Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Southern and Northern Dynasties

Encyclopedia : S : SO : SOU : Southern and Northern Dynasties


This article is about the Southern and Northern Dynasties in China. For the same-name period in other countries, see Nanboku-cho for Japan and Southern and Northern Dynasties of Vietnam.
Southern and Northern Dynasties
(420-589)
Southern Dynasties: Northern Dynasties:
Liu Song
Southern Qi
Liang
Chen
Northern Wei
Eastern Wei
Western Wei
Northern Qi
Northern Zhou
This box: [ view] • [ talk] • [ edit]

The Southern and Northern Dynasties (}; }; 420-589) followed the Sixteen Kingdoms and preceded Sui Dynasty in China and was an age of civil war and disunity.

During this period the process of sinicization accelerated among the non-Chinese arrivals in the north and among the aboriginal tribesmen in the south. Many northern Chinese also immigrated to the south. This process was also accompanied by the increasing popularity of Buddhism (introduced into China in the first century A.D.) in both north and south China.

The south and north developed into a relatively stable equilibrium, due to geographical differences. The flat steppes of the north gave a significant edge to cavalry, while the riverlands of the south gave a significant edge to naval warfare. A strong navy on the Yangtze River could protect the south from the north, since cavalry was useless in the riverlands. Likewise, logistical difficulties for the horse-poor south made it difficult to maintain a successful northern campaign. Depending on the relative strengths of the states, the Huai River area and the Sichuan basin were the primary areas of significant territorial changes. This barrier was only overcome by the first Emperor of the Sui Dynasty, who built a large invading navy in the Sichuan basin.
History of China
3 Sovereigns & 5 Emperors
Xia Dynasty
Shang Dynasty
Zhou
Spring & Autumn Eastern Zhou
Warring States
Qin Dynasty
Western Han Han
Xin
Tang Dynasty
(interrupted by Second Zhou)
Republic of China (Taiwan)
  • Timeline of Chinese history
  • Dynasties in Chinese history
  • Military history of China
  • Naval history of China
  • This box: [ view] • [ talk] • [ edit]
    Despite (or perhaps because of) the political disunity of the times, there were notable technological advances. The invention of gunpowder (at that time for use only in fireworks) and the wheelbarrow is believed to date from the sixth or seventh century. Advances in medicine, astronomy, and cartography are also noted by historians.

    References

    See also

     


    From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
    All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

    Search Titles
    0123456789
    ABCDEFGHIJ
    KLMNOPQRST
    UVWXYZ?

    E-mail this article to:

    Personal Message: