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The Chinese History Podcast
thechinesehistorypodcast
22 episodes
5 months ago
The Chinese History Podcast aims to make Chinese history more accessible to the general public through interviews with scholars and students about various aspects of Chinese history and culture.
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History
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The Chinese History Podcast aims to make Chinese history more accessible to the general public through interviews with scholars and students about various aspects of Chinese history and culture.
Show more...
History
Episodes (20/22)
The Chinese History Podcast
The Southern Dynasties: An Interview with Professor Andrew Chittick
Between 304 and 589 CE, China was divided into rivaling regimes occupying North and South China. While the north was controlled by a series of non-Han Chinese peoples, ultimately culminating in the Xianbei Northern Wei, the south was ruled by ruling houses of Han Chinese descent. In this companion episode to the interview ith Scott Pearce on the Northern Wei, Professor Andrew Chittick joins us to discuss the Southern Dynasties, from their development, to their society and culture, to their relationship with their northern neighbor, and finally to their legacy. Contributors: Andrew Chittick: Andrew Chittick is the E. Leslie Peter Professor of East Asian Humanities and History at Eckerd College, St. Petersburg, FL. His research focuses on the culture of early south China and maritime trade relations with Southeast Asia.  He is the author of numerous articles and two full-length books: Patronage and Community in Medieval China: The Xiangyang Garrison, 400-600 CE (SUNY Press, 2010) and The Jiankang Empire in Chinese and World History (Oxford University Press, 2020). The latter book introduces a ground-breaking new perspective on the history and political identity of what is now south China in the early medieval period (3rd-6th centuries CE), including its evolving ethnic identity, innovative military and economic systems, and engagement with broader Sino-Southeast Asian and Buddhist cultures.  Yiming Ha: Yiming Ha is the Rand Postdoctoral Fellow in Asian Studies at Pomona College. His current research is on military mobilization and state-building in China between the thirteenth and seventeenth centuries, focusing on how military institutions changed over time, how the state responded to these changes, the disconnect between the center and localities, and the broader implications that the military had on the state. His project highlights in particular the role of the Mongol Yuan in introducing an alternative form of military mobilization that radically transformed the Chinese state. He is also interested in military history, nomadic history, comparative Eurasian state-building, and the history of maritime interactions in early modern East Asia. He received his BA from UCLA, his MPhil from the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, and his PhD from UCLA. He is also the book review editor for Ming Studies. Credits: Episode no. 22 Release date: May 9, 2025 Recording date: February 10, 2025 Recording location: St. Petersburg, FL/Los Angeles, CA Images: Stone pixiu 貔貅 (winged lion), from the tomb of Xiao Hui, a prince of Southern Liang (502-557), in Nanjing. (Image Source) Greatest extent of the Liang Dynasty, one of the southern dynasties. (Image Source) Liang Emperor Wu, who reigned the longest out of all the Southern Dynasty emperors, from 502 to 549. His reign saw the growing importance of Buddhism. (Image Source) A scroll of tributary emperors paying homage to the Liang emperor. The Southern Dynasties oversaw a prosperous commercial economy, with trading networks spanning East and Southeast Asia. Song copy of the original Liang painting. (Image Source) A Tang dynasty copy of Wang Xizhi's (303–361), Lantingji xu, one of the most famous pieces of calligraphy in Chinese history. The Southern Dynasties are known for their cultural production. (Image Source) Selected References: Chittick, Andrew. The Jiankang Empire in Chinese and World History. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020. Dien, Albert E. Six Dynasties Civilization. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2009. Dien, Albert E. and Keith N. Knapp, eds. The Cambridge History of China: Volume 2, The Six Dynasties, 220–589. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020. Graff, David A. Medieval Chinese Warfare, 300–900. London and New York: Routledge, 2002. Lewis, Mark Edward. China between Empires: The Northern and Southern Dynasties. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2009.
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5 months ago
46 minutes 2 seconds

The Chinese History Podcast
More Swindles from the Late Ming - An Interview with the Translators
Bruce Rusk and Christopher Rea joins us to discuss their new translation of a Late Ming book on scams and swindles.
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8 months ago
42 minutes 15 seconds

The Chinese History Podcast
The Northern Wei: An Interview with Professor Scott Pearce
Scott Pearce, an expert on the Medieval China, joins us to talk about the Northern Wei regime (386-534).
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9 months ago
52 minutes 9 seconds

The Chinese History Podcast
Professor Ronald Po on Qing China's 'Blue Frontier'
In this episode, Professor Ronald Po of LSE talks about Qing maritime history and policy in the 18th and 19th centuries.
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1 year ago
46 minutes 40 seconds

The Chinese History Podcast
Cultural Production during the Ming-Qing Transition: A Conversation with Professor Lynn Struve
Emeritus professor Lynn Struve talks about cultural and intellectual production during the Ming-Qing transition.
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1 year ago
56 minutes 10 seconds

The Chinese History Podcast
Professor Pamela Crossley on History and Identity in Qing Imperial Ideology
Professor Pamela Crossley of Dartmouth University talks about the relationship between history and identity and Qing imperial ideology.
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2 years ago
48 minutes 18 seconds

The Chinese History Podcast
The Maritime Kingdom of the Zheng Family: An Interview with Professor Xing Hang
Professor Xing Hang of Brandeis University talks about the Zheng family regime on Taiwan.
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2 years ago
54 minutes 26 seconds

The Chinese History Podcast
Professor Maura Dykstra on Her New Book ”Uncertainty in the Empire of Routine: The Administrative Revolution of the Eighteenth-Century Qing State” (Governing China, Part 2)
Professor Maura Dykstra of Caltech joins us to talk about her new book about an administrative revolution that took place in the Qing Empire.
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3 years ago
37 minutes 38 seconds

The Chinese History Podcast
The Ming Bureaucracy and its Practices: A Conversation with Professor Chelsea Wang (Governing China, Part 1)
Professor Chelsea Wang of Claremont McKenna College joins us today to talk about some of the bureaucratic practices of the Ming dynasty which might seem strange and counterintuitive to modern observers but actually have their own logic in the Ming.
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3 years ago
48 minutes 29 seconds

The Chinese History Podcast
The Ming in the Southwest: Conquest, Rule, and Legacy
UC Berkely PhD student Sean Cronan discusses the Ming’s conquest and rule of Southwest China and their legacy in the region.
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3 years ago
39 minutes 23 seconds

The Chinese History Podcast
Professor Joanna Waley-Cohen on New Qing History
Professor Joanna Waley-Cohen of NYU joins us to talk about a very influential school in the study of Qing history - the New Qing History school.
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3 years ago
38 minutes 28 seconds

The Chinese History Podcast
Wang Yangming and the School of Mind: An Interview with Professor George L. Israel
Professor George L. Israel talks about the life, reception, and impact of the great Ming dynasty Neo-Confucian scholar Wang Yangming.
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3 years ago
55 minutes 58 seconds

The Chinese History Podcast
Diplomacy, War, and Interstate Order in the Late 13th century East Asia: A Reconsideration of the Mongol Invasions of Japan
USC PhD candidate Lina Nie shares some new perspectives on the Mongol invasions of Japan, with a focus on the diplomacy that went on before and after the invasions and what that diplomacy can tell us about the interstate order in East Asia during that time.
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3 years ago
34 minutes 47 seconds

The Chinese History Podcast
Rediscovering and Reconnecting: The Intellectual Exchange of Hui Muslims in the 19th and 20th Centuries
Professor Nile Green of UCLA talks about the exchange between Chinese Muslim scholars and Arab and Indian Muslim scholars in the 19th and 20th centuries and the implications this had for the development of Islam in China and for the foreign understanding of Islam in China.
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3 years ago
56 minutes 41 seconds

The Chinese History Podcast
Sino-Japanese Diplomatic Encounters from the 1st to the 9th Century
In this episode, UCLD Ph.D. student Greg Sattler talks about Sino-Japanese diplomatic exchange from the 1st to the 9th centuries.
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3 years ago
45 minutes 30 seconds

The Chinese History Podcast
New Narratives on the Late Ming Military: An Interview with Professor Kenneth Swope
Professor Kenneth Swope joins us to talk about military developments in the Late Ming, particularly its military successes, which up until now has usually been ignored.
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3 years ago
50 minutes 46 seconds

The Chinese History Podcast
Feeding and Supplying the World’s Largest City: The Environmental Impact of Northern Song Kaifeng
Dr. Yuan Chen, an environmental historian of premodern China, talks to us about how the Song dynasty capital of Kaifeng impacted the environment of China and changed ecological features.
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3 years ago
41 minutes 58 seconds

The Chinese History Podcast
The Mongol-Yuan Conquest of the Southern Song
In this episode, UCLA PhD Candidate Yiming Ha will talk about the forty-four year Mongol-Song war, including the general course of the war, some of the major battles, the weapons, and broader implications.
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3 years ago
34 minutes 27 seconds

The Chinese History Podcast
The Tributary System and Chosŏn-Ming Relations: A Conversation with Professor Sixiang Wang
In this episode, Professor Sixiang Wang of UCLA talks explains the tributary system as a historiographical in the study of Chinese diplomacy in the Early Modern Periodand gives us an introduction to the relationship between Chosŏn Korea and Ming China
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3 years ago
46 minutes 43 seconds

The Chinese History Podcast
King Kwong Wong on Koryŏ Korea Under Mongol-Yuan Domination
King Kwong Wong, an independent scholar specializing in Koryŏ-Mongol relations, gives us an introduction to the history of Koryŏ under it was under Mongol-Yuan domination,
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3 years ago
36 minutes 46 seconds

The Chinese History Podcast
The Chinese History Podcast aims to make Chinese history more accessible to the general public through interviews with scholars and students about various aspects of Chinese history and culture.