Ancient China and its Enemies

Douban
Ancient China and its Enemies

Login or register to review or add this item to your collection.

ISBN: 9780521543828
author: Nicola Di Cosmo
publishing house: Cambridge University Press
publication date: 2004 -5
binding: Paperback
price: USD 57.00
number of pages: 380

/ 10

2 ratings

No enough ratings
Borrow or Buy

The Rise of Nomadic Power in East Asian History

Nicola Di Cosmo   

overview

This comprehensive history of the northern frontier of China through the first millennium B.C. details the formation of two increasingly distinct cultural areas: the sedentary Chinese and the northern nomads. Nicola Di Cosmo explores the tensions existing between these two worlds as they became progressively more polarized, with the eventual creation of the nomadic Hsiung-nu empire in the north, and of the Chinese empire in the south. Di Cosmo investigates the origins of the antagonism between early China and its "barbarian" neighbors.
Table of contents
Introduction
Part I:
1. The Steppe Highway: the rise of Pastoral Nomadism as a Eurasian phenomenon;
2. Bronze, Iron and Gold: the evolution of nomadic cultures on the Northern frontier of China
Part II:
3. Beasts and birds: the historical context of early Chinese perceptions of northern peoples;
4. Walls and horses: the beginning of historical contacts between horse-riding Nomads and Chinese states
Part III:
5. Those who draw the bow: the rise of the Hsiung-nu Nomadic Empire and the political unification of the Nomads;
6. >From peace to war: China's shift from appeasement to military engagement
Part IV.
7. In search of grass and water: ethnography and history of the North in the Historian's Records;
8. Taming the North: the rationalization of the nomads in Ssu-ma Ch'ien's historical thought;
Conclusion.

other editions
comments
reviews
notes