Of All Arts in Chinese Empire Only Medicine Unbroken
- Introduction & Quick Facts
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- Relief
- The eastern region
- The Northeast Plain
- The Changbai Mountains
- The North Red china Apparently
- The Loess Plateau
- The Shandong Hills
- The Qin Mountains
- The Sichuan Basin
- The southeastern mountains
- Plains of the eye and lower Yangtze
- The Nan Mountains
- The southwest
- The Yunnan-Guizhou Plateau
- The Plateau of Tibet
- The northwest
- The Tarim Basin
- The Junggar Basin
- The Tien Shan
- The eastern region
- Drainage
- Soils
- Climate
- The air masses
- Temperature
- Precipitation
- Plant and creature life
- Flora
- Fauna life
- Relief
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- Ethnic groups
- Languages
- Sino-Tibetan
- Altaic
- Other languages
- Religion
- Settlement patterns
- Rural areas
- Urban areas
- Demographic trends
- Population growth
- Population distribution
- Internal migration
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- General considerations
- The office of the government
- Economic policies
- Agriculture, forestry, and angling
- Farming and livestock
- Forestry and line-fishing
- Resources and power
- Minerals
- Hydroelectric potential
- Energy production
- Manufacturing
- Finance
- Trade
- Services
- Labour and taxation
- Transportation and telecommunication
- Railways
- Route networks
- Waterways
- Port facilities and shipping
- Aviation
- Posts and telecommunication
- General considerations
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- Parallel structure
- Ramble framework
- Political process
- Role of the CCP
- Assistants
- Justice
- Security
- Health and welfare
- Education
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- Cultural milieu
- The arts
- Literature
- Visual arts
- Performing arts
- Cultural institutions
- Daily life, sports, and recreation
- Media and publishing
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- Prehistory
- Archaeology in China
- Early humans
- Neolithic Catamenia
- Climate and environment
- Food production
- Major cultures and sites
- Incipient Neolithic
- 6th millennium bce
- 5th millennium bce
- 4th and tertiary millennia bce
- Regional cultures of the Late Neolithic
- Religious beliefs and social system
- The first historical dynasty: the Shang
- The advent of bronze casting
- The Shang dynasty
- Imperial burials
- The chariot
- Art
- Late Shang divination and religion
- Country and society
- The Zhou and Qin dynasties
- The history of the Zhou (1046–256 bce)
- Zhou and Shang
- The Zhou feudal arrangement
- Social, political, and cultural changes
- The decline of feudalism
- Urbanization and assimilation
- The rise of monarchy
- Economic development
- Cultural alter
- The Qin empire (221–207 bce)
- The Qin state
- Struggle for ability
- The empire
- The history of the Zhou (1046–256 bce)
- The Han dynasty
- Dynastic authority and the succession of emperors
- Eleven (Western) Han
- Prelude to the Han
- The regal succession
- From Wudi to Yuandi
- From Chengdi to Wang Mang
- Dong (Eastern) Han
- Eleven (Western) Han
- The administration of the Han empire
- The structure of government
- The civil service
- Provincial government
- The armed forces
- The practise of government
- The structure of government
- Relations with other peoples
- Cultural developments
- Dynastic authority and the succession of emperors
- The 6 Dynasties
- Political developments
- The division of China
- Sanguo (3 Kingdoms; 220–280 ce)
- The Xi (Western) Jin (265–316/317 ce)
- The era of barbarian invasions and rule
- The Dong (Eastern) Jin (317–420) and later dynasties in the south (420–589)
- The Shiliuguo (Sixteen Kingdoms) in the n (303–439)
- The division of China
- Intellectual and religious trends
- Confucianism and philosophical Daoism
- Daoism
- Buddhism
- Political developments
- The Sui dynasty
- Wendi's institutional reforms
- Integration of the south
- Foreign affairs nether Yangdi
- The Tang dynasty
- Early on Tang (618–626)
- Administration of the state
- Fiscal and legal organisation
- The period of Tang power (626–755)
- The "era of expert government"
- Ascent of the empress Wuhou
- Prosperity and progress
- Military reorganization
- Late Tang (755–907)
- Provincial separatism
- The struggle for cardinal say-so
- Cultural developments
- The influence of Buddhism
- Trends in the arts
- Social change
- Pass up of the aristocracy
- Population movements
- Growth of the economy
- Early on Tang (618–626)
- The Five Dynasties and the 10 Kingdoms
- The Wudai (5 Dynasties)
- The Shiguo (Ten Kingdoms)
- The barbarians: Tangut, Khitan, and Juchen
- The Tangut
- The Khitan
- The Juchen
- The Song dynasty
- Bei (Northern) Song (960–1127)
- Unification
- Consolidation
- Reforms
- Reject and fall
- Nan (Southern) Vocal (1127–1279)
- Survival and consolidation
- Relations with the Juchen
- The court's relations with the hierarchy
- The principal councillors
- The bureaucratic style
- The clerical staff
- The rise of Neo-Confucianism
- Internal solidarity during the decline of the Nan Song
- Vocal civilisation
- Bei (Northern) Song (960–1127)
- The Yuan, or Mongol, dynasty
- The Mongol conquest of China
- Invasion of the Jin state
- Invasion of the Song land
- China under the Mongols
- Mongol government and administration
- Early Mongol rule
- Changes under Kublai Khan and his successors
- Economic system
- Religious and intellectual life
- Daoism
- Buddhism
- Foreign religions
- Confucianism
- Literature
- The arts
- Yuan Mainland china and the Westward
- The cease of Mongol rule
- Mongol government and administration
- The Mongol conquest of China
- The Ming dynasty
- Political history
- The dynasty's founder
- The dynastic succession
- Government and assistants
- Local government
- Central government
- Later innovations
- Foreign relations
- Economic policy and developments
- Population
- Agriculture
- Taxation
- Coinage
- Civilization
- Philosophy and religion
- Fine arts
- Literature and scholarship
- Political history
- The early Qing dynasty
- The rise of the Manchu
- The Qing empire
- Political institutions
- Foreign relations
- Economic development
- Qing society
- Social organization
- State and society
- Trends in the early on Qing
- Late Qing
- Western claiming, 1839–threescore
- The get-go Opium War and its aftermath
- The antiforeign motility and the second Opium War (Arrow War)
- Popular insurgence
- The Taiping Rebellion
- The Nian Rebellion
- Muslim rebellions
- Effects of the rebellions
- The Self-Strengthening Movement
- Foreign relations in the 1860s
- Industrialization for "cocky-strengthening"
- Changes in outlying areas
- Due east Turkistan
- Tibet and Nepal
- Myanmar (Burma)
- Vietnam
- Japan and the Ryukyu Islands
- Korea and the Sino-Japanese War
- Reform and upheaval
- The Hundred Days of Reform of 1898
- The Boxer Rebellion
- Reformist and revolutionist movements at the terminate of the dynasty
- Sunday Yat-sen and the United League
- Constitutional movements after 1905
- The Chinese Revolution (1911–12)
- Western claiming, 1839–threescore
- The early republican menses
- The development of the republic (1912–20)
- Early on power struggles
- Prc in World State of war I
- Japanese gains
- Yuan's attempts to get emperor
- Conflict over entry into the war
- Germination of a rival southern regime
- Wartime changes
- Intellectual movements
- An intellectual revolution
- Riots and protests
- The interwar years (1920–37)
- Beginnings of a national revolution
- The Nationalist Party
- The Chinese Communist Party
- Communist-Nationalist cooperation
- Reactions to warlords and foreigners
- Militarism in China
- The foreign presence
- Reorganization of the KMT
- Struggles within the 2-political party coalition
- Clashes with foreigners
- KMT opposition to radicals
- The Northern Expedition
- Expulsion of communists from the KMT
- The Nationalist regime from 1928 to 1937
- Japanese assailment
- War between Nationalists and communists
- The United Front confronting Nihon
- Beginnings of a national revolution
- The development of the republic (1912–20)
- The late republican menstruation
- The state of war against Nihon (1937–45)
- The Sino-Japanese War
- Phase 1
- Phase two: stalemate and stagnation
- Renewed communist-Nationalist disharmonize
- The international alliance against Nippon
- U.South. aid to China
- Conflicts within the international brotherhood
- Phase 3: approaching crisis (1944–45)
- Nationalist deterioration
- Communist growth
- Efforts to prevent civil war
- The Sino-Japanese War
- Civil state of war (1945–49)
- A race for territory
- Attempts to terminate the war
- Resumption of fighting
- The tide begins to shift
- A land revolution
- The decisive year, 1948
- Communist victory
- A race for territory
- The state of war against Nihon (1937–45)
- Establishment of the People's Republic
- Reconstruction and consolidation, 1949–52
- The transition to socialism, 1953–57
- Rural collectivization
- Urban socialist changes
- Political developments
- Foreign policy
- New directions in national policy, 1958–61
- Readjustment and reaction, 1961–65
- The Cultural Revolution, 1966–76
- Attacks on cultural figures
- Attacks on party members
- Seizure of power
- The cease of the radical menstruation
- Social changes
- Struggle for the premiership
- Consequences of the Cultural Revolution
- Prc after the expiry of Mao
- Domestic developments
- Readjustment and recovery
- Economical policy changes
- Political developments
- Educational and cultural policy changes
- International relations
- Relations with Taiwan
- Domestic developments
- Prehistory
Source: https://www.britannica.com/place/China/Literature
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