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READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
A HISTORY OF CHINACHAPTER V.THE CH'IN DYNASTY(256-207 B.C.)1.
Towards the unitary State
In 256 BC the last ruler of
the Chou dynasty abdicated in favor of the feudal lord of the state of Ch'in.
Some people place the beginning of the Ch'in dynasty in that year, 256 BC;
others prefer the date 221 BC, because it was only in that year that the
remaining feudal states came to their end and Ch'in really ruled all China.
The territories of the state
of Ch'in, the present Shensi and eastern Kansu, were from a geographical point
of view transit regions, closed off in the north by steppes and deserts and in
the south by almost impassable mountains. Only between these barriers, along
the rivers Wei (in Shensi) and T'ao (in Kansu), is
there a rich cultivable zone which is also the only means of transit from east
to west. All traffic from and to Turkestan had to take this route. It is
believed that strong relations with eastern Turkestan began in this period, and
the state of Ch'in must have drawn big profits from its "foreign
trade". The merchant class quickly gained more and more importance. The
population was growing through immigration from the east which the government
encouraged. This growing population with its increasing means of production,
especially the great new irrigation systems, provided a welcome field for trade
which was also furthered by the roads, though these were actually built for
military purposes.
The state of Ch'in had never
been so closely associated with the feudal communities of the rest of China as
the other feudal states. A great part of its population, including the ruling
class, was not purely Chinese but contained an admixture of Turks and Tibetans.
The other Chinese even called Ch'in a "barbarian state", and the
foreign influence was, indeed, unceasing. This was a favorable soil for the
overcoming of feudalism, and the process was furthered by the factors mentioned
in the preceding chapter, which were leading to a change in the social
structure of China. Especially the recruitment of the whole population,
including the peasantry, for war was entirely in the interest of the
influential nomad fighting peoples within the state. About 250 BC, Ch'in was
not only one of the economically strongest among the feudal states, but had
already made an end of its own feudal system.
Every feudal system harbors
some seeds of a bureaucratic system of administration: feudal lords have their
personal servants who are not recruited from the nobility, but who by their
easy access to the lord can easily gain importance. They may, for instance, be
put in charge of estates, workshops, and other properties of the lord and thus
acquire experience in administration and an efficiency which are obviously of
advantage to the lord. When Chinese lords of the preceding period, with the
help of their sub-lords of the nobility, made wars, they tended to put the
newly-conquered areas not into the hands of newly-enfeoffed noblemen, but to keep them as their property and to put their administration
into the hands of efficient servants; these were the first bureaucratic
officials. Thus, in the course of the later Chou period, a bureaucratic system
of administration had begun to develop, and terms like "district" or
"prefecture" began to appear, indicating that areas under a bureaucratic
administration existed beside and inside areas under feudal rule. This process
had gone furthest in Ch'in and was sponsored by the representatives of the
Legalist School, which was best adapted to the new economic and social
situation.
A son of one of the concubines
of the penultimate feudal ruler of Ch'in was living as a hostage in the neighbouring state of Chao, in what is now northern Shansi.
There he made the acquaintance of an unusual man, the merchant Lü Pu-wei, a man of education and
of great political influence. Lü Pu-wei persuaded the feudal ruler of Ch'in to declare this son his successor. He also
sold a girl to the prince to be his wife, and the son of this marriage was to
be the famous and notorious Shih Huang-ti. Lü Pu-wei came with his protégé
to Ch'in, where he became his Prime Minister, and after the prince's death in
247 BC Lü Pu-wei became the
regent for his young son Shih Huang-ti (then called
Cheng). For the first time in Chinese history a merchant, a commoner, had
reached one of the highest positions in the state. It is not known what sort of
trade Lü Pu-wei had carried
on, but probably he dealt in horses, the principal export of the state of Chao.
As horses were an absolute necessity for the armies of that time, it is easy to
imagine that a horse-dealer might gain great political influence.
Soon after Shih Huang-ti's accession Lü Pu-wei was dismissed, and a new group of advisers, strong
supporters of the Legalist school, came into power. These new men began an
active policy of conquest instead of the peaceful course which Lü Pu-wei had pursued. One
campaign followed another in the years from 230 to 222, until all the feudal
states had been conquered, annexed, and brought under Shih Huang-ti's rule.
2.
Centralization in every
field
The main task of the now
gigantic realm was the organization of administration. One of the first acts
after the conquest of the other feudal states was to deport all the ruling
families and other important nobles to the capital of Ch'in; they were thus
deprived of the basis of their power, and their land could be sold. These
upper-class families supplied to the capital a class of consumers of luxury
goods which attracted craftsmen and businessmen and changed the character of
the capital from that of a provincial town to a centre of arts and crafts. It
was decided to set up the uniform system of administration throughout the
realm, which had already been successfully introduced in Ch'in: the realm was
split up into provinces and the provinces into prefectures; and an official was
placed in charge of each province or prefecture. Originally the prefectures in
Ch'in had been placed directly under the central administration, with an
official, often a merchant, being responsible for the collection of taxes; the
provinces, on the other hand, formed a sort of military command area,
especially in the newly-conquered frontier territories. With the growing
militarization of Ch'in, greater importance was assigned to the provinces, and the
prefectures were made subordinate to them. Thus the officials of the provinces
were originally army officers but now, in the reorganization of the whole
realm, the distinction between civil and military administration was abolished.
At the head of the province were a civil and also a military governor, and both
were supervised by a controller directly responsible to the emperor. Since
there was naturally a continual struggle for power between these three
officials, none of them was supreme and none could develop into a sort of
feudal lord. In this system we can see the essence of the later Chinese
administration.
Owing to the centuries of
division into independent feudal states, the various parts of the country had
developed differently. Each province spoke a different dialect which also
contained many words borrowed from the language of the indigenous population;
and as these earlier populations sometimes belonged to different races with
different languages, in each state different words had found their way into the
Chinese dialects. This caused divergences not only in the spoken but in the
written language, and even in the characters in use for writing. There exist to
this day dictionaries in which the borrowed words of that time are indicated,
and keys to the various old forms of writing also exist. Thus difficulties
arose if, for instance, a man from the old territory of Ch'in was to be
transferred as an official to the east: he could not properly understand the
language and could not read the borrowed words, if he could read at all! For a
large number of the officials of that time, especially the officers who became
military governors, were certainly unable to read. The government therefore
ordered that the language of the whole country should be unified, and that a
definite style of writing should be generally adopted. The words to be used
were set out in lists, so that the first lexicography came into existence
simply through the needs of practical administration, as had happened much
earlier in Babylon. Thus, the few recently found manuscripts from pre-Ch'in
times still contain a high percentage of Chinese characters which we cannot
read because they were local characters; but all words in texts after the Ch'in
time can be read because they belong to the standardized script. We know now
that all classical texts of pre-Ch'in time as we have them today, have been
re-written in this standardized script in the second century B.C.: we do not
know which words they actually contained at the time when they were composed,
nor how these words were actually pronounced, a fact which makes the
reconstruction of Chinese language before Ch'in very difficult.
The next requirement for the
carrying on of the administration was the unification of weights and measures
and, a surprising thing to us, of the gauge of the tracks for wagons. In the
various feudal states there had been different weights and measures in use, and
this had led to great difficulties in the centralization of the collection of
taxes. The centre of administration, that is to say the new capital of Ch'in,
had grown through the transfer of nobles and through the enormous size of the
administrative staff into a thickly populated city with very large requirements
of food. The fields of the former state of Ch'in alone could not feed the city;
and the grain supplied in payment of taxation had to be brought in from far
around, partly by cart. The only roads then existing consisted of deep
cart-tracks. If the axles were not of the same length for all carts, the roads
were simply unusable for many of them. Accordingly a fixed length was laid down
for axles. The advocates of all these reforms were also their beneficiaries,
the merchants.
The first principle of the
Legalist school, a principle which had been applied in Ch'in and which was to
be extended to the whole realm, was that of the training of the population in
discipline and obedience, so that it should become a convenient tool in the
hands of the officials. This requirement was best met by a people composed as
far as possible only of industrious, uneducated, and tax-paying peasants.
Scholars and philosophers were not wanted, in so far as they were not directly
engaged in work commissioned by the state. The Confucianist writings came under special attack because they kept alive the memory of the
old feudal conditions, preaching the ethic of the old feudal class which had
just been destroyed and must not be allowed to rise again if the state was not
to suffer fresh dissolution or if the central administration was not to be
weakened. In 213 BC there took place the great holocaust of books which
destroyed the Confucianist writings with the
exception of one copy of each work for the State Library. Books on practical
subjects were not affected. In the fighting at the end of the Ch'in dynasty the
State Library was burnt down, so that many of the old works have only come down
to us in an imperfect state and with doubtful accuracy. The real loss arose,
however, from the fact that the new generation was little interested in the Confucianist literature, so that when, fifty years later,
the effort was made to restore some texts from the oral tradition, there no
longer existed any scholars who really knew them by heart, as had been
customary in the past.
In 221 BC Shih Huang-ti had become emperor of all China. The judgments passed on
him vary greatly: the official Chinese historiography rejects him
entirely—naturally, for he tried to exterminate Confucianism, while every later
historian was himself a Confucian. Western scholars often treat him as one of
the greatest men in world history. Closer research has shown that Shih Huang-ti was evidently an average man without any great gifts,
that he was superstitious, and shared the tendency of his time to mystical and
shamanistic notions. His own opinion was that he was the first of a series of
ten thousand emperors of his dynasty (Shih Huang-ti means "First Emperor"), and this merely suggests megalomania. The
basic principles of his administration had been laid down long before his time
by the philosophers of the Legalist school, and were given effect by his
Chancellor Li Ssŭ. Li Ssŭ was the really great personality of that period. The Legalists taught that the
ruler must do as little as possible himself. His Ministers were there to act
for him. He himself was to be regarded as a symbol of Heaven. In that capacity
Shih Huang-ti undertook periodical journeys into the
various parts of the empire, less for any practical purpose of inspection than
for purposes of public worship. They corresponded to the course of the sun, and
this indicates that Shih Huang-ti had adopted a
notion derived from the older northern culture of the nomad peoples.
He planned the capital in an
ambitious style but, although there was real need for extension of the city,
his plans can scarcely be regarded as of great service. His enormous palace,
and also his mausoleum which was built for him before his death, were
constructed in accordance with astral notions. Within the palace the emperor
continually changed his residential quarters, probably not only from fear of
assassination but also for astral reasons. His mausoleum formed a hemispherical
dome, and all the stars of the sky were painted on its interior.
3.
Frontier defence. Internal collapse
When the empire had been
unified by the destruction of the feudal states, the central government became
responsible for the protection of the frontiers from attack from without. In
the south there were only peoples in a very low state of civilization, who
could offer no serious menace to the Chinese. The trading colonies that
gradually extended to Canton and still farther south served as Chinese
administrative centres for provinces and prefectures,
with small but adequate armies of their own, so that in case of need they could
defend themselves. In the north the position was much more difficult. In
addition to their conquest within China, the rulers of Ch'in had pushed their
frontier far to the north. The nomad tribes had been pressed back and deprived
of their best pasturage, namely the Ordos region. When the livelihood of nomad
peoples is affected, when they are threatened with starvation, their tribes
often collect round a tribal leader who promises new pasturage and better
conditions of life for all who take part in the common campaigns. In this way
the first great union of tribes in the north of China came into existence in
this period, forming the realm of the Hsiung-nu under
their first leader, T'ou-man. This first realm of the Hsiung-nu was not yet extensive, but its ambitious
and warlike attitude made it a danger to Ch'in. It was therefore decided to
maintain a large permanent army in the north. In addition to this, the frontier
walls already existing in the mountains were rebuilt and made into a single
great system. Thus came into existence in 214 BC, out of the blood and sweat of
countless pressed laborers, the famous Great Wall.
On one of his periodical journeys the emperor fell ill and died. His death was the signal for the rising of many rebellious elements. Nobles rose in order to regain power and influence; generals rose because they objected to the permanent pressure from the central administration and their supervision by controllers; men of the people rose as popular leaders because the people were more tormented than ever by forced labor, generally at a distance from their homes. Within a few months there were six different rebellions and six different "rulers". Assassinations became the order of the day; the young heir to the throne was removed in this way and replaced by another young prince. But as early as 206 BC one of the rebels, Liu Chi (also called Liu Pang), entered the capital and dethroned the nominal emperor. Liu Chi at first had to retreat and was involved in hard fighting with a rival, but gradually he succeeded in gaining the upper hand and defeated not only his rival but also the other eighteen states that had been set up anew in China in those years.
(B)
The Western Chin dynasty
1.
Internal situation in the Chin empire
The change of dynasty in the
state of Wei did not bring any turn in China's internal history. Ssŭ-ma Yen, who as emperor was called Wu Ti (265-289),
had come to the throne with the aid of his clique and his extraordinarily large
and widely ramified family. To these he had to give offices as reward. There
began at court once more the same spectacle as in the past, except that princes
of the new imperial family now played a greater part than under the Wei
dynasty, whose ruling house had consisted of a small family. It was now
customary, in spite of the abolition of the feudal system, for the imperial
princes to receive large regions to administer, the fiscal revenues of which
represented their income. The princes were not, however, to exercise full
authority in the style of the former feudal lords: their courts were full of
imperial control officials. In the event of war it was their duty to come
forward, like other governors, with an army in support of the central
government. The various Chin princes succeeded, however, in making other
governors, beyond the frontiers of their regions, dependent on them. Also, they
collected armies of their own independently of the central government and used
those armies to pursue personal policies. The members of the families allied
with the ruling house, for their part, did all they could to extend their own
power. Thus the first ruler of the dynasty was tossed to and fro between the conflicting
interests and was himself powerless. But though intrigue was piled on intrigue,
the ruler who, of course, himself had come to the head of the state by means of
intrigues, was more watchful than the rulers of the Wei dynasty had been, and
by shrewd counter-measures he repeatedly succeeded in playing off one party
against another, so that the dynasty remained in power. Numerous widespread and
furious risings nevertheless took place, usually led by princes. Thus during
this period the history of the dynasty was of an extraordinarily dismal
character.
In spite of this, the Chin
troops succeeded in overthrowing the second southern state, that of Wu (AD
280), and in so restoring the unity of the empire, the Shu Han realm having been already conquered by the Wei. After the destruction of Wu
there remained no external enemy that represented a potential danger, so that a
general disarmament was decreed (280) in order to restore a healthy economic
and financial situation. This disarmament applied, of course, to the troops
directly under the orders of the dynasty, namely the troops of the court and
the capital and the imperial troops in the provinces. Disarmament could not,
however, be carried out in the princes' regions, as the princes declared that
they needed personal guards. The dismissal of the troops was accompanied by a
decree ordering the surrender of arms. It may be assumed that the government
proposed to mint money with the metal of the weapons surrendered, for coin (the
old coin of the Wei dynasty) had become very scarce; as we indicated
previously, money had largely been replaced by goods so that, for instance,
grain and silks were used for the payment of salaries. China, from c. 200 AD on
until the eighth century, remained in a period of such partial "natural
economy".
Naturally the decree for the
surrender of weapons remained a dead-letter. The discharged soldiers kept their
weapons at first and then preferred to sell them. A large part of them was
acquired by the Hsiung-nu and the Hsien-pi
in the north of China; apparently they usually gave up land in return. In this
way many Chinese soldiers, though not all by any means, went as peasants to the
regions in the north of China and beyond the frontier. They were glad to do so,
for the Hsiung-nu and the Hsien-pi
had not the efficient administration and rigid tax collection of the Chinese;
and above all, they had no great landowners who could have organized the
collection of taxes. For their part, the Hsiung-nu
and the Hsien-pi had no reason to regret this
immigration of peasants, who could provide them with the farm produce they
needed. And at the same time they were receiving from them large quantities of
the most modern weapons.
This ineffective disarmament
was undoubtedly the most pregnant event of the period of the western Chin
dynasty. The measure was intended to save the cost of maintaining the soldiers
and to bring them back to the land as peasants (and taxpayers); but the
discharged men were not given land by the government. The disarmament achieved
nothing, not even the desired increase in the money in circulation; what did
happen was that the central government lost all practical power, while the
military strength both of the dangerous princes within the country and also of
the frontier people was increased. The results of these mistaken measures
became evident at once and compelled the government to arm anew.
2.
Effect on the frontier
peoples
Four groups of frontier
peoples drew more or less advantage from the demobilization law—the people of
the Toba, the Tibetans, and the Hsien-pi in the
north, and the nineteen tribes of the Hsiung-nu
within the frontiers of the empire. In the course of time all sorts of
complicated relations developed among those ascending peoples as well as between
them and the Chinese.
The Toba (T'o-pa)
formed a small group in the north of the present province of Shansi, north of
the city of Tat'ungfu, and they were about to develop
their small state. They were primarily of Turkish origin, but had absorbed many
tribes of the older Hsiung-nu and the Hsien-pi. In considering the ethnical relationships of all
these northern peoples we must rid ourselves of our present-day notions of
national unity. Among the Toba there were many Turkish tribes, but also Mongols,
and probably a Tungus tribe, as well as perhaps
others whom we cannot yet analyze. These tribes may even have spoken different
languages, much as later not only Mongol but also Turkish was spoken in the
Mongol empire. The political units they formed were tribal unions, not national
states.
Such a union or federation can
be conceived of, structurally, as a cone. At the top point of the cone there
was the person of the ruler of the federation. He was a member of the leading
family or clan of the leading tribe (the two top layers of the cone). If we
speak of the Toba as of Turkish stock, we mean that according to our present
knowledge, this leading tribe (a) spoke a language belonging to the Turkish
language family and (b) exhibited a pattern of culture which belonged to the
type called above in Chapter One as "North-western Culture". The next
layer of the cone represented the "inner circle of tribes", i.e. such
tribes as had joined with the leading tribe at an early moment. The leading
family of the leading tribe often took their wives from the leading families of
the "inner tribes", and these leaders served as advisors and councilors
to the leader of the federation. The next lower layer consisted of the
"outer tribes", i.e. tribes which had joined the federation only
later, often under strong pressure; their number was always much larger than
the number of the "inner tribes", but their political influence was
much weaker. Every layer below that of the "outer tribes" was
regarded as inferior and more or less "unfree".
There was many a tribe which, as a tribe, had to serve a free tribe; and there
were others who, as tribes, had to serve the whole federation. In addition,
there were individuals who had quit or had been forced to quit their tribe or
their home and had joined the federation leader as his personal
"bondsmen"; further, there were individual slaves and, finally, there
were the large masses of agriculturists who had been conquered by the
federation. When such a federation was dissolved, by defeat or inner dissent,
individual tribes or groups of tribes could join a new federation or could
resume independent life.
Typically, such federations
exhibited two tendencies. In the case of the Hsiung-nu
we indicated already previously that the leader of the federation repeatedly
attempted to build up a kind of bureaucratic system, using his bondsmen as a
nucleus. A second tendency was to replace the original tribal leaders by
members of the family of the federation leader. If this initial step, usually
first taken when "outer tribes" were incorporated, was successful, a
reorganization was attempted: instead of using tribal units in war, military
units on the basis of "Groups of Hundred", "Groups of
Thousand", etc., were created and the original tribes were dissolved into
military regiments. In the course of time, and especially at the time of the
dissolution of a federation, these military units had gained social coherence
and appeared to be tribes again; we are probably correct in assuming that all
"tribes" which we find from this time on were already
"secondary" tribes of this type. A secondary tribe often took its
name from its leader, but it could also revive an earlier "primary
tribe" name.
The Toba represented a good
example for this "cone" structure of pastoral society. Also the Hsiung-nu of this time seem to have had a similar
structure. Incidentally, we will from now on call the Hsiung-nu
"Huns" because Chinese sources begin to call them "Hu", a term which also had a more general meaning (all
non-Chinese in the north and west of China) as well as a more special meaning
(non-Chinese in Central Asia and India).
The Tibetans fell apart into
two sub-groups, the Ch'iang and the Ti. Both names
appeared repeatedly as political conceptions, but the Tibetans, like all other
state-forming groups of peoples, sheltered in their realms countless alien
elements. In the course of the third and second centuries BC the group of the
Ti, mainly living in the territory of the present Szechwan, had mixed
extensively with remains of the Yüeh-chih; the
others, the Ch'iang, were northern Tibetans or
so-called Tanguts; that is to say, they contained
Turkish and Mongol elements. In AD 296 there began a great rising of the Ti,
whose leader Ch'i Wan-nien took on the title emperor. The Ch'iang rose with
them, but it was not until later, from 312, that they pursued an independent
policy. The Ti State, however, though it had a second emperor, very soon lost
importance, so that we shall be occupied solely with the Ch'iang.
As the tribal structure of
Tibetan groups was always weak and as leadership developed among them only in
times of war, their states always show a military rather than a tribal
structure, and the continuation of these states depended strongly upon the
personal qualities of their leaders. Incidentally, Tibetans fundamentally were
sheep-breeders and not horse-breeders and, therefore, they always showed
inclination to incorporate infantry into their armies. Thus, Tibetan states
differed strongly from the aristocratically organized "Turkish"
states as well as from the tribal, non-aristocratic "Mongol" states
of that period.
The Hsien-pi,
according to our present knowledge, were under "Mongol" leadership,
i.e. we believe that the language of the leading group belonged to the family
of Mongolian languages and that their culture belonged to the type described
above as "Northern culture". They had, in addition, a strong admixture
of Hunnic tribes. Throughout the period during which
they played a part in history, they never succeeded in forming any great
political unit, in strong contrast to the Huns, who excelled in state
formation. The separate groups of the Hsien-pi
pursued a policy of their own; very frequently Hsien-pi
fought each other, and they never submitted to a common leadership. Thus their
history is entirely that of small groups. As early as the Wei period there had
been small-scale conflicts with the Hsien-pi tribes, and
at times the tribes had had some success. The campaigns of the Hsien-pi against North China now increased, and in the
course of them the various tribes formed firmer groupings, among which the Mu-jung tribes played a leading part. In 281, the year after
the demobilization law, this group marched south into China, and occupied the
region round Peking. After fierce fighting, in which the Mu-jung section suffered heavy losses, a treaty was signed in 289, under which the Mu-jung tribe of the Hsien-pi recognized
Chinese overlordship. The Mu-jung were driven to this step mainly because they had been continually attacked from
southern Manchuria by another Hsien-pi tribe, the Yü-wen, the tribe most closely related to them. The Mu-jung made use of the period of their so-called subjection
to organize their community in North China.
South of the Toba were the
nineteen tribes of the Hsiung-nu or Huns, as we are
now calling them. Their leader in AD 287, Liu Yüan,
was one of the principal personages of this period. His name is purely Chinese,
but he was descended from the Hun shan-yü, from the
family and line of Mao Tun. His membership of that long-famous noble line and
old ruling family of Huns gave him a prestige which he increased by his great
organizing ability.
3.
Struggles for the throne
We shall return to Liu Yüan later; we must now cast another glance at the official
court of the Chin. In that court a family named Yang had become very powerful,
a daughter of this family having become empress. When, however, the emperor
died, the wife of the new emperor Hui Ti (290-306)
secured the assassination of the old empress Yang and of her whole family. Thus
began the rule at court of the Chia family. In 299
the Chia family got rid of the heir to the throne, to
whom they objected, assassinating this prince and another one. This event
became the signal for large-scale activity on the part of the princes, each of
whom was supported by particular groups of families. The princes had not
complied with the disarmament law of 280 and so had become militarily supreme.
The generals newly appointed in the course of the imperial rearmament at once
entered into alliance with the princes, and thus were quite unreliable as
officers of the government. Both the generals and the princes entered into
agreements with the frontier peoples to assure their aid in the struggle for
power. The most popular of these auxiliaries were the Hsien-pi,
who were fighting for one of the princes whose territory lay in the east. Since
the Toba were the natural enemies of the Hsien-pi,
who were continually contesting their hold on their territory, the Toba were
always on the opposite side to that supported by the Hsien-pi,
so that they now supported generals who were ostensibly loyal to the
government. The Huns, too, negotiated with several generals and princes and
received tempting offers. Above all, all the frontier peoples were now
militarily well equipped, continually receiving new war material from the
Chinese who from time to time were co-operating with them.
In AD 300 Prince Lun assassinated the empress Chia and removed her group. In 301 he made himself emperor, but in the same year he
was killed by the prince of Ch'i. This prince was
killed in 302 by the prince of Ch'ang-sha, who in
turned was killed in 303 by the prince of Tung-hai.
The prince of Ho-chien rose in 302 and was killed in
306; the prince of Ch'engtu rose in 303, conquered
the capital in 305, and then, in 306, was himself removed. I mention all these
names and dates only to show the disunion within the ruling groups.
4.
Migration of Chinese
All these struggles raged
round the capital, for each of the princes wanted to secure full power and to
become emperor. Thus the border regions remained relatively undisturbed. Their
population suffered much less from the warfare than the unfortunate people in
the neighbourhood of the central government. For this
reason there took place a mass migration of Chinese from the centre of the
empire to its periphery. This process, together with the shifting of the
frontier peoples, is one of the most important events of that epoch. A great
number of Chinese migrated especially into the present province of Kansu, where
a governor who had originally been sent there to fight the Hsien-pi
had created a sort of paradise by his good administration and maintenance of
peace. The territory ruled by this Chinese, first as governor and then in
increasing independence, was surrounded by Hsien-pi, Tibetans, and other peoples, but thanks to the great immigration of Chinese and
to its situation on the main caravan route to Turkestan, it was able to hold
its own, to expand, and to become prosperous.
Other groups of Chinese
peasants migrated southwards into the territories of the former state of Wu. A
Chinese prince of the house of the Chin was ruling there, in the present
Nanking. His purpose was to organize that territory, and then to intervene in
the struggles of the other princes. We shall meet him again at the beginning of
the Hun rule over North China in 317, as founder and emperor of the first south
Chinese dynasty, which was at once involved in the usual internal and external
struggles. For the moment, however, the southern region was relatively at
peace, and was accordingly attracting settlers.
Finally, many Chinese migrated
northward, into the territories of the frontier peoples, not only of the Hsien-pi but especially of the Huns. These alien peoples,
although in the official Chinese view they were still barbarians, at least
maintained peace in the territories they ruled, and they left in peace the
peasants and craftsmen who came to them, even while their own armies were
involved in fighting inside China. Not only peasants and craftsmen came to the
north but more and more educated persons. Members of families of the gentry
that had suffered from the fighting, people who had lost their influence in
China, were welcomed by the Huns and appointed teachers and political advisers
of the Hun nobility.
5.
Victory of the Huns. The Hun Han dynasty
(later renamed the Earlier Chao dynasty)
With its self-confidence thus
increased, the Hun council of nobles declared that in future the Huns should no
longer fight now for one and now for another Chinese general or prince. They
had promised loyalty to the Chinese emperor, but not to any prince. No one
doubted that the Chinese emperor was a complete nonentity and no longer played
any part in the struggle for power. It was evident that the murders would
continue until one of the generals or princes overcame the rest and made
himself emperor. Why should not the Huns have the same right? Why should not
they join in this struggle for the Chinese imperial throne?
There were two arguments
against this course, one of which was already out of date. The Chinese had for
many centuries set down the Huns as uncultured barbarians; but the inferiority
complex thus engendered in the Huns had virtually been overcome, because in the
course of time their upper class had deliberately acquired a Chinese education
and so ranked culturally with the Chinese. Thus the ruler Liu Yüan, for example, had enjoyed a good Chinese education and
was able to read all the classical texts. The second argument was provided by
the rigid conceptions of legitimacy to which the Turkish-Hunnic aristocratic society adhered. The Huns asked themselves: "Have we, as
aliens, any right to become emperors and rulers in China, when we are not
descended from an old Chinese family?" On this point Liu Yüan and his advisers found a good answer. They called Liu Yüan's dynasty the "Han dynasty", and so linked
it with the most famous of all the Chinese dynasties, pointing to the pact
which their ancestor Mao Tun had concluded five
hundred years earlier with the first emperor of the Han dynasty and which had
described the two states as "brethren". They further recalled the
fact that the rulers of the Huns were closely related to the Chinese ruling
family, because Mao Tun and his successors had
married Chinese princesses. Finally, Liu Yüan's Chinese family name, Liu, had also been the family name of the rulers of the
Han dynasty. Accordingly the Hun Lius came forward
not as aliens but as the rightful successors in continuation of the Han
dynasty, as legitimate heirs to the Chinese imperial throne on the strength of
relationship and of treaties.
Thus the Hun Liu Yüan had no intention of restoring the old empire of Mao Tun, the empire of the nomads; he intended to become emperor of China, emperor of a country of farmers. In this lay the fundamental difference between the earlier Hun empire and this new one. The question whether the Huns should join in the struggle for the Chinese imperial throne was therefore decided among the Huns themselves in 304 in the affirmative, by the founding of the "Hun Han dynasty". All that remained was the practical question of how to hold out with their small army of 50,000 men if serious opposition should be offered to the "barbarians". Meanwhile Liu Yüan provided himself with court ceremonial on the Chinese
model, in a capital which, after several changes, was established at P'ing-ch'êng in southern Shansi. He attracted more and more
of the Chinese gentry, who were glad to come to this still rather barbaric but
well-organized court. In 309 the first attack was made on the Chinese capital,
Loyang. Liu Yüan died in the following year, and in
311, under his successor Liu Ts'ung (310-318), the
attack was renewed and Loyang fell. The Chin emperor, Huai Ti, was captured and kept a prisoner in P'ing-ch'êng until in 313 a conspiracy in his favour was brought
to light in the Hun empire, and he and all his supporters were killed.
Meanwhile the Chinese clique of the Chin dynasty had hastened to make a prince
emperor in the second capital, Ch'ang-an (Min Ti,
313-316) while the princes' struggles for the throne continued. Nobody troubled
about the fate of the unfortunate emperor in his capital. He received no
reinforcements, so that he was helpless in face of the next attack of the Huns,
and in 316 he was compelled to surrender like his predecessor. Now the Hun Han
dynasty held both capitals, which meant virtually the whole of the western part
of North China, and the so-called "Western Chin dynasty" thus came to
its end. Its princes and generals and many of its gentry became landless and
homeless and had to flee into the south.
CHAPTER VI.THE HAN DYNASTY (206 B.C.-A.D. 220)
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