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The Imperial Handbook: A Practical Guide to Ancient Chinese Society

Reiya_Alberich
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Synopsis
Every epic tale needs a believable stage. This guide transports you to the heart of Imperial China, the inspiration for countless novels. Move beyond stereotypes and build your empires, courts, and conflicts with confidence, armed with knowledge of how one of history's most enduring civilizations truly functioned. Inside, you’ll find things like: -The Son of Heaven: Understand the absolute power of the Emperor, the Mandate of Heaven, and the intricate rituals of the court. -The Pillars of Power: A breakdown of the vast Imperial Bureaucracy, from the Grand Chancellor to the local Magistrates, and the infamous Imperial Examination system. -Behind the Jade Walls: A glimpse into the secretive world of the Inner Court—the harem, eunuchs, and the fierce politics behind the throne. This handbook is designed for everyone—from authors and creators seeking authentic details to general readers who want to move beyond the fiction and understand the rich, complex reality of ancient Chinese governance and society
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Chapter 1 - Introduction

The term Ancient China usually refers to the long historical period before China entered the "modern" era (roughly before the fall of the Qing Dynasty in 1911). But in academic or historical discussions, people often divide it into:

Prehistoric China (before written records, up to c. 1600 BCE)

Ancient China proper (first dynasties with writing, from Shang onward)

Imperial China (from Qin unification, 221 BCE, until 1911 CE)

So, when people say "Ancient China," they usually mean the earliest dynasties up through the end of the Tang or Song (sometimes stretching all the way to the Qing).

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The Main Dynasties (Simplified Timeline)

Legendary & Prehistoric

Xia (夏, c. 2070–1600 BCE)

Considered the first dynasty in traditional records, but its existence is debated. Said to be founded by Yu the Great, who tamed floods.

Early Dynasties

Shang (商, c. 1600–1046 BCE)

First dynasty with written records (oracle bones). Known for bronze casting, ancestor worship, and divination.

Zhou (周, 1046–256 BCE)

Longest dynasty. Early period (Western Zhou) centralized; later (Eastern Zhou) fragmented. Eastern Zhou split into Spring and Autumn period and Warring States period. Key philosophies (Confucianism, Daoism, Legalism, Mohism) emerged here.

Imperial Dynasties

Qin (秦, 221–206 BCE)

First unified empire under Qin Shi Huang. Standardized script, weights, currency. Built the first Great Wall. Harsh but short-lived.

Han (汉, 206 BCE–220 CE)

Golden Age. Expanded empire, established Confucian state ideology, developed Silk Road trade. Major scientific advances (paper, astronomy, medicine).

Period of Disunion

Three Kingdoms (220–280 CE)

Wei, Shu, Wu—famous for warfare and Romance of the Three Kingdoms tales.

Jin, Sixteen Kingdoms, Northern & Southern Dynasties (280–589 CE)

Fragmented, but culturally rich—Buddhism spread widely.

Reunification & Flourishing

Sui (隋, 581–618 CE)

Short but important: built Grand Canal, re-centralized administration.

Tang (唐, 618–907 CE)

Peak of Chinese culture and power. Cosmopolitan capital Chang'an, poetry (Li Bai, Du Fu), art, international trade along Silk Road.

Late Imperial

Song (宋, 960–1279 CE)

Economic and cultural flourishing: printing, gunpowder weapons, compass. Weak militarily; lost north to nomads, later conquered by Mongols.

Yuan (元, 1271–1368 CE)

Founded by Kublai Khan (Mongol Empire). Multi-ethnic empire, connected East and West through trade (Marco Polo era).

Ming (明, 1368–1644 CE)

Restored Han rule. Famous for porcelain, Forbidden City, Zheng He's voyages, strengthening of Great Wall.

Qing (清, 1644–1911 CE)

Founded by the Manchu. Expanded empire to its largest borders. Flourished early but later weakened by corruption, rebellions, and foreign invasions (Opium Wars). Ended in 1911, marking the end of imperial China.