Early Ming Government: The Evolution of Dual CapitalsPreliminary Material /Farmer Edward L. --Early Ming Emperors /Farmer Edward L. --The Ming Empire /Farmer Edward L. --The Founding, 1355-1379 /Farmer Edward L. --Instability, 1380-1402 /Farmer Edward L. --Consolidation of Ming Power: The Yung-Lo Era, 1403-1425 /Farmer Edward L. --The Dual Capital System /Farmer Edward L. --The Transition to Peking: Control of Resources /Farmer Edward L. --The Capital as a Power Center /Farmer Edward L. --Notes /Farmer Edward L. --Bibliography /Farmer Edward L. --Glossary /Farmer Edward L. --Index /Farmer Edward L. --Harvard East Asian Monographs /Farmer Edward L. |
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Page 22
... economic development of the south : When the second unified empire emerged , although the mili- tary and political centers were still in the north , the economic center had already shifted to the south . Because of this , when the ...
... economic development of the south : When the second unified empire emerged , although the mili- tary and political centers were still in the north , the economic center had already shifted to the south . Because of this , when the ...
Page 205
... economic institutions . The spe- cialized literature on these topics is copious . My goal here is simply to show how economic factors affected political and military policy . A 30 - page bibliography of Japanese and Chinese works on the ...
... economic institutions . The spe- cialized literature on these topics is copious . My goal here is simply to show how economic factors affected political and military policy . A 30 - page bibliography of Japanese and Chinese works on the ...
Page 220
... economic strength alone is not a sufficient determinant of military power and , specifically , that Peking was able ... economic resources of the south and northern defense and stresses the point that strategic and not economic factors ...
... economic strength alone is not a sufficient determinant of military power and , specifically , that Peking was able ... economic resources of the south and northern defense and stresses the point that strategic and not economic factors ...
Contents
Early Ming Emperors | 1 |
THE MING EMPIRE | 3 |
Principal Capital Sites in Chinese History | 18 |
Copyright | |
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activities administration apparent army became border Branch campaign canal capital central Ch'en changes Chin China Chinese Chu Yuan-chang civil command construction continued court defense designated discussion dynasty early early Ming economic emperor empire established fact farming Fengyang fiefs figures five forces founding frontier functions given grain guard heir horses Hung-wu imperial important institutions involved Kaifeng land later Middle military Ming Ministry Mongol months move MSL:HW Nanking northern offices organs palace Pei-p'ing Peking period persons plain points political population position practice prefecture princes problem provinces regime region reign rice River rule ruler sent shih society sources Southern Capital status Sung supply throne tion took trade transport tribute units wall Yangtze Yuan Yung-lo Yung-lo period