The Mongols had always come into contact with several cultural influences in their traditional settlement area. Shamanistic, Buddhist and popular religious elements combined in their religion. They were indifferent to Confucianism, at most they showed interest in popular Daoism. But other Chinese and foreign religions – Nestorian Christianity, Judaism, Islam – were tolerated, and the clergy even enjoyed tax exemption.
The Mongols also took a liking to the bourgeois culture of the Chinese cities; Opera and novel were able to develop further under her aegis. The scholarly culture, which had always been promoted publicly, now survived mainly in private circles. Neither they nor the Chinese folk culture showed any foreign influences, despite the close contact that the Mongolian Empire established between the east and the west. However, for the first time Europe has now received direct news from China and other countries beyond the Islamic world about the Franciscan monks Giovanni dal Piano dei Carpini († 1252), Wilhelm von Rubruk, Odorico da Pordenone († 1331) and who traveled to the Mongol court on behalf of the papal Giovanni dei Marignolli († 1359); the latter two reached Beijing. The most lasting effect, however, was the trip to Asia of the Venetian merchant Marco Polo (1271–95), whose detailed report stimulated later voyages of discovery.
Chinese achievements such as compass and letterpress (printing process) found their way west. China’s openness to the world, shown earlier, was lost after the song returned to its own traditions – not least because of the ongoing defensive battles against foreign peoples. Nationalism and xenophobia, on the other hand, became increasingly noticeable. In the end, the Yuan dynasty fell victim to the classic uprisings of impoverished peasants, which – given the ethnic discrimination they had previously suffered – were also marked by national uprising. These were, of course, made easier by disputes within the Mongolian clans. All in all, the Mongols (unlike other foreign rulers) adapted their style of government strongly to China, a country located in Asia according to computerannals.com, but they were not sinized in their entire way of life.
Ruling dynasties in China
Chinese dynasties | ||||
Traditional chronology: | ||||
Legendary emperors (9 rulers) | 2852-2205 BC Chr. | |||
Xia (Hsia) (17 rulers) | 2205-1766 BC Chr. | |||
(? Erlitou) | around 2500-1500 BC Chr. | |||
Historical chronology: | ||||
Shang, later Yin (28 rulers) | around the 16th century to around 1050 BC Chr. | |||
Zhou (Chou; 38 ruler) | about 1050 to 249 BC Chr. | |||
Western Zhou (12 rulers) | about 1050 to 771 BC Chr. | |||
Eastern Zhou (26 rulers) | 771-249 BC Chr. | |||
Qin (Ch’in; 3 rulers) | 221-206 BC Chr. | |||
Han | 202 BC BC to AD 220 | |||
Western (former) Han (15 rulers) | 202 BC Chr. To 9 n. Chr. 23-25 and n. Chr. | |||
Xin (Hsin; 1 ruler) | 9-23 AD | |||
Eastern (Later) Han (14 rulers) | 25-220 | |||
Three realms (Sanguo, San-kuo) | 220-265 / 280 | |||
Wei (5 rulers) | 220-265 | |||
Shu (2 rulers) | 221-263 | |||
Wu (4 rulers) | 222-280 | |||
Jin (Chin) | 265-420 | |||
Western Jin (4 rulers) | 265-316 | |||
Eastern Jin (11 rulers) | 317-420 | |||
1. Separation into north and south(Nanbei Chao, Nan-pei ch’ao) | 420-589 and 386-581, respectively | |||
In the south: | ||||
Southern Dynasties (Nanchao, Nan-ch’ao) | 420-589 | |||
Song (Sung; 8 rulers) | 420-479 | |||
Qi (Ch’i; 7 rulers) | 479-502 | |||
Liang (6 rulers) | 502-557 | |||
Chen (Ch’en; 5 rulers) | 557-589 | |||
In the North: | ||||
Sixteen States (Shiliuguo, Shih-liu-kuo) | 304-439 | |||
Tibetans: 4 dynasties, 19 rulers | ||||
Xiongnu (Hsiungnu): 4 dynasties, 19 rulers | ||||
Mongols: 5 dynasties, 16 rulers | ||||
Chinese: 3 dynasties, 14 rulers | ||||
Northern Dynasties (Beichao, Pei-ch’ao) | 386-581 | |||
Northern Wei or Toba-Wei (Topa-Wei; 14 rulers) | 386-534 | |||
Western Wei (3 rulers) | 535-556 | |||
Eastern Wei (1 ruler) | 534-550 | |||
Northern Zhou (Chou; 6 rulers) | 556-581 | |||
Northern Qi (Ch’i; 6 rulers) | 550-577 | |||
Sui (3 rulers) | 581 / 589-618 | |||
Tang (T’ang; 22 rulers) | 618-907 | |||
2. Separation into north and south | 907-979 | |||
In the North: | ||||
Five Dynasties (Wudai, Wu-tai) | 907-960 | |||
Later Liang (2 rulers) | 907-923 | |||
Later Tang (T’ang; 4 rulers) | 923-936 | |||
Later Jin (Chin; 2 rulers) | 936-946 | |||
Later Han (2 rulers) | 947-950 | |||
Later Zhou (Chou; 3 rulers) | 951-960 | |||
In the south: | ||||
Ten States (Shiguo, Shih-kuo) | 902-979 | |||
Wu (4 rulers) | 902-937 | |||
Southern Tang (T’ang; 3 rulers) | 937-975 | |||
Former Shu (2 rulers) | 907-925 | |||
Later Shu (2 rulers) | 934-965 | |||
Southern Han (4 rulers) | 917-917 | |||
Chu (Ch’u; 6 rulers) | 927-951 | |||
Wuyue (Wu-yüeh; 5 rulers) | 907-987 | |||
Min (6 rulers) | 909-944 | |||
Jingnan (Ching-nan; 5 rulers) | 925-963 | |||
Northern Han (4 rulers; in the north) | 951-979 | |||
Song (sung) | 960-1279 | |||
Northern Song (9 rulers) | 960-1127 | |||
Southern Song (9 rulers) | 1127-1279 | |||
Foreign dynasties (in the north) | 907-1271 | |||
Liao (9 rulers; Kitan) | 907-1125 | |||
Xixia (Hsi-Hsia; 10 rulers; Tanguts) | 1032 / 38-1227 | |||
Jin (Chin; 9 rulers; Jurdschen) | 1115-1234 | |||
Yuan (Yüan; 12 rulers; Mongols) | 1271 / 79-1368 | |||
Ming (17 rulers) | 1368-1644 | |||
Qing (Ch’ing; 12 rulers; Manchu) | 1644-1911 / 12 |
Ming (1368-1644)
Zhu Yuanzhang (Chu Yüan-chang), as Emperor Taizu (T’ai-tsu, 1368–98), the founding emperor of the Ming dynasty, came from Anhui, a stronghold of the messianically inspired sect »White Lotus«, whose mixed doctrine of folk-religious-Buddhist Elements with a Manichaean influence was a driving force behind the first uprisings of the population of central and northern China, impoverished by extinction and natural disasters. In his childhood and adolescence, overshadowed by hardship and misery, a mendicant and beggar monk, Zhu Yuanzhang concluded joined the rebels in his homeland, swung himself up to their leaders and, after long fighting, knocked other regional rulers of central and southern China out of the field. In 1368, after a skilfully conducted national, anti-Mongolian propaganda campaign, he conquered the still Mongolian-ruled north and took the capital Beijing after he had previously proclaimed the national Ming dynasty (“the bright” or “the enlightened”); the name of which may have made a conscious reference to Manichaeism. However, he himself expanded Nanjing as the capital. Until his death (1398) he secured campaigns in Manchuria, Mongolia and south-west China took control of the classical territories of China and created a Chinese empire again.