11th Century in Law - 1005 in Law, 1018 in Law, 1059 in Law, 1080 in Law, 1086 in Law, 1091 in Law, 1100 in Law, 11th-Century Treaties (Paperback)


Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: 1005 in Law, 1018 in Law, 1059 in Law, 1080 in Law, 1086 in Law, 1091 in Law, 1100 in Law, 11th-Century Treaties, Domesday Book, Charter of Liberties, Shanyuan Treaty, Byzantine-venetian Treaty of 1082, Peace of Bautzen, Treaty of Caen, Treaty of Melfi, Treaty of Ceprano. Excerpt: The Shanyuan Treaty in 1004/05 was the pivotal point in the relations between the Northern Song (960-1127) and the Liao Dynasties (916-1125). The ruling class of the Liao were a people of nomadic origin known as the Khitan (Qidan in Chinese) who rose in the northeast around present-day Heilongjiang Province. The Song Dynasty, also referred to as the Northern Song, ruled virtually all of China from the late tenth century when it eliminated the last of the kingdoms in the north and the south that stood against Chinese unification.Liao-Song Relations Early on from the succession of the Song Dynasty from the Five Dynasties in 960, relations between the Song and Liao were cordial. The Song had more important matters on their hand, namely the taking of the remaining kingdoms in the south and one in the north to reunify the realm. With that accomplished in 979, the Song turned their eyes on the Liao. The Song destroyed the Northern Han state in 979. The Northern Han was a Shatuo Turk kingdom that considered itself the legitimate successor of the Later Han dynasty that fell in 950. As it was under the protection of the Liao, it engendered some friction between the two. However, what concerned the Song even more was the continued Liao possession of the strategic Sixteen Prefectures, which included present-day Beijing .After the Northern Han was destroyed by the Song, the emperor decided to march on Liao holdings in the Sixteen Prefectures. The Song forces were routed and the emperor had to retreat in igno...

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Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: 1005 in Law, 1018 in Law, 1059 in Law, 1080 in Law, 1086 in Law, 1091 in Law, 1100 in Law, 11th-Century Treaties, Domesday Book, Charter of Liberties, Shanyuan Treaty, Byzantine-venetian Treaty of 1082, Peace of Bautzen, Treaty of Caen, Treaty of Melfi, Treaty of Ceprano. Excerpt: The Shanyuan Treaty in 1004/05 was the pivotal point in the relations between the Northern Song (960-1127) and the Liao Dynasties (916-1125). The ruling class of the Liao were a people of nomadic origin known as the Khitan (Qidan in Chinese) who rose in the northeast around present-day Heilongjiang Province. The Song Dynasty, also referred to as the Northern Song, ruled virtually all of China from the late tenth century when it eliminated the last of the kingdoms in the north and the south that stood against Chinese unification.Liao-Song Relations Early on from the succession of the Song Dynasty from the Five Dynasties in 960, relations between the Song and Liao were cordial. The Song had more important matters on their hand, namely the taking of the remaining kingdoms in the south and one in the north to reunify the realm. With that accomplished in 979, the Song turned their eyes on the Liao. The Song destroyed the Northern Han state in 979. The Northern Han was a Shatuo Turk kingdom that considered itself the legitimate successor of the Later Han dynasty that fell in 950. As it was under the protection of the Liao, it engendered some friction between the two. However, what concerned the Song even more was the continued Liao possession of the strategic Sixteen Prefectures, which included present-day Beijing .After the Northern Han was destroyed by the Song, the emperor decided to march on Liao holdings in the Sixteen Prefectures. The Song forces were routed and the emperor had to retreat in igno...

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Books + Company

Country of origin

United States

Release date

May 2010

Availability

Supplier out of stock. If you add this item to your wish list we will let you know when it becomes available.

First published

May 2010

Creators

Dimensions

152 x 229 x 3mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback - Trade

Pages

44

ISBN-13

978-1-156-33647-2

Barcode

9781156336472

Categories

LSN

1-156-33647-3



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