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List of emperors of the Song dynasty

The Song dynasty (960–1279) was an imperial dynasty of China that succeeded the period referred to as Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period (907–960) and preceded the Yuan dynasty (1271–1368), which conquered the Song dynasty in 1279. The conventional division into the Northern Song dynasty (960–1127) and Southern Song dynasty (1127–1279) is created by the conquest of northern China by the Jin dynasty (1115–1234) in 1127 and the consequent shift of the capital from Bianjing (present-day Kaifeng) in the north to Lin'an (present-day Hangzhou) in the south.

Emperor of the Song dynasty
宋朝皇帝
Imperial
A hanging-scroll portrait painting of Emperor Taizu of Song (r. 960–976), founder of the Song dynasty, painted by an anonymous Song artist
Details
StyleHis Imperial Majesty (陛下)
Guanjia (官家)
First monarchEmperor Taizu (Northern Song)
Emperor Gaozong (Southern Song)
Last monarchEmperor Qinzong (Northern Song)
Zhao Bing (Southern Song)
Formation960 (Northern Song)
1127 (Southern Song)
Abolition1127 (Northern Song)
1279 (Southern Song)
ResidenceImperial City, Bianliang
Imperial City, Lin'an
AppointerHereditary

Below is a complete list of emperors of the Song dynasty, including their temple names, posthumous names, given names, and era names. The dynasty was founded by Zhao Kuangyin, who became Emperor Taizu (r. 960–976) and concluded with the death of Zhao Bing (r. 1278–1279). The last emperor of the Northern Song was Emperor Qinzong (r. 1126–1127), while the first Southern Song emperor was Emperor Gaozong (r. 1127–1162).

The emperor, or huangdi, was the supreme head of state during the imperial era of China (221 BC – 1912), including the Song dynasty. He was a hereditary ruler who shared executive powers with civilian officials appointed to various levels of office according to their performance in bureaucratic examinations. The growing importance of the civilian bureaucracy and national gentry class during the Song dynasty led to a much more limited role for the emperor in shaping public policy, although he still maintained his autocratic authority. He had the sole right to establish new laws, although he was expected to respect legal precedents set forth by previous emperors of his dynasty.[1]

Background

 
 
Left image: Portrait of Emperor Taizong (r. 976–997) by an anonymous Song artist
Right image: Portrait of Emperor Shenzong (r. 1067–1085) by an anonymous Song artist

The Song dynasty was founded by Zhao Kuangyin (Emperor Taizu) (r. 960–976) in 960, before the Song completely reunified China proper by conquest—excluding only the Sixteen Prefectures. The Song fought a series of wars with the Liao dynasty (1125–1279), ruled by the Khitans, over the possession of the Sixteen Prefectures of northern China.[2] The Liao regime was toppled in 1125 in a joint conquest by Song forces and the Jurchens led by Wuqimai (Emperor Taizong) (r. 1123–1134). However, the Jin quickly turned against the Song and invaded Song's northern territory.[2] In what is known as the Jingkang Incident,[3] Jin forces captured the Song capital, Bianjing (present-day Kaifeng), in 1127, along with Emperor Huizong (r. 1100–1126), then a retired emperor, and his ruling son Emperor Qinzong (r. 1126–1127).[4]

Emperor Gaozong (r. 1127–1162), a son of Emperor Huizong, fled south and reestablished the Song dynasty at what is now Nanjing.[5] He established a temporary capital at Lin'an (present-day Hangzhou) in 1129, yet by 1132 he declared it the official capital of the Song Empire.[6] The Jin made several failed attempts to conquer the Southern Song, but in 1165 Emperor Xiaozong of Song (r. 1162–1189) and Emperor Shizong of Jin (r. 1161–1189) agreed to a peace treaty that resulted in a diplomatic accord being reached between the two empires.[7] The Song continued to rule southern China until 1279, when the Yuan dynasty led by Kublai Khan, the Khagan of the Mongols,[8] invaded and conquered Song. The last ruler was Zhao Bing (r. 1278–1279), who was killed on 19 March 1279[9] during the naval Battle of Yamen in what is now modern Yamen Town in Xinhui District, Jiangmen City, Guangdong Province.[10][11]

Titles and names

From the Qin dynasty (221–206 BC) until the Qing dynasty (1644–1912), the ruling head of state was known as huangdi, or emperor.[12] In Chinese historical texts, emperors of the Song dynasty, along with the Tang and Yuan dynasties, are referred to by their temple names.[13] Before the Tang dynasty (618–907), emperors were generally referred to in historical texts by their posthumous names.[13] During the Ming (1368–1644) and Qing dynasties, emperors were exclusively referred to in historical texts by their single era name, whereas emperors of previous dynasties, including the Song, usually had multiple era names.[14] The amount of written characters used in posthumous names grew steadily larger from the Han dynasty (202 BC – AD 220) onwards and thus became overly long when referring to sovereigns.[13] For example, the posthumous name of Nurhaci (r. 1616–1626), the founder of the Manchu state which would eventually establish the Qing dynasty, contained 29 written characters.[13] By the Tang dynasty, much shorter temple names were preferred when referring to the emperor, a preference that was carried into the Song dynasty.[13] Each emperor also had a tomb name (陵號; linghao) and various other honorific titles.[15]

Head of state

 
Peter K. Bol writes that Emperor Huizong's political ideology and even his artwork, such as this piece showing women preparing silk, has much in common with official Li Jie's (李誡; 1065–1110) architectural treatise Yingzao Fashi (1103): "high technical standards, a lack of interest in individual variation, a concern with effective functioning, and a coherence of design in which all the parts fit together seamlessly ... It seems to me that these qualities are those that mark the promise of the New Policies and the era's faith that it could transform society into a mutually supporting and constantly self-improving social organism."[16]

In theory, the emperor's political power was absolute, but even during the Han dynasty, he shared executive powers with civilian officials and normally based his decisions on the advice and formal consensus of his ministers.[17] During the Song dynasty, a national examination system (Civil Service Exam) managed by scholar-bureaucrats was used to recruit officials; those who passed the palace examination – the highest-level examination in the empire – were appointed directly by the emperor to the highest central government positions.[18] Like commoners, these senior officials had to obey his edicts as law or be punished.[1] However, senior officials not only challenged the emperor over policy, but restrained him by invoking the ideal Confucian mores and values of the literati gentry class from which they came.[19]

During the preceding Tang dynasty, the civil service examinations did not yet produce the high number of officials as they would during the Song dynasty;[20] a hereditary aristocracy remained dependent on the court for attaining rank and holding office.[21] Song rulers, particularly Emperor Huizong, encountered a great deal of political opposition despite attempts to attain the ideals of the sage kings of antiquity. The inability of the sovereign to monopolize political authority was linked to the rise of a new class of gentry and scholar-official who filled the bureaucracy.[22]

When the Song dynasty was founded, the political elites consisted of officials (and their sons) who had served in the Five Dynasties era, as well as those who came from prominent families which boasted an aristocratic ancestry and had provided officials for generations.[23] Since the first Song emperors wished to avoid domination of government by military strongmen such as the jiedushi of the previous era, they limited the power of military officers and focused on building a powerful civilian establishment.[24] During the 11th century, the expansion of schools and local academies nurtured a nationwide gentry class which provided most if not all officials.[25] By the late 11th century, the elite marriage strategies of prominent families eroded due to the intense partisan politics surrounding the New Policies (新法; xin fa) of Chancellor Wang Anshi (1021–1086). These great families were replaced by officials representing diverse local gentry lineages throughout the country.[26]

Peter K. Bol asserts that the supporters of Wang Anshi's expansionist, activist central government in his New Policies were convinced that he understood the dao which brought utopia to Western Zhou (c. 1050 BC – 771 BC) antiquity and were determined to conform society according to his vision. The marginalised emperor – the last remaining aristocrat with any true political power – embraced the fiction that he was like the sage kings of old who brought society into a state of total harmony with court rituals and policy reforms.[22] Yet after the reign of Emperor Huizong, Song rulers and officials alike disregarded the New Policies and focused instead on reforming society through a local, bottom-up approach.[22] For example, Emperor Huizong attempted from 1107 to 1120 to bar anyone who had not attended a government school from serving in public office. He thus rejected anyone who did not acknowledge his brand of Confucian ideology as orthodoxy.[27] However, the government-run school system during the Southern Song eventually lost prominence to private academies, which had outnumbered government schools during the early Northern Song.[28] Even before Emperor Huizong's reign, Sima Guang (1019–1086), a prominent chancellor and political rival to Wang Anshi, had little to say about the emperor's role in shaping major reforms and public policy, mentioning only that the emperor made major appointments when necessary.[29]

Emperors could choose whether to supervise the policy bureaucracy or to pursue scholarship, cults, hobbies, or women instead. However, Frederick W. Mote argues that most Song emperors – who spent much of their childhood confined and isolated within a luxurious palace – were aloof conformists detached from the world of normal affairs and thus relied on officialdom to administer the government.[30] While the mainstream view is that the Song court exercised the highest degree of restraint and courtesy towards civil officials, the new protocol of enhanced deferential treatment by officials towards the emperor during conferences and meetings further eroded the emperor's close contact with his ministers.[31]

List of emperors

Northern Song, 960–1127

Portrait Temple name
(廟號; miào hào)[note 1]
Posthumous name
(諡號; shì hào)
Birth name Lifespan Period of reign Era names (年號; nián hào) durations
 
Taizu (太祖; Tàizǔ) 啟運立極英武睿文神德聖功至明大孝皇帝[note 2] Zhao Kuangyin (趙匡胤; Zhào Kuāngyìn) 927–976 (49) 960–976
  • Jianlong (建隆; Jiànlóng; 960–963)[32]
  • Qiande (乾德; Qiándé; 963–968)[33]
  • Kaibao (開寶; Kāibǎo; 968–976)[34]
 
Taizong (太宗; Tàizōng) 至仁應道神功聖德文武睿烈大明廣孝皇帝 Zhao Jiong (趙炅; Zhào Jiǒng) 939–997 (58) 976–997
  • Taipingxingguo (太平興國; Tàipíngxīngguó; 976–984)[35]
  • Yongxi (雍熙; Yōngxī; 984–988)[36]
  • Duangong (端拱; Duāngǒng; 988–989)[37]
  • Chunhua (淳化; Chúnhuà; 990–994)[38]
  • Zhidao (至道; Zhìdào; 995–997)[39]
 
Zhenzong (真宗; Zhēnzōng) (Empress Consort Liu ruled as regent at the end of his rule) 應符稽古神功讓德文明武定章聖元孝皇帝 Zhao Heng (趙恆; Zhào Héng) 968–1022 (54) 997–1022
  • Xianping (咸平; Xiánpíng; 998–1003)[40]
  • Jingde (景德; Jǐngdé; 1004–1007)[41]
  • Dazhongxiangfu (大中祥符; Dàzhōngxiángfú; 1008–1016)[42]
  • Tianxi (天禧; Tiānxǐ; 1017–1021)[43]
  • Qianxing (乾興; Qiánxīng; 1022)[44]
 
Renzong (仁宗; Rénzōng) (Empress Dowager Liu ruled as regent in the beginning of his rule) 體天法道極功全德神文聖武睿哲明孝皇帝 Zhao Zhen (趙禎; Zhào Zhēn) 1010–1063 (53) 1022–1063
  • Tiansheng (天聖; Tiānshèng; 1023–1032)[45]
  • Mingdao (明道; Míngdào; 1032–1033)[46]
  • Jingyou (景祐; Jǐngyòu; 1034–1038)[47]
  • Baoyuan (寶元; Bǎoyuán; 1038–1040)[48]
  • Kangding (康定; Kāngdìng; 1040–1041)[49]
  • Qingli (慶曆; Qìnglì; 1041–1048)[50]
  • Huangyou (皇祐; Huángyòu; 1049–1053)[51]
  • Zhihe (至和; Zhìhé; 1054–1056)[52]
  • Jiayou (嘉祐; Jiāyòu; 1056–1063)[53]
 
Yingzong (英宗; Yīngzōng) 體乾應曆隆功盛德憲文肅武睿聖宣孝皇帝 Zhao Shu (趙曙; Zhào Shǔ) 1032–1067 (35) 1063–1067
  • Zhiping (治平; Zhìpíng; 1064–1067)[54]
 
Shenzong (神宗; Shénzōng) 紹天法古運德建功英文烈武欽仁聖孝皇帝 Zhao Xu (趙頊; Zhào Xū) 1048–1085 (37) 1067–1085
  • Xining (熙寧; Xīníng; 1068–1077)[55]
  • Yuanfeng (元豐; Yuánfēng; 1078–1085)[56]
 
Zhezong (哲宗; Zhézōng) 憲元繼道顯德定功欽文睿武齊聖昭孝皇帝 Zhao Xu (趙煦; Zhào Xù) 1077–1100 (23) 1085–1100
  • Yuanyou (元祐; Yuányòu; 1086–1093)[57]
  • Shaosheng (紹聖; Shàoshèng; 1094–1098)[58]
  • Yuanfu (元符; Yuánfú; 1098–1100)[59]
 
Huizong (徽宗; Huīzōng) 體神合道駿烈遜功聖文仁德慈憲顯孝皇帝 Zhao Ji (趙佶; Zhào Jí) 1082–1135 (53) 1100–1125
  • Jianzhongjingguo (建中靖國; Jiànzhōngjìngguó; 1101)[60]
  • Chongning (崇寧; Chóngníng; 1102–1106)[61]
  • Daguan (大觀; Dàguān; 1107–1110)[62]
  • Zhenghe (政和; Zhènghé; 1111–1118)[63]
  • Chonghe (重和; Chónghé; 1118)[64]
  • Xuanhe (宣和; Xuānhé; 1119–1125)[65]
 
Qinzong (欽宗; Qīnzōng) 恭文順德仁孝皇帝 Zhao Huan (趙桓; Zhào Huán) 1100–1161 (61) 1126–1127
  • Jingkang (靖康; Jìngkāng; 1125–1127)[66]

Southern Song, 1127–1279

Portrait Temple names
(廟號; miào hào)
Posthumous names
(諡號; shì hào)
Birth names Lifespan Period
of reigns
Era names (年號; nián hào) and their according range of years
 
Gaozong (高宗; Gāozōng) Shòumìng Zhōngxīng Quángōng Zhìdé Shèngshén Wǔwén Zhāorén Xiànxiào Huángdì (受命中興全功至德聖神武文昭仁憲孝皇帝) Zhao Gou (趙構; Zhào Gòu) 1107–1187 (80) 1127–1162
  • Jianyan (建炎; Jiànyán; 1127–1130)[67][note 3]
  • Shaoxing (紹興; Shàoxīng; 1131–1162)[68]
 
Xiaozong (孝宗; Xiàozōng) Shàotǒng Tóngdào Guāndé Zhāogōng Zhéwén Shénwǔ Míngshèng Chéngxiào Huángdì (紹統同道冠德昭功哲文神武明聖成孝皇帝) Zhao Shen (趙昚; Zhào Shèn) 1127–1194 (67) 1162–1189
  • Longxing (隆興; Lóngxīng; 1163–1164)[69]
  • Qiandao (乾道; Qiándào; 1165–1173)[70]
  • Chunxi (淳熙; Chúnxī; 1174–1189)[71]
 
Guangzong (光宗; Guāngzōng) Xúndào Xiànrén Mínggōng Màodé Wēnshùn Wǔshèng Zhécí Xiào Huángdì (循道憲仁明功茂德溫文順武聖哲慈孝皇帝) Zhao Dun (趙惇; Zhào Dūn) 1147–1200 (53) 1189–1194
  • Shaoxi (紹熙; Shàoxī; 1190–1194)[72]
 
Ningzong (寧宗; Níngzōng) Fǎtiān Bèidào Chúnquán Démào Gōngrén Wénzhé Wǔshèng Ruìgōng Xiào Huángdì (法天備道純德茂功仁文哲武聖睿恭孝皇帝) Zhao Kuo (趙擴; Zhào Kuò) 1168–1224 (56) 1194–1224
  • Qingyuan (慶元; Qìngyuán; 1195–1200)[73]
  • Jiatai (嘉泰; Jiātài; 1201–1204)[74]
  • Kaixi (開禧; Kāixǐ; 1205–1207)[75]
  • Jiading (嘉定; Jiādìng; 1208–1224)[76]
 
Lizong (理宗; Lǐzōng) Jiàndào Bèidé Dàgōng Fùxīng Lièwén Rénwǔ Shèngmíng Ānxiào Huángdì (建道備德大功復興烈文仁武聖明安孝皇帝) Zhao Yun (趙昀; Zhào Yún) 1205–1264 (59) 1224–1264
  • Baoqing (寶慶; Bǎoqìng; 1225–1227)[77]
  • Shaoding (紹定; Shàodìng; 1228–1233)[78]
  • Duanping (端平; Duānpíng; 1234–1236)[79]
  • Jiaxi (嘉熙; Jiāxī; 1237–1240)[80]
  • Chunyou (淳祐; Chúnyòu; 1241–1252)[81]
  • Baoyou (寶祐; Bǎoyòu; 1253–1258)[82]
  • Kaiqing (開慶; Kāiqìng; 1259)[83]
  • Jingding (景定; Jǐngdìng; 1260–1264)[84]
 
Duzong (度宗; Dùzōng) Duānwén Míngwǔ Jǐngxiào Huángdì (端文明武景孝皇帝) Zhao Qi (趙祺; Zhào Qí) 1240–1274 (34) 1264–1274
  • Xianchun (咸淳; Xiánchún; 1265–1274)[85]
 
Gong (宋恭帝; Gōng) Xiàogōng Yìshèng Huángdì (孝恭懿圣皇帝) Zhao Xian (趙顯; Zhào Xiǎn) 1271–1323 (52) 1275
  • Deyou (德祐; Déyòu; 1275–1276)[86]
 
Duanzong (端宗; Duānzōng) Yùwén Zhāowǔ Mǐnxiào Huángdì (裕文昭武愍孝皇帝) Zhao Shi (趙昰; Zhào Shì) 1268–1278 (10) 1276–1278
  • Jingyan (景炎; Jǐngyán; 1276–1278)[87]
 
Zhao Bing (趙昺; Zhào Bǐng) 1271–1279 (8) 1278–1279
  • Xiangxing (祥興; Xiángxīng; 1278–1279)[88]

Timeline

Zhao BingEmperor DuanzongEmperor Gong of SongEmperor DuzongEmperor LizongEmperor NingzongEmperor GuangzongEmperor Xiaozong of SongEmperor Gaozong of SongEmperor QinzongEmperor Huizong of SongEmperor ZhezongEmperor Shenzong of SongEmperor Yingzong of SongEmperor Renzong of SongEmperor ZhenzongEmperor Taizong of SongEmperor Taizu of SongSong dynastySong dynasty

Family tree of emperors

Notes

  1. ^ Convention: "Sòng" + temple name or posthumous name except last emperor who was revered as "Song Di Bing" (宋帝昺; Sòng Dì Bǐng)
  2. ^ See the "names and titles" section of this article for an explanation.
  3. ^ In 1129, Emperor Gaozong was briefly forced to abdicate in favour of his two-year-old son Zhao Fu, with the era name Mingshou, but as shortly after Emperor Gaozong was restored by forces loyal to him, Zhao Fu is not usually considered a Song emperor by traditional historians, nor was his era name recognised. But see Bo (1977), pp. 941–942.

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b Mote (1999), pp. 98–99.
  2. ^ a b Bol (2001), p. 112.
  3. ^ Hennessey (1984), pp. 42, 51.
  4. ^ Ebrey et al. (2006), pp. 165–167.
  5. ^ Gernet (1962), p. 22.
  6. ^ Coblin (2002), p. 533.
  7. ^ Tillman (1995), p. 29; Mostern (2008), p. 241.
  8. ^ Rossabi (1988), pp. 8, 53.
  9. ^ Grant (2010), p. 56
  10. ^ Rossabi (1988), pp. 93–94.
  11. ^ David C. Wright (2012). David Andrew Graff; Robin D. S. Higham (eds.). A Military History of China. University Press of Kentucky. p. 73. ISBN 978-0-8131-3584-7.
  12. ^ Wilkinson (1998), p. 106; Mote (1999), p. 98.
  13. ^ a b c d e Wilkinson (1998), p. 106.
  14. ^ Wilkinson (1998), pp. 106–107.
  15. ^ Wilkinson (1998), p. 107.
  16. ^ Bol (2001), pp. 113–114.
  17. ^ de Crespigny (2007), pp. 1216, 1226–1228; Bielenstein (1980), pp. 84–85, 143–144; Hucker (1975), pp. 149–150; Wang (1949), pp. 157–158, 173–177.
  18. ^ Ebrey et al. (2006), p. 159–160; Bol (2001), p. 107; Gernet (1962), p. 65.
  19. ^ Mote (1999), pp. 99–100.
  20. ^ Ebrey (1999), pp. 145–146.
  21. ^ Bol (2001), 132.
  22. ^ a b c See Bol (2001), pp. 103–134 for detailed analysis.
  23. ^ Hartwell (1982), pp. 405–407.
  24. ^ Ebrey (1999), pp. 145–146; Mote (1999), p. 102; see also Needham (1972), p. 132.
  25. ^ Yuan (1994), pp. 196–194; Bol (2001), pp. 115–116, 121, 133; see also Ebrey (1999), pp. 145–146.
  26. ^ Hartwell (1982), pp. 413–416.
  27. ^ Bol (2001), 116.
  28. ^ Hymes (1986), pp. 132–133; Walton (1999), p. 199.
  29. ^ Bol (2001), p. 133.
  30. ^ Mote (1999), p. 100.
  31. ^ Mote (1999), p. 101.
  32. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 873–876.
  33. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 876–878.
  34. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 878–881.
  35. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 881–883.
  36. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 883–885.
  37. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 885–886.
  38. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 886–887.
  39. ^ Bo (1977), p. 887.
  40. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 887–891.
  41. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 891–892.
  42. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 892–894.
  43. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 894–895.
  44. ^ Bo (1977), p. 895.
  45. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 895–896.
  46. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 896–897.
  47. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 897–898.
  48. ^ Bo (1977), p. 898.
  49. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 898–899.
  50. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 899–903.
  51. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 903–904.
  52. ^ Bo (1977), p. 905.
  53. ^ Bo, pp. 905–907.
  54. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 908–909.
  55. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 909–914.
  56. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 914–918.
  57. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 918–921.
  58. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 921–923.
  59. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 923–924.
  60. ^ Bo (1977), p. 927.
  61. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 927–928.
  62. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 928–929.
  63. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 929–931.
  64. ^ Bo (1977), p. 931.
  65. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 932–935.
  66. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 937–938.
  67. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 938–942.
  68. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 944–961.
  69. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 961–962.
  70. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 963–965.
  71. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 965–969.
  72. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 970–972.
  73. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 972–973.
  74. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 977–978.
  75. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 979–981.
  76. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 981–988.
  77. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 989–990.
  78. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 991–994.
  79. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 995–996.
  80. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 996–997.
  81. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 998–1002.
  82. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 1003–1004.
  83. ^ Bo (1977), p. 1005.
  84. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 1006–1008.
  85. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 1008–1011.
  86. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 1012–1013.
  87. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 1013–1015.
  88. ^ Bo (1977), pp. 1015–1016.

References

  • Bielenstein, Hans (1980). The Bureaucracy of Han Times. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-22510-8.
  • Bo Yang (1977). Timeline of Chinese History 中國歷史年表. Taipei: Sing-Kuang Book Company Ltd.
  • Bol, Peter K. (2001). "Whither the Emperor? Emperor Huizong, the New Policies, and the Tang-Song Transition". Journal of Song and Yuan Studies (31): 103–134. JSTOR 23496091.
  • Coblin, W. South (2002). "Migration History and Dialect Development in the Lower Yangtze Watershed". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies. 65 (3): 529–543. doi:10.1017/S0041977X02000320. JSTOR 4146032.
  • de Crespigny, Rafe (2007) [23–220 AD]. A Biographical Dictionary of Later Han to the Three Kingdoms. Leiden: Koninklijke Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-15605-0.
  • Ebrey, Patricia Buckley (1999). The Cambridge Illustrated History of China (paperback). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-66991-X.
  • Ebrey, Patricia; Walthall, Anne; Palais, James (2006). East Asia: A Cultural, Social, and Political History. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company. ISBN 0-618-13384-4.
  • Gernet, Jacques (1962). Daily Life in China on the Eve of the Mongol Invasion, 1250–1276. Stanford: Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-0720-0.
  • Grant, Reg (2010). Battle at Sea: 3000 years of naval warfare. London: Dorling Kindersley. ISBN 978-0756639730.
  • Hartwell, Robert M. (1982). "Demographic, Political, and Social Transformations of China, 750–1550". Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies. 42 (2): 365–442. doi:10.2307/2718941. JSTOR 2718941.
  • Hennessey, William O. (July 1984). "Classical Sources and Vernacular Resources in "Xuanhe Yishi": The Presence of Priority and the Priority of Presence". Chinese Literature: Essays, Articles, Reviews. 6 (1/2): 33–52. doi:10.2307/823445. JSTOR 823445.
  • Hucker, Charles O. (1975). China's Imperial Past: An Introduction to Chinese History and Culture. Stanford: Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-0887-8.
  • Hymes, Robert P. (1986). Statesmen and Gentlemen: The Elite of Fu-Chou, Chiang-Hsi, in Northern and Southern Sung. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-30631-0.
  • Mostern, Ruth (2008). "From Battlefields to Counties: War, Border, and State Power in Southern Song Huainan". In Wyatt, Don J. (ed.). Battlefronts Real and Imagined: War, Border, and Identity in the Chinese Middle Period. New York: Palgrave MacMillan. pp. 227–252. ISBN 978-1-4039-6084-9.
  • Mote, Frederick W. (1999). Imperial China: 900–1800. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-01212-7.
  • Needham, Joseph (1972). Science and Civilization in China: Volume 1, Introductory Orientations. London: Syndics of the Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-05799-X.
  • Rossabi, Morris (1988). Khubilai Khan: His Life and Times. Berkeley, Los Angeles, London: University of California Press. ISBN 0520067401.
  • Tillman, Hoyt C.; West, Stephen H. (1995). China Under Jurchen Rule: Essays on Chin Intellectual and Cultural History. Albany: State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-7914-2273-9.
  • Walton, Linda (1999). Academies and Society in Southern Sung China. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 0824819624. JSTOR 3558593.
  • Wang, Yu-ch'uan (June 1949). "An Outline of The Central Government of The Former Han Dynasty". Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies. 12 (1/2): 134–187. doi:10.2307/2718206. JSTOR 2718206.
  • Wilkinson, Endymion (1998). Chinese History: A Manual. Cambridge and London: Harvard University Asia Center of the Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-12378-6.
  • Yuan, Zheng (Summer 1994). "Local Government Schools in Sung China: A Reassessment". History of Education Quarterly. 34 (2): 193–213. doi:10.2307/369121. JSTOR 369121. S2CID 144538656.

External links

  • Chinese History – Song Dynasty 宋 (960–1279), emperors and rulers (www.chinaknowledge.de)

list, emperors, song, dynasty, song, dynasty, 1279, imperial, dynasty, china, that, succeeded, period, referred, five, dynasties, kingdoms, period, preceded, yuan, dynasty, 1271, 1368, which, conquered, song, dynasty, 1279, conventional, division, into, northe. The Song dynasty 960 1279 was an imperial dynasty of China that succeeded the period referred to as Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period 907 960 and preceded the Yuan dynasty 1271 1368 which conquered the Song dynasty in 1279 The conventional division into the Northern Song dynasty 960 1127 and Southern Song dynasty 1127 1279 is created by the conquest of northern China by the Jin dynasty 1115 1234 in 1127 and the consequent shift of the capital from Bianjing present day Kaifeng in the north to Lin an present day Hangzhou in the south Emperor of the Song dynasty宋朝皇帝ImperialA hanging scroll portrait painting of Emperor Taizu of Song r 960 976 founder of the Song dynasty painted by an anonymous Song artistDetailsStyleHis Imperial Majesty 陛下 Guanjia 官家 First monarchEmperor Taizu Northern Song Emperor Gaozong Southern Song Last monarchEmperor Qinzong Northern Song Zhao Bing Southern Song Formation960 Northern Song 1127 Southern Song Abolition1127 Northern Song 1279 Southern Song ResidenceImperial City BianliangImperial City Lin anAppointerHereditaryBelow is a complete list of emperors of the Song dynasty including their temple names posthumous names given names and era names The dynasty was founded by Zhao Kuangyin who became Emperor Taizu r 960 976 and concluded with the death of Zhao Bing r 1278 1279 The last emperor of the Northern Song was Emperor Qinzong r 1126 1127 while the first Southern Song emperor was Emperor Gaozong r 1127 1162 The emperor or huangdi was the supreme head of state during the imperial era of China 221 BC 1912 including the Song dynasty He was a hereditary ruler who shared executive powers with civilian officials appointed to various levels of office according to their performance in bureaucratic examinations The growing importance of the civilian bureaucracy and national gentry class during the Song dynasty led to a much more limited role for the emperor in shaping public policy although he still maintained his autocratic authority He had the sole right to establish new laws although he was expected to respect legal precedents set forth by previous emperors of his dynasty 1 Contents 1 Background 2 Titles and names 3 Head of state 4 List of emperors 4 1 Northern Song 960 1127 4 2 Southern Song 1127 1279 5 Timeline 6 Family tree of emperors 7 Notes 8 Footnotes 9 References 10 External linksBackground EditSee also History of the Song dynasty Left image Portrait of Emperor Taizong r 976 997 by an anonymous Song artist Right image Portrait of Emperor Shenzong r 1067 1085 by an anonymous Song artist The Song dynasty was founded by Zhao Kuangyin Emperor Taizu r 960 976 in 960 before the Song completely reunified China proper by conquest excluding only the Sixteen Prefectures The Song fought a series of wars with the Liao dynasty 1125 1279 ruled by the Khitans over the possession of the Sixteen Prefectures of northern China 2 The Liao regime was toppled in 1125 in a joint conquest by Song forces and the Jurchens led by Wuqimai Emperor Taizong r 1123 1134 However the Jin quickly turned against the Song and invaded Song s northern territory 2 In what is known as the Jingkang Incident 3 Jin forces captured the Song capital Bianjing present day Kaifeng in 1127 along with Emperor Huizong r 1100 1126 then a retired emperor and his ruling son Emperor Qinzong r 1126 1127 4 Emperor Gaozong r 1127 1162 a son of Emperor Huizong fled south and reestablished the Song dynasty at what is now Nanjing 5 He established a temporary capital at Lin an present day Hangzhou in 1129 yet by 1132 he declared it the official capital of the Song Empire 6 The Jin made several failed attempts to conquer the Southern Song but in 1165 Emperor Xiaozong of Song r 1162 1189 and Emperor Shizong of Jin r 1161 1189 agreed to a peace treaty that resulted in a diplomatic accord being reached between the two empires 7 The Song continued to rule southern China until 1279 when the Yuan dynasty led by Kublai Khan the Khagan of the Mongols 8 invaded and conquered Song The last ruler was Zhao Bing r 1278 1279 who was killed on 19 March 1279 9 during the naval Battle of Yamen in what is now modern Yamen Town in Xinhui District Jiangmen City Guangdong Province 10 11 Titles and names EditFrom the Qin dynasty 221 206 BC until the Qing dynasty 1644 1912 the ruling head of state was known as huangdi or emperor 12 In Chinese historical texts emperors of the Song dynasty along with the Tang and Yuan dynasties are referred to by their temple names 13 Before the Tang dynasty 618 907 emperors were generally referred to in historical texts by their posthumous names 13 During the Ming 1368 1644 and Qing dynasties emperors were exclusively referred to in historical texts by their single era name whereas emperors of previous dynasties including the Song usually had multiple era names 14 The amount of written characters used in posthumous names grew steadily larger from the Han dynasty 202 BC AD 220 onwards and thus became overly long when referring to sovereigns 13 For example the posthumous name of Nurhaci r 1616 1626 the founder of the Manchu state which would eventually establish the Qing dynasty contained 29 written characters 13 By the Tang dynasty much shorter temple names were preferred when referring to the emperor a preference that was carried into the Song dynasty 13 Each emperor also had a tomb name 陵號 linghao and various other honorific titles 15 Head of state EditSee also Society of the Song dynasty Peter K Bol writes that Emperor Huizong s political ideology and even his artwork such as this piece showing women preparing silk has much in common with official Li Jie s 李誡 1065 1110 architectural treatise Yingzao Fashi 1103 high technical standards a lack of interest in individual variation a concern with effective functioning and a coherence of design in which all the parts fit together seamlessly It seems to me that these qualities are those that mark the promise of the New Policies and the era s faith that it could transform society into a mutually supporting and constantly self improving social organism 16 In theory the emperor s political power was absolute but even during the Han dynasty he shared executive powers with civilian officials and normally based his decisions on the advice and formal consensus of his ministers 17 During the Song dynasty a national examination system Civil Service Exam managed by scholar bureaucrats was used to recruit officials those who passed the palace examination the highest level examination in the empire were appointed directly by the emperor to the highest central government positions 18 Like commoners these senior officials had to obey his edicts as law or be punished 1 However senior officials not only challenged the emperor over policy but restrained him by invoking the ideal Confucian mores and values of the literati gentry class from which they came 19 During the preceding Tang dynasty the civil service examinations did not yet produce the high number of officials as they would during the Song dynasty 20 a hereditary aristocracy remained dependent on the court for attaining rank and holding office 21 Song rulers particularly Emperor Huizong encountered a great deal of political opposition despite attempts to attain the ideals of the sage kings of antiquity The inability of the sovereign to monopolize political authority was linked to the rise of a new class of gentry and scholar official who filled the bureaucracy 22 When the Song dynasty was founded the political elites consisted of officials and their sons who had served in the Five Dynasties era as well as those who came from prominent families which boasted an aristocratic ancestry and had provided officials for generations 23 Since the first Song emperors wished to avoid domination of government by military strongmen such as the jiedushi of the previous era they limited the power of military officers and focused on building a powerful civilian establishment 24 During the 11th century the expansion of schools and local academies nurtured a nationwide gentry class which provided most if not all officials 25 By the late 11th century the elite marriage strategies of prominent families eroded due to the intense partisan politics surrounding the New Policies 新法 xin fa of Chancellor Wang Anshi 1021 1086 These great families were replaced by officials representing diverse local gentry lineages throughout the country 26 Peter K Bol asserts that the supporters of Wang Anshi s expansionist activist central government in his New Policies were convinced that he understood the dao which brought utopia to Western Zhou c 1050 BC 771 BC antiquity and were determined to conform society according to his vision The marginalised emperor the last remaining aristocrat with any true political power embraced the fiction that he was like the sage kings of old who brought society into a state of total harmony with court rituals and policy reforms 22 Yet after the reign of Emperor Huizong Song rulers and officials alike disregarded the New Policies and focused instead on reforming society through a local bottom up approach 22 For example Emperor Huizong attempted from 1107 to 1120 to bar anyone who had not attended a government school from serving in public office He thus rejected anyone who did not acknowledge his brand of Confucian ideology as orthodoxy 27 However the government run school system during the Southern Song eventually lost prominence to private academies which had outnumbered government schools during the early Northern Song 28 Even before Emperor Huizong s reign Sima Guang 1019 1086 a prominent chancellor and political rival to Wang Anshi had little to say about the emperor s role in shaping major reforms and public policy mentioning only that the emperor made major appointments when necessary 29 Emperors could choose whether to supervise the policy bureaucracy or to pursue scholarship cults hobbies or women instead However Frederick W Mote argues that most Song emperors who spent much of their childhood confined and isolated within a luxurious palace were aloof conformists detached from the world of normal affairs and thus relied on officialdom to administer the government 30 While the mainstream view is that the Song court exercised the highest degree of restraint and courtesy towards civil officials the new protocol of enhanced deferential treatment by officials towards the emperor during conferences and meetings further eroded the emperor s close contact with his ministers 31 List of emperors EditSee also Song emperors family tree Northern Song 960 1127 Edit Portrait Temple name 廟號 miao hao note 1 Posthumous name 諡號 shi hao Birth name Lifespan Period of reign Era names 年號 nian hao durations Taizu 太祖 Taizǔ 啟運立極英武睿文神德聖功至明大孝皇帝 note 2 Zhao Kuangyin 趙匡胤 Zhao Kuangyin 927 976 49 960 976 Jianlong 建隆 Jianlong 960 963 32 Qiande 乾德 Qiande 963 968 33 Kaibao 開寶 Kaibǎo 968 976 34 Taizong 太宗 Taizōng 至仁應道神功聖德文武睿烈大明廣孝皇帝 Zhao Jiong 趙炅 Zhao Jiǒng 939 997 58 976 997 Taipingxingguo 太平興國 Taipingxingguo 976 984 35 Yongxi 雍熙 Yōngxi 984 988 36 Duangong 端拱 Duangǒng 988 989 37 Chunhua 淳化 Chunhua 990 994 38 Zhidao 至道 Zhidao 995 997 39 Zhenzong 真宗 Zhenzōng Empress Consort Liu ruled as regent at the end of his rule 應符稽古神功讓德文明武定章聖元孝皇帝 Zhao Heng 趙恆 Zhao Heng 968 1022 54 997 1022 Xianping 咸平 Xianping 998 1003 40 Jingde 景德 Jǐngde 1004 1007 41 Dazhongxiangfu 大中祥符 Dazhōngxiangfu 1008 1016 42 Tianxi 天禧 Tianxǐ 1017 1021 43 Qianxing 乾興 Qianxing 1022 44 Renzong 仁宗 Renzōng Empress Dowager Liu ruled as regent in the beginning of his rule 體天法道極功全德神文聖武睿哲明孝皇帝 Zhao Zhen 趙禎 Zhao Zhen 1010 1063 53 1022 1063 Tiansheng 天聖 Tiansheng 1023 1032 45 Mingdao 明道 Mingdao 1032 1033 46 Jingyou 景祐 Jǐngyou 1034 1038 47 Baoyuan 寶元 Bǎoyuan 1038 1040 48 Kangding 康定 Kangding 1040 1041 49 Qingli 慶曆 Qingli 1041 1048 50 Huangyou 皇祐 Huangyou 1049 1053 51 Zhihe 至和 Zhihe 1054 1056 52 Jiayou 嘉祐 Jiayou 1056 1063 53 Yingzong 英宗 Yingzōng 體乾應曆隆功盛德憲文肅武睿聖宣孝皇帝 Zhao Shu 趙曙 Zhao Shǔ 1032 1067 35 1063 1067 Zhiping 治平 Zhiping 1064 1067 54 Shenzong 神宗 Shenzōng 紹天法古運德建功英文烈武欽仁聖孝皇帝 Zhao Xu 趙頊 Zhao Xu 1048 1085 37 1067 1085 Xining 熙寧 Xining 1068 1077 55 Yuanfeng 元豐 Yuanfeng 1078 1085 56 Zhezong 哲宗 Zhezōng 憲元繼道顯德定功欽文睿武齊聖昭孝皇帝 Zhao Xu 趙煦 Zhao Xu 1077 1100 23 1085 1100 Yuanyou 元祐 Yuanyou 1086 1093 57 Shaosheng 紹聖 Shaosheng 1094 1098 58 Yuanfu 元符 Yuanfu 1098 1100 59 Huizong 徽宗 Huizōng 體神合道駿烈遜功聖文仁德慈憲顯孝皇帝 Zhao Ji 趙佶 Zhao Ji 1082 1135 53 1100 1125 Jianzhongjingguo 建中靖國 Jianzhōngjingguo 1101 60 Chongning 崇寧 Chongning 1102 1106 61 Daguan 大觀 Daguan 1107 1110 62 Zhenghe 政和 Zhenghe 1111 1118 63 Chonghe 重和 Chonghe 1118 64 Xuanhe 宣和 Xuanhe 1119 1125 65 Qinzong 欽宗 Qinzōng 恭文順德仁孝皇帝 Zhao Huan 趙桓 Zhao Huan 1100 1161 61 1126 1127 Jingkang 靖康 Jingkang 1125 1127 66 Southern Song 1127 1279 Edit Portrait Temple names 廟號 miao hao Posthumous names 諡號 shi hao Birth names Lifespan Periodof reigns Era names 年號 nian hao and their according range of years Gaozong 高宗 Gaozōng Shouming Zhōngxing Quangōng Zhide Shengshen Wǔwen Zhaoren Xianxiao Huangdi 受命中興全功至德聖神武文昭仁憲孝皇帝 Zhao Gou 趙構 Zhao Gou 1107 1187 80 1127 1162 Jianyan 建炎 Jianyan 1127 1130 67 note 3 Shaoxing 紹興 Shaoxing 1131 1162 68 Xiaozong 孝宗 Xiaozōng Shaotǒng Tongdao Guande Zhaogōng Zhewen Shenwǔ Mingsheng Chengxiao Huangdi 紹統同道冠德昭功哲文神武明聖成孝皇帝 Zhao Shen 趙昚 Zhao Shen 1127 1194 67 1162 1189 Longxing 隆興 Longxing 1163 1164 69 Qiandao 乾道 Qiandao 1165 1173 70 Chunxi 淳熙 Chunxi 1174 1189 71 Guangzong 光宗 Guangzōng Xundao Xianren Minggōng Maode Wenshun Wǔsheng Zheci Xiao Huangdi 循道憲仁明功茂德溫文順武聖哲慈孝皇帝 Zhao Dun 趙惇 Zhao Dun 1147 1200 53 1189 1194 Shaoxi 紹熙 Shaoxi 1190 1194 72 Ningzong 寧宗 Ningzōng Fǎtian Beidao Chunquan Demao Gōngren Wenzhe Wǔsheng Ruigōng Xiao Huangdi 法天備道純德茂功仁文哲武聖睿恭孝皇帝 Zhao Kuo 趙擴 Zhao Kuo 1168 1224 56 1194 1224 Qingyuan 慶元 Qingyuan 1195 1200 73 Jiatai 嘉泰 Jiatai 1201 1204 74 Kaixi 開禧 Kaixǐ 1205 1207 75 Jiading 嘉定 Jiading 1208 1224 76 Lizong 理宗 Lǐzōng Jiandao Beide Dagōng Fuxing Liewen Renwǔ Shengming Anxiao Huangdi 建道備德大功復興烈文仁武聖明安孝皇帝 Zhao Yun 趙昀 Zhao Yun 1205 1264 59 1224 1264 Baoqing 寶慶 Bǎoqing 1225 1227 77 Shaoding 紹定 Shaoding 1228 1233 78 Duanping 端平 Duanping 1234 1236 79 Jiaxi 嘉熙 Jiaxi 1237 1240 80 Chunyou 淳祐 Chunyou 1241 1252 81 Baoyou 寶祐 Bǎoyou 1253 1258 82 Kaiqing 開慶 Kaiqing 1259 83 Jingding 景定 Jǐngding 1260 1264 84 Duzong 度宗 Duzōng Duanwen Mingwǔ Jǐngxiao Huangdi 端文明武景孝皇帝 Zhao Qi 趙祺 Zhao Qi 1240 1274 34 1264 1274 Xianchun 咸淳 Xianchun 1265 1274 85 Gong 宋恭帝 Gōng Xiaogōng Yisheng Huangdi 孝恭懿圣皇帝 Zhao Xian 趙顯 Zhao Xiǎn 1271 1323 52 1275 Deyou 德祐 Deyou 1275 1276 86 Duanzong 端宗 Duanzōng Yuwen Zhaowǔ Mǐnxiao Huangdi 裕文昭武愍孝皇帝 Zhao Shi 趙昰 Zhao Shi 1268 1278 10 1276 1278 Jingyan 景炎 Jǐngyan 1276 1278 87 Zhao Bing 趙昺 Zhao Bǐng 1271 1279 8 1278 1279 Xiangxing 祥興 Xiangxing 1278 1279 88 Timeline EditFamily tree of emperors EditChinese emperors family tree middle Song dynastyNotes Edit Convention Song temple name or posthumous name except last emperor who was revered as Song Di Bing 宋帝昺 Song Di Bǐng See the names and titles section of this article for an explanation In 1129 Emperor Gaozong was briefly forced to abdicate in favour of his two year old son Zhao Fu with the era name Mingshou but as shortly after Emperor Gaozong was restored by forces loyal to him Zhao Fu is not usually considered a Song emperor by traditional historians nor was his era name recognised But see Bo 1977 pp 941 942 Footnotes Edit a b Mote 1999 pp 98 99 a b Bol 2001 p 112 Hennessey 1984 pp 42 51 Ebrey et al 2006 pp 165 167 Gernet 1962 p 22 Coblin 2002 p 533 Tillman 1995 p 29 Mostern 2008 p 241 Rossabi 1988 pp 8 53 Grant 2010 p 56 Rossabi 1988 pp 93 94 David C Wright 2012 David Andrew Graff Robin D S Higham eds A Military History of China University Press of Kentucky p 73 ISBN 978 0 8131 3584 7 Wilkinson 1998 p 106 Mote 1999 p 98 a b c d e Wilkinson 1998 p 106 Wilkinson 1998 pp 106 107 Wilkinson 1998 p 107 Bol 2001 pp 113 114 de Crespigny 2007 pp 1216 1226 1228 Bielenstein 1980 pp 84 85 143 144 Hucker 1975 pp 149 150 Wang 1949 pp 157 158 173 177 Ebrey et al 2006 p 159 160 Bol 2001 p 107 Gernet 1962 p 65 Mote 1999 pp 99 100 Ebrey 1999 pp 145 146 Bol 2001 132 a b c See Bol 2001 pp 103 134 for detailed analysis Hartwell 1982 pp 405 407 Ebrey 1999 pp 145 146 Mote 1999 p 102 see also Needham 1972 p 132 Yuan 1994 pp 196 194 Bol 2001 pp 115 116 121 133 see also Ebrey 1999 pp 145 146 Hartwell 1982 pp 413 416 Bol 2001 116 Hymes 1986 pp 132 133 Walton 1999 p 199 Bol 2001 p 133 Mote 1999 p 100 Mote 1999 p 101 Bo 1977 pp 873 876 Bo 1977 pp 876 878 Bo 1977 pp 878 881 Bo 1977 pp 881 883 Bo 1977 pp 883 885 Bo 1977 pp 885 886 Bo 1977 pp 886 887 Bo 1977 p 887 Bo 1977 pp 887 891 Bo 1977 pp 891 892 Bo 1977 pp 892 894 Bo 1977 pp 894 895 Bo 1977 p 895 Bo 1977 pp 895 896 Bo 1977 pp 896 897 Bo 1977 pp 897 898 Bo 1977 p 898 Bo 1977 pp 898 899 Bo 1977 pp 899 903 Bo 1977 pp 903 904 Bo 1977 p 905 Bo pp 905 907 Bo 1977 pp 908 909 Bo 1977 pp 909 914 Bo 1977 pp 914 918 Bo 1977 pp 918 921 Bo 1977 pp 921 923 Bo 1977 pp 923 924 Bo 1977 p 927 Bo 1977 pp 927 928 Bo 1977 pp 928 929 Bo 1977 pp 929 931 Bo 1977 p 931 Bo 1977 pp 932 935 Bo 1977 pp 937 938 Bo 1977 pp 938 942 Bo 1977 pp 944 961 Bo 1977 pp 961 962 Bo 1977 pp 963 965 Bo 1977 pp 965 969 Bo 1977 pp 970 972 Bo 1977 pp 972 973 Bo 1977 pp 977 978 Bo 1977 pp 979 981 Bo 1977 pp 981 988 Bo 1977 pp 989 990 Bo 1977 pp 991 994 Bo 1977 pp 995 996 Bo 1977 pp 996 997 Bo 1977 pp 998 1002 Bo 1977 pp 1003 1004 Bo 1977 p 1005 Bo 1977 pp 1006 1008 Bo 1977 pp 1008 1011 Bo 1977 pp 1012 1013 Bo 1977 pp 1013 1015 Bo 1977 pp 1015 1016 References EditBielenstein Hans 1980 The Bureaucracy of Han Times Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 22510 8 Bo Yang 1977 Timeline of Chinese History 中國歷史年表 Taipei Sing Kuang Book Company Ltd Bol Peter K 2001 Whither the Emperor Emperor Huizong the New Policies and the Tang Song Transition Journal of Song and Yuan Studies 31 103 134 JSTOR 23496091 Coblin W South 2002 Migration History and Dialect Development in the Lower Yangtze Watershed Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 65 3 529 543 doi 10 1017 S0041977X02000320 JSTOR 4146032 de Crespigny Rafe 2007 23 220 AD A Biographical Dictionary of Later Han to the Three Kingdoms Leiden Koninklijke Brill ISBN 978 90 04 15605 0 Ebrey Patricia Buckley 1999 The Cambridge Illustrated History of China paperback Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 66991 X Ebrey Patricia Walthall Anne Palais James 2006 East Asia A Cultural Social and Political History Boston Houghton Mifflin Company ISBN 0 618 13384 4 Gernet Jacques 1962 Daily Life in China on the Eve of the Mongol Invasion 1250 1276 Stanford Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 0720 0 Grant Reg 2010 Battle at Sea 3000 years of naval warfare London Dorling Kindersley ISBN 978 0756639730 Hartwell Robert M 1982 Demographic Political and Social Transformations of China 750 1550 Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 42 2 365 442 doi 10 2307 2718941 JSTOR 2718941 Hennessey William O July 1984 Classical Sources and Vernacular Resources in Xuanhe Yishi The Presence of Priority and the Priority of Presence Chinese Literature Essays Articles Reviews 6 1 2 33 52 doi 10 2307 823445 JSTOR 823445 Hucker Charles O 1975 China s Imperial Past An Introduction to Chinese History and Culture Stanford Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 0887 8 Hymes Robert P 1986 Statesmen and Gentlemen The Elite of Fu Chou Chiang Hsi in Northern and Southern Sung Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 30631 0 Mostern Ruth 2008 From Battlefields to Counties War Border and State Power in Southern Song Huainan In Wyatt Don J ed Battlefronts Real and Imagined War Border and Identity in the Chinese Middle Period New York Palgrave MacMillan pp 227 252 ISBN 978 1 4039 6084 9 Mote Frederick W 1999 Imperial China 900 1800 Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 01212 7 Needham Joseph 1972 Science and Civilization in China Volume 1 Introductory Orientations London Syndics of the Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 05799 X Rossabi Morris 1988 Khubilai Khan His Life and Times Berkeley Los Angeles London University of California Press ISBN 0520067401 Tillman Hoyt C West Stephen H 1995 China Under Jurchen Rule Essays on Chin Intellectual and Cultural History Albany State University of New York Press ISBN 0 7914 2273 9 Walton Linda 1999 Academies and Society in Southern Sung China Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 0824819624 JSTOR 3558593 Wang Yu ch uan June 1949 An Outline of The Central Government of The Former Han Dynasty Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 12 1 2 134 187 doi 10 2307 2718206 JSTOR 2718206 Wilkinson Endymion 1998 Chinese History A Manual Cambridge and London Harvard University Asia Center of the Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 12378 6 Yuan Zheng Summer 1994 Local Government Schools in Sung China A Reassessment History of Education Quarterly 34 2 193 213 doi 10 2307 369121 JSTOR 369121 S2CID 144538656 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has 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