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Chinas Conquest of Taiwan in the Seventeenth Century: Victory at Full Moon 1st ed. 2017 [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 242 pages, kõrgus x laius: 235x155 mm, kaal: 541 g, 9 Illustrations, black and white; VI, 242 p. 9 illus., 1 Hardback
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Aug-2017
  • Kirjastus: Springer Verlag, Singapore
  • ISBN-10: 981102247X
  • ISBN-13: 9789811022470
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 242 pages, kõrgus x laius: 235x155 mm, kaal: 541 g, 9 Illustrations, black and white; VI, 242 p. 9 illus., 1 Hardback
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Aug-2017
  • Kirjastus: Springer Verlag, Singapore
  • ISBN-10: 981102247X
  • ISBN-13: 9789811022470
Teised raamatud teemal:
This is the first book to comprehensively cover the historical process leading to Taiwan’s integration with Mainland China in the seventeenth century. As such, it addresses the Taiwan question in the seventeenth century, presenting for the first time the process leading to the island’s integration with the mainland through the story of the Zheng family and Admiral Shi Lang. 
The author has confirmed Zheng Chenggong (Koxinga)’s Ming loyalism and his politicization of the conflicts on the China coast. Thus, the author concludes that Zheng was a “revolutionary traditionalist” who transformed sheer violence into a political movement in an unprecedented way. He politicized the entire region and paved the way for the inevitable conflict with Mainland China. After repeated political talks had failed, the rising Qing China decided to take Taiwan by force. Though seaborne warfare was a formidable task at the time, the man who overcame these difficulties and completed the seemingly impossible mission was none other than Admiral Shi Lang. 
The book provides a new and more justifiable assessment of the Admiral’s contribution to the conquest of Taiwan and pacification of coastal unrest. The book will be of interest to general readers as well as specialists researching security and warfare on the China coast. 
1 Introduction
1(4)
2 Unrest on the China Coast
5(30)
2.1 Background to Maritime Activities
5(3)
2.2 Trade and Security
8(2)
2.3 The Great Pirate War and Aftermath
10(15)
2.4 Here Came the Red-Haired Dutch
25(10)
3 The Rise of Zheng Zhilong
35(22)
3.1 Zheng's Early Life
35(6)
3.2 From Pirate to Warlord
41(16)
4 Zheng Chenggong's Politicization of the China Coast
57(24)
5 From Dutch Taiwan to Zheng Taiwan
81(28)
6 The Antagonism Across the Taiwan Strait
109(18)
7 The Politics of Peace Talks
127(16)
7.1 The Ideological Obstacle to Peace
128(2)
7.2 Holding Peace in Play
130(6)
7.3 The Breakdown of Peace Talk and Its Resumption
136(5)
7.4 No Light at the End of the Peace Tunnel
141(2)
8 Shi Lang the Admiral
143(16)
8.1 A Rising Star from the Ranks
144(2)
8.2 Escape from Zheng's Wrath and Defection to the Qing
146(6)
8.3 The Road to Become the Naval Chief
152(7)
9 The Crucial Naval Battle Near Penghu
159(18)
9.1 Controversy Over Strategy
160(4)
9.2 The Naval Battles off the Penghu Islands
164(9)
9.3 Shi's Policy of Rehabilitation
173(1)
9.4 The Beginning of the End
174(3)
10 Taiwan's Integration with China
177(22)
10.1 The Decision to Surrender
178(2)
10.2 Repay Injury with Kindness
180(3)
10.3 Celebration of Victory with Jubilation
183(4)
10.4 The Decision of Annexation
187(3)
10.5 The Emperor and the Admiral
190(2)
10.6 The Legacies of the Taiwan Conquest
192(7)
11 Conclusion
199(4)
Maps 203(8)
References 211(24)
Index 235
As a disciple of the late Academician of Academia Sinica (1948) Kung-chuan Hsiao, the author is an indefatigable researcher and literary executor. With twenty singly authored scholarly books (many with multiple editions), eight edited or translated volumes, over one hundred scholarly articles, by his receipt in 2001 Choices distinguished list of Outstanding Academic Titles, the author ranks as one of admirable research leaders in the rather crowded field of late Imperial and modern Chinese history. The author is recognized for his studies in several different areas. First, he works on several pivotal figures in late Qing and early Republican period, in which reform, revolution, and nationalism flourished in China.Guo Songtao, Yan Fu, Kang Youwei, Liang Qichao, Zhang Binglin, and Hu Shi. In particular, the authors studies in the two extremely significant thinkers Kang and Zhang throw new perspectives on the late Qing and early Republican periods of Chinese thought. The result is a provocative and stimulating analysis of the two thinkers. The authors command of the sources, his understanding of the intellectual trends, and his careful scholarship have marked him as one of the worlds leading experts on this important topic. Also his published work in English and Chinese has served to bring the two worlds of scholarship closer together. As late Professor Frederic Wakeman, past president of the American Historical Association, writes, Professor Wong has acquired a mastery of modern Chinese intellectual history that is quite breathtaking.Second, the authors study of the Yuanming Yuan imperial garden is the most comprehensive one to date. He used a large number of sources, both archival and secondary, and excellent maps, sketches, plans, and photographs, and he overcomes these potential difficulties admirably. As Professor Laura Hosteler said in her review in the distinguished American Historical Review (June 2002), Wong brings the gardens and their inhabitants to life. This is no small achievement for a historian. In a similar vein, the authors biography of Guo Songtao, by using Guos massive diary and other sources, presents the historical figures daily life, not only an account of the mans inner life but also a description of what the routes he traveled and how he traveled. The biography is richer for its lively descriptions of the man and his time that serves well to understand Chinas bumpy road to join the rest of the world. Thirdly, the authors work on historiography is gaining considerable currency among historians and literary scholars across the Taiwan Strait. His book on the historian Chen Yinke is the first of its sort. Indeed, it takes arduous effort to do justice to the complicated personality and his enormous learning. In addition to overcome the difficulties for a pioneering work so admirably, the author also judiciously defends some of Chens important arguments with sufficient evidence and reasoning. His Shizhuan tongshuo (On Historiography) and Shixue jiuzhang (Nine Approaches to Historiography) are noted as much by their eloquent reinterpretation of some major Chinese and Western historians and their works as by their refined literary and modern style of Chinese writing. The author is a rare historian with literary talent. He writes with clarity, and his scholarly works are often delightful to read. His early excellent training in Chinese classics provided him with immediate access to the more difficult sources for research.The last but not the least, the author has important findings in early Taiwanese history as well. In his lengthy article published in 1983, he invalidates the revisionist view which questions Koxinga (Zheng Chenggong)s Ming-loyalism. He powerfully concludes that Zheng was a revolutionary traditionalist who transformed sheer violence into a political movement in an unprecedented way. He politicized the entire region. Recently, the author extends his research into environmental history. The author has received many distinguished honors, including Exchange Scholar, Committee on Scholarly Communication with PRC, National Academy of Sciences, U.S.A. (1981-82); Scholar of the Year Award, Virginia Social Sciences Association (1993);Virginia Tech Alumni Award of Recognition for Research Excellence (1994); Winner, List of 2% Outstanding Academic Titles, Choice, the publication of Association of American Research Libraries (2001);Professor Emeritus, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (2003-); Honorary Chair Professor, Xiamen University, P.R.C.