Early Tang China and the world, 618-750 CE /

For about half a century, the Tang dynasty has held a reputation as the most "cosmopolitan" period in Chinese history, marked by unsurpassed openness to foreign peoples and cultures and active promotion of international trade. Heavily influenced by Western liberal ideals and contemporary C...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yang, Shao-yun (Author)
Published: Cambridge University Press,
Publisher Address: Cambridge :
Publication Dates: 2023.
Literature type: Book
Language: English
Series: Cambridge elements. Elements in the global Middle Ages,
Subjects:
Summary: For about half a century, the Tang dynasty has held a reputation as the most "cosmopolitan" period in Chinese history, marked by unsurpassed openness to foreign peoples and cultures and active promotion of international trade. Heavily influenced by Western liberal ideals and contemporary China's own self-fashioning efforts, this glamorous image of the Tang calls for some critical reexamination. This Element presents a broad and revisionist analysis of early Tang China's relations with the rest of the Eurasian world and argues that idealizing the Tang as exceptionally "cosmopolitan" limits our ability to think both critically and globally about its actions and policies as an empire--back cover.
Carrier Form: 75 pages : color illustrations, color maps ; 23 cm.
Bibliography: Includes bibliographical references (pages [70]-75).
ISBN: 9781009214643
1009214640
Index Number: DS749
CLC: D829
K242
Call Number: K242/Y227
Contents: Introduction -- 1. The fall of the Sui dynasty -- 2. The Tang dynasty and the fall of the Eastern Türk Khaganate -- 3. Taizong's empire (630-649) -- 4. Expansion in Central Asia and Korea (650-670) -- 5. A concatenation of frontier crises (670-700) -- 6. Southern frontiers and maritime trade (to ca. 750) -- 7. Tang China and the Buddhist world (to ca. 750) -- Conclusion: Thinking critically and globally about the "cosmopolitan" Tang.