Medieval Chinese Warfare 300-900Routledge, 2 вер. 2003 р. - 304 стор. Shortly after 300 AD, barbarian invaders from Inner Asia toppled China's Western Jin dynasty, leaving the country divided and at war for several centuries. Despite this, the empire gradually formed a unified imperial order. Medieval Chinese Warfare, 300-900 explores the military strategies, institutions and wars that reconstructed the Chinese empire that has survived into modern times. |
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... Jin dynasty (AD 265–317), which ushered in nearly three centuries of disunity. By the beginning of the fourth century, the need for permanent standing forces had resulted in the replacement of the farmerconscripts of Han times by men of ...
... Jin dynasty (AD 265–317), which ushered in nearly three centuries of disunity. By the beginning of the fourth century, the need for permanent standing forces had resulted in the replacement of the farmerconscripts of Han times by men of ...
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... Jin government in the south survived the debacle of the early fourth century ... dynasties, including the need to defend against attack from the north, the ... dynasty in 581. The Wei rulers found it necessary to deploy strong forces to ...
... Jin government in the south survived the debacle of the early fourth century ... dynasties, including the need to defend against attack from the north, the ... dynasty in 581. The Wei rulers found it necessary to deploy strong forces to ...
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... Jin dynasty in the Yangzi valley in 317 to the conquest of its successor, the Chen dynasty, by Sui in 589. The north–south division was prolonged for a number of reasons. The north was usually divided between several states, but even ...
... Jin dynasty in the Yangzi valley in 317 to the conquest of its successor, the Chen dynasty, by Sui in 589. The north–south division was prolonged for a number of reasons. The north was usually divided between several states, but even ...
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... empire ruled by the Jin dynasty (house of Sima) from the ancient capital city of Luoyang just south of the Yellow River. The Jin regime was heir to the administrative and political traditions of China's first unified empire, which had ...
... empire ruled by the Jin dynasty (house of Sima) from the ancient capital city of Luoyang just south of the Yellow River. The Jin regime was heir to the administrative and political traditions of China's first unified empire, which had ...
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... Jin court at the end of the third century came from families that had already been prominent under the Han dynasty. The crisis that overtook the empire in the first decade of the fourth century was of a very different sort. A new round ...
... Jin court at the end of the third century came from families that had already been prominent under the Han dynasty. The crisis that overtook the empire in the first decade of the fourth century was of a very different sort. A new round ...
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