@article{ART002740468}, author={Peter I. Yun}, title={No Title}, journal={Journal of Manchurian Studies}, issn={1738-3668}, year={2006}, number={5}, pages={11-20}
TY - JOUR AU - Peter I. Yun TI - No Title JO - Journal of Manchurian Studies PY - 2006 VL - null IS - 5 PB - The Manchurian Studies Association SP - 11 EP - 20 SN - 1738-3668 AB - KW - The Ming was not a successor to the Mongol Yuan Empire;but it had merely established an independent Han Chinese regime that occupied a part of the world empire. Similarly;the Manchu Qing Empire(Daicing gurun) did not succeed but conquered the Chinese Ming dynasty. Whereas the Ming was satisfied as a “lesser empire” ruling over the traditional Han territory of the “Central Plain;” the Manchus built a large empire twice the size of the Ming through conquest of the “border regions” of Xinjiang;Tibet;Mongolia;Manchuria;and Taiwan in the 17th and 18th centuries. The “border regions” were joined not to “China” but to the Manchu Qing Empire. The Qing control fundamentally changed society and economy of those regions;and they finally became “integral” parts of China;and the spatial and ethnic make-up of today’s China had been newly constituted only during the Manchu Qing period. The separate ethnic identity of the Manchus was one of the most important element in their rule over the vast multi-ethnic empire. However;most studies have followed the rather simple notion that the Manchus had been “sinicized” and lost their own identity. A few Western scholars now reject this simplistic Sinocentric perspective;and this paper presents a brief overview of the recent Western academic works that approach the Qing history from the “Manchu-centered” or “Inner Asian” perspectives. DO - UR - ER -
Peter I. Yun. (2006). No Title. Journal of Manchurian Studies, 5, 11-20.
Peter I. Yun. 2006, "No Title", Journal of Manchurian Studies, no.5, pp.11-20.
Peter I. Yun "No Title" Journal of Manchurian Studies 5 pp.11-20 (2006) : 11.
Peter I. Yun. No Title. 2006; 5 : 11-20.
Peter I. Yun. "No Title" Journal of Manchurian Studies no.5(2006) : 11-20.
Peter I. Yun. No Title. Journal of Manchurian Studies, 5, 11-20.
Peter I. Yun. No Title. Journal of Manchurian Studies. 2006; 5 11-20.
Peter I. Yun. No Title. 2006; 5 : 11-20.
Peter I. Yun. "No Title" Journal of Manchurian Studies no.5(2006) : 11-20.