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The Imperial Qín Dynasty

Elements of Governance as Reflected in the Liye Manuscripts, Welten Ostasiens / Worlds of East Asia / Mondes de lExtrême Orient 37

Erscheint am 04.11.2024, 1. Auflage 2024
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Bibliografische Daten
ISBN/EAN: 9783110791839
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: V, 415 S., 41 s/w Illustr., 16 farbige Illustr., 1
Einband: gebundenes Buch

Beschreibung

The Liye text corpus, which is named after an ancient township in present-day Lóngshan, Húnán province, grants unique opportunities to reshape the image and redefine our knowledge about social, legal, political, administrative and ritual responsibilities of the first Chinese empire. The impressive collection of over 37,000 documents span a time period from 222 to 208 BC and grant a unique opportunity to reshape the image and redefine our knowledge about social, legal, political, logistical and ritual responsibilities of the first Chinese empire. This book is concerned with the overall governance at the southern fringes of the Qín dynasty as reflected in the excavated documents from Liye well J1. It contributes to a revised understanding of the Qín dynasty by demonstrating that the degree of decentralization in the empire was high and to a large extent coordinated by relatively autonomously governed regions. It furthermore displays the Qín dynastys strong sense of historical continuity and a desire to strive towards unification by embracing the predominant standards of earlier rulers. After an introductory part on the Liye material, this book analyzes Qíns sophisticated methods of calendar and timekeeping. It then dwells into the territoriality of the young empire and focuses on unification attempts bound to transform the pre-imperial multistate order into a standardized system of governance and control. The last part deals with the organization of essential resources, including unprecedented tax calculations district (xiang ) level. Overall, this book offers a fascinating glimpse at the many microstructures and complexities in the peripheral area of a larger administration. The manuscripts available to us to this day and the ones that will be excavated from wells J2 and J3 in the future will undoubtedly continue to be a basic reference point when it comes to the research of pre-imperial and early imperial documents.

Autorenportrait

Marcel Schneider, University of Zurich, Switzerland.

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