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Ming dynasty information


Great Ming
  • 大明 (Chinese)
  • Dà Míng
1368–1644
Imperial seal of Ming dynasty
Imperial seal
Ming China in 1415 during the reign of the Yongle Emperor
Ming China in 1415 during the reign of the Yongle Emperor
Ming China around 1580
Ming China around 1580
Capital
  • Nanjing (1368–1644)
  • Beijing (1403–1644)
Common languages
  • Mandarin (official)
  • other Chinese languages
  • Turki
  • Old Uyghur
  • Tibetan
  • Mongolian
  • Jurchen
  • and others
Religion
  • Heaven worship
  • Taoism
  • Confucianism
  • Buddhism
  • Chinese folk religion
  • Islam
  • Roman Catholicism
GovernmentAbsolute monarchy
Emperor 
• 1368–1398 (first)
Hongwu Emperor
• 1402–1424
Yongle Emperor
• 1572–1620 (longest)
Wanli Emperor
• 1627–1644 (last)
Chongzhen Emperor
Historical eraEarly modern
• Established in Nanjing[a]
23 January 1368
• Beijing designated as capital
28 October 1420
• Fall of Beijing
25 April 1644
• End of the Southern Ming[b]
1662
Area
1450[1][2]6,500,000 km2 (2,500,000 sq mi)
Population
• 1393[3]
65,000,000
• 1500[4]
125,000,000
• 1600[5]
160,000,000
GDP (nominal)estimate
• Per capita
Decrease 19.8 taels[6]
Currency
  • Paper money (1368–1450)
  • Bimetallic:
    • Copper cashes (in strings of coin and paper)
    • Silver taels (in sycees and by weight)
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Ming dynasty Yuan dynasty
Later Jin Ming dynasty
Shun dynasty Ming dynasty
Xi dynasty Ming dynasty
Southern Ming Ming dynasty
Macau Ming dynasty
Ming dynasty
"Ming dynasty" in Chinese characters
Chinese明朝
Dynastic name
Chinese大明

The Ming dynasty (/mɪŋ/ MING),[7] officially the Great Ming, was an imperial dynasty of China, ruling from 1368 to 1644 following the collapse of the Mongol-led Yuan dynasty. The Ming dynasty was the last imperial dynasty of China ruled by the Han people, the majority ethnic group in China. Although the primary capital of Beijing fell in 1644 to a rebellion led by Li Zicheng (who established the short-lived Shun dynasty), numerous rump regimes ruled by remnants of the Ming imperial family—collectively called the Southern Ming—survived until 1662.[c]

The Ming dynasty's founder, the Hongwu Emperor (r.1368–1398), attempted to create a society of self-sufficient rural communities ordered in a rigid, immobile system that would guarantee and support a permanent class of soldiers for his dynasty:[8] the empire's standing army exceeded one million troops and the navy's dockyards in Nanjing were the largest in the world.[9] He also took great care breaking the power of the court eunuchs[10] and unrelated magnates, enfeoffing his many sons throughout China and attempting to guide these princes through the Huang-Ming Zuxun, a set of published dynastic instructions. This failed when his teenage successor, the Jianwen Emperor, attempted to curtail his uncles' power, prompting the Jingnan campaign, an uprising that placed the Prince of Yan upon the throne as the Yongle Emperor in 1402. The Yongle Emperor established Yan as a secondary capital and renamed it Beijing, constructed the Forbidden City, and restored the Grand Canal and the primacy of the imperial examinations in official appointments. He rewarded his eunuch supporters and employed them as a counterweight against the Confucian scholar-bureaucrats. One eunuch, Zheng He, led seven enormous voyages of exploration into the Indian Ocean as far as Arabia and the eastern coasts of Africa. Hongwu and Yongle emperors had also expanded the empire's rule into Inner Asia.

The rise of new emperors and new factions diminished such extravagances; the capture of the Emperor Yingzong of Ming during the 1449 Tumu Crisis ended them completely. The imperial navy was allowed to fall into disrepair while forced labor constructed the Liaodong palisade and connected and fortified the Great Wall into its modern form. Wide-ranging censuses of the entire empire were conducted decennially, but the desire to avoid labor and taxes and the difficulty of storing and reviewing the enormous archives at Nanjing hampered accurate figures.[8] Estimates for the late-Ming population vary from 160 to 200 million,[d] but necessary revenues were squeezed out of smaller and smaller numbers of farmers as more disappeared from the official records or "donated" their lands to tax-exempt eunuchs or temples.[8] Haijin laws intended to protect the coasts from Japanese pirates instead turned many into smugglers and pirates themselves.

By the 16th century, the expansion of European trade—though restricted to islands near Guangzhou such as Macau—spread the Columbian exchange of crops, plants, and animals into China, introducing chili peppers to Sichuan cuisine and highly productive maize and potatoes, which diminished famines and spurred population growth. The growth of Portuguese, Spanish, and Dutch trade created new demand for Chinese products and produced a massive influx of South American silver. This abundance of specie remonetized the Ming economy, whose paper money had suffered repeated hyperinflation and was no longer trusted. While traditional Confucians opposed such a prominent role for commerce and the newly rich it created, the heterodoxy introduced by Wang Yangming permitted a more accommodating attitude. Zhang Juzheng's initially successful reforms proved devastating when a slowdown in agriculture was produced by the Little Ice Age. The value of silver rapidly increased because of a disruption in the supply of imported silver from Spanish and Portuguese sources, making it impossible for Chinese farmers to pay their taxes. Combined with crop failure, floods, and an epidemic, the dynasty collapsed in 1644 as Li Zicheng's rebel forces entered Beijing.[11] Li then established the Shun dynasty, but it was defeated shortly afterwards by the Manchu-led Eight Banner armies of the Qing dynasty, with the help of the defecting Ming general Wu Sangui.


Cite error: There are <ref group=lower-alpha> tags or {{efn}} templates on this page, but the references will not show without a {{reflist|group=lower-alpha}} template or {{notelist}} template (see the help page).

  1. ^ Turchin, Adams & Hall (2006), p. 222
  2. ^ Taagepera (1997), p. 500
  3. ^ Ho (1959), pp. 8–9, 22, 259.
  4. ^ Frank (1998), p. 109.
  5. ^ Maddison (2006), p. 238.
  6. ^ Broadberry (2014).
  7. ^ Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary.
  8. ^ a b c Zhang (2008), pp. 148–175
  9. ^ Ebrey, Walthall & Palais (2006), p. 271.
  10. ^ Crawford (1961), p. 115–148
  11. ^ Brook, Timothy (2023). The price of collapse: the Little Ice Age and the fall of Ming China. Princeton Oxford: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-25040-3.

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