The Rise of Manchu Power in Northeast Asia (c. 1600-1636)
The
Manchu conquest of China is arguably the greatest historical event of the seventeenth century, both for the changes it engendered within
Asia and for its far-reaching implications in world history. Yet if we take even the simple phrase "Manchu conquest of China" we see that whether the conquerors were really "
Manchu," whether it was an actual "conquest," and whether they ruled a land that could have been defined as "
China" at the time are all disputable notions. Indeed, historians have argued against the concept that the
Qing state can be identified with a single ethnicity, that the Qing rulers occupied China less as an act of willful conquest than as the result of the
Ming dynasty's collapse, and that China under the
Ming was very different from that ruled by the Qing.
This talk will
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