Chinese History: Han, Song, and Tang Dynasties

por oliviagates001
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The policy of foreign rule differed widely through time periods; differing invading conquerors. Some adopted the policies of the indigenous Han Chinese, while other imposed other systems of rule over the defeated peoples. For example, John Keay notes that the Liao, in an effort to establish organized rule, established the Han practice of primogeniture (Keay, 138). After the rise of Jin rule, the Jurchen Jin had to establish legitimacy. Keay argues that practices such as adopting centralized government and certain imperial rituals helped cement the power of the Jin (Keay, 159). However, it was with the establishment of the Yuan that helped prop up the legitimacy of the Jin through history. After the invasion of the Mongols and defeat of the Chinese, the Yuan dynasty adopted a multicultural policy; although Keay notes that Kubilai Khan ruled “in the Chinese style,” (Keay, 165). In other words, invading conquerors ruled China using an admixture of imperial policies and foreign invasion ta

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