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China and the Manchus

By Giles, Herbert A.

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Book Id: WPLBN0000623780
Format Type: PDF eBook
File Size: 118.28 KB
Reproduction Date: 2005

Title: China and the Manchus  
Author: Giles, Herbert A.
Volume:
Language: English
Subject: Literature, Literature & thought, Writing.
Collections: Blackmask Online Collection
Historic
Publication Date:
Publisher: Blackmask Online

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Giles, H. A. (n.d.). China and the Manchus. Retrieved from http://www.gutenberg.cc/


Description
Excerpt: Chapter 1. THE NU?CHENS AND KITANS The Manchus are descended from a branch of certain wild Tungusic nomads, who were known in the ninth century as the Nu?chens, a name which has been said to mean ?west of the sea.? The cradle of their race lay at the base of the Ever?White Mountains, due north of Korea, and was fertilised by the head waters of the Yalu River. In an illustrated Chinese work of the fourteenth century, of which the Cambridge University Library possesses the only known copy, we read that they reached this spot, originally the home of the Su?shen tribe, as fugitives from Korea; further, that careless of death and prizing valour only, they carried naked knives about their persons, never parting from them by day or night, and that they were as ?poisonous? as wolves or tigers. They also tattooed their faces, and at marriage their mouths. By the close of the ninth century the Nu?chens had become subject to the neighbouring Kitans, then under the rule of the vigorous Kitan chieftain, Opaochi, who, in 907, proclaimed himself Emperor of an independent kingdom with the dynastic title of Liao, said to mean ?iron,? and who at once entered upon that long course of aggression against China and encroachment upon her territory which was to result in the practical division of the empire between the two powers, with the Yellow River as boundary, K`ai?feng as the Chinese capital, and Peking, now for the first time raised to the status of a metropolis, as the Kitan capital. Hitherto, the Kitans had recognised China as their suzerain; they are first mentioned in Chinese history in A.D. 468, when they sent ambassadors to court, with tribute.

Table of Contents
Table of Contents: China and the Manchus, 1

 
 



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