan in the 13th century / Thomas T. Allsen
Turks in China under the Mongols: A preliminary investigation of Turco-Mongol relations in the 13th and 14th centuries / Igor de Rachewiltz
Part VI: China's foreign relations in historical context
Yin and yang in the China
Manchuria
Korea triangle / Gari Ledyard.
Notes:
Revised papers from a conference held in Issaquah, Wash., July 1978.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 25. Nov 2020)
Description based on print version record.
ISBN:
9780520341722
0520341724
9780520906938
0520906934
9780585344133
0585344132
OCLC:
1224278834

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