Timeline of Chinese history: Difference between revisions
Line 87: | Line 87: | ||
|2117 BC || King [[Tai Kang]] || [[Erlitou culture]] || |
|2117 BC || King [[Tai Kang]] || [[Erlitou culture]] || |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|2088 BC || King [[Zhong |
|2088 BC || King [[Zhong Kang]] || || |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|2075 BC || King Xiang || || |
|2075 BC || King Xiang || || |
Revision as of 12:00, 18 September 2014
Part of a series on the | ||||||||||||||
History of China | ||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
The following is a timeline of the history of China. Between the changing of the dynasties, most dates overlap as ruling periods do not transfer immediately. Even in the simplest case the last year of one dynasty is the first year of the next dynasty, which amounts to counting that year twice, in terms of the arithmetic process used in the Gregorian calendar. The overlap could grow to many years in the case of dynasties in which the actual founder's father was posthumously declared as the official founder and the official founding date altered accordingly, despite the concurrent existence of the previous dynasty; for example, Wen of Zhou and Cao Cao. Dates prior to 841 BC (beginning of the Gonghe regency) are provisional and subject to dispute.
Prehistoric China
Date | Events | ||
680,000-780,000 BC | Peking Man of Zhoukoudian (est.) | ||
20-19,000 BC | last evidence of creation and use of pottery found in Xianren Cave in Jiangxi province.[1] | ||
7600 BC | Zhenpiyan culture | Archaeological evidence on domestication of pigs for the first time.[2] | |
7500 BC | Pengtoushan culture | Analysis of Chinese rice residues show that rice had been domesticated by this time. | |
7000 BC | Peiligang culture | ||
6600 BC | Jiahu script: still under debate whether this can be considered as a form of writing | ||
6000 BC | Cishan culture | Archaeological evidence on domestication of dogs and chickens for the first time.[2] | |
5000 BC | Baijia culture | Archaeological evidence on domestication of oxen and sheep for the first time.[2] | |
4500 BC | Approximate end of Hemudu culture. | ||
4000 BC | Banpo script; scholars still debate if it is actual writing or not. | ||
3630 BC | Approximate date of the oldest discovered silk in China, found by archaeologists in what is now Henan province in what was the late Yangshao period. | ||
3000 BC | Longshan culture | During the Longshan Neolithic period, the buffaloes are domesticated for the first time in China, and the plow may have been used. | |
2570 BC | Approximate date for the silk and other items found at the Liangzhu culture site at Qianshanyang in Wuxing District, Zhejiang; silk items found there included a braided silk belt, silk threads, and woven silk. |
Ancient China
Ancient Dynasties
Date | Ruler | Events | Other people/events |
2852 BC | Fuxi | This period is part of Chinese mythology | |
2737 BC | Yan Emperor | ||
2698 BC | Yellow Emperor | The Battle of Banquan, the first battle in Chinese history and the Battle of Zhuolu, the second battle in Chinese history, fought by the Yellow Emperor. | |
2650 BC | Legend of Cangjie, inventor of the Chinese character | ||
2597 BC | Emperor Shaohao | ||
2514 BC | Emperor Zhuanxu | ||
2436 BC | Emperor Ku | ||
2361 BC | Emperor Zhi | Supposed first Chinese contact with Văn Lang (Viet Nam).[1] | |
2358 BC | Emperor Yao | Yao ordered Gun to tame the flooding of the rivers. | |
2255 BC | Emperor Shun | Gun failed in taming the flood and was executed on Shun's orders. | |
2205 BC | Yu the Great conquers the flood (est.) |
Date | Ruler | Events | Other people/events |
2194 BC | King Yu | Nine Tripod Cauldrons | Bronze Age in China |
2146 BC | King Qi | ||
2117 BC | King Tai Kang | Erlitou culture | |
2088 BC | King Zhong Kang | ||
2075 BC | King Xiang | ||
2047 BC | King Hou Yi | Hou Yi expelled Xiang from Xia and arrogated the crown to himself | |
2039 BC | King Han Zhuo | Han Zhuo killed Hou Yi and took his place | |
2007 BC | King Shao Kang | Shao Kang executed Han Zhuo and restored the kingdom lost by his father King Xiang | |
1985 BC | King Zhu | ||
1968 BC | King Huai | ||
1924 BC | King Mang | ||
1906 BC | King [[Xie] | ||
1890 BC | King Bu Jiang | ||
1831 BC | King Jiong | ||
1810 BC | King Jin | ||
1789 BC | King Kong Jia | ||
1758 BC | King Gao | ||
1747 BC | King Fa | Mount Tai earthquake (est.) | |
1728 BC | King Jie | Failure in Battle of Mingtiao |
Date | Ruler | Events | Other people/events |
1675 BC | King Tang of Shang | Conquest of Xia Dynasty in Battle of Mingtiao | |
1400 BC | Erligang Culture | ||
1398 BC | King Pan Geng | Around this time, the capital is moved from Zhengzhou to Yinxu. | |
1250 BC | King Wu Ding | ||
1200 BC | Oracle bone script, providing the first evidence for the Chinese calendar system. | Around this time, the militant consort Fu Hao is buried in her tomb at Yinxu. | |
1122 BC | The Zhou Dynasty is founded on the periphery of the Shang realm. | ||
1101 BC | King Di Yi | ||
1075 BC | King Zhou | ||
1050 BC | Ji Chang (posthumously known as King Wen of Zhou) dies, making this the alleged latest date for the creation of the mathematical King Wen sequence. | ||
1047 BC | King Zhou takes Daji as his concubine. | ||
1046 BC | Battle of Muye; King Zhou allegedly dies while his palace burns to the ground. |
Date | Ruler | Events | Other people/events |
1034 BC | King Wu | Bronze script in greater use. | |
103? BC | King Cheng | ||
1026 BC | |||
1020 BC | King Kang | ||
1000 BC | Earliest possible date for the compilation of the Book of Songs | ||
995 BC | King Zhao | ||
976 BC | King Mu | During the 12th year of King Wu's reign, Zhou forces attacked and defeated some branches of the Rong people, allowing for territorial expansion of Zhou. King Mu's critics, including the Duke of Zhai (as recorded in a later 4th century BC discourse of the Biography of King Mu), stated that Mu's expeditions to displace the Rong people were unjustified, as they kept to their own lands and hence abided by their station in the cosmological-political order with China at the center. | |
922 BC | King Gong | ||
899 BC | King Yi | ||
891 BC | King Xiao | ||
885 BC | King Yi | When the nomadic Rong people of Taiyuan staged an attack on the Zhou capital at Haojing (present-day Xi'an), King Yi called upon the aid of his nobles, a significant event which demarcated the beginning of the Zhou monarchs' dependence on their regional nobles to defend the kingdom. Under the command of Guo Gong, the Zhou were able to defeat the Rong people in a significant battle c. 854 BCE, reportedly capturing about a thousand horses. | |
877 BC | King Li | During Li's reign, the Western Rong people launched an invasion deep into Chinese territory before being pushed out. | |
841 BC | Gonghe regency | First year of concise, consecutive court dating at the beginning of the regency of Gonghe. | |
827 BC | King Xuan | ||
781 BC | King You | ||
771 BC | After King You had replaced Queen Shen with a favored concubine Baosi, the queen's father, the Marquis of Shen, allied with the Quanrong nomadic tribe to sack the capital. Queen Shen's son Ji Yijiu was then put on the throne, initiating the Eastern Zhou era. |
Date | Ruler | Events | Other people/events |
770 BC | King Ping | ||
722 BC | Spring and Autumn Period begins, the Lu state begins the chronicle of the Spring and Autumn Annals. | Capital moved from Haojing (present-day Xi'an) to Luoyang. | |
720 BC | King Huan | ||
707 BC | King Huan led a campaign against Duke Zhuang of Zheng after the latter refused to appear in the capital, angered that Huan had dismissed him from his old post as Left Advisor at court. King Huan was allegedly shamed when he was injured in the shoulder by an arrow in an ensuing battle. Duke Zhuang continued to rule the Zheng state until his death in 701 BC. | ||
697 BC | King Zhuang | ||
685 BC | Duke Huan of Qi began his reign over the Qi state in this year, and was the first of the Five Hegemons who assumed great autonomy from the Zhou Dynasty monarch, the latter of whom became more or less a figurehead during the Eastern Zhou Dynasty. | ||
682 BC | King Xi | ||
677 BC | King Hui | ||
651 BC | King Xiang | ||
645 BC | Death of Guan Zhong, the chancellor of the Qi state who was appointed by Duke Huan as recommended by Bao Shuya. Guan initiated centralizing administrative and economic reforms that, for a time, made Qi the most successful and developed state in ancient China. | ||
632 BC | Battle of Chengpu | ||
618 BC | King Qing | ||
612 BC | King Kuang | ||
606 BC | King Ding | Sunshu Ao, China's first known hydraulic engineer. | |
595 BC | Battle of Bi | ||
585 BC | King Jian | ||
575 BC | Battle of Yanling | ||
571 BC | King Ling | ||
551 BC | Laozi, Confucius | ||
548 BC | Oldest known reference to the weiqi (known as go in Japanese) board game. | ||
544 BC | King Jing | Four occupations (est.) | |
543 BC | Guided by the aristocratic statesman Zi Chan, the Zheng state creates a formal code of law. | ||
520 BC | King Dao | ||
515 BC | King Jing | King Liao of Wu is assassinated by Zhuan Zhu, allowing King Helü of Wu to ascend to the throne of the Wu state. | |
506 BC | Battle of Boju | ||
500 BC | Approximate date for the invention of cast iron in China and the earliest possible date for the invention of the iron plough, which by the 3rd century BC, with better casting techniques, would become the heavy moldboard iron plough. | Approximate date for the first use of bronze knife money. | |
486 BC | King Fuchai of Wu built the Han Canal, a proto-section of the Grand Canal of China | ||
484 BC | Death of Wu Zixu, an official of the Wu state and advisor to King Helü. | ||
482 BC | King Goujian of Yue captures the Wu state capital in a surprise assault while King Fuchai was away at Huangchi. | ||
481 BC | End of Spring and Autumn Period | ||
475 BC | King Yuan | ||
474 BC | The Wu state is annexed by the Yue state. | ||
470 BC | Birth of Mozi | ||
468 BC | King Zhending | ||
465 BC | Death of King Goujian of Yue; his sword was later found in an archaeological site in Hubei in the 1960s. | ||
441 BC | King Ai and King Si | ||
440 BC | King Kao | ||
432 BC | Tomb of Marquis Yi of Zeng | ||
425 BC | King Weilie | ||
403 BC | The Jin state is partitioned, marking the beginning of the Warring States period. Meanwhile, Marquis Wen of Wei ascends to power, sponsoring Confucianism in the Wei state, and employing able advisors such as the Legalist Li Kui, the militant officer Wu Qi and the hydraulic engineer Ximen Bao. | ||
401 BC | King An | ||
400 BC | Astronomers Gan De and Shi Shen Star catalogue compilation (est.) |
Earliest date for the creation of the earliest known maps made in China, from the Qin state. | |
389 BC | Latest possible date for the Zuo Zhuan historical text. | ||
386 BC | The city of Handan is founded, serving as the capital for the Zhao state. | ||
381 BC | Wu Qi is assassinated at the funeral of King Diao of Chu; his book, Wuzi, is considered to be one of the Seven Military Classics. | ||
375 BC | King Lie | The Zheng state is annexed by the Han state. | |
370 BC | Zhuangzi is born around this time. | ||
368 BC | King Xian | ||
354 BC | Battle of Guiling | ||
350 BC | Earliest proposed date for the Guodian Chu Slips, containing the oldest known version of the Tao Te Ching, parts of the Book of History, and a chapter from the Book of Rites | ||
342 BC | Battle of Maling | Crossbow used in China. | |
320 BC | King Shenjing | ||
319 BC | Mencius becomes an official in the Qi state | ||
316 BC | Death of Sun Bin | ||
314 BC | King Nan | ||
310 BC | Birth of Xunzi | ||
307 BC | Imitating the northern nomadic armies, King Wuling of Zhao reforms the Zhao state's military by adopting formal cavalry ranks over charioteers and importing the trouser-pants style of the nomads for soldiers. | ||
305 BC | Birth of Zou Yan, whose school of thought would for the first time systematically combine the two premodern theories of Yin and yang and the Five Elements. | ||
300 BC | Erya, China's oldest known dictionary | ||
293 BC | Battle of Yique | ||
278 BC | Qu Yuan writes the poem Lament for Ying and commits suicide after the fall of the Chu state's capital, Ying, to the Qin state. | ||
260 BC | Battle of Changping | ||
256 BC | King Nan dies. Zhou territory annexed by Qin. | Dujiangyan Irrigation System | |
250 BC | The repeating crossbow is featured in drawings from the records of the Chu state. | ||
246 BC | The Zhengguo Canal is completed by Zheng Guo of the Qin state. |
Imperial China
Date | Emperor | Events | Other people/events |
361 BC | Duke Xiao | ||
356 BC | Shang Yang initiates a reform movement in the Qin state, which is outlined in the Book of Lord Shang. | ||
338 BC | King Huiwen | Shang Yang is executed. The rulers of the Qin state begin adopting the title of "King" instead of "Duke". | |
316 BC | The states of Shu and Ba are conquered by the Qin state | ||
311 BC | King Wu | ||
306 BC | King Zhaoxiang | ||
293 BC | Battle of Yique | ||
255 BC | Emergence of the Seven Warring States | ||
250 BC | King Xiaowen | ||
249 BC | King Zhuangxiang | ||
246 BC | Ying Zheng (as King of Qin) |
Ying Zheng becomes king of Qin | |
230 BC | Qin's wars of unification begin. The Han state is conquered by the Qin state | ||
227 BC | Jing Ke fails to assassinate Ying Zheng. | ||
223 BC | The Chu state is conquered by the Qin state | ||
222 BC | The Yan and Zhao states are conquered by the Qin state. | ||
221 BC | First Emperor of Qin |
The Qin state unifies China under the Qin Dynasty with a powerful central government, marking the end of the Warring States period. Ying Zheng proclaims himself "Qin Shi Huang" (means "First Emperor of Qin"). | Imperial Seal of China |
220 BC | Construction of the Great Wall of China begins | Chancellor Li Si standardizes the writing system with Small Seal Script characters. | |
214 BC | The Lingqu Canal is engineered by Shi Lu, and is the oldest contour canal (i.e. follows a contour line) in the world | ||
213 BC | Start of the Burning of books and burying of scholars policy | ||
210 BC | Burial of the Terracotta Army, featuring over 8,000 terracotta statues and the earliest known umbrellas in China. | ||
209 BC | Second Emperor of Qin | Chieftain Modu Chanyu establishes the Xiongnu empire on the northern steppe. | Military officers Chen Sheng and Wu Guang rebel against the Qin Dynasty after fear of execution for delay of arriving at a post with newly drafted conscripts; their small revolt initiates a gradual but massive and uncoordinated revolt on several fronts against Qin authority. |
208 BC | The chief eunuch Zhao Gao has the chancellor Li Si executed, destabilizing Qin as the rebellions of Xiang Yu and others become widespread. | The Qin army led by Zhang Han defeats Chen Sheng and Wu Guang's rebel force. | |
207 BC | Ziying | Battle of Julu. Liu Bang's rebel force enters Guanzhong, the heartland of Qin. The last Qin ruler, Ziying, kills Zhao Gao and surrenders to Liu Bang. | The Nanyue state is established in present-day Vietnam by the Qin general Zhao Tuo. |
206 BC | In the first month of 206 BC, after Liu Bang occupied the Qin capital of Xianyang, Xiang Yu's rebel force arrives at the city and plunders it, destroying the Epang Palace by fire and killing Ziying and members of the Qin royal family. Although Ziying had already surrendered to Liu Bang in the last month of 207 BC, this event is viewed by historians as the final event of the Qin Dynasty. |
Date | Emperor | Events | Other people/events |
206 BC | Start of the Chu-Han contention, a civil war between the forces of Liu Bang and Xiang Yu after the fall of Qin. | Feast at Hong Gate | |
205 BC | Battle of Jingxing | ||
202 BC | Emperor Gaozu | Battle of Gaixia | |
200 BC | Battle of Baideng | Sometime in the 2nd century BC, the multi-tube seed drill is invented and increases agricultural yields as seeds are carefully planted in rows instead of being cast out onto the crop field. | |
193 BC | Death of Xiao He, the first chancellor of the Han Dynasty | ||
195 BC | |||
190 BC | Emperor Hui | Chang'an becomes the eastern terminus of the Silk Road connecting to Europe | |
189 BC | Death of Zhang Liang, a key advisor to Emperor Gaozu. | ||
180 BC | Emperor Wen | Rule of Wen and Jing | Lü Clan Disturbance |
168 BC | Mawangdui Silk Texts are interred at the tombs of Mawangdui, containing some of the oldest known textual versions of the I Ching. | ||
157 BC | Emperor Jing | ||
141 BC | Emperor Wu | ||
140 BC | Persuaded by Dong Zhongshu's essay in a literary competition, Emperor Wu, or his chancellor Wei Wan, adopts Confucianism at court. | ||
139 BC | Under the patronage of Prince Liu An, the scholars known as the Eight Immortals of Huainan publish the Huainanzi, a philosophical text that also covered subjects of military strategy as well as geography and cartography. | ||
135 BC | Han–Minyue War | Southward expansion of the Han Dynasty | |
133 BC | Han–Xiongnu War | Battle of Mayi | |
130 BC | Sino-Roman relations | ||
125 BC | Zhang Qian returns to China to report on his travels and the kingdoms of Dayuan (Fergana), Kangju (Sogdiana), Daxia (Greco-Bactrian Kingdom), Shendu (Indo-Greek Kingdom), Anxi (Parthia), and Taozhi (Mesopotamia). | ||
119 BC | Battle of Mobei | ||
111 BC | Han–Dongyue War | Han–Nanyue War | |
109 BC | Han–Dian War | ||
108 BC | Battle of Loulan | Wiman Joseon in Korea falls to Han forces. | |
102 BC | Emperor Wu's forces besiege Kokand in the Fergana Valley | ||
100 BC | Steel in China. | ||
91 BC | Sima Qian completes the Records of the Grand Historian, a groundbreaking work in Chinese historiography. | ||
87 BC | Emperor Zhao | ||
86 BC | Death of Jin Midi, an official of Xiongnu ethnicity who became a regent of the Han Dynasty during the early reign of Emperor Zhao. | ||
74 BC | Emperor Xuan | ||
67 BC | Battle of Jushi | ||
60 BC | Protectorate of the Western Regions is established. | ||
48 BC | Emperor Yuan | Consort Ban, a female poet, is born around this time. | |
40 BC | The Ji Jiu Pian dictionary records China's first known use of the treadle-operated tilt hammer, while the later book Xinlun by Huan Tan described the first hydraulic-powered trip hammer which would have been operated by a waterwheel. | ||
37 BC | Death of Jing Fang, who was the first in music theory to note that 53 perfect fifths approximates 31 octaves. Like the later Zhang Heng, he was also a proponent of the radiating influence theory, which stated that the light of the moon was merely the reflected light of the sun. | ||
36 BC | Battle of Zhizhi | ||
30 BC | First mention of the wheelbarrow in history. | ||
18 BC | Biographies of Exemplary Women, a book about exemplary women in Chinese history, is compiled by the scholar Liu Xiang. | ||
32 BC | Emperor Cheng | ||
6 BC | Emperor Ai | ||
1 BC | Emperor Ping | ||
1 | Sometime from this year until the end of the century, the earliest representation of a stern-mounted rudder for steering ships is made in China, on a tomb model of a sailing junk. | ||
2 | Han government census counts 59 million people in the empire. | ||
3 | Emperor Ping establishes a nationwide school system on the central, prefectural, and county levels. | ||
6 | Emperor Ruzi | ||
8 | Liu Xin completes his star catalogue of 1080 stars, as well as fixing the year at 365.25016 days long (11 minutes longer than the modern year) by calculating the synodic month to be 29 43/81 days long, with a total of 235 synodic months adding up to 19 years. He is also the first Chinese to attempt a more accurate calculation of pi at 3.154, as the Chinese before him simply approximated it to 3. Zhang Heng and Liu Hui would later improve upon Liu's calculation in the 2nd and 3rd centuries, respectively. |
Date | Emperor | Events | Other people/events |
9 | Wang Mang | Emperor Ruzi is dethroned; Wang Mang initiates the short-lived Xin Dynasty | Wang Mang introduces the well-field system of land distribution and agricultural production. |
10 | Wang Mang introduces an income tax of 10% for professionals and skilled laborers. | Wang Mang outlaws the private use of crossbows. Despite this, Liu Xiu (later Emperor Guangwu of Han) purchases them on the black market to aid the rebellion of his brother Liu Yan and rebel leader Li Tong in early winter of 22. | |
12 | With pressure from aristocrats, Wang is forced to rescind the well-field system. | ||
17 | Wang Mang imposes government monopolies on liquor, salt, iron, coinage, forestry, and fishing. | Mother Lü initiates rebellion against a county magistrate in Shandong province. | |
18 | Death of Yang Xiong, a poet, Taoist and author who wrote the first dialect dictionary of China, the Fangyan. | ||
23 | Battle of Kunyang | Storming of Weiyang Palace, Wang Mang is killed, Emperor Gengshi restores the Han Dynasty. |
Date | Emperor | Events | Other people/events |
23 | Emperor Gengshi | ||
25 | Emperor Guangwu | ||
27 | Chimei rebels surrender to Han authority after defeat | ||
31 | Prefect Du Shi invents waterwheel-powered bellows for the blast furnace in making cast iron. | ||
33 | Rebellion of Gongsun Shu; Gongsun blockades the width of the Yangtze River with a fortified floating pontoon bridge, but his defenses give in once Han general Cen Peng employs "castle ships" to ram and attack Gongsun's rebel navy | ||
43 | Second Chinese domination of Vietnam | ||
52 | The first known gazetteer of China, the Yuejue Shu, is written. | ||
57 | Sino-Japanese relations | ||
58 | Death of chancellor Deng Yu. | ||
65 | Liu Ying, son of Emperor Guangwu, sponsors Buddhism. | ||
68 | White Horse Temple, the first Buddhist temple in China, is founded. | ||
73 | Battle of Yiwulu | ||
83 | Wang Chong correctly theorizes the nature of the water cycle; he is also the first in Chinese history to mention the use of the chain pump. | ||
87 | Yuan An, an advocate of marriage alliance policies with the Xiongnu, is promoted to the position of Minister over the Masses. | ||
88 | Emperor He | ||
89 | Battle of Ikh Bayan | ||
97 | Ban Chao sends envoy Gan Ying to the outskirts of the Roman Empire. | ||
100 | The Shuowen Jiezi dictionary is completed by Xu Shen. | ||
105 | Cai Lun invents papermaking | Goguryeo—Han War | |
106 | Emperor Shang | ||
111 | Emperor An | Ban Zhao completes the Book of Han, which was begun by her father Ban Biao and continued by her older brother Ban Gu. | |
120 | Zhang Heng completes his star catalogue, documenting 2,500 stars in over 100 constellations, writes a new formula for pi, corrected mistakes in the Chinese calendar, gave reasoning for a spherical moon that reflects light, and noted that lunar eclipse occurred when the earth obstructed the sunlight reaching the moon, while a solar eclipse was the moon's obstruction of sunlight reaching earth. | ||
125 | Emperor Shun | Zhang Heng invents the first hydraulic-powered armillary sphere, given motive power by a waterwheel and incorporating an inflow water clock, the latter of which he improved by adding a compensating tank between the reservoir and the inflow vessel. | The earliest known Chinese depiction of a mechanical distance-marking odometer is drawn on a mural of the Xiaotangshan Tomb. |
132 | Zhang Heng invents a seismometer device that, with a pendulum and complex set of gears and cranks, is able to discern the cardinal direction of earthquakes by the dropping of bronze balls into wrought toad's mouths indicating the direction. | Birth of Cai Yong, a mathematician, astronomer, musician and calligrapher. | |
142 | The Kinship of the Three | ||
145 | Emperor Chong | ||
146 | Emperor Zhi | ||
147 | Emperor Huan | Birth of Lokaksema, a Yuezhi monk from Kushan who translated Mahayana Buddhist texts into Chinese. | |
148 | An Shigao, a Persian prince from Parthia, arrives in China in this year to translate Theravada and Mahayana Buddhist texts into Chinese. | ||
166 | Roman embassy reaches China. | Disasters of Partisan Prohibitions | |
168 | Emperor Ling | ||
177 | Birth of Cai Wenji, a female poet and music composer. | ||
179 | Earliest known reference to The Nine Chapters on the Mathematical Art | ||
180 | Ding Huan invents the manual-powered rotary fan, which is recorded in the Book of the Later Han as being able to make halls cool enough for people to shiver during the summer. During the Tang Dynasty, hydraulics were applied to power the rotary fan first innovated by Ding. | ||
184 | Yellow Turban Rebellion | Liang Province Rebellion | |
185 | Zhi Yao, a Yuezhi monk from Kushan, translates Buddhist texts into Chinese. | ||
189 | Emperor Shao | Dong Zhuo deposes Emperor Shao (demoted to the status of Prince of Hongnong) | Massacre of eunuchs |
190 | Emperor Xian | Campaign against Dong Zhuo | Battle of Xingyang |
191 | Battle of Jieqiao | Battle of Yangcheng, Battle of Xiangyang | |
192 | Lü Bu murders Dong Zhuo in an assassination plot masterminded by minister Wang Yun. | ||
192 | Guan Yu, Zhang Fei, Liu Bei fights against Lu Bu. | ||
193 | Battle of Fengqiu | ||
194 | Sun Ce's conquests in Jiangdong | Battle of Yan Province | |
197 | Battle of Wancheng | ||
198 | Battle of Xiapi | Battle of Yijing | |
199 | Campaign against Yuan Shu | ||
200 | Battle of Guandu | ||
202 | Battle of Bowang | ||
204 | Gongsun Kang, a Chinese warlord of Liaodong, establishes the Daifang Commandery in northern Korea. | ||
208 | Battle of Red Cliffs - - Cao Cao loses war with 840,000 troops against Liu Bei and Sun Quan's 50,000. Zhuge Liang, Zhou Yu, and Pang Tong came up with the interlock of strategies, which included the Ruse of Pain strategy and many others. Zhuge Liang uses fire the third time after predicting the unusual direction of the wind blow (which at that time during the winter the wind usually blew from west to east, but he predicted that for three days the wind will blow the opposite direction) and burned down Cao's ships with most of his troops in it | Battle of Changban Zhuge Liang uses fire first time, Battle of Xiakou Zhuge Liang uses fire second time, Battle of Yiling, Battle of Jiangling | |
211 | Battle of Tong Pass | ||
213 | Siege of Jicheng | Battle of Lucheng | |
214 | Liu Bei's takeover of Yi Province | Battle of Jiameng Pass | |
215 | Battle of Yangping | Battle of Baxi | |
217 | Battle of Xiaoyao Ford | Battle of Ruxu | |
218 | Battle of Mount Dingjun | ||
219 | Lü Meng's invasion of Jing Province | Battle of Han River, Battle of Fancheng | |
220 | Cao Pi forces Emperor Xian to abdicate and proclaims himself Emperor of Cao Wei |
Date | Emperor (Cao Wei) |
Emperor (Shu Han) |
Emperor (Eastern Wu) |
Events | Other people/events |
221 | Cao Pi | Liu Bei | Battle of Xiaoting | ||
222 | Sun Quan | Battle of Yiling | |||
225 | Liu Shan | Zhuge Liang's Southern Campaign | |||
227 | Cao Rui | Xincheng Rebellion | |||
228 | Zhuge Liang's Northern Expeditions | Battle of Tianshui, Battle of Jieting, Battle of Shiting?, Siege of Chencang | |||
232 | Death of Cao Zhi, a famous poet, author of the Seven Paces Poem (Written While Taking Seven Paces: "Pods burned to cook peas, Peas weep in the pot:'Grown from the same trees, Why boil us so hot?'" - It was for his brother, who was trying to find an excuse to execute him, his brother lost the bargain of telling him to make a poem in seven steps or be executed for his fraud educations), and son of Cao Cao. | ||||
234 | Battle of Wuzhang Plains | ||||
244 | Cao Fang | Battle of Xingshi | |||
247 | Jiang Wei's Northern Expeditions | ||||
248 | The rebellion of Triệu Thị Trinh in Vietnam is crushed by Eastern Wu. | ||||
249 | Incident at Gaoping Tombs | ||||
250 | Introduction of Buddhism in China | ||||
255 | Cao Mao | Sun Liang | Ma Jun invents the south-pointing chariot, a mechanical directional pathfinder that acts like a compass in that it always points south. This device may have employed a differential gear system, the same found in modern automobiles. | Battle of Didao, Guanqiu Jian and Wen Qin start a rebellion in Shouchun | |
263 | Cao Huan | Sun Xiu | Conquest of Shu by Wei | Liu Hui publishes the revised version of The Nine Chapters on the Mathematical Art, with Liu's commentary. | |
265 | Sun Hao | Nine-rank system | |||
280 | Emperor Wu of Jin | Conquest of Wu by Jin (Si Ma, descendant of Cao's general of the army) |
Date | Emperor | Events | Other people/events |
265 | Emperor Wu | Sometime between this year and 271, the Jin Dynasty cartographer and geographer Pei Xiu noted a groundbreaking development in Chinese cartography, as he was the first to describe the grid reference and graduated scale of measurement for Chinese maps; however, it is known that grids and familiarity with scaled distance on maps existing beforehand, while scholars point to evidence that it might have been an original innovation of Zhang Heng. | |
271 | |||
280 | Unification of China, Conquest of Wu by Jin | Records of the Three Kingdoms by Chen Shou | |
290 | Emperor Hui | ||
291 | War of the Eight Princes | ||
304 | Sixteen Kingdoms (Han Zhao, Later Zhao, Cheng Han, Former Liang, Later Liang, Northern Liang, Western Liang, Southern Liang, Former Yan, Later Yan, Northern Yan, Southern Yan, Former Qin, Later Qin, Western Qin, Xia) | ||
306 | |||
307 | Emperor Huai | ||
311 | Emperor Min | Emperor Huai is captured by Han Zhao forces, the capital is moved from Luoyang to Chang'an. | |
313 | The state of Goguryeo in Manchuria and Korea conquers the Jin-Chinese Lelang Commandery. | ||
316 | Chang'an falls, Emperor Min surrenders to Liu Yao, a general of the Xiongnu state Han Zhao. The Eastern Jin Dynasty's capital is established in Jiankang (present-day Nanjing). | ||
318 | Emperor Min is executed by Liu Cong, emperor of Han Zhao. |
Date | Emperor | Events | Other people/events |
317 | Emperor Yuan | Sixteen Kingdoms and Six Dynasties | |
322 | First accurate tomb depiction of stirrups. | ||
323 | Emperor Ming | ||
324 | The sick and ailing rebel Wang Dun dies while his forces are defeated by Emperor Ming's troops. | ||
325 | Emperor Cheng | ||
328 | Su Jun, who waged war against the regent Yu Liang, is defeated by generals Tao Kan and Wen Jiao. | ||
342 | Emperor Kang | ||
344 | Emperor Mu | ||
353 | Calligrapher Wang Xizhi writes the Lantingji Xu in semi-cursive script. | ||
361 | Emperor Ai | ||
365 | Emperor Fei | ||
366 | Painter Gu Kaizhi becomes an officer of Jin. | ||
369 | Jin general Huan Wen is defeated by Murong Chui, a general of the ethnic Xianbei state of Former Yan. | ||
372 | Emperor Xiaowu | ||
383 | Battle of Fei River | ||
396 | Emperor An | ||
399 | Faxian sails to Sri Lanka and India to recover Buddhist texts. | ||
405 | Poet Tao Qian goes into retirement for the next 22 years, until his death. | ||
419 | Emperor Gong | ||
420 | The regent Liu Yu seizes the throne from Emperor Gong, initiating the Liu Song Dynasty. |
Date | Southern Dynasty | Northern Dynasty | Events | Other people/events |
386 | North Wei | |||
404 | Huiyuan, founder of Pure Land Buddhism, writes the book On Why Monks Do Not Bow Down Before Kings, where he argues that Buddhist clergy should stay out of politics but Buddhist laypeople make good subjects because of belief in karma. | |||
420 | Liu Song | |||
439 | ||||
475 | Bodhidharma arrives in China | |||
477 | Oldest known painted depiction of a horse collar, on a cave mural of Dunhuang, Northern Wei. | |||
479 | Southern Qi | |||
485 | After the well-field system had fallen out of use, Emperor Xiaowen of Northern Wei introduces the equal-field system. | |||
496 | Change of Xianbei names to Han names | |||
501 | Cui Hong begins compiling the Shiliuguo Chunqiu | |||
502 | Liang Dynasty | |||
523 | Songyue Pagoda is built, the earliest known fully brick pagoda in China, in departure from the fully timber tradition. It still stands at a height of 40 m (131 ft). | |||
534 | Eastern Wei Western Wei | |||
543 | The Chinese dictionary Yupian is completed by Gu Yewang. | |||
550 | Northern Qi Western Wei | |||
557 | Chen Dynasty | Northern Qi Northern Zhou | ||
577 | Northern Zhou | |||
581 | Emperor Jing of Northern Zhou is forced to step down from the throne by his regent Yang Jian, who assumes power as Emperor Wen of Sui, initiating the Sui Dynasty. |
Date | Emperor | Events | Other people/events |
581 | Emperor Wen | ||
582 | Compilation begins on the Jingdian Shiwen dictionary. | ||
589 | Yan Zhitui makes the first reference to toilet paper in history. | ||
598 | Goguryeo–Sui War begins in what is now North Korea. | ||
600 | First of the Japanese embassies to China. | ||
601 | Lu Fayan publishes the rime dictionary Qieyun. | ||
602 | Third Chinese domination of Vietnam | ||
604 | Emperor Yang | ||
605 | Imperial examinations are instituted, beginning a long bureaucratic tradition of scholar-officialdom in China. | Zhaozhou Bridge completed. | |
607 | Japanese emissary Ono no Imoko arrives in China. | ||
609 | Grand Canal of China completed. | ||
610 | Engineers Geng Xun and Yuwen Kai improve the clepsydra clock model when they provided a steelyard balance that allowed seasonal adjustment in the pressure head of the compensating tank and could then control the rate of flow for different lengths of day and night. The earlier Zhang Heng of the Han Dynasty was the first to add the compensating tank between the reservoir and the inflow vessel. | Emperor Yang collaborates a huge effort for all the commanderies of China to submit gazetteers describing their local areas and providing maps to the central government, in an effort to maintain control and provide better security. | |
611 | Four Gates Pagoda is completed. | ||
612 | Battle of Salsu | ||
617 | After capturing Chang'an, the rebel-turned-emperor Li Yuan demotes Emperor Yang to the status of a Taishang Huang (retired emperor). |
Date | Emperor | Events | Other people/events |
618 | Emperor Gaozu | Transition from Sui to Tang | |
621 | Battle of Hulao | ||
624 | The Yiwen Leiju encyclopedia is completed by Ouyang Xun. | ||
626 | Emperor Taizong | Emperor Taizong's campaign against Eastern Tujue | Incident at Xuanwu Gate |
635 | First Christian missionaries arrive in China: Nestorian monks from Asia Minor and Persia, building Daqin Pagoda. Alopen, a Persia bishop of the Assyrian Church of the East, also writes the Jesus Sutras. | Emperor Taizong's campaign against Tuyuhun; also, Book of Liang is published. | |
636 | Xumi Pagoda is completed. | Compilations of the Book of Chen, Book of Northern Qi, Book of Zhou, and the Book of Sui. | |
638 | Emperor Taizong's campaign against Tufan | ||
639 | Emperor Taizong's campaign against Xueyantuo | ||
640 | Protectorate General to Pacify the West | Emperor Taizong's campaign against Xiyu states including Karakhoja, beginning a series of campaigns against the Western Turks | |
643 | Emperor Taizong commissions artist Yan Liben to paint the portraits of 24 different emperors and 18 noted scholars for the Portraits at Lingyan Pavilion. | ||
644 | Emperor Taizong's campaign against Goguryeo, Tang allies with Korean Silla during the Goguryeo–Tang War | First Tang campaign against Karasahr | |
646 | Great Tang Records on the Western Regions is compiled by Bianji, documenting the travels of Buddhist monk Xuanzang through the Gobi Desert, Kucha, Tashkent, Samarkand, Gandhara, and finally to India where he studied at Nalanda. | ||
647 | Protectorate General to Pacify the North | ||
648 | Book of Jin is compiled. | Second Tang campaign against Karasahr and campaign against Kucha | |
649 | Emperor Gaozong | Four Arts of the Chinese Scholar (est.) | |
650 | The Records of the Tang Dynasty describes a landmark visit to China by Sa`d ibn Abi Waqqas, one of the sahaba, in 650. This event is considered to be the birth of Islam in China. | ||
657 | Emperor Gaozong commissions the compilation of a large materia medica documenting the use of 833 medicinal drugs. | Conquest of the Western Turks | |
659 | Compilations for the History of Southern Dynasties and History of Northern Dynasties is completed. | ||
663 | Battle of Baekgang, Silla-Tang forces defeat Japanese-Baekje navy. | ||
666 | Two Chinese Buddhist monks, Zhi Yu and Zhi You, craft a mechanical south-pointing chariot for Japanese Emperor Tenji. | ||
668 | Protectorate General to Pacify the East | ||
684 | Wu Zetian | Qianling Mausoleum is completed. | Death of poet Luo Binwang. |
699 | Chinese troops retake the Four Garrisons of Anxi from the Tibetans. | ||
700 | Approximate date for the creation of the Dunhuang map, an astronomical chart. | ||
704 | Giant Wild Goose Pagoda is rebuilt. | ||
709 | Emperor Zhongzong | Small Wild Goose Pagoda is completed. | |
710 | Emperor Ruizong | The Shitong, a history of Chinese historiography up until the late 8th century, is compiled by Liu Zhiji. | Death of Shangguan Wan'er, a female writer, government official, and concubine. |
712 | Emperor Xuanzong | Pear Garden, an Academy of Music that trained acting troupes. | |
713 | Kaiyuan newspaper | ||
725 | Yi Xing invents a water-powered celestial globe featuring an escapement mechanism and striking clock. | ||
729 | Gautama Siddha completes the compilation of the Treatise on Astrology of the Kaiyuan Era. | ||
740 | This year marks the death of the painter Wu Daozi and poet Meng Haoran. | ||
744 | Poets Du Fu and Li Bai meet for the first time. | ||
751 | Battle of Talas; this battle marks the beginning of the westward transmission of the ancient Chinese papermaking process. | ||
755 | An Lushan Rebellion | Death of the painter Zhang Xuan. | |
756 | Emperor Suzong | Battle of Yongqiu | |
758 | Arab and Persian pirates loot and burn the seaport of Guangzhou, causing Chinese officials to virtually shut down the port for five decades while foreign vessels from the Indian Ocean came mostly to Hanoi in Chinese-controlled Vietnam to trade there instead. | ||
757 | Battle of Suiyang | ||
760 | Earliest date for The Classic of Tea by Lu Yu. | ||
761 | Death of Wang Wei, a painter, musician, poet, scholar and official. | ||
762 | Emperor Daizong | The Jingxingji is written by Du Huan, which described several major foreign countries including the Abbasid Caliphate and the Byzantine Empire. | |
763 | Shi Siming is killed by his son. The An Lushan Rebellion ends. | ||
781 | Emperor Dezong | Nestorian Stone is composed. | |
783 | Death of the famous painter Han Gan. | ||
785 | Official Jia Dan begins a monumental work of cartography and geography. In it he describes many foreign places, including present-day Japan, Korea, India, Sri Lanka, Arabian Peninsula, the Euphrates River and Baghdad of present-day Iraq, and minaret lighthouses in the Persian Gulf that were later described by Al-Masudi and Al-Muqaddasi. | ||
794 | Prince Li Gao has the first Chinese paddle-wheel ships made. | ||
798 | The Army of Divine Strategy, staffed by eunuch officers, reaches 240,000 troops, thanks largely to the revenues of the salt commission. | ||
799 | The lucrative trade of the salt commission, a government monopoly, accounts for half of the government's incoming revenues by this year. | ||
801 | Compilation of the Tongdian history and encyclopedia by Du You is complete. | ||
805 | Emperor Shunzong | ||
806 | Emperor Xianzong | With a renewed military, Emperor Xianzong begins a series of seven major military campaigns in which he quells all remaining rebelling provinces except for two. | |
820 | Emperor Muzong | ||
824 | Emperor Jingzong | Death of Han Yu, an essayist and poet who was an early proponent of the Classical Prose Movement, while his works are considered foundations for later Neo-Confucianism. He was also an early polemecist and advocate against Buddhism. | |
831 | Emperor Wenzong | A Uyghur Turk sues the son of a Tang grand general who had failed to repay a debt of 11 million government-issued copper coins. Emperor Wenzong hears the news and is so upset that he not only banishes the general, but also attempts to ban all trade between Chinese and foreigners except for trade in livestock. This ban is unsuccessful and trade with foreigners resumes, especially in maritime affairs overseas. | |
843 | Emperor Wuzong | Chang'an, a large fire consumes 4,000 homes, warehouses, and other buildings in the East Market, yet the rest of the city is at a safe distance from the blaze (which is largely quarantined in East Central Chang'an thanks to the large width of roads in Chang'an that produce fire breaks). | |
845 | Great Anti-Buddhist Persecution | ||
846 | Emperor Xuānzong | Death of Bai Juyi, a poet who penned over 2,800 poems in his lifetime. | |
851 | Arab merchant Suleiman al-Tajir visits Guangzhou seaport and describes Chinese porcelain manufacture, tea consumption, granaries and the Islamic mosque of the city. He notes that the Chinese use toilet paper instead of washing with water. | ||
852 | Death of Du Mu, a famous poet renowned for his vivid and realistic style. | ||
853 | Duan Chengshi publishes his Miscellaneous Morsels from Youyang. | ||
858 | An enormous flood along the Grand Canal and on the North China Plain kills tens of thousands of people. | ||
863 | Emperor Yizong | Duan Chengshi describes the slave trade, ivory trade, and ambergris trade in Berbera, Somalia, East Africa. | |
868 | Woodblock printing of the Diamond Sutra | ||
874 | Emperor Xizong | Huang Chao Rebellion | |
879 | Huang Chao burns and loots the international seaport at Guangzhou, killing thousands of native Chinese and foreign merchants from all over the Asian continent. | ||
884 | The Huang Chao Rebellion is crushed by Tang troops. | ||
888 | Emperor Zhaozong | ||
907 | Emperor Ai | Zhu Wen overthrows the Tang Dynasty and initiates the Later Liang | Ten thousand years (est.) |
Date | 5 Dynasties | 10 Kingdoms | Events |
907 | Later Liang | Wu Wuyue Min Chu Southern Han Former Shu Later Shu Jingnan Southern Tang Northern Han |
|
917 | Earliest known description in China of Greek fire. | ||
919 | Earliest known description of a flamethrower in China. | ||
923 | Later Tang | ||
936 | Later Jin | ||
947 | Later Han | ||
950 | The earliest known depiction of a fire lance (proto gun) and lobbed grenade. | ||
960 | Around this time, Gu Hongzhong paints the classic Night Revels of Han Xizai. | ||
951 | Later Zhou | ||
960 | |||
961 | Huqiu Tower is built. | ||
979 |
Date | Emperor | Events | Other people/events |
907 | Emperor Taizu | ||
926 | Emperor Taizong | ||
947 | Emperor Shizong | ||
951 | Emperor Muzong | ||
969 | Emperor Jingzong | ||
993 | Emperor Shengzong | The First Goryeo–Khitan War, marking the beginning of the Goryeo–Khitan Wars | |
997 | The Chinese dictionary Longkan Shoujian is compiled by the monk Xingjun. | ||
1005 | Shanyuan Treaty | ||
1010 | Second Goryeo–Khitan War | ||
1018 | Third Goryeo–Khitan War | Battle of Gwiju | |
1031 | Emperor Xingzong | ||
1056 | Emperor Daozong | Pagoda of Fogong Temple is completed. | |
1120 | Emperor Tianzuo | Pagoda of Tianning Temple is completed. | |
1124 | Kara-Khitan Khanate | ||
1125 | Song and Jin conquest of hua. |
Date | Emperor | Events | Other people/events |
960 | Emperor Taizu | Chenqiao Mutiny | In the Wuli Xiaoshi (1630), Fang Yizhi states that Song Taizu was presented with gunpowder-impregnated fire arrows in this year. Hundred Family Surnames (est.) |
971 | Song troops defeat the war elephants of Southern Han. | ||
974 | Song troops construct and defend a floating pontoon bridge across the Yangtze River in order to secure supply lines while fighting against the Southern Tang forces. | ||
976 | Emperor Taizong | Yuelu Academy founded. | |
977 | Longhua Pagoda is built. | ||
978 | Extensive Records of the Taiping Era is completed. It is the first of the Four Great Books of Song. | ||
981 | Battle of Bach Dang | ||
983 | Imperial Readings of the Taiping Era is completed. | ||
984 | Canal pound lock invented by Qiao Weiyo | ||
986 | Finest Blossoms in the Garden of Literature is completed. | ||
990 | Famous painter Fan Kuan is born around this time. | ||
1000 | Emperor Zhenzong | Sometime between this year and the end of the century, the Chinese discovered how to use bituminous coke instead of charcoal for blast furnaces in casting iron, sparing thousands of acres of prime timberland from deforestation. | |
1005 | The Shanyuan Treaty is signed between Liao and Song. | ||
1010 | After 39 years in the making, the enormous atlas of China commissioned by the emperor and drawn by a team of scholars under Lu Duosun and Song Zhun is completed in 1556 chapters, including maps for individual towns, districts, counties, prefectures, circuits (provinces), and a map of the whole of China. | ||
1011 | The Guangyun rime dictionary is completed by Chen Pengnian and Qiu Yong. | ||
1013 | Prime Tortoise of the Record Bureau is completed. | ||
1037 | Emperor Renzong | Ding Du publishes the Jiyun rime dictionary. | |
1041 | Bi Sheng invents the earliest movable type printing. | ||
1043 | Fan Zhongyan and Ouyang Xiu introduce the Qingli Reforms, which would soon be rescinded in 1045. | ||
1044 | Wujing Zongyao, first book with written gunpowder formula; the book also describes the double-piston flamethrower. | ||
1045 | Lingxiao Pagoda is completed. | ||
1049 | Iron Pagoda is completed. | ||
1055 | Liaodi Pagoda is completed. | ||
1060 | The compilation of the New Book of Tang, edited by Ouyang Xiu, is presented to the emperor. | ||
1063 | Emperor Yingzong | Pizhi Pagoda is completed. | |
1068 | Emperor Shenzong | First use of the drydock in China | |
1069 | Chancellor Wang Anshi introduces the reforms of the New Policies, which included the Baojia system, his policies breed factionalism at court while the later chancellor Sima Guang would lead the conservatives against his party. | ||
1070 | Su Song publishes the Bencao Tujing, an interdisciplinary pharmaceutical treatise incorporating information on botany, zoology and mineralogy. | ||
1072 | Guo Xi paints Early Spring. | ||
1075 | Diplomat Shen Kuo asserts Song's rightful borders by using court archives against the bluff of Emperor Daozong of Liao. | Shen Kuo travels to Cizhou, and describes a forging process of cast iron under a cool blast that is considered by historians Needham and Hartwell as a predecessor to the metallurgic Bessemer process. | |
1076 | Wang Anshi resigns as chancellor. | ||
1077 | Su Song is sent on a diplomatic mission to the Liao Dynasty, discovers that the Khitan people calendar is more mathematically accurate than the Song; Emperor Zhezong later sponsors Su Song's clock tower in order to compete with Liao astronomers. | ||
1078 | According to the research of Robert Hartwell, China was producing on annual average 127,000,000 kg (125,000 t) of cast iron by this year, a sixfold increase since the year 806 during the Tang. | ||
1080 | Song forces inflict defeats on the Western Xia Dynasty, Shen Kuo takes up defense at Yan'an. | ||
1081 | An officer disobeys commands and his army is destroyed by the Tanguts; although he successfully defended Yan'an, Shen Kuo is blamed for the fiasco and impeached. | Su Song publishes a 200 volume work on Liao-Song relations. | |
1084 | Sima Guang completes the compilation of Zizhi Tongjian, a universal history text of 294 volumes with 3 million Chinese characters. | The female poet Li Qingzhao is born. | |
1085 | Emperor Zhezong | The New Policies Group, a political faction once led by Wang Anshi, is ousted from power as the new Empress dowager and regent overrule the young Emperor Zhezong with the political faction led by Sima Guang. | |
1088 | Dream Pool Essays by Shen Kuo, first book to describe the magnetic compass; Shen also postulates theories in early geomorphology and paleoclimatology, describes Bi Sheng's movable type printing, atmospheric refraction, problems of calculus and trigonometry, methods of archaeology, and is the first in China to describe camera obscura (after Ibn al-Haytham) and the concept of true north. | ||
1090 | First known description of the mechanical belt drive is found in the Book of Sericulture by Qin Guan. | ||
1094 | Clock tower of Su Song is completed in Kaifeng, featuring an escapement mechanism and chain drive to rotate an armillary sphere and sound an intricate striking clock. | ||
1094 | Dongpo Academy is established on the island of Hainan, on the same spot where famous poet and official Su Shi was exiled by the New Policies court faction. | ||
1103 | Emperor Huizong | Yingzao Fashi architectural treatise is published by Li Jie and is promoted by Huizong's government as a standard manual for construction and building. | |
1107 | Death of the painter, calligrapher and poet Mi Fu. | ||
1111 | Donglin Academy is founded. | ||
1119 | Zhu Yu publishes his Pingzhou Table Talks, confirming Shen Kuo's description of the magnetic compass by stating its use in seafaring. | ||
1125 | Song Dynasty forces ally with rebel Jurchens to topple the Khitan Liao Dynasty. | ||
1125 | Jin Dynasty declares war against the Song Dynasty. | ||
1127 | Emperor Qinzong | Jingkang Incident, the northern third of China is conquered by the Jurchens under the Jin Dynasty, the capital of Song Dynasty is moved south from Kaifeng to Hangzhou. |
Date | Emperor | Events | Other people/events |
1132 | Emperor Gaozong | China's first permanent standing navy is established, with Song naval headquarters at Dinghai. | A fire destroys over 13,000 homes in the new capital at Hangzhou |
1135 | Yue Fei defeats the rebels under Yang Yao by first entangling his paddle-wheel ships in rotten logs and other floating debris. | ||
1141 | The Treaty of Shaoxing is signed between Jin and Song. | ||
1142 | Yue Fei is accused of alleged treason by the chancellor Qin Hui and put to death on Emperor Gaozong's orders. | ||
1161 | Battle of Tangdao and Battle of Caishi, Song naval victories over Jin after the latter attempted to conquer southern China. | The Yunjing rime dictionary is compiled by Zhang Linzhi. | |
1162 | Emperor Xiaozong | Beisi Pagoda is completed. | |
1165 | Liuhe Pagoda is completed | ||
1179 | White Deer Grotto Academy is rebuilt by Zhu Xi. | ||
1189 | Emperor Guangzong | ||
1215 | Emperor Ningzong | Battle of Zhongdu | |
1241 | Emperor Lizong | Emperor Lizong sponsors Zhu Xi's Four Books and Neo-Confucianism. | |
1247 | Qin Jiushao writes his Mathematical Treatise in Nine Sections, which included use of the Horner scheme hundreds of years before it was discovered independently by William George Horner. | ||
1259 | Möngke Khan dies in Chongqing during the Battle of Fishing Town. | ||
1260 | The Toluid Civil War begins between Ariq Böke and Kublai Khan, forcing Kublai to retreat north as Song chancellor Jia Sidao pushes Mongol troops north of the Yangtze River in an opportune assault. | ||
1261 | Emperor Duzong | Although written of around 1100, Yang Hui draws the first known Chinese diagram of the Pascal's triangle. | From this year until the conquest of Song, Kublai Khan attempts to gain southern Chinese acceptance in benevolent displays of releasing large bands of Southern Song merchants after short periods of capture and detainment at the border. |
1265 | The Mongols, under Kublai Khan's leadership, invade Sichuan and capture 146 Song naval ships as war booty. | ||
1267 | Battle of Xiangyang begins | ||
1269 | In this year, and every consecutive year until 1272, the Song navy attempts to break the enormous Mongol and Northern Chinese naval blockade on the Han River. All attempts are unsuccessful, as thousands of men and hundreds of ships are lost in the process. | ||
1271 | Voyage of Marco Polo begins | ||
1273 | Battle of Xiangyang concludes with Yuan victory. | ||
1275 | Emperor Gong | Turkish general Bayan defeats Song chancellor Jia Sidao's army of 130,000 troops; Jia is impeached from court and killed by one of his own guards. | |
1276 | Emperor Duanzong | Unlike his contemporary and fellow painter Zhao Mengfu, the scholar-official Qian Xuan declines the offer to serve the Yuan government and spends the rest of his life creating works of art. | |
1278 | Scholar-general Wen Tianxiang leads Song forces to resist the Mongol invaders. Wen is captured and refuses to surrender to the Yuan government. He spends four years in prison before being executed on Kublai Khan's orders in 1283. | ||
1279 | Emperor Bing | Battle of Yamen; the Yuan general Zhang Hongfan crushes the last resistance of Southern Song. |
Date | Emperor | Events | Other people/events |
1038 | Emperor Jingzong | ||
1048 | Emperor Yizong | ||
1067 | Emperor Huizong | ||
1086 | Emperor Chongzong | ||
1139 | Emperor Renzong | ||
1193 | Emperor Huanzong | ||
1206 | Emperor Xiangzong | ||
1211 | Emperor Shenzong | ||
1223 | Emperor Xianzong | ||
1226 | Emperor Mozhu | ||
1227 | Genghis Khan dies during the siege on the final Western Xia stronghold. His successor, Ögedei Khan, conquers Western Xia and resumes the war against the Jurchen Jin Dynasty. |
Date | Emperor | Events | Other people/events |
1115 | Emperor Taizu | Wanyan Aguda (Emperor Taizu) leads the Jurchens to attack the Liao Dynasty. | |
1125 | Emperor Taizong | The Jin invades the Northern Song, beginning the Jin–Song wars | |
1127 | Jingkang Incident | ||
1135 | Emperor Xizong | ||
1153 | Emperor Hailingwang | The Jin capital is moved from Huining Fu to Zhongdu (present-day Beijing) | |
1157 | The capital is moved again, this time from Beijing to Kaifeng. | ||
1161 | Emperor Shizong | Hailingwang attempts to invade and conquer the Southern Song Dynasty, but their naval forces are destroyed at the Battle of Tangdao and Battle of Caishi | |
1164 | The Treaty of Longxing between Song and Jin ushers in four decades of peace. | ||
1189 | Emperor Zhangzong | Chengling Pagoda is built. | |
1211 | Emperor Weishaowang | The Mongol leader Genghis Khan launches a military campaign against the Jin Dynasty. | |
1214 | Emperor Xuanzong | In the terms of a treaty with Genghis Khan, the Jin Dynasty becomes a vassal state of the expanding Mongol Empire. | |
1215 | When the Jin court moves their capital from Beijing to Kaifeng once more, Genghis Khan sees this as open revolt and sacks the former capital Beijing, burning the city to the ground. | ||
1216 | The Song Dynasty attacks Jin from the south and again in 1223 while the Jin empire was collapsing. | ||
1227 | Emperor Aizong | Genghis Khan died during the siege of the final Western Xia stronghold in 1227. His successor, Ögedei Khan, resumes the war against Jin in the same year. | |
1233 | The Jin capital is captured in the Mongol siege of Kaifeng by Ögedei Khan's forces. | ||
1234 | Emperor Modi | Emperor Modi is killed by Mongol forces at the siege of Caizhou in present-day Runan County of Henan. |
Date | Emperor | Events | Other people/events |
1260 | Kublai Khan makes the Tibetan lama Drogön Chögyal Phagpa State Preceptor and grants him power over Tibet, his Sakya regime lasted until its overthrow in the 1350s by the Phagmodru myriarchy. | ||
1270 | Sambyeolcho Rebellion in Korea against Mongol-dominated Goryeo. | ||
1271 | Emperor Shizu (Kublai Khan) |
Kublai Khan founds the Yuan Dynasty. | |
1273 | Battle of Xiangyang | ||
1274 | Mongol invasions of Japan | ||
1276 | Gaocheng Astronomical Observatory is built. | ||
1279 | Battle of Yamen | ||
1287 | Rabban Bar Sauma, a Nestorian Uyghur Turk from Beijing, travels to Europe in this year and hosted by Andronikos II Palaiologos of the Byzantine Empire, Philip IV of France, and Edward I of England in hopes of forming an alliance to seize Jerusalem, then under the Muslim Mamluk Bahri dynasty. | Battle of Pagan, end of Pagan Kingdom | |
1288 | Battle of Bạch Đằng | ||
1289 | Franciscan friars begin mission work in China | ||
1298 | Emperor Chengzong | Wang Zhen improves the movable type printing of Bi Sheng by introducing the first successful wooden type characters; he also experiments with tin metal type characters. | |
1307 | Emperor Wuzong | ||
1316 | Emperor Renzong | Guo Shoujing dies; among his life achievements were fixing the calendar year at 365.2425 (same as the Gregorian Calendar), building upon Shen Kuo's mathematical work on trigonometry by introducing spherical trigonometry, and engineered an artificial Kunming Lake in Beijing. | |
1320 | Emperor Yingzong | ||
1324 | Emperor Taiding | The rime dictionary Zhongyuan Yinyun is published by Zhou Deqing. | |
1328 | Emperor Tianshun | ||
1329 | Emperor Mingzong | ||
1330 | Emperor Wenzong | Pagoda of Bailin Temple is completed | |
1332 | Emperor Ningzong | ||
1334 | Emperor Huizong | Wang Dayuan ventures to North Africa. | |
1352 | Zhu Yuanzhang joins the Red Turban Rebellion | ||
1356 | Zhu Yuanzhang's rebel force captures Nanjing. | ||
1363 | Battle of Lake Poyang, one of the largest naval battles in world history in terms of personnel. | ||
1368 | Rebel general Xu Da defeats Yuan forces, while Emperor Huizong flees from Dadu (present-day Beijing). Zhu Yuanzhang establishes the Ming Dynasty and becomes the Hongwu Emperor. |
Date | Emperor | Events | Other people/events |
1368 | Hongwu Emperor | Zhu Yuanzhang overthrows the Yuan Dynasty and founds the Ming Dynasty. He adopts the reign title of "Hongwu". | |
1371 | Haijin (maritime trade ban) | ||
1373 | Emperor Hongwu bans the Imperial examinations in favor of a recommendation system. | The Temple of the Six Banyan Trees is rebuilt. | |
1375 | Latest possible date for the writing of the Huolongjing treatise on gunpowder weapons, as its co-editor Liu Ji dies on May 16. | ||
1380 | Hongwu abolishes the Chancellery of China, taking over direct responsibility of the Three Departments and Six Ministries, although the later Grand Secretariat would aid the emperor in managing the state. | ||
1381 | The Ming Dynasty annexes land from the Kingdom of Dali, in present-day Yunnan and Guizhou, spurring a Chinese migration of hundreds of thousands. | ||
1382 | The Jinyiwei, a secret police organization, is established. | ||
1384 | Imperial examinations are reinstated by Hongwu, but he had the chief examiner executed on charges of corruption. | ||
1397 | The Ming Code of Law is completed, yet drawing much of its clauses from the earlier Tang Code of 653. | ||
1398 | Jianwen Emperor | ||
1402 | Yongle Emperor | Yongle takes the throne after a three-year long civil war with his nephew, the Jianwen Emperor. | |
1405 | The overseas voyages of admiral Zheng He begin, sailing around Southeast Asia, throughout the Indian Ocean, and as far as East Africa to reestablish tributary relations of foreign countries with China. | Ming Xiaoling Mausoleum is completed. | |
1406 | Construction of the Forbidden City begins, as well as new Beijing city fortifications | ||
1407 | Fourth Chinese domination of Vietnam, although Chinese troops were pushed out two decades later by Lê Lợi of the Lê Dynasty. | Deshin Shekpa, the fifth Karmapa of Tibet, visits the court of Yongle. | |
1408 | The massive Yongle Encyclopedia is completed. | ||
1415 | Restoration work on the Grand Canal is completed. | ||
1420 | After 13 years of a massive construction project for a new capital and Forbidden City, the Yongle Emperor declares Beijing the new capital, while Nanjing is demoted. | Ming Dynasty Tombs are built. | |
1424 | Xuande Emperor | ||
1427 | Xuande Emperor | Famous painter Shen Zhou is born. | |
1431 | The Lê Dynasty of Vietnam is recognized by the Ming court as a tribute state. | ||
1443 | Zhengtong Emperor | The Zhihua Temple is built. | |
1446 | The Precious Belt Bridge is rebuilt. | ||
1449 | Jingtai Emperor | Tumu Crisis; the Zhengtong Emperor is captured by the Mongols after losing the battle and is released a year later | |
1457 | Tianshun Emperor | Zhu Qizhen (former Zhengtong Emperor) seizes power from the Jingtai Emperor in a palace coup and begins his second reign as the "Tianshun Emperor". | |
1461 | Rebellion of Cao Qin | ||
1464 | Chenghua Emperor | The Miao people and Yao people of Guangxi rebel against Ming authority; a combined Ming force of 190,000 (including 1,000 Mongols) crushes the rebellion within two years. | |
1473 | Zhenjue Temple is completed. | ||
1488 | Hongzhi Emperor | The Korean official Choe Bu shipwrecks along Zhejiang coast of China. Travels the entire length of the Grand Canal to repatriate back to Joseon Korea. He later wrote a famous book on his travels, which was printed in both Korea and Japan in the latter half of the 16th century. | |
1510 | Zhengde Emperor | Prince of Anhua Rebellion | |
1516 | First Portuguese contact by Jorge Álvares in Macau, followed up by Rafael Perestrello in Guangzhou. | ||
1517 | Fernão Pires de Andrade and Tomé Pires are sent as ambassadors to China by Manuel I of Portugal; they land at Guangzhou. | ||
1519 | Prince of Ning rebellion | ||
1521 | Jiajing Emperor | Events, such as the Portuguese conquest of Malacca, lead to the rejection of the Portuguese embassy and the new Jiajing Emperor calling upon the Portuguese to return power of Malacca to the loyal Ming vassal Mahmud Shah; Chinese and Portuguese ships fight at Tuen Mun, but relations are eventually smoothed out later by Leonel de Sousa and others determined to repair the reputation that the Portuguese initially won in China. | |
1529 | Death of philosopher Wang Yangming | ||
1530 | Around this time, mechanical engineer Zhou Shuxue improves Zhan Xiyuan's 14th century sand-driven mechanical clock by adding a fourth large gear wheel, revising gear teeth ratios, and widening the orifice which collected sand in Zhan's clock, since Zhou complained that the device clogged up too often. Although lacking the essential escapement mechanism of earlier Chinese clocks, this sand-driven clock of Zhan and Zhou featured a stationary dial face over which a pointer circulated by mechanical timing. | ||
1549 | Portuguese ships make continuous annual trade stops to Shangchuan Island from now on. | ||
1550 | Altan Khan breaches the Great Wall, besieges Beijing, and burns down its suburbs after looting it. | ||
1553 | Outer City of Beijing to the south is completed, which brought the overall size of the city to 4 by 4½ miles. | ||
1556 | Shaanxi Earthquake. 850,000 casualties | ||
1557 | The Portuguese establish permanent settlement in Macau. | ||
1558 | Ming forces led by Qi Jiguang defeat Japanese pirates at Cengang. | ||
1567 | Longqing Emperor | Haijin laws are formally repealed; government allows private foreign maritime trade, although the state had conducted all foreign trade during the ban. | |
1573 | Wanli Emperor | After the Spanish establish a permanent base at Manila in the Philippines, their American-mined silver trade with China trumps the Portuguese-Japanese silver trade. | |
1574 | Qin Liangyu, a later female military officer of Miao heritage, is born. | ||
1576 | Pagoda of Cishou Temple is built. | ||
1577 | Wanshou Temple is built. | ||
1581 | Grand Secretary Zhang Juzheng implements the Single Whip Reform, allowing the land tax to be paid entirely in silver due to inflated paper currency and widespread counterfeit coinage. | ||
1582 | Jesuits begin mission work in China | First reference is made about the publishing of private newspapers in Beijing. | |
1584 | Abraham Ortelius, in his atlas Theatrum Orbis Terrarum, is the first known European to feature an illustration of the Chinese invention known as the 'sailing carriage', essentially a wheelbarrow with a ship's mast and a sail. | ||
1587 | Physician and pharmacologist Li Shizhen publishes the Bencao Gangmu, detailing the use of over 1,800 medicinal drugs. | ||
1590 | Wu Cheng'en writes Journey to the West. | ||
1592 | When Japan invades Korea in the Imjin War, Ming China aids Korea with troops and supplies. | ||
1593 | Siege of Pyongyang | ||
1597 | Siege of Ulsan | ||
1598 | Battle of Sacheon | Battle of Noryang; the theatrical drama The Peony Pavilion, written by playwright Tang Xianzu, is performed at the Pavilion of Prince Teng. | |
1602 | From this year until 1682, the Dutch East India Company ships some six million Chinese porcelain items to Europe. | ||
1604 | Donglin movement | ||
1607 | The Greek mathematical treatise Euclid's Elements is translated into Chinese by Xu Guangqi, Sabatino de Ursis, and Matteo Ricci. | ||
1609 | Sancai Tuhui encyclopedia is published. | ||
1610 | Plum in the Golden Vase is published. | ||
1615 | The Chinese dictionary Zihui is compiled by Mei Yingzuo. | ||
1616 | Nurhaci found the Later Jin Dynasty (later renamed to Qing Dynasty) in Manchuria | The Nanjing Religious Incident begins in this year, when all foreign Jesuits were expelled from the Ming court and the astronomy bureau; this was a temporary triumph of traditionalist Confucian officials who rejected Western science in favor of Chinese science; by 1622 this policy was reversed, and the astronomy burea was once again staffed by European Jesuits and Chinese supportive of Western science. | |
1619 | Battle of Sarhu | Chinese philosopher Wang Fuzhi is born. | |
1624 | Tianqi Emperor | Headquartered in Jakarta, the Dutch East India Company establishes Dutch rule of Taiwan. | |
1626 | Johann Adam Schall von Bell writes the first treatise on the telescope into the Chinese language. | Jesuit Nicolas Trigault writes the Xiru Ermu Zi, establishing the first system of Chinese Romanization. | |
1627 | Chongzhen Emperor | First Manchu invasion of Korea; downfall of eunuch Wei Zhongxian, who ruled as a virtual dictator for seven years; Zhang Zilie publishes the Chinese dictionary Zhengzitong. | Polish Jesuit Michał Boym first introduces the heliocentric model of the Solar System into Chinese astronomy. |
1628 | Battle of Ningyuan | ||
1632 | By this time, the Manchus have conquered much of Inner Mongolia. | ||
1634 | Chongzhen Emperor acquires the telescope of the late Johann Schreck. | ||
1635 | Liu Tong adds his preface to the Dijing Jingwulue, a Chinese prose classic. | ||
1637 | Second Manchu invasion of Korea | Song Yingxing publishes the Tiangong Kaiwu encyclopedia; due to his scholarly and encyclopedic achievements, scientist and sinologist Joseph Needham calls him the "Diderot of China". | |
1638 | The Beijing Gazette switches its production method from woodblock printing to movable type printing in this year. | ||
1639 | The Nongzheng Quanshu agricultural treatise of Xu Guangqi is published. | Painter Chen Hongshou travels to Beijing and earns instant acclaim by the court. | |
1641 | Death of Xu Xiake, whose published travel diary of some 404,000 Chinese characters includes notes on regional geography, climate, and mineralogy. | ||
1642 | Kaifeng flood | With new additional Han Chinese banners, the full Eight Banners of the Manchu Qing Dynasty are established. | |
1644 | Battle of Shanhai Pass; the Chongzhen Emperor hangs himself from the Guilty Chinese Scholartree, after hearing that rebels under Li Zicheng breached the gates of Beijing | Ming general Wu Sangui and the Manchu prince Dorgon occupy Beijing; soon after, the Shunzhi Emperor is proclaimed ruler of China under the Qing Dynasty. |
Date | Emperor | Events | Other people/events |
1644 | Li Zicheng |
Date | Emperor | Events | Other people/events |
1644 | Shunzhi Emperor | The Qing Dynasty is established in China. | |
1652 | The 5th Dalai Lama of Tibet visits the court of Shunzhi in Beijing. | ||
1659 | Jesuits Martino Martini and Ferdinand Verbiest arrive in China, the former for the second time. | ||
1661 | On the death of the Shunzhi Emperor, his confidant Johann Adam Schall von Bell is thrown into prison, eventually released, but dies shortly after. | ||
1662 | Kangxi Emperor | The Siege of Fort Zeelandia ends with the Dutch East India Company's surrender of Taiwan to Koxinga. | |
1674 | Revolt of the Three Feudatories | ||
1682 | Belgian Jesuit Antoine Thomas arrives in China. | ||
1683 | Battle of Penghu, surrender of the Kingdom of Tungning | ||
1689 | Treaty of Nerchinsk with Russia | ||
1690 | Death of Yun Shouping, a painter who was considered one of the "Six Masters" of the Qing era. | ||
1698 | Lugou Bridge is reconstructed. | ||
1705 | Papal legate Charles-Thomas Maillard De Tournon arrives in China. | ||
1700 | Thirteen Factories | ||
1711 | British East India Company establishes a trading post in Guangzhou | The Peiwen Yunfu rime dictionary is completed. | |
1716 | Publication of the Kangxi Dictionary | ||
1720 | In opposition to the Dzungars, Qing troops conquer and occupy Lhasa in Tibet. | ||
1721 | In a culmination of the Chinese Rites controversy, the Kangxi Emperor delivers a decree banning Christian preaching in China in response to a papal bull by Pope Clement XI. | ||
1725 | Yongzheng Emperor | The Gujin Tushu Jicheng encyclopedia is completed. | |
1732 | Death of Jiang Tingxi, a painter, calligrapher, and encyclopedist | ||
1750 | Qianlong Emperor | French Jesuit Jean Joseph Marie Amiot is sent to China. | |
1755 | Ten Great Campaigns | Puning Temple is built in commemoration of the defeat of the Dzungars. | |
1760 | Initiation of the Canton System. | ||
1771 | Putuo Zongcheng Temple is completed. | ||
1774 | The Wenjin Chamber is built. | ||
1780 | Fragrant Hills Pagoda is built. | ||
1782 | Imperial collection of Four encyclopedia is completed. | ||
1791 | Dream of the Red Chamber is published. | ||
1793 | Anglo-Chinese relations and the Macartney Embassy; Lord Macartney, the first British envoy to Beijing, is hosted by Qianlong's confidant Heshen. | ||
1796 | Jiaqing Emperor | White Lotus Rebellion | |
1807 | Robert Morrison, first Protestant missionary arrives | ||
1820 | Daoguang Emperor | ||
1823 | Publication of the Bible in Chinese | ||
1839 | First Opium War | ||
1842 | First of the Unequal Treaties, Treaty of Nanjing |
||
1844 | Wei Yuan publishes his Illustrated Treatise on the Maritime Kingdoms, a gazetteer inspired by the desire to learn more of the West and the threat it posed to Qing China. | Treaty of Wanghia between the Qing Empire and the United States, with the first United States Ambassador to China. | |
1850 | Xianfeng Emperor | Ten Tigers of Canton | |
1851 | Taiping Rebellion | Jintian Uprising | |
1855 | Third Pandemic of Bubonic plague | Punti–Hakka Clan Wars | |
1856 | Second Opium War | ||
1858 | Battle of Sanhe | Treaty of Aigun, Treaty of Tianjin | |
1860 | Burning of Old Summer palace | Beijing Convention | |
1861 | Following the Convention of Peking, Prince Gong establishes the Zongli Yamen (Foreign Office). | ||
1862 | Tongzhi Emperor | Dungan revolt | The Tongwen Guan, or School of Combined Learning, is established to teach Chinese students Western languages. |
1864 | After fighting the Taiping rebels for four years, the Ever Victorious Army is disbanded; it was the first Chinese army that employed a European officer corps and as well as tactics, strategy, and techniques. | ||
1868 | Yangzhou riot | End of the Nien Rebellion | |
1870 | Tianjin Massacre | ||
1871 | The famous general Li Hongzhang is appointed to the position of Viceroy of Zhili, an office he would hold until 1895, serving again in the same post from 1900 to 1901, until replaced by Yuan Shikai. | ||
1873 | End of the Panthay Rebellion | ||
1876 | Guangxu Emperor | After the murder of Augustus Raymond Margary in the 'Margary Affair', the Chefoo Convention is held to resolve the issue but turns into an excuse for the British to press for additional concessions. | |
1884 | Sino-French War | ||
1885 | Battle of Fuzhou | ||
1891 | Founding of Shanghai Sharebrokers Association | ||
1894 | First Sino-Japanese War (Battle of Pungdo, Battle of Seonghwan, Battle of Pyongyang, Battle of Yalu River, Battle of Jiuliancheng, Battle of Lushunkou, Battle of Weihaiwei, Battle of Yingkou) |
||
1895 | Treaty of Shimonoseki | ||
1898 | Hundred Days' Reform | Coup led by Empress Dowager Cixi | |
1900 | Boxer Rebellion | ||
1901 | Boxer Protocol | ||
1910 | Xuantong Emperor | Huanghuagang Uprising | |
1911 | Xinhai Revolution | Wuchang Uprising |
Modern China
1905-end of examination system in China
Republic of China (Republican Era)
After 1949 (People's Republic of China and Republic of China)
Footnotes
- ^ Xiaohong, et al. (2002).
- ^ a b c Huang et al. (2002).
See also
By sources
By era
- List of Palaeolithic sites in China
- List of Neolithic cultures of China
- List of Chalcolithic cultures of China
- History of China
By individual categories
- Chinese sovereign
- Dynasties in Chinese history
- Foreign relations of Imperial China
- Historical capitals of China
- History of the political divisions of China
- Table of Chinese monarchs (very long)
- List of recipients of tribute from China
- List of tributaries of Imperial China
- Unequal Treaties
References
- Xaiohong, Wu et al. (2012). "Early Pottery at 20,000 Years Ago in Xianrendong Cave, China," in Science," Vol. 336, No. 6089.
- Zhenguo, Huang et al. (2002). "The relative stability of prehistorical geographic environment in China's tropics on the basis of archaeology," in Journal of Geographical Sciences, Vol. 12, No. 4.
Further reading
- George Henry Townsend (1867), "China", A Manual of Dates (2nd ed.), London: Frederick Warne & Co.
{{citation}}
: External link in
(help); Unknown parameter|chapterurl=
|chapterurl=
ignored (|chapter-url=
suggested) (help) - Charles E. Little (1900), "China", Cyclopedia of Classified Dates, New York: Funk & Wagnalls
{{citation}}
: External link in
(help); Unknown parameter|author=
and|chapterurl=
|chapterurl=
ignored (|chapter-url=
suggested) (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - Benjamin Vincent (1910), "China", Haydn's Dictionary of Dates (25th ed.), London: Ward, Lock & Co.
{{citation}}
: External link in
(help); Unknown parameter|chapterurl=
|chapterurl=
ignored (|chapter-url=
suggested) (help)