Talk:Ming dynasty/Archive 1
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Nothing in decline about the Yellow River flood in 1642
More info is needed about this flood which killed about 300,000 people. Anyone interested in doing some research?
Use of Pinyin
172: try to use Pinyin romanization. But if you determined to use other methods, provide redirect links to their respective Pinyin titled pages.Wikipedia talk:Naming conventions (chinese) would be helpful. -- User:kt2
I will from now on. I'm sorry.
- It's okay and you don't need to be sorry. BTW you don't have to use Pinyin in your sections but just redirect the links to Pinyin titled pages. Wade-Giles is still being used among Chinese history researchers.
- I disagree. For consistency it is best to stick to a single system of transliteration, and pinyin is now the most widely known and used system. Marco polo 19:59, 20 April 2007 (UTC)
Error in date
I think there is a mistake in the date but I don't know the correct answer : "Hung-wu increasingly concentrated power in his own hands and in 1830 abolished the Imperial Secretariat"
Koxinga 12:37 12 Jun 2003 (UTC)
"and in any case restrictions on emigration and ship building were largely lifted by the mid-17th century."
Surely this is a mistake?, the Ming dynasty had collapsed by that time, 1644, they were in no position to ban or allow anything.
Meaningless phrase.
The phrase `capsized by a tablet' is meaningless, but I'm not sure what was intended.
Section should be removed.
Fall of Ming dynasty
It is a poorly written article. It is layered in a lot of objectivity. It is does not contain factual data for an encyclopedia.
adam.lang 12:37 12 Jul 2005 (UTC)
Split
This article should be split. Maurreen (talk) 07:07, 4 August 2005 (UTC)
- How do you mean? 22:30, 24 August 2005 (UTC)
- The majority of the Zhu Yuanzhang stuff has been deleted it was almost word for word identical to the Zhu Yuanzhang article.The "Fall of the Ming dynasty"material has been split off into its own article.Cetot 01:25, 6 September 2005 (UTC)
Muslim Ming Dynasty
Is there a proper source for the claims that the Ming Dynasty could have been Muslim?
- What happed to the info on that? It was interesting reading. You should at least put the deleted text in the talk page. --Dangerous-Boy 05:56, 20 January 2006 (UTC)
- What a silly assertion that the emperors were Muslim (although they certainly hired a large entourage of Muslims and dealt constantly with Muslim merchants); anyone who knows about the history of the emperor's daily lives and writing can tell you they were anything but Muslim, Christian, Jew, or any other Abrahamic-based religious person. Show me this so-called evidence, please.--Pericles of AthensTalk 03:29, 2 January 2008 (UTC)
Wikification
I don't know if this article will ever get wikified unless someone knowledgeable about the subject does it. -- Kjkolb 09:19, September 4, 2005 (UTC)
- Your prayers have been answered; glad to be of service. Lol.--Pericles of AthensTalk 03:48, 2 January 2008 (UTC)
- What is all this discussion stuff? Do we really need this stuff on the article? Colipon+(T) 23:57, 4 September 2005 (UTC)
- As far as I can tell its basically virtual history a list of turning points at which the Ming dynasty could have saved itself, with the "discussion" bit being what could have been done differently.Interesting in its own way but confusing if you can't tell which bits are fact and which bits speculative.Cetot 01:25, 6 September 2005 (UTC)
Yu Ninjie's map?
What happened to it? --Dangerous-Boy 06:01, 20 January 2006 (UTC)
Why is this article marked for copyediting?
I've glanced over about half of the article, and I can't see any terribly badly worded sections or prevalent mispellings. I've removed the copyedit tag, but of course feel free to add it again if anyone wishes.
- Look at the first paragraph of the section "Exploration to isolation." I have no idea what the paragraph is talking about. With the numerous spelling and grammatical errors, it seems to me that someone just insert it there randomly. 70.133.9.25 03:09, 12 June 2007 (UTC)
Cao or chao?
I thought the correct pinyin of 朝 was chao?Erik-the-red
"Exploration to Isolation" - Qs:
Help! This section is really confusing - I have the impression that it's attempting to summarize a mish-mash of different theories about material exchange during the Ming period [AND how that may or may not relate to the overall decline of the dynasty]. The problem is, the summaries are so short that they not only contradict each other, they are sometimes internally contradictory. So, for example:
- what is this connection between the commercial and religious lobbies - how and why do their interests overlap?
- What exactly are the 'anti-clerical efforts of the Confucian scholar gentry' and how is the state funding them?
- If Zheng He is a quintessential outsider to the establishment, and his trips were opposed by the literati, but supported by the merchants, then how can they be described as more political than economic?
- And how can they be both intended "to enroll further states as tributaries and mark the dominance of the Chinese Empire" while being "unlike European voyages of exploration later in the 15th century... not intended to extend Chinese sovereignty overseas" ?
This seems like a fairly complicated, nuanced argument that might deserve some more explanation - does anyone know these sources? Then we've got this thing about Mongols (?) and pirates (?) and silver (blaming the entire fall of the dynasty on silver strikes me as possibly a slight overkill), and at the very last the traditional argument about stagnation. If all these theories are going to get thrown together, it would be so helpful for the reader if there was some synthesis to indicate how they relate to each other. If anyone can shed some light, that would be great. Otherwise, I'll try to figure it out since I'll be doing a fair amount of reading on the Ming d. over then next few months. Isocephaly 04:18, 7 October 2007 (UTC)
- Hold your horses there cowboy, don't underestimate the influence of economic devastation caused by the sudden drop in available silver, the common medium of exchange that was keeping the Ming economy scooting by. I've deleted much of the garbage you're talking about though; it looks like a completely new article after I've touched it.--Pericles of AthensTalk 03:26, 2 January 2008 (UTC)
Expansion
I just expanded the intro significantly; the introductory information I have just added will soon be elaborated on in the body of the article. Hold on to your butts people and be patient, this article is going to need a lot of work.
If people have sources and wish to contribute, some key things must be focused upon:
- China's entry into a new global commercial connection with the Old and New worlds
- China's grand construction, public works, and naval projects
- China's internal economy and economic policies/reforms
- The difference in Ming society and culture from the beginning of the dynasty to the end
- The emergence of consumer culture and blending of merchant and gentry class
- Silver, silver, and more silver! ...And then less of it.
- Literature and the arts
- Technology and engineering
I hope these points will spark some ideas in your heads.--Pericles of AthensTalk 08:36, 24 November 2007 (UTC)
- I will be doing some mass deletions of unsourced statements now, and if anyone has a problem with any specific deletion, please bring this to attention. Otherwise, I am going to give this entire article a good cleansing and a rewrite all over.--Pericles of AthensTalk 20:03, 24 November 2007 (UTC)
- I love how this article rants on and on and on about Hongwu—as if he had anything to do with the Ming Dynasty after Yongle set it on a completely different course—and then all of the sudden it switches gears to talking entirely about the decline of the dynasty in the 17th century. What the hell??? This leaves the reader with a gaping sense of confusion with all that happened in between the reign of Hongwu in the 14th century and the decline in the 17th century.--Pericles of AthensTalk 20:53, 24 November 2007 (UTC)
- I will be doing some mass deletions of unsourced statements now, and if anyone has a problem with any specific deletion, please bring this to attention. Otherwise, I am going to give this entire article a good cleansing and a rewrite all over.--Pericles of AthensTalk 20:03, 24 November 2007 (UTC)
Stick a fork in it, it's done!
Seriously, this turkey is just about overcooked at the size of 101 KB. It has swelled past what some might consider acceptable limits. Please! No one add anything to this article! Unless it is seriously necessary; even then, bring it up on the talk page here before adding it, so that a compromise can be made about size and content. Thanks.--Pericles of AthensTalk 05:04, 27 December 2007 (UTC)
- Don't mean to pry(and maybe I'm wrong), but are you sure YuanChong Huan got European firearms from his cook? Good job with the article btw.
>GnipTalk 12:02, 29 December 2007 (UTC)
- Well, you shouldn't be asking me whether I'm sure Yuan got firearms from his cook who had European contacts; you should be contacting Jonathan Spence, who said so on page 24 of the book I cited. Lol. I'm just the messenger dude, representing views from scholarly sources. No original research allowed in my camp. Yaarr.--Pericles of AthensTalk 08:54, 29 December 2007 (UTC)
- Well, I guess the cook had a lot more influence than what I assumed an average cook had. I always assumed it was Yuan himself who got the European cannons. If you feel like it I would ask you to tell me a little more about this guy Gnip 4:02, 29 December 2007
- I wish I could, Spence just mentions it in passing while discussing a much broader topic than cooks. Lol. To be honest, I was a little curious about this guy myself, but Spence does not care to go into detail about everything (otherwise his already hefty book would be twice as long).--Pericles of AthensTalk 20:27, 30 December 2007 (UTC)
- Well, I guess the cook had a lot more influence than what I assumed an average cook had. I always assumed it was Yuan himself who got the European cannons. If you feel like it I would ask you to tell me a little more about this guy Gnip 4:02, 29 December 2007
Just a point of detail, but the complete sentence from Spence (The Search for Modern China, p. 24) is: "As a staff member of the ministry of war, with a good knowledge of European firearms apparently garnered from his cook, who knew some Westerners, Yuan was able to hold the Liao River against Nurhaci" (my emphasis). Spence must have seen a document or a study that mentioned the cook connection, but he couldn't confirm it, and this is probably why he used the word "apparently." And Spence only says that Yuan acquired knowledge of firearms from his cook, not the weapons themselves. I'm not sure what that would mean, but Spence's original sounds less certain than the sentence in the Wiki. Maybe we could add a judicious "perhaps" somewhere?--Madalibi (talk) 09:06, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
- Hmm, good catch. I should have gone back and carefully read that particular sentence in Spence's book. A "perhaps" would definitely suffice.--Pericles of AthensTalk 09:09, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
Done, plus a few minor modifications. I'm really glad the cook is discussed under such an aptly named sub-section! --Madalibi (talk) 09:17, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
- Haha! Exactly! Shoot that turkey with a European flintlock rifle, retreive the bullet, stick it in the oven, cook it, then stick a fork in it! Lol. Happy premature Thanksgiving, since it's five days away.--Pericles of AthensTalk 15:10, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
Happy Thanksgiving too, thanks! I wonder if Yuan Chonghuan also received knowledge of turkey from his cook. --Madalibi (talk) 03:31, 22 November 2008 (UTC)
- Hahaha! You know what? The trade network from the Americas to China wouldn't make this prospect at all impossible. That would be interesting to know if any native Americans were aboard the European ships which traversed regularly from the Americas to East Asia.--Pericles of AthensTalk 08:00, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
- I've managed to trace Spence's claim about the cook! It's in the biography of Yuan Chonghuan in Eminent Chinese of the Ch'ing Period (known in the field as "ECCP"), edited by Arthur Hummel and published in 1943. The biography itself was written by George A. Kennedy; the citation is from p. 954: "They [the defenders of the city of Ningyuan, including Yuan Chonghuan] were successful in beating off the enemy, largely as a result of the havoc wrought by the newly-mounted "foreign guns" (see under Sun Yuan-hua) which were fired off under the direction of Yuan's Fukienese cook." Kennedy doesn't say where he got this bit of information, but it was probably from one of the primary sources listed at the end of the article. The guns themselves were obtained directly from the Portuguese in Macao, probably through Jesuit intermediaries. The use of cannon to defend the frontier was first advocated by Sun Yuanhua 孫元化, who had "studied some Western mathematics and the use of firearms under Hsu Kuang-ch'i," an important Christian convert and student of the Jesuits (citation from bio of Sun Yuanhua by Fang Chao-ying in ECCP, p. 686). Hope this clarifies a few matters. --Madalibi (talk) 06:35, 22 November 2008 (UTC)
- Excellent find, Madalibi! Your research effort here was fantastic; I never thought we'd be able to hunt down the origin of Spence's claim. It just goes to show: never underestimate the Master, Madalibi! Lol.--Pericles of AthensTalk 08:00, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
- This is a good one: Arilang talk 07:23, 22 November 2008 (UTC)
Great picture, Arilang! I hope this is the real thing. What worries me a little bit is that the caption says it was manufactured in England... Does anybody know why? --Madalibi (talk) 08:42, 22 November 2008 (UTC)
- Another odd thing for a cannon that was supposedly used in the late Ming: what the hell is it doing in Latvia?! --Madalibi (talk) 08:44, 22 November 2008 (UTC)
Cannon in Latvia?
Are you sure? How can you tell? Arilang talk 08:58, 22 November 2008 (UTC)
Oh, I can see now. It was really photoed in Latvia, though not necessary means that it is a fake. I think I got the image from zh:wikipedia, will try to give you the zh:wiki link. Arilang talk 09:07, 22 November 2008 (UTC)
This is where I got the image from zh:加農炮
紅衣大炮,原名紅夷大炮,最遠射程可達二十里以上,是天啟年間從葡萄牙人購得,為英國製造的早期zh:加農炮。 Arilang talk 10:01, 22 November 2008 (UTC)
- The original on Wikimedia Commons says that the picture was taken in Riga, Latvia; it makes no mention of China whatsoever. The Chinese page on "Jianong pao" 加農炮 (the page is actually on Western cannon, not on Chinese cannon) describes the picture as follows: "What was originally called 'Cannon' in English referred to this kind of firearm/cannon" (英文當中的Cannon最初指的是這種類型的火炮). Neither the page nor the caption gives a date or mentions that this kind of cannon was used in China. Now the editors of the page on Hongyi da pao 紅衣大炮 (which means "Red-clothed cannon" but should read 紅夷大炮: "red[-haired] barbarian cannon") has a sentence saying that "hongyi dapao" were first purchased from the Portuguese in the Tianqi period (1621-1627). This is very true, but the page suddenly says that these Portuguese firearms were early "jianong" (i.e., Western cannon) that were made in England (為英國製造的早期加農炮). The term "jianong" has a wiki link that leads to the page with a picture of the Latvian cannon. To summarize: the claim that Portuguese cannon was made in England is both dubious (since the Portuguese certainly knew how to cast their own cannon) and unreferenced, and the claim that the Riga cannon was used in China doesn't appear on the page that has the picture (and now that I think about it, such a claim doesn't even appear on the page on "hongyi dapao" either!). Conclusion: I see no reason to believe that the cannon depicted on the picture was ever used in China. It actually looks like a later cannon, probably 19th century. --Madalibi (talk) 13:58, 22 November 2008 (UTC)
- A shame that the claim is not authentic; hopefully we will get our hands on a photograph of the real deal. In fact, I have uploaded an image of a breech-loaded Ming cannon influenced by the European breech design. You can view it at the article Huolongjing. Just scroll down to the bottom of the page.--Pericles of AthensTalk 08:01, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
What about this one?
Arilang talk 10:30, 22 November 2008 (UTC)
Very briefly: the "invincible general cannon" could be one of the several hundreds of cannon Ferdinand Verbiest cast in the early Kangxi reign. From the 17th-century drawings I've seen, the weapons the Ming bought from the Portuguese probably looked about the same. The cannon on the right is more recent. --Madalibi (talk) 01:42, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
@Madalabi, I think the Chinese correct name of 'Invincible general cannon' is 「天佑助威大將軍」zh:紅衣大炮 後金在瀋陽利用俘虜過來的工匠劉漢,成功仿製了西洋大炮,定名為「天佑助威大將軍」,他們還創造了「失蠟法」,化鑄鐵為鑄鋼 Arilang talk 06:46, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
"Simào de Andrade"
Not so spelt in Portuguese: the linked article on Fernão Pires de Andrade has got it wrong. I've corrected the spelling. --NigelG (or Ndsg) | Talk 19:15, 16 January 2008 (UTC)
- The original version is how Mote's book Cambridge History of China spells it, but I'll give you the benefit of the doubt, since you seem pretty certain (I've never attempted to learn Portuguese, although I know a bit of Spanish).--Pericles of AthensTalk 04:10, 17 January 2008 (UTC)
- It's well known that errors like this tend to propagate themselves. If you do a Google search on "Simao de Andrade" (with or without the accent), & restrict it to Portuguese pages (Advanced search), you'll see that my spelling is correct. Pedantry: dontcha just love it?! --NigelG (or Ndsg) | Talk 10:12, 17 January 2008 (UTC)
- Lol, indeed.--Pericles of AthensTalk 10:17, 17 January 2008 (UTC)
- It's well known that errors like this tend to propagate themselves. If you do a Google search on "Simao de Andrade" (with or without the accent), & restrict it to Portuguese pages (Advanced search), you'll see that my spelling is correct. Pedantry: dontcha just love it?! --NigelG (or Ndsg) | Talk 10:12, 17 January 2008 (UTC)
- The original version is how Mote's book Cambridge History of China spells it, but I'll give you the benefit of the doubt, since you seem pretty certain (I've never attempted to learn Portuguese, although I know a bit of Spanish).--Pericles of AthensTalk 04:10, 17 January 2008 (UTC)
I just created this article, which has lots of valuable info for the mid Ming Dynasty and the Ming Mongols section of this article.--Pericles of AthensTalk 10:17, 17 January 2008 (UTC)
Congrats on FA promotion
Congratulations to all concerned! Thoroughly deserved. --NigelG (or Ndsg) | Talk 10:45, 22 January 2008 (UTC)
- Woo-hoo! I'm so happy! This is awesome! Thanks everybody.--Pericles of AthensTalk 13:07, 22 January 2008 (UTC)
Mingshi- the English online version?
Mingshi is the official history book of the Ming dynasty. I want to read this historiography which is translated into Enlish in the Internet. I had tried to find something like this but I found nothing. Can anyone here give me the link of the English online version of Mingshi? Thanks so much,--Redflowers (talk) 09:00, 15 February 2008 (UTC)
- So far I've only been able to find snippets and tiny sections of the overall text translated from Zhongwen into English. I find it hard to believe no one has provided an available English online version, but this is unfortunately the case from what I've seen in Google searches.--Pericles of AthensTalk 01:42, 16 February 2008 (UTC)
Puritan slant?
I was surprised to see (unless I missed it) nothing on the sexual habits of the Ming. How did they reproduce? I hear there is some good material, about love of women as well as love of youths, in Timothy Brook's book The Confusions of Pleasure: Commerce and Culture in Ming China. If no one here has it I will look for it. Haiduc (talk) 11:47, 18 February 2008 (UTC)
- I left a message on your talk page.--Pericles of AthensTalk 22:58, 18 February 2008 (UTC)
- I have taken the paragraph, which strikes me as being overlong to begin with, and have moved things around to allow the excursion into sexuality. I'll be happy to help edit if you like.
There was a rich variety of occupations and employments one could choose or inherit from a father's line of work. This would include—but certainly was not limited to—coffinmakers, ironworkers and blacksmiths, tailors, cooks and noodle-makers, retail merchants, tavern, teahouse, or winehouse managers, shoemakers, seal cutters, pawnshop owners, and merchant bankers engaging in a proto-banking system involving notes of exchange.[187][89]
Brothels also did a thriving business, catering to the tastes of the refined upper classes. Refined gentlemen enjoyed the favors of girls as well as boys, who fetched a much higher price....
Urban shops and retailers sold a variety of goods such as special paper money to burn at ancestral sacrifices . . .
--Haiduc (talk) 19:27, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
- Sounds like a good start. Can we work on this later? I'm going to be very busy tonight. Thanks.--Pericles of AthensTalk 01:38, 20 February 2008 (UTC)
- I've added two sentences to the section on this subject, although not worded exactly as you've suggested here. Cheers!--Pericles of AthensTalk 22:24, 21 February 2008 (UTC)
- Sounds like a good start. Can we work on this later? I'm going to be very busy tonight. Thanks.--Pericles of AthensTalk 01:38, 20 February 2008 (UTC)
--LaGrandefr (talk) 13:55, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
Mediation: Map Dispute
Someone is crazy?
This image is well used in the article. If someone want to say it's faked, please cite the sources. --LaGrandefr (talk) 10:13, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
Yes, someone is crazy
Aside from the gigantic, erroneous extra territory in Manchuria that this map claims for the Ming, Tibet was also never part of the Ming Empire; they were merely a tributary state of the Ming. From Alex McKay's book The History of Tibet (2003, Routledge, ISBN 0415308429) on page 65:
In 1368 the Mongol Yuan Dynasty was replaced by the Ming, who were in no position to interfere in Tibet although they did perpetuate the illusion of overlordship by receiving the so-called "tribute emissaries" and granting titles to several of the guard lamas.
Tibet was not dominated by China again until the 18th century during the high Qing Dynasty. Showing a map of the Ming that includes its vassal states is misleading to the general reader unaware of what is under direct administration and what is a vassal state. In fact, this map makes no attempt to distinguish what is vassal and what is not. It simply places all under a gigantic yellow blob. How is this helpful or encyclopedic, I ask?--Pericles of AthensTalk 11:50, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
- I know Tibet will be a big issue in this image. Here, I can give many sources, like [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] [ www dot travelchinaguide dot com /cityguides/tibet dot htm ], it says that After the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) was established, Tibetan high lamas were summoned to the imperial court to receive titles and appointments. [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] [ zt dot tibet dot cn /english/zt/041225_xzsh/1-3 dot htm ], it says that The Ming dynasty carried on the institutions set up by the Yuan in Tibet and adjusted administrative apparatus for the Tibetan areas.The Central government of the Ming dynasty held judicial power. So whether Tibet a an independent country in this periode, I don't see the debate. --LaGrandefr (talk) 12:31, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
- What a ridiculous assertion! It was Jangchub Gyaltsän who retained the Mongol institutions in Tibet after the Yuan Dynasty had lost control. In no way, shape, or form did the Ming interfere or tell the Tibetans how to run their administration. The Ming simply gathered tribute.--Pericles of AthensTalk 13:35, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
- Please check the history of the map at Commons, whence you will discover that in a past incarnation it was probably called "Image:Mongol Empire after Genghis.jpg" and renamed when it was transfered to Commons from the German wiki. I think someone wrongly assumed that the Ming inherited in its entirity the territory of the Mongol Khanate of China. In addition although the map was uploaded in January 2006, the map didn't acquire its "The Ming Empire without its vassal states under the Yongle Emperor" caption until 28 March 2008, and wasn't even categorised as belonging to the Ming Dynasty category until December 2007.KTo288 (talk) 18:08, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
- To his credit, User:LaGrandefr has provided the link showing the SinoPress Map that his latest custom-made map is based off of. He is no longer pushing for this map displayed above, but another displayed below. Scroll down some and you will see it.--Pericles of AthensTalk 17:50, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
- I'm aware that the discussion has mostly moved past this map. I did, however, pop over to the German Wikipedia, where the original uploader is most active, and ask him to check both maps description pages on commons; as it was clear to me they should not have identical descriptions. He has corrected the one that was misdescribed (by an IP editor, reviewing the history). The map showing a larger territory was the one misdescribed. He also made this comment. GRBerry 12:55, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
- To his credit, User:LaGrandefr has provided the link showing the SinoPress Map that his latest custom-made map is based off of. He is no longer pushing for this map displayed above, but another displayed below. Scroll down some and you will see it.--Pericles of AthensTalk 17:50, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
- Please check the history of the map at Commons, whence you will discover that in a past incarnation it was probably called "Image:Mongol Empire after Genghis.jpg" and renamed when it was transfered to Commons from the German wiki. I think someone wrongly assumed that the Ming inherited in its entirity the territory of the Mongol Khanate of China. In addition although the map was uploaded in January 2006, the map didn't acquire its "The Ming Empire without its vassal states under the Yongle Emperor" caption until 28 March 2008, and wasn't even categorised as belonging to the Ming Dynasty category until December 2007.KTo288 (talk) 18:08, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
- What a ridiculous assertion! It was Jangchub Gyaltsän who retained the Mongol institutions in Tibet after the Yuan Dynasty had lost control. In no way, shape, or form did the Ming interfere or tell the Tibetans how to run their administration. The Ming simply gathered tribute.--Pericles of AthensTalk 13:35, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
You'll need better sources than "TravelChinaGuide dot com"
Dude, you are placing "TravelChinaGuide" and primary source documents written in the Ming Dynasty from "China Tibet Information Center" that have not been commented on by a secondary scholarly source...over McKay's book I just cited above? Tibet was merely a tributary state, any claim of authority the Ming court had over Tibet was nominal and did not reflect any administrative reality. Your obstinate statement "I don't see the debate" clearly shows that you do not understand what a scholarly source is. A commercial entity like "TravelChinaGuide" is not a peer-reviewed university research team; by using it, you are making your argument incredibly weak and unsubstantiated. And you have also failed to address my point that this map does not adequately distinguish the difference between what was directly administered and what was a vassel entity.--Pericles of AthensTalk 12:40, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
- And please do not change the map image again from its original map; you are jeopardizing a featured article that I brought to fruition and you are not building consensus with other editors on which map is more accurate. In fact, another editor here is of my opinion as well.--Pericles of AthensTalk 12:48, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
- Guy, in my opnion, we can just give the sources, but not choose the sources according to personal willings. You just search History of Tibet + Dynasty Ming by google or anything else, you can find a great number of sources, not just "TravelChinaGuide". For the relation between China and Tibet, 1st, the system of tributary for Imperial China is quite hard to desribe. The concept country is invented in the modern world, which cannot be easily used for those ancient cases. 2nd, even in modern times, a leader of a country can/will be summoned or titled by another country? The judicial power can be controled by another? etc. I'm sorry that I cannot find an example.
- Moreover, Image:Ming-China1.jpg and Image:Ming-Empire2.jpg are made by the same author de:Louis le Grand, from the same source History Atlas of China, I cannot understand why one can be used, and the other cannot. And there is also a map in the artile which shows the samallest territory of Ming, so Image:Ming-China1.jpg shows its largest territory, this should be a featured article--LaGrandefr (talk) 13:08, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
Guy, in my opnion, we can just give the sources, but not choose the sources according to personal willings.
What? What does this even mean?--Pericles of AthensTalk 13:25, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
You just search History of Tibet + Dynasty Ming by google or anything else, you can find a great number of sources, not just "TravelChinaGuide".
How does this refute what I've stated about scholarly sources?Pericles of AthensTalk 13:25, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
For the relation between China and Tibet, 1st, the system of tributary for Imperial China is quite hard to desribe. The concept country is invented in the modern world, which cannot be easily used for those ancient cases. 2nd, even in modern times, a leader of a country can/will be summoned or titled by another country? The judicial power can be controled by another? etc. I'm sorry that I cannot find an example.
So, if I was to follow your argument that Tibet was not a "country" but simply an administered part of the Ming Empire due to its obligation of appearing at the Ming court with tribute, then by extension, Joseon Korea and the Malacca Sultanate were also part of the Ming Empire, because, afterall, they paid tribute to the Ming court too. I'm sorry, your arugment does not hold water; even more important, you're not backing this up with any sources to refute McKay's book. Tisk, tisk.--Pericles of AthensTalk 13:25, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
Moreover, Image:Ming-China1.jpg and Image:Ming-Empire2.jpg are made by the same author de:Louis le Grand, from the same source History Atlas of China, I cannot understand why one can be used, and the other cannot.
Because Ming-China1 jpg does not distinguish between what is a vassal state and what was under direct administration of the Ming Empire, while Ming-Empire2 jpg does not claim any territory that is undue to it. I don't care if the Fairy Godmother made one, and Jesus Christ and Elvis worked together to author the other map. One is patently false and one is closer to reality.--Pericles of AthensTalk 13:25, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
And there is also a map in the artile which shows the samallest territory of Ming, so Image:Ming-China1 jpg shows its largest territory, this should be a featured article
Now your logic escapes me. How does this justify the use of a map that does not distinguish Tibet as a tributary, but rather lumps it under the Ming Empire in the same way it could for Korea and Malacca? Hell, while we're at it, why not say that Borneo, Champa, Hormuz, the Philippines, Calicut, and Cambodia were all part of the Ming Empire, because they paid tribute to the Ming court as well. You don't see how ridiculous your argument is?--Pericles of AthensTalk 13:25, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
- About Citing sources, you can don't agree with my sources, but you cannot deny them. You speak of McKay's book, I didn't read it. And you give me an impression that you juge just by your head, even some of my sources come from official websites(not blog, forum, etc). It seems that it's not autorised to give personal opinions in wikipedia, but you act very well over this point. Neither of us can decide if Tibet belongs to China in the periode or not. you can insist on your book, I can cite my sources at the same time. Now that there is already a map which shows your opinion in the article, why cannot a map be used which shows others' opinion? Image:Ming-China1.jpg is sourced by History Atlas of China, why Korea or Malacca are not in, please those scholars who made it.
- ps, my country is laic, we don't talk about gods all the time.--LaGrandefr (talk) 13:55, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
My evidences which show that LaGrandefr's map was wrong
I think I am with PericlesofAthens because I have enough evidences to say that the original map was still right and the new map uploaded by LaGrandefr which is very pro-Chinese colonialism (they want to occupy Tibet with many shameful ways and many crazy reasons) and I know that's wrong from the first time I see it. Open your eyes and see the true map of Ming Dynasty (Hmm, I think you must learn more about Chinese History, LaGrandefr but not the brainwash education from Chinese Communists!):
[some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter]
- [ www dot paulnoll dot com /China/Dynasty/dynasty-Ming dot html ]
- [ homepages dot stmartin dot edu /Fac_Staff/rlangill/HIS%20217%20maps/Ming%20dynasty%20map dot jpg ]
- [ www dot chinahighlights dot com /map/ancient-china-map/ming-dynasty-map dot htm ]
- [ depts dot washington dot edu /chinaciv/1xarming dot jpg ]
- [ www dot shen-nong dot com /eng/images/history/ming/img_ming_map dot gif ]
- [ www dot republicanchina dot org /fresian_ming dot gif ]
- [ acc6 dot its dot brooklyn dot cuny dot edu /~phalsall/images/mingmap dot jpg ]
- [ www dot regenttour dot com /china/history/mapming dot jpg ]
- [ www dot oceansatlas dot org /unatlas/uses/transportation telecomm/maritime trans/nav/images/ming map dot gif ]
- [ www dot monkeytree dot org /silkroad/travelerimages/ming dot map dot jpg ]
- [ www dot mnsu dot edu /emuseum/prehistory/china/map/ming dot html ]
- [ www-tc dot pbs dot org /wgbh/nova/sultan/images/expl map l.jpg?Log=0 ]
- [ www dot loyno dot edu /~seduffy/MapImages/mingmap-display dot jpg ]
- [ www dot wwnorton dot com /college/history/worlds/images/map2 5 dot jpg ]
- [ www dot wwnorton com /college/history/worlds/images/map4 5 dot jpg ]
I think this silly discussion should be stop and revert back to the better last version which was OK. I think I will invite some admins if this problems still happening in next 2-3 days.
Angelo De La Paz (talk) 15:17, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
- Thank you for providing the maps, Angelo De La Paz, espcially the ones from ".edu" sites, as they are from scholarly sources and can be trusted without reservation over LaGrandefr's "TravelChinaGuide".--Pericles of AthensTalk 15:48, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
- OK! You are welcome. You could call me as Angelo, it was enough. I hate my very long username.
Angelo De La Paz (talk) 16:07, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
- Now that there are other people who come to discussion. Here, I'll draw a conclusion.
- Angelo De La Paz said that I take a brainwash education. With Wikipedia:No personal attacks and Wikipedia:Patent nonsense, frankly, you will risk something, and I wish you not to do Wikipedia:Autobiography. I'm not from China.
- Just like all that I said above, wikipedia should present different opinions, cite all sources. One article, two maps, different view point, that is a featured article.
- Sources that show Tibet was Chinese in the dynasty of Ming are below:
- [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter]
- -[ en dot tibetculture dot net /art/thangka/200712/t20071214 302278 dot htm tibetculture dot net ]
-[ www dot artfaces dot com /artkids/oriental dot htm artfaces dot com ] -[ en dot tibet dot cn /history/his/t20050309 14413 dot htm tibet dot cn ] -[ www dot onlineopinion dot com dot au /view.asp?article=7142&page=0 onlineopinion dot com dot au ] -[ www dot tibetinfor dot com /tibetzt-en/tangka/doc/02 dot htm tibetinfor dot com ] -[ www dot tibet-tour dot com /tibet/thangka dot html tibet-tour dot com ] -[ www dot china dot org dot cn /english/tibet-english/lishi dot htm china dot org dot cn ] -[ www dot tibettravel dot info /chamdo/chamdo-history dot html tibettravel dot info ] -[ www dot presscluboftibet dot org /tibet-4/tibetan-history dot htm presscluboftibet org ] -[ history dot howstuffworks dot com /asian-history/history-of-tibet dot htm howstuffworks dot com ] -[ www dot china-embassy dot ch /eng/ztnr/xzzt/t138746 dot htm china-embassy dot ch ] -[ www dot flying com tw /travel/trip/tibet/tibet-3 dot htm flying dot com dot tw ] -[ news.bbc.co.uk/chinese/trad/hi/newsid_1340000/newsid_1346900/1346944.stm bbc.co.uk ] -[ www dot tibet-trip dot com/zoujin/ShowArticle.asp?ArticleID=59 tibet-trip dot com ] -[ news dot guoxue dot com/print.php?articleid=15315 guoxue dot com ] -[ www dot fmcoprc dot gov dot hk /chn/topic/zjxb/xb12s/xzhk/t46781 dot htm fmcoprc dot gov dot hk ] -[ peacehall dot com /forum/200803/renquan2008/147023 dot shtml peacehall dot com ] -[ www dot tibet dot gov dot cn /getCommonContent.do?contentId=341768 tibet dot gov dot cn ] etc.
- Among them, official or scholastic, Chinese or non-Chinese, pro-comminist or anti-comminist, the same opinion is shown. I cann't understand how could someone agnore all of them.
- Angelo De La Paz want to invite more admins to this article, please, allez-y! If this issue was not resolved, I'll watch this page till the end.--LaGrandefr (talk) 16:13, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
Stop it before too late
As you can see that the people here are disagree with your new map (included myself, a Chinese mix and recently User:Josuechan) because we know you are wrong. Mostly sources have showed that the map of China under Ming Dynasty was smaller (only Eastern part of nowaday China). Find out on Google:
Don't worry! I will invite some main contributors of WikiProject China and some admins as soon as possible. But now, I am giving the last chance for you!
Angelo De La Paz (talk) 16:58, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
- Exactly! Most people (more importantly, scholars of history who write and publish journals and books) acknowledge that Tibet was a tributary state with nominal titles granted to it by the Ming; anyone who states that Tibet was directly governed under Ming rule and swayed by it is, in my opinion, either ignorant about history or has a political agenda and a trick up their sleeve for some political purpose or another.--Pericles of AthensTalk 17:34, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
State your argument clearly
LaGrandefr, I am still unclear as to what your argument is, or what you think your "sources" are explaining. Are you arguing that Tibet was a sheng (province) of the Ming Dynasty? <-- Which would be totally false and absurd. Or are you arguing that it does not matter that the map you are propagating (i.e. Image:Ming-China1.jpg) does not distinguish (by using different and separate colors for political entities) what was directly administered and what was an independent yet vassal tributary state neighboring the Ming? As to your point about "showing opinions", I'm sorry, what you are doing is original research if you are relying on the pictures of primary source documents from "China Tibet Information Center", which is not a scholarly journal article or a peer-reveiwed and published book. Since you are not a historian and have not written a book on Ming-Tibet relations, you have no authority to make judgments about Ming court documents stating things such as "We gave the Tibetan Lama such and such titles today, because he is under the power of the Great Ming, mu-ha-ha-ha!", etc. and things along those lines (note I am being half-serious here). It's about primacy of sources, LaGrandefr. A book published by Routledge (i.e. McKay's book) is to be trusted over "TravelChinaGuide dot com". If I can't make you understand that simplest of simple ideas, then a Wikipedia administrator will make you understand that.--Pericles of AthensTalk 15:59, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
You speak of McKay's book, I didn't read it.
I'm sorry, but feigning ignorance is no excuse, you can access his book on Google Books right here: http://books.google.com/books?id=DVZ0gdBp6u0C&printsec=frontcover&dq=History+of+Tibet&sig=Nhl4nuR2V9ToeePc6hzXPm891tA#PPA65,M1
It's not even just McKay, it's a well-known historical fact that Tibet was not part of the Ming Empire, which is what you are trying to suggest in a very poor and pathetic fashion. If you are obstinate and choose to disregard this clear-cut evidence from McKay's book (and others, shall I gather more texts?), then you certainly do not belong on Wikipedia. However, you might want to consider writing novels and historical fiction, since that seems to be your interest.--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:11, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
- Let me make a conclusion of relations between of China and Tibet during the dynasty of Ming: The Chinese government didn't totally, absolutely controled Tibet throughout the whole dynasty.But it controled it, even just [following link edited because it triggered Wikipedia spam filter] [ www dot history hyphen of hyphen china dot com/ming-dynasty/economic-of-ming-dynasty dot html] at the height of its power. I don't possede a view point over this issue, and it is NOT allowed in wikipedia moreover. I cite the sources that I find, this is a job for every wikipedia users. TravelChinaGuide dot com is just the fiste page that I found by google, it means nothing at all. I've already give so many others sources. You cites one book, frankly, if I want to look for a book which tells that tibet was Chinese during Ming, I can find 100000~~ in China.--LaGrandefr (talk) 16:28, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
Let me make a conclusion of relations between of China and Tibet during the dynasty of Ming
No, let's not do that at all. Your argument should be grounded in secondary source scholarly articles or books and NOTHING else. Capiche?--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:47, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
But it controled it, even just [following link edited because it triggered Wikipedia spam filter] [ www dot history hyphen of hyphen china dot com/ming-dynasty/economic-of-ming-dynasty dot html] at the height of its power.
Again, with the ".com" sites; you honestly don't understand why those sites should be avoided? Always stick to ".edu" sites if you want anyone to take your argument seriously.--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:47, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
I cite the sources that I find, this is a job for every wikipedia users.
It's also the job of every Wikipedian to make sure those "sources" aren't full of BS. Quite frankly, I find all of these ".com" sites of yours a laughingstock compared to any serious research done by professors and historical authors who publish through university presses or respected journals or trade presses. You should be ashamed of yourself as a Wikipedian.--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:47, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
TravelChinaGuide dot com is just the fiste page that I found by google, it means nothing at all.
You say it means nothing at all, yet you earlier tried to legitimize your "house-of-cards" argument by using "TravelChinaGuide". So which is it? Trustworthy as a credible source? Or an untrustworthy commercial site geared towards encouraging tourism that any serious historian wouldn't consider even glancing at? The answer should be painfully obvious.--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:47, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
I've already give so many others sources. You cites one book, frankly, if I want to look for a book which tells that tibet was Chinese during Ming, I can find 100000~~ in China.
So far you have shown no map to supplement the one you're propagating. You have brought to the table ".com" sites, sites not in English (this is an English wikipedia after all), an embassy site (these are diplomatic politicians, not historians), and PRC government sites that are so far pretty laughable. And if you can find "100,000" books in China that claim the same bizarre thing that you are claiming, then I would like to see them; so far you've shown me not one piece of scholarly evidence that contradicts McKay's book. I repeat, not one. So don't go making claims you can't back up.--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:47, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
And on a final note here, the Ming court's granting of nominal noble titles and accepting tribute from Tibet has nothing to do with conquering, ruling, subjugating, and administering Tibet (as the Qing would later do). You seem not to notice the difference.--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:52, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
Again, with the ".com" sites; you obviously don't understand why those sites should be avoided? Always stick to ".edu" sites if you want anyone to take your argument seriously.
- Please forgive my naivety, since when people cannot cite the websites with the ".com"? The article 2008 Tibetan unrest has given 164 websites with ".com" or some ends like this, the same case for most of articles in wikipedia. Could you please tell where did you find this order? Thank you.
- And I have given nearly 20 websites, most are in English. I don't know why you told the bizarre thing. Sorry.--LaGrandefr (talk) 17:04, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
Please forgive my naivety, since when people cannot cite the websites with the ".com"?
Maybe just this once I will; ".com" sites are OK to use if you are reporting current events, such as "so and so died today, the public reaction was so and so, this political leader of China said it was a tragic loss, blah, blah, blah." However, ".com" sites are never to be used for making assertions and scholarly analysis of political history. That would be like saying the United States dominated the political administration and politicians of Canada and coerced them into fighting in a historical war (take your pick) because it was America's neighbor, and then citing "Billy-Bob's-Fried-Country-Steakhouse-Grill dot com" as evidence.--Pericles of AthensTalk 17:11, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
You often edit wikipedia? The websites are cited everywhere in Wikipedia. If you want soooooo much a citation of one book(in fact, the image is based on a book, History altas of China), ok, I will go to buy a book. Please wait some days and please don't change the image all the time. It presents a view point(not mine) after all.--LaGrandefr (talk) 17:23, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
- Just because many people use ".com" sites as sources on Wiki does not suddenly make it a legitimate source. Somehow I heavily doubt that there is a gigantic scholarly war going on between different professors and scholars about the political relation of Tibet with the Ming, but if there is then I am not against reporting it here in the main article in a separate section about Tibet that may or may not feature your map from Sinomap Press, as you allege it came from (you better be right about that, for the sake of your argument).--Pericles of AthensTalk 17:28, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
Other problems, foul source and wrong language
First of all, Image:Ming-Empire2.jpg comes from "History and Commercial Atlas of China, Harvard University Press, 1905" while your pathetic image map Image:Ming-China1.jpg claims its source as this commercial ".com" site with ads littering the page:
[some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] [ military dot china dot com /zh cn/history2/06/11027560/20050527/12348629 dot html ]
Hmm...let's balance this out here logically; one map comes from the Harvard University Press, one of the most distinguished scholarly printing presses in the world, and the other comes from a ridiculous ".com" site with a Super Mario add at the top. I wonder which one is more credible?!
Second of all, your map is in German! I'm sorry, but this is an English wikipedia; I hope those from France such as yourself can discern the stark difference between German and English.--Pericles of AthensTalk 17:00, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
- Image:Ming-China1.jpg is also based on history altas of China which comes from [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] [ www dot sinomaps dot com/newInternet/index dot aspx Sinomap press], ISBN:7503103841, Date:1982-10-01.
- For the version of language, there's never problem. I can translate it into English in several minutes. Now everything is OK?--LaGrandefr (talk) 17:13, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
- Finally! You're citing a credible source with an ISBN! I know you are secular as you state above, but it must be a holy miracle, since I never thought you had it in you! If you can create a new map in English that would be super. However, I think, given this discussion, the main article desperately needs a written section on Tibet, with a range of sources describing the relationship of Ming China with Tibet, in order to give the reader a full, comprehensive view of the subject. If there is some sort of controversey and fight amongst scholarly sources (Sinomap Press and Harvard University Press have had a scuffle over something like this, perhaps?), then that is worth mentioning.--Pericles of AthensTalk 17:19, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
- Do all that you want. I know you have spent much time in this article, just go to perfect it. And I will upload an image with English version tomorrow.--LaGrandefr (talk) 17:31, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
Problems with LaGrandefr's new English Map
You bothered creating a new map, but didn't heed a word of what was discussed here? How many times do I have to repeatedly state it: if you're going to make a map with Tibet included in it, Tibet should not be under the same color of political entity as China proper, the heart of the Ming Empire. It should be given a separate color to distinguish it as a vassal state (and if you include Tibet, why not Korea, which is also shown on the map and was a vassal state?). I'm starting to suspect that you don't know what a vassal state is, one which pays tribute as a foreign country, while a directly-governed province of an empire pays administrator's taxes to the central government. If you still don't know the difference between the two, then there's nothing that I or anyone can do to help you (I wish I could speak French, so that I could better help you understand). I can only revert your new map every time you place it here, and request from a moderator that you steer clear from this article, as you seem to be here merely to jeopardize article stability and ignore others' input regardless of facts from sources demonstrating the false political boundaries of your map. I'm sorry if that sounds harsh, but your refusal to cooperate and listen to the feedback of other editors is astounding.--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:46, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
Sorry, I made this map on the basis of the original map made by Sinomap Press, ISBN:7503103841. I won't and can't change it according to my personal willing. Thanks--LaGrandefr (talk) 13:29, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
- ^-- To anyone who might be confused, this is not a quote, but a response by LeGrandefr, who for some reason put his response in quotation style.--Pericles of AthensTalk 20:39, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
New section on Tibet
I have created a new section on Tibet listing the arguments of scholars who believed that Tibet was a foreign country offering tribute to the Ming court through diplomatic affairs, and the arguments of two scholars who assert that Tibetan officials were employed by the Ming (due to granting of titles) and were offering corvee payments in a domestic system, not as foreigners.--Pericles of AthensTalk 19:18, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
It's incredible!
A large paragraph can be removed! & A well-sourced map can be rejected! This is a best English wikipedia! LaGrandefr (talk) 12:30, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
- Okay, I just log on to this article and didn't realize there was an edit war going on. I also noticed this suspicious map was added to Ming Dynasty so I removed it. I mean seriously, you'll need some well-known sources to back up this map, and not just citing sinomap.com (???). Listen, if you want to show the Ming Dynasty at one of its larger extent, I assume this map [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] [ images dot encarta dot msn dot com /xrefmedia/aencmed/targets/maps/mhi/T028712A dot gif ] published by the MSN Encarta would probably be one of them.--Balthazarduju (talk) 14:28, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
Content Dispute-Ming Dynasty (Maps)
Due to the content dispute, I asked for an admin to fully protect the article, as I am not one myself. I think we all need to take a step back, and cool down. I'm not an admin, but I have mediated a few disputes before. So, here is what I suggest. Each editor (who has been editing this article recently) should calmly state their views, and if possible, show diffs, or provide external sources to verify/add weight to their views. I'd ask we all be civil, and keep a cool head. Cheers, Steve Crossin (talk to me) 14:34, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
Responses
- ming_1443.png, drawn by Sinomap Press, ISBN:7503103841. According to [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] [ www dot sinomaps dot com/english/html/home dot html ], Sinomap Press is the only national-level map publisher in China. It says SinoMaps Press specially represents the most authentic and reliable map publisher on drafting the standard boundaries and administrative division boundaries of China.So a map made by an organization like this should be quite reliable.
- And ming_1443.png shows the largest territory at the height of Ming's power. Isn't it a good annotation of featured article like Ming Dynasty?--LaGrandefr (talk) 15:17, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
- I think that, given the new sub-section on Tibet describing opposing views of scholars, both maps should be included since there is a scholarly dispute (outside of Wikipedia) on Tibet's exact relationship to the Ming Dynasty. One side says that Tibet was an independent but vassal state who simply paid tribute through diplomatic relations, while the Ming court held up the facade and illusion of rule over Tibet by granting Tibetan lamas fancy titles. The other side (so far I've only found two PRC historians Wang and Nyima who state this) says Tibet was a region governed by Tibetan leaders who were appointed by the Ming court, obeyed Ming authority, and did not come to Beijing as envoys but as domestic appointees; keep in mind, Wang and Nyima admit that the Ming never sent troops to conquer Tibet or garrisoned troops there as they would any normal part of the empire; their argument is that this wasn't necessary, as Tibetan leaders were loyal to Ming authority (although the Ming never asserted their authority in Tibet, but only granted titles from afar in Beijing). User:LaGrandefr should cease from plugging his map into the lead picture of the article, when it is clearly best served in the Tibet sub-section in the first section ('Founding') of the article, since his map is not only disputed by members here, but also international scholars who would find such a map to be a contentious issue. Besides, the original map in the lead is from Harvard University Press, and shows the belief of scholars who show evidence that Tibet was not a governed or administrative region of the Ming. My main qualm with LeGrandefr's map is that it does not distinguish—by color—the political boundaries of the Ming as opposed to their vassal state of Tibet.Pericles of AthensTalk 15:58, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
- The relevant question here is: Was Tibet an administered part of Ming China? If that was, then LaGrandefr's map is appropriate; otherwise it is not. So far LaGrandefr fails to address this question but resorts to appealing to the authority of SinoMaps as a disinterested map publisher. However, SinoMaps is a public institution under the PRC government. In a country there's no freedom of speech and the media are seen to be a tool for promoting the political agenda, it is not advisable to grant too much authority to SinoMaps.
- So was Tibet an administered part of Ming China? As Pericles of Athens has argued, it is generally agreed among scholars that it was not, with a dissenting minority from some PRC scholars. Therefore, the best compromise is keep the original map in the lead, while adding a section discussing the relations with Tibet, as Pericles of Athens already did.
- Incidentally, unlike Pericles of Athens, who was responsible for pushing the article to the FA status, LaGrandefr's sole "contribution" to the article was to add a dubious map despite strong objections from many of the editors involved. Josuechan (talk) 01:05, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
- I have got enough evidences that show the existing map (and also the original map of Harvard University [1]) was right and enough reliable. Please look at my evidences again: [2][3]. And the second reason that is User:LaGrandefr was very rude with many other contributors and I can not forgive him again [4][5].Angelo De La Paz (talk) 05:17, 1 April 2008 (UTC) -->
- I wouldn't hastly labeling anyone for pushing agenda or anything like that. Like you said above, we shouldn't dwelling about politicizing other people either. In terms of discussing the map by User:LaGrandefr, one of the major problems about this map "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Ming_1443.png" is that even though LaGrandefr claims that it is from "Sinomap Press", but where? He/she didn't actually provide any link to the map, except link to the index site and the homepage. LaGrandefr, even if you created this map, you might want to provide the link to the original map so we can check the validity of the map.--Balthazarduju (talk) 05:06, 1 April 2008 (UTC) -->
Further responses
- I am not really involved in the discussion, but I wonder what the nominal and not-so-nominal difference(s) between Tibet and the Mongols during Ming dynasty were. I guess the Tibetans never took a Chinese emperor captive, and the Great Wall was not built against the Tibetan menace, but clearly Mongols took part in the tribute system and received titles in return.
- On another note, could Portugal qualify as a would-be tributary ? Yaan (talk) 16:10, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
- Well, according to LaGrandefr, all the Mongols on the steppe were then part of the Ming Empire. Apparently anyone who paid tribute to the Ming court was part of the Ming Empire, which would mean that the entire Portuguese Empire was in fact under the rule and the sway of the Ming. <sarcasm> Nevermind Philip II of Spain and his claim to the Portuguese throne in 1580 with his deceased son Don Juan! The Portuguese (and the Spanish) paid some tribute to the Ming court, so surely, the entire Habsburg realm was governed directly by the Ming Dynasty. </sarcasm>--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:43, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
- No no, my understanding is that the Portuguese wanted to pay tribute to the Ming, but never succeeded in doing so (that's why I wrote "would-be"). Or did they? Yaan (talk) 16:55, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
- Yes, you're right, although the Portuguese did pay 500 teals of silver per year to Ming China after an official treaty and lease of Macau in 1582, while some Portuguese visited Beijing again in the early 17th century to show off Portuguese cannons.--Pericles of AthensTalk 17:12, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
- My suggestion: paste the map like this to be the lead picture. More explication in the section below. How is it?--LaGrandefr (talk) 16:08, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
- Yes, we're all aware of what picture you want to put in the lead; how is this a strong argument to take away the Harvard University Press map that is already in the lead? I'm trying to make a compromise here by including your SinoMap Press image in an appropriate section about Tibet since your map claims Tibet for the Ming Empire, an issue that is contested by scholars around the world. It is most relevant in that article section, no?--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:47, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
Countering Wang and Nyima's argument, and in extension, LaGrandefr's
Once the protection ban on this article is lifted, I intend to add this to the Tibetan sub-section of the article to counter the argument of Wang and Nyima that Tibet was part of the Ming Empire.
In their argument, Wang and Nyima failed to mention the ongoing civil war between Tibetan lama monasteries during the Ming Dynasty—the two major sects being the "Red Caps" and "Yellow Caps" which employed their own guards of armed monks.[1] Fred W. Riggs states that the Red Cap sect "tended to look to China for help" while the Yellow Cap Sect was in league with the Western Mongol federation.[1] The fifth high lama of the Yellow Cap sect proclaimed that his sect was to be the official religion of Tibet in 1642, after his predecessor had been granted the title 'Dalai Lama' by the Mongols.[1]
The source used is Riggs, Fred W. "Tibet in Extremis," Far Eastern Survey (Volume 19, Number 21, 1950): 224–230.
If Tibet was an administered part of Ming China, then why did the Ming avoid intervening in this civil war, which, according to User:LaGrandefr, was on their claimed soil? If Tibet was part of the Ming Empire, then how could rivaling sects within their empire be allied with the Oirat Mongols, the enemies of the Ming Dynasty? If the Ming titles granted to leading Tibetan "officials" had any great significance, then why did the Ming court just sit back and watch the Oirat Mongol federation confer titles onto the same Tibetans?
I think User:LaGrandefr, claiming to be an innocent Frenchman, has a PRC political ax to grind in all of his zealous efforts to promote his bogus map while ignoring McKay's book which I cited above, and I'm sure he'll also ignore this as well, because I don't think User:LaGrandefr is here to contribute like other normal Wikipedia editors. In fact, looking at his edit history, he joined recently and all of his edits are focused on this one article. Take a hint, moderators.
One should never politicize history so that it can fit nice and neat with the desires of people in current affairs; I hope LaGrandefr contemplates this before making a response.--Pericles of AthensTalk 21:44, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
- For anyone curious about a more nuanced history of Tibet and Ming China, this link should be helpful. It is the second volume of McKay's book (850 to 1850), with individual chapters written by different scholars.--Pericles of AthensTalk 04:35, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
- I wouldn't hastly labeling anyone for pushing agenda or anything like that. Like you said above, we shouldn't dwelling about politicizing other people either. In terms of discussing the map by User:LaGrandefr, one of the major problems about this map "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Ming_1443.png" is that even though LaGrandefr claims that it is from "Sinomap Press", but where? He/she didn't actually provide any link to the map, except link to the index site and the homepage. LaGrandefr, even if you created this map, you might want to provide the link to the original map so we can check the validity of the map.--Balthazarduju (talk) 05:06, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
- Maybe it is kind of nitpicking, but the title Dalai Lama was conferred (that is, some authors also point out that "Dalai" is just a translation of "Gyatso", the tibetan name(?) of the third Dalai Lama) by Altan Khan of the Tümed, who are definitely not an Oirad tribe. I am also not so sure that the Oirads were heavily involved in Tibetan politics in the 14th-16th centuries. They were very active in the 17th century, but I think this may have started only in the 1630s. Finally, for some reason the more common terms for these sects in english seem to be yellow and red hats. Yaan (talk) 12:05, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
- Thank you for bringing to light these corrections.--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:24, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
- Maybe it is kind of nitpicking, but the title Dalai Lama was conferred (that is, some authors also point out that "Dalai" is just a translation of "Gyatso", the tibetan name(?) of the third Dalai Lama) by Altan Khan of the Tümed, who are definitely not an Oirad tribe. I am also not so sure that the Oirads were heavily involved in Tibetan politics in the 14th-16th centuries. They were very active in the 17th century, but I think this may have started only in the 1630s. Finally, for some reason the more common terms for these sects in english seem to be yellow and red hats. Yaan (talk) 12:05, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
ming_1443.png
ming_1443.png is not my map, it's drawn by SinoMap Press, which is the only national-level map publisher in China. I know there are many maps about Ming Dynasty, just like User:Angelo_De_La_Paz has given above. But among them, each map is not identical, because each scholar has his own opinion. But ming_1443.png is the only official map up to now, although there are some disputes. Same example like PRC's map, there are also many disputed territories, we can just paste the official map drawn by PRC's government. As for us, we can only note the disputed territories, in my opinion.--LaGrandefr (talk) 13:49, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
The original map is [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] [ www dot spratlys dot org /maps/5/ming dot jpg] here, I won't and can't modify the map according to my willing.--LaGrandefr (talk) 13:49, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
issues for Tibet
Was Tibet an administered part of Ming China? Different people conclude different results. I introduce you a book, Mingshi(明史), written in 1739 by the succeeding dynasty Qing Dynasty, which is the official Chinese historical works. I think any research (including someone's McKay)will be powerless face to it, because it's the book of book that records the whole offical history of Ming Dynasty and every research about Ming Dynasty should base on it. In this book, it says the territory of Ming begins with Chosŏn in the East, occupies Tubo in the West, includes Annam in the South, reaches the Great Desert in the North.(東起朝鮮,西據吐番,南包安南,北距大磧) And Tubo is the ancient name of Tibet in Chinese. So I don't see where is the dispute.--LaGrandefr (talk) 13:49, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
- Yet your map includes neither Choson nor Annam. Yaan (talk) 13:59, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
- Because it's not me who drawn it. The official map is like this, I cannot modify it. Why there are so many English wikipedian so subjective? It is authorized to give the personal thoughts in English wikipedia?--LaGrandefr (talk) 14:05, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
- It's not the Ming dynasty's official map, though. Heaven forbid wikipedia ever has to follow the official version of a country's history. The current map, OTOH, seems to have been published by a generally reliable, academic source, so it is probably more authorative than yours, no matter how "official". Yaan (talk) 14:14, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
- Because it's not me who drawn it. The official map is like this, I cannot modify it. Why there are so many English wikipedian so subjective? It is authorized to give the personal thoughts in English wikipedia?--LaGrandefr (talk) 14:05, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
- Sorry, I have nothing to say if you mischief like this. I wait the response of admins.--LaGrandefr (talk) 14:31, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
Certainly Mingshi is much more reliable than Sinomap. However, the map LaGrandefr proposed here is not from Mingshi, but Sinomap. So it's an "official" map in the sense that it's approved by the PRC government. Worse, according to the quoted sentence (計明初封略,東起朝鮮,西據吐番,南包安南,北距大磧用), Vietnam should also be part of Ming, but how come the map didn't include it? So is LaGrandefr opposing his own map? Interesting. In fact, Vietnam has a better claim to be part of Ming because 1) an administrative unit (布政使司) was set up there; 2) Ming army actually occupied the region till mid-Ming. (see Mingshi vol. 40 志第十六 地理一). But these didn't happen to Tibet.
Well, well, certainly I'm not suggesting a map that includes Vietnam because such a map would be misleading. A more appropriate treatment is to discuss the subtleties in an appropriate section. It is even more so with Tibet. Josuechan (talk) 16:36, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
Josuechan (talk) 16:36, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
- Mingshi has never drawn a map, how can I find a map in Mingshi?I cited Mingshi, because someone argued that Tibet was not in Ming China and Mingshi is the authorative document in the world.
- Ming court has settled Dbus-Gtsang Itinerant High Commandery(烏思藏行都指揮使司) and Mdo-khams Itinerant High Commandery (朵甘行都指揮使司) in Tibet, and the system of High Commandery(都指揮使司) was settled for every region in Ming China, no longer Sheng(省) like User:PericlesofAthens talked above, which has been abolished in 1376.
- Our subject is too far from the issue. Mingshi has well proved that Tibet was in Ming China. and of course, if someone are so willing to join Vietnam or Korea into Ming China. Why not make a map that shows differences of each map? Regards. --LaGrandefr (talk) 17:00, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
If it hadn't before, your credibility just went down the toilet drain
Different people conclude different results.
Which is outlined in the article due to the new section I created, yes. Does this warrant your controversial map to be touted as the lead picture in the article? NO. If you wish to keep your picture, the only compromise I will make is having it placed in the Tibet sub-section, where the issue about scholarly debate is discussed. I ask how is this not sensible, since the other map is valid and is printed by Harvard University Press.--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:52, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
I introduce you a book, Mingshi(明史), written in 1739 by the succeeding dynasty Qing Dynasty, which is the official Chinese historical works. I think any research (including someone's McKay)will be powerless face to it, because it's the book of book that records the whole offical history of Ming Dynasty and every research about Ming Dynasty should base on it.
First off, YOU are not a historian, YOU are not qualified to analyze or make judgements about primary source documents (in this case, the Mingshi, written almost 300 years ago), and to say that McKay's book (and other scholars I've mentioned in the article) is invalid because of what is stated in the Mingshi is ridiculous beyond all belief. Unlike modern university research and private publishing without fear of censorship or government interference, the Mingshi was a history commissioned by the Qing court which was in the process of subjugating Tibet to Qing rule; it is a politically-correct and sponsored history, unlike Sima Qian's Shiji, which was independent of political baggage. I think it is safe to say that if Zhang Tingyu, employed by the Qing court, had portrayed the reality of Tibet-Ming relations as we in modern times understand it, Emperor Qianlong would have fired him and hired a new leading editor.--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:52, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
begins with Chosŏn in the East, occupies Tubo in the West, includes Annam in the South, reaches the Great Desert in the North.
Bravo, Mr. History! Well, I guess dumbing down everything into one sentence proves it alright; surely there was no nuanced narrative to the story of Tibet-Ming relations, surely the Tibetans never wrote about their own affairs, and surely there's no information about Tibet from the time period besides the Mingshi. Sheesh, even Wang and Nyima aren't brazen enough to claim the Ming "occupies Tubo in the West". I'm sorry, but any credibility that the Mingshi had just went down the toilet drain, along with your credibility.--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:52, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
So I don't see where is the dispute.
That's because you're placing blind faith and total, unmitigated trust in every sentence of the Mingshi (a politically-sponsored history), which has been found to contain faults and inaccuracies by modern scholars, such as Timothy Brook to name one. Try finding a book written in at least the past 100 years (and not sanctioned by a government entity), and maybe someone won't completely laugh and discard your argument. And the last I checked, you are not a historian and you are certainly not bringing any scholarly sources to the table to back your claims.--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:52, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
The official map is like this
No, SinoMap Press does not make "official maps," this is a controversial map contested by scholars that I've already noted in the new Tibet section of the article. Your argument is so lame that I don't even think you're trying anymore to make sense at all. Please, go edit an article that does not require much from scholarly input. I know! You can bring Pee-wee's Playhouse up to featured article status! That would be the perfect article for someone with your level of "professionalism".--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:52, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
Sorry, I have nothing to say if you mischief like this.
I see only one person creating mischief here, and it certainly isn't User:Yaan.--Pericles of AthensTalk 17:17, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
Sockpuppet, perhaps?
Mistakes cannot stay in a featured article like this way.
^ From Steve's user page, as he requested I keep the argument here.
The only person making an egregious mistake here is you, after you have repeatedly ignored scholarly sources on the vassal status of Tibet, not directly-governed status. I seriously question your motives, since you seem to have joined Wikipedia on March 28 simply to plug your dubious map into the Ming article, all the while failing to address the points that other editors have made about the map, SinoMap Press, and scholarly books and articles which refute the boundaries portrayed in your map. Drop this "I'm an innocent little kid with a lolly-pop" act, it's not fooling anyone. In fact, since you've joined, you've also redirected a page, uploaded images with ease, created a custom-made map for upload, and now crafted this table here with wiki command codes, something any new and amateur editor is typically unable to do because they haven't had enough experience (I sure didn't know how to do any of that in my first week of editing).
LeGrandefr's table:
Date | User | Dispute | Responce |
---|---|---|---|
09:53, 28 March 2008 | User:Angelo De La Paz | accuse to use unsourced new fake map | I added the source in no time [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] [ military dot china dot com /zh cn/history2/06/11027560/20050527/12348629 dot html ] |
10:18, 28 March 2008 | User:Angelo De La Paz | not English version map | I promised to make a English map. |
13:28, 28 March 2008 | User:PericlesofAthens | no scholarly sources | I cited dozens of sites, official or scholastic, Chinese or non-Chinese, pro-communist or anti-communist. |
16:55, 28 March 2008 | User:PericlesofAthens | ".com" sites cannot be used | For this point, I've never heard. |
12:40, 28 March 2008 | User:PericlesofAthens | pester with TravelChinaGuide dot com, the first site that I found by google | dozens of sites cited |
15:17, 28 March 2008 | User:Angelo De La Paz | claimed that I have had a brainwash education | I cited wiki orders like Wikipedia:No personal attacks and Wikipedia:Patent nonsense. |
15:59, 28 March 2008 | User:PericlesofAthens | accuse to do original research | Up to now, I've never given my proper opinion and always persuade others not to stick to personal willing. |
17:00, 28 March 2008 | User:PericlesofAthens | still stuck to TravelChinaGuide.com | I cited History Atlas of China SinoMap Press, ISBN:7503103841 |
17:19, 28 March 2008 | User:PericlesofAthens | accepted the credible source with an ISBN and expressed a new map in English would be super. | I made the new English map ming_1443.png in a whole night. |
16:46, 30 March 2008 | User:PericlesofAthens | critics of the false political boundaries | Same source, same map, where's difference? |
21:44, 31 March 2008 | User:PericlesofAthens | conjecture of my background | I'm not from China, I don't know Communists. |
05:06, 1 April 2008 | User:Balthazarduju | ask for the link to the original map | I offered immediately. |
13:59, 1 April 2008 | User:Yaan | demand the existence of Choson and Annam | They are not in Ming's territory in the original map, I cannot modify the map myself. |
Do I smell a previously banned wiki account, or worse, sock puppetry?--Pericles of AthensTalk 17:32, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
This quote comes from WP:SOCKPUPPET
Not surprisingly, sock puppet accounts usually show much greater familiarity with Wikipedia and its editing process than most newcomers. They are more likely to use edit summaries, immediately join in existing edit wars, or participate vocally in procedures like Articles for deletion or Requests for adminship as part of their first few edits. They are also more likely to be brand new or a single purpose account when looking at their contributions summary.
Hahahahaha! Dude, every single point in that quotation describes LaGrandefr completely! Oh, I am on to you, buddy.--Pericles of AthensTalk 17:50, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
- Of course, he might just have gained his experience on other WPs. Yaan (talk) 18:00, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
- It's possible, but we'll see.--Pericles of AthensTalk 18:02, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
I'm sorry that I have no more willing to talk with you, you have already run into a totally insane state and you are just an extremely sceptic. You can suspect everything that you don't believe, even with plenty of sources given to you. Could I ask you whether you really know about Mingshi? This book is the most authoritative source of all researches about Ming Dynasty to each scholar. You said the author cheated in this official historical works, written 300 years ago, to join Tibet into Ming China, so why don't you say that the author just want to vent his anger because a Tibetan has slept with the his woman. It seems more logical, in my opinion. How can it exsits a person so stubbron and gossipy like you, it's incredible!--LaGrandefr (talk) 08:59, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
First off, why are you posting your reply in quotation format? This is the second time you've done that; that's a bit odd. Second, you have not given me plenty of sources, I'm the only one who has supported your argument with the scholarly source of Wang and Nyima, and they make a pretty flimsy argument themselves (which I have fairly displayed and recounted in the new section on Tibet in the article). Thirdly, despite the fact that the Mingshi is the "most authoritative source of all researches about Ming Dynasty" simply because of its scope and size, does not make it infallible or lacking in error. I never said the author(s) "cheated in this official historical works," that is you putting words into my mouth. Good job! The scholars of the Mingshi were of 18th century minds; they read the Ming court documents stating that Tibet was "all under heaven" and was subjugated by titles, and they did not doubt this. I cannot fault them for that, or lacking full comprehensive sources (including Tibetan perspectives on their own affairs) which modern historians now have at their disposal to prove that Tibetan leaders were autonomous. What I said was, if the Mingshi editors understood what we know today in the modern world about Ming-era Tibet, they would not have quickly come to the conclusion that "Tubo was occupied in the West", and arguably Qianlong would have been displeased with that part of the Mingshi if this was the case. Get it??--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:02, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
How can it exsits a person so stubbron and gossipy like you, it's incredible!
Personal attack, anyone? First you put words into my mouth that I never said, and then you accuse me of making those statements, as well as being gossipy and stubborn! How innocent of you. That's what we call a strawman argument. I'm on to you pal, as I have reason to believe you are a sockpuppet, and I have a suspicious IP number that might tell all. We'll just wait and see, won't we sugar-bumps?--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:02, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
Final argument of ming_1443.png
All in all, some guys have exhausted me. Why don't you just open your eyes and accept more opinion? I won't respond any more the gossipy arguments, now that I've offered plenty of sources above. The effect speaks, the tongue needs not, I choose to be silent in waiting the response of admins.
“ | I offer a map, ming_1443.png, drawn by [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] [ www dot sinomaps dot com /english/html/home dot html Sinomap Press], ISBN 7503103841, the original map of Ming china is [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] [ www dot spratlys dot org/maps/5/ming dot jpg here]. And Sinomap Press is the only national-level map publisher in China. It has that it specially represents the most authentic and reliable map publisher on drafting the standard boundaries and administrative division boundaries of China.
Up to now, the only controversy in this map is about the position of Tibet. I cited Mingshi, officially compiled in 1739 by the succeeding dynasty Qing Dynasty. It is one of the 24 official Chinese historical works and the very source that every research of Ming Dynasty must base on it. In this book, it says the territory of Ming begins with Chosŏn in the East, occupies Tubo in the West, includes Annam in the South, reaches the Great Desert in the North.(東起朝鮮,西據吐番,南包安南,北距大磧) And Tubo is the ancient name of Tibet in Chinese. So Mingshi has well proved Tibet was in Ming China at the period and the only controversy of ming_1443.png no longer exists. |
” |
Please don't respond in this section, I just want to wait the final response of admins. Last sentences for some guys, ignorance is the mother of suspicions and truth will conquer.--LaGrandefr (talk) 09:27, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
Other discussion
I'm not sure why there's an argument here. There is already more than one map. Why do we need this one? Why do we need so many and what are the reasons for favoring this one over the other?
We need to be clear on what the map is depicting. The Westphalian notion of nation-states with clearly delineated boundaries did not exist in Ming China. There were lands administered directly under imperial authorities, lands administered by local authorities with the supervision of imperial authorities, lands administered by tributaries, and unknown lands. --Jiang (talk) 12:57, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
- Excellent explication. Just like what I said above, the concept country is invented in the modern world, which cannot be easily used for those ancient cases.(13:08, 28 March 2008) However, some guys are so willing to do this meaningless thing. In the Chinese culture, the territory of China is Tianxia, which means the whole world. Different lands belonged to Imperial China in different ways. It's useless to record China occupies Tibet in the official historical works (like some one's suspect) since Chinese emperors consider themselves to be the owner of the world, moreover, Tibet was also considered to be a "barbaric" region in the ancient times.--LaGrandefr (talk) 13:24, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
- What?! So your argument is, despite the fact that the Ming never occupied Tibet and never interfered with their administrative affairs, and simply because of the concept of Tianxia and the beliefs of the Ming emperors, your bogus map should be included here? I'm surprised how much your argument does not coincide with Wang and Nyima's about the Ming controlling Tibet through worthless granted titles as well as trade and tribute. I'm sorry, these high abstract concepts of Tianxia are not sufficient grounds for you to force in a map here showing Tibet under Chinese occupation while other Chinese vassals such as Korea and the Vietnamese Le Dynasty (since your map is for the year 1443) are not included. If you truly heeded your own argument, then you would abandon the SinoPress map altogether, since it does not accurately portray what you believe about Tianxia and China's tributary states. If you believed that all was under heaven, then why not show a map of the entire world for the Ming Dynasty's territory? Your argument, once again, is bogus and has nothing to do with modern concepts of political reality and history (wikipedia is not here to support Tianxia as a means to create political maps). And not only that, you're still refusing to bring to the table any scholarly sources! This is all merely your opinion and a bogus map made by SinoPress. I've at least brought to the table Wang and Nyima's book. Tisk, tisk, suspected sockpuppet LaGrandefr.--Pericles of AthensTalk 15:51, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
moreover, Tibet was also considered to be a "barbaric" region in the ancient times.
And your point is? Any place not considered China proper or under Chinese dynastic hegemony was consider a "barbarian" land. My question is why are you so hell-bent on this map showing the tributary vassal Tibet under direct Chinese rule, while ignoring other neighboring tributaries which could be classed in the same manner? You've failed to address this point, along with many others, hence my suspicion about your agenda here.--Pericles of AthensTalk 17:10, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
Debunking the Mingshi and LaGrandefr's map ming_1443
PericlesofAthens: This has gone far enough. You have every right to state your opinion, but this text below (not the source, the comments), and as the image, are unacceptable. As such, I have removed the image. I will not tolerate incivility, biting newcomers, mockery, or personal attacks. Understood? Steve Crossin (talk to me) 04:34, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
- File:DiamondWarning.png:User:PericlesofAthens has thrown a nuclear bomb in my talk page. I protest about this uncivil act to others in Wikipedia.--LaGrandefr (talk) 12:18, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
- I thought the picture would generate a laugh or two in a harmless fashion and lighten the mood a bit. If you feel otherwise, fine by me, as it is rather unimportant compared to the substance of my argument below, which is serious.--Pericles of AthensTalk 04:50, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
- Well, well, Pericles of Athens' comments and picture might be taken as sarcasm, but certainly not mockery. I would also like so stress there's fine line between personal attacks and relevant criticisms on your oppontant; not every criticism of your oppontant is personal attack. If I make some irrelevant comments about LaGrandefr's race, religion beliefs, or sexual orientation in the present discussion, I might be making personal attacks. But what Pericles of Athens did in his comments was to undermine LaGrandefr's creditibility regarding Ming history, which is totally relevant. I don't understand why they are seen as personal attacks. Josuechan (talk) 05:47, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
- Thank you Josuechan; at the time of writing this, I did not feel like I was making a personal attack, rather, an attack on his argument; big difference.--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:19, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
WARNING. Certain users may experience total and utter earth-shattering disappointment that their argument has been mercilessly beaten and torn apart by Turrell V. Wylie in the following section, as the Mingshi loses all credibility as a direct and reliable scholarly source. Wikipedia users should use the Mingshi with caution and a grain of salt while consulting modern secondary source literature of scholarly books and journals to check and verify their arguments!--Pericles of AthensTalk 20:56, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
Passage #1
This is rich; to further buttress the points of scholars I've already mentioned here on the talk page and in the main article, I point to this chapter "Lama Tribute in the Ming Dynasty" by Turrell V. Wylie, pages 467-473 in the book History of Tibet (Volume II):
...the payment of tribute in Ming times cannot be interpreted as evidence of China's suzerainty over any country. Li Tieh-tseng himself noted that the tribute missions were highly profitable to the lamas and became such a drain on the Ming treasury that they had to be curtailed. If the purpose of the Ming policy towards the lamas were to maintain Chinese suzerainty over Tibet, then surely such control depended on means other than the so-called "tribute missions."
This brings us to the issue of the bestowal of titles and seals on the lamas. Both Chinese authors cited in this paper interpret this as a continuation by the Ming emperors of the lama policy of the preceding Yuan dynasty and that it constituted the official renewal of appointments made by the Mongol emperors. Li Tieh-tseng wrote that "Most of the offices were hereditary under the Yuan dynasty. Their occupants, in command of one thousand or ten thousand families, were reappointed with new patents." He refers, of course, to the offices of a chiliarch and a myriarch; offices which were in effect during the lifetime of the Mongol-imposed Sa-skya government.
I have dealt with the first Mongol conquest of Tibet in the 13th century in some detail elsewhere. Suffice it here to say that following the census of 1268, Khubilai Khan had central Tibet divided into thirteen myriarchies for purposes of taxation and administration. The hierocratic he imposed on Tibet employs lamas as viceroys with administrative headquarters at Sa-Skya. Historically, Tibet came under Mongol domination a decade before China was finally conquered by the armies of Khubilai Khan.
In the middle of the 14th century, Tibetans led by the myriarch of Phag-mo-gru rebelled against the Sa-Skya government. Mongol military failed to intervene and Sa-Skya was overthrown. The Phag-mo-gru myriarch became the de facto ruler of Tibet and the Mongol Emperor Toghun Temür conferred on him the seal and title of T'ai Si-tu. The Phag-mo-gru ruler established a new form of centralized government with headquarters at Sne-gdong in the Yar-klungs district. He replaced the myriarchy system imposed by the Mongols with administrative units called rdzong, each governed by an official appointed by him. Thus, the "lama-patron" relationship (yon-mchod) which, beginning with Khubilai Khan and 'Phags-pa of Sa-Skya, had been the underlying principle of the Mongol-imposed polity in Tibet, came to an end. Historically then, Tibet became independent of Mongol domination before the Ming dynasty ever came into existence. In view of such chronology, one cannot help but question the validity of the claim that Tibetan myriarchs—whose offices had ceased to exist—"were reappointed with new patents" by the Ming emperors.
The Chinese authors cited in this paper view the Ming policy as a continuation of the Mongol policy towards the lamas. Granted that the myriarchs and other officials of Tibet were confirmed in office by the Mongols, the primary sources make it clear that the khans focused their political support on lamas of the Sa-Skya sect as their viceroys. Contrastingly, the Chinese emperors of the Ming dynasty lavished rewards and titles on all leading lamas who accepted the invitation to come to court, regardless of their sectarian affiliations. The Ming Shih lists various titles bestowed on lamas; eight of which end in the title "King" (Chinese: Wang). A contemporary Tibetan text notes that the Ming emperor bestowed the office and title of Dhang (phonetically: Wang) on the hierarch of Phag-mo-gru, but it then states that the hierarchs of 'Bi-khung, Rtse-dgong, and Gling were equally given that title as well.
Even though the Chinese authors cited regard the entitlement of lamas as the renewal of appointments made earlier by the Mongol emperors, evidence contained in the Ming Shih itself disproves such an interpretation.
So here LaGrandefr is, trying to use the Mingshi (as he states here, his 'Bible' of Ming history) as the prime text to secure and validate his point about rule over Tibet, and even the Mingshi contradicts him! Oh this is too much for words. Irony, much?
More to come...--Pericles of AthensTalk 19:30, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
Passage #2
Continuing his point on the next page, from pages 469 to 470:
Consider first the title Ta Pao Fa Wang ("Great Precious King of the [Buddhist] Law"). This was the same title Khubilai Khan gave to 'Phags-pa Lama of Sa-Skya as his Imperial Teacher and Viceroy of Tibet. If it were the intention of the Ming emperors to continue the Mongol policy towards the lamas, then one would have expected that this exalted title would have been bestowed on a descendent of the Sa-Skya lineage in order to perpetuate—even if only symbolically—a semblence of the "lama-patron" relationship that pertained in the Mongol dynasty. Or even better from the pragmatic view of maintaining suzerainty, that title should have gone to the successor of T'ai Si-tu of Phagmo-gru as the de facto ruler of Tibet. Notwithstanding, these historical or political considerations, the title of "Great Precious King of the Law" was bestowed according to the Ming Shih in the year 1407 by the Yung-lo Emperor on the fifth hierarch of the Black-hat Karma-pa sect.
It is impossible to interpret this entitlement of the Karma-pa hierarch as a "renewal of appointment" by the Ming emperor for the simple reason that the Black-hat Karma-pa lamas were not appointed to myriarchic office during the previous Mongol dynasty. In fact, the Black-hat Karma-pa is said to have been politically eclipsed by Khubilai Khan because Karma Bakshi, second hierarch of the sect, refused Khubilai's invitation to become his court lama. Logically, if the Black-hat Karma-pa hierarchs had not been appointed to office by the Mongol emperors, then there could be no "reappointment to office" by succeeding Chinese emperors.
A successor of the famous 'Phags-pa Lama of Sa-Skya was given a title, albeit a new one; namely Ta Ch'eng Fa Wang ("King of the Law of the Great Vehicle" [=Mahayana]).
As for the Phag-mo-gru hierarch, de facto ruler of Tibet at the time, it is said he was the first to go to the Ming court. The Ming Shih refers to him as the "acting Imperial Teacher" and states that the emperor changed his title to the lesser one of "State Teacher" (kuo shih). Decades later, however, one of the successors of the Phag-mo-gru hierarch was given the more exalted title of Shan Huo Wang ("King Who Teaches Liberation").
Even more important to the contention that the Ming policy cannot be regarded as one of renewing official appointments is the case of Chos-rje Shākya Ye-shes, a personal disciple of Tsong-ka-pa, founder of the Yellow-hat Dge-lugs-pa sect. The Yung-lo Emperor repeatedly invited Tsong-ka-pa to come to court, but he declined. Tsong-ka-pa finally sent his disciple, Chos-rje Shākya Ye-shes, in his stead. On his first visit to the court, this disciple was given the title of "State Teacher"; the same title originally given the Phagmo-gru ruler of Tibet. On a later visit to the court, this disciple received the title of Ta Tz'u Fa Wang ("Great Compassionate King of the Buddhist Law") from the Hsüan-te Emperor.
Chos-rje Shākya Ye-shes was just one among the many disciples of Tsong-ka-pa, yet he received a title with the pompous designation of "King". Presumably, he was then regarded as being on the same religious plane as the hierarchs of the Black-hat Karma-pa, the Sa-Skya-pa, and others who also were given the title of a "King".
Again, it is impossible to regard the title bestowed on Chos-rje Shākya Ye-shes as a "renewal of appointment" made by the Mongol emperors. The reformation movement that led to the rise of the Yellow-hat sect did not begin until after the fall of the Mongol dynasty, consequently no member of that sect could have been appinted to office by the Mongol court.
At this point it is important to note that neither the name of the Yellow-hat sect or that of its founder, Tsong-ka-pa, appear in the official history of the Ming Dynasty. The reason for this is provided by Li Tieh-tseng himself, who wrote that "In China not only the emperor could do no wrong, but also his prestige and dignity had to be upheld at any cost. Had the fact been made known to the public that Ch'eng-tsu's repeated invitations extended to Tsong-ka-pa were declined, the Emperor's prestige and dignity would have been considered as lowered to a contemptible degree, especially at a time when his policy to show high favours toward lamas was by no means popular and had already caused resentment among the people. This explains why no mention of Tsong-k'a-pa and the Yellow Sect was made in the Ming Shih and Ming Shih lu."
And with that last statement of Wylie quoting the challenged scholar Li Tieh-tseng, do you see now, User:LaGrandefr, why it is wrong and dangerous for YOU to make judgments about the Mingshi, as if you were some qualified historian and professor with a Ph.D? Here is a gigantic error of history embodied in your supposedly faultless Mingshi. With that in mind, you better drop your present argument and pick up a book and start reading, because your argument has just now been destroyed.
Still more to come...--Pericles of AthensTalk 19:51, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
Passage #3
After quoting Li Tieh-tseng here, Wylie continues by wrapping up his argument here (NOTE: the bolding of text here in two spots is my own doing, not Wyli'es):
Such censorship of the official history of the Ming dynasty distorts the true picture of the period. It is clear, however, that the Ming emperors were not continuing the lama policy of the previous Mongol dynasty. Beginning with Khubilai Khan, the Mongol emperors had appointed a Sa-Skya lama as "Imperial Teacher" to serve as the viceroy of the Mongol-imposed government in Tibet. When the last Sa-Skya lama to hold that title died in 1358, the Sa-Skya regime had already been overthrown and the office of the "Imperial Teacher" fell into disuse. Although the Mongols had focused their support singularly on lamas of the Sa-Skya sect to rule Tibet, the Chinese emperors rewarded all who came to court regardless of sectarian affiliation. Since the Ming emperors were not following the Mongol practice, their lama policy must have been based on another consideration.
Relevant here is the turn of events during the reign of the Shih-tsung Emperor (1522-1566). This emperor embraced Taoism, degraded lamas, and suppressed Buddhism. The Ming Shih states from this time onwards "Tibetan lamas rarely went to China". In view of the lavish rewards and titles that were given to lamas for almost two centuries, the fact that they stopped going to China in the 16th century suggests a dramatic change in Ming policy towards the lamas. It is mere coincidence that this change was synchronic with the return of the Mongols to the Kokonor region?
Even though the Mongols were overthrown in China, they continued to be a force in Inner Asia. Early in the 16th century they began again to infiltrate the Kokonor region, and in the reign of the Shih-tsung Emperor, Mongols under the leadership of Altan Khan began to harass the Chinese frontier. Altan Khan finally made peace with the Ming court in 1571, but that did not stop him from becoming involved in Tibetan affairs. He invited the third hierarch of the Yellow-hat Sect to Mongolia and in 1578 he gave that lama the Mongolian title of Dalai ("Ocean"). Following the example of his ancestor Khubilai Khan, Altan Khan entered into the "lama-patron" relationship with this Dalai Lama.
Although I'm done with Wylie's source, I'm not done here by far, more to come.--Pericles of AthensTalk 20:48, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
User Responses
In the order of appearance, I ask that Wikipedia Users please state their thoughts and opinions in one of the following response slots in regards to the Wylie passages above, the Tibet issue, and LaGrandefr's map. Make sure that you have read all three passages of Wylie's book chapter that I have presented above, in order to write your own comprehensive arguments. I'll start off...
- User 1 --> Given that the Mingshi is 269 years old, was written by pre-modern scholars who were writing a history overseen by the government, was written in an uneasy political situation where the scholars had to censure themselves and avoid insulting the Ming emperors (as well as their Qing emperor Qianlong), and Wylie's statement that "Such censorship of the official history of the Ming dynasty distorts the true picture of the period", then LaGrandefr's argument of validating his scholarly-challenged map through the use of primary source documents (Mingshi) without the consultation and analysis of modern scholars amounts to original research. As we all know, Wikipedia does not sponsor original research. His argument thus becomes null and void, if not dangerous to a free encyclopedia.--Pericles of AthensTalk 21:50, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
- User 2 -->
- Like I said before, whether LaGrandefr's map is appropriate or not hinges on the relation of Tibet with Ming China. To support his claim that Tibet was in fact an administered part of Ming China, LaGrandefr quoted a sentence from Mingshi (actually only 4 characters are relevant) that may be roughly translated as: [Ming] occupies Tubo [Tibet] in the West. But as he himself said, the concept of a nation state is modern, it is not obvious whether Mingshi meant Tibet was actually an administrative part of Ming, or it was just a tributary state which is also counted as part of Ming anyway. Seems to me he needs more than a sentence to establish his claim.
- Besides, the reliability of Mingshi is disputed. Common sense would suggest that Mingshi, written by men as opposed to inspired by gods, is error-prone. So I wouldn't put as much faith in it as LaGrandefr apparently did. If Mingshi were the last word on Ming, why do we need all these Ming scholars and research papers on Ming? That said, I would trust Mingshi if there's no evidence to suggest otherwise, as it's probably the most authoritative work of its time. But I'm afraid it's now on of those instances when Mingshi is not reliable. Josuechan (talk) 05:33, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
- User 3 -->
- We have a map published by a reliable source and apparently roughly in line with respected secondary sources on the period, and another one that seems to be in contradiction with a number respected secondary sources, and also misses info on the Mings other tributaries (or "tributaries"). IMO all one could ask for would be to attribute the mao currently on the page (map published by ... in ...), and maybe create an extra section on the relation between the Ming and Tibet. Yaan (talk) 16:02, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
- User 4 -->
- User 5 -->
Thank you.--Pericles of AthensTalk 21:30, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
Irrelevant
Thank you for your response. According to the sentence [Ming] occupies Tubo [Tibet] in the West(西據吐番) in Mingshi, it's really that we cannot see how exact relation between Tibet and Ming China was. However, it's very clearly that Ming occupied Tibet, just like Germany occupied France during the WWII, so we can definitely claim that France was in Germany at that period. As for other proves, I've even described the two administrative divisions in Tibet settled by Ming China(17:00, 1 April 2008), Dbus-Gtsang Itinerant High Commandery(烏思藏行都指揮使司) and Mdo-khams Itinerant High Commandery (朵甘行都指揮使司), which is the same administrative division as China proper. And the system of Itinerant High Commandery (都指揮使司) was settled in 1375 in the whole Ming China.
Moreover, all the researches of Ming Dynasty are based on Mingshi, which is one of the 24 official Chinese historical works. If it's not reliable, the whole article of Ming Dynasty and all researches of this domain should be doubted. Besides, I want to point out that Qing Dynasty and Ming Dynasty are two mortal enemies, is it logical to exaggerate the territory of enemy? Sorry, I don't see the significance.--LaGrandefr (talk) 11:19, 3 April 2008 (UTC)}}
- Sorry, but your comment here is irrelevant to the sub-section, unfounded, and unconstructive. Besides, I've proven you wrong with the Mingshi itself! Until you make a sensible response to Wylie's passage, basing your argument in Wylie's or another modern scholar's argument, then your post does not deserve to belong in the sub-section above. Thank you.--Pericles of AthensTalk 14:04, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
- And of course most historians use the Mingshi, but it's only a large guide, not a 100% trustworthy document, and there are many, many more primary sources for historians to peruse through besides the Mingshi. If you read the passages above (which you obviously didn't), you would clearly see the problem with placing trust in the Mingshi when it comes to Tibet.
- The Qing and Ming being once mortal enemies is irrelevant. By the time the Mingshi was compiled by Qing scholars, the Southern Ming had been conquered for almost 70 years, and the actual Ming for nearly 100 years. The Qing scholars based their history off of what men in the time of the Ming wrote, and as Wylie shows above is that the people making the Ming court records avoided displaying the true situation in Tibet, because it would embarrass and demote the status of the Yongle Emperor, who they did not want to insult (he was prone to execute people who dissatisfied him, although not as much as Hongwu). No Qing emperor, especially Qianlong who was trying to conquer Tibet, would choose to degrade a former Chinese emperor in their situations with Tibet, especially one such as Yongle, who Qing emperors no doubt would try to use as a moral or bold exemplar and historical precedent as all emperors of China did with former emperors. It would be considered insulting even in Qing times to degrade Ming emperors.--Pericles of AthensTalk 14:04, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
- And of course most historians use the Mingshi, but it's only a large guide, not a 100% trustworthy document, and there are many, many more primary sources for historians to peruse through besides the Mingshi. If you read the passages above (which you obviously didn't), you would clearly see the problem with placing trust in the Mingshi when it comes to Tibet.
- Sorry, but your comment here is irrelevant to the sub-section, unfounded, and unconstructive. Besides, I've proven you wrong with the Mingshi itself! Until you make a sensible response to Wylie's passage, basing your argument in Wylie's or another modern scholar's argument, then your post does not deserve to belong in the sub-section above. Thank you.--Pericles of AthensTalk 14:04, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
I know very well your position and I respect it at the same time. But you should realize there's also other scholarly opinion also based on some historical documents, which is different from your opinion. Still my sentence that I said I above, different scholars have different opinions. You just stick to your position and cannot accept even tarnish other scholars' opinion. As for the relation between Ming court and Tibet, some scholars think Tibet was part of Ming China (sovereignty), some scholars think Tibet was a tributary of Ming China (suzerainty), some scholars even think there were no ties between the two. Why don't we present all of the opinions? We cannot choose the opinions according to our pleasures. I'm glad that you return to yourself, (no longer suspect everything like some time ago) and present rational arguments. I've made a suggestion in my user page. If you're still not satisfied, I can change the color of Tibet into a color relatively different from China proper, in order to reach a further negotiation. How about it? Regards. --LaGrandefr (talk) 15:10, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
- "However, it's very clearly that Ming occupied Tibet, just like Germany occupied France during the WWII, so we can definitely claim that France was in Germany at that period." - when exactly did Ming China occupy Tibet? Yaan (talk) 15:53, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
- Never. The Ming never sent conquering troops to Tibet and never sent troops to garrison in Tibet. Even Wang and Nyima admit this, and they are the scholarly supporters of Ming rule over Tibet. Which, indeed, makes this France and Germany during WWII comparison bizarre and misplaced.--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:33, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
The contention here is which map picture will be in the lead
In response to your statements above, LaGrandefr, yes, I've already noted the different scholarly conclusions in the article in the new Tibet section (even the Wylie passage above notes different scholars' opinions, so it's not as if this hasn't dawned on me, LaGrandefr). I am all for presenting all opinions, as per WP:NPOV. In fact, I have no qualms with including your map in the article, as I've stated numerous times above. However, the contentious issue here is not so much my disagreement with SinoPress's map, but where it is placed in the article. With your edit here, you were not content with having the contested SinoPress Map in the new Tibet section; instead, you wanted it in the introductory lead section and in the infobox. Another problem with your map that will confuse readers is comparing it to the other maps in the article. I feel that readers will become confused by your map in the lead as they discover other maps later on that don't show Tibet under Ming control, asking "When did the Ming conquer Tibet?" Which, of course, never happened. They might also ask "If it was conquered, when did the Ming lose control of it?" This is the heart of the issue and the problem with your map being in the lead section. Using Wylie's passage above, the Harvard University Press map I support would be accurate, as it is most clear that Yongle had little sway or power over the Tibetans he granted titles to; in fact, anyone who happened to walk into the palace door with tribute in their hands was labeld a "King" no matter what; it could have been a lama's janitor for all Yongle knew! Lol. More importantly, some Tibetan leaders refused to acknowledge Yongle and declined his invitation to court. The Jiajing Emperor (r. 1521–1567), a staunch Daoist, discarded relations with the Tibetan lamas as if the tribute relationship had never existed; at the same time, the Mongols' relationship with Tibetan lamas was enhanced.--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:33, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
More evidence and a new problem with the SinoPress Map
In addition to the arguments made by scholars Hoffman, Riggs, and Wylie above, here is more evidence I present from Dawa Norbu's China's Tibet Policy (2001, Richmond: Curzon, ISBN 0700704744) on page 51–52 (after discussing Phags-pa Lama and Kubilai Khan):
The highly respectful and reverential treatment extended to the Sakya Lamas is not an isolated case, though it is the first such case in Sino-Tibetan relations. Similar reverence and respect were shown by successive Chinese dynasties to successive ruling or reigning High Lamas of Tibet. Two such examples will illustrate our point: the Ming emperor invited the V Karmapa (Lama Dezhin Shagpa) to China in 1407. A noted Tibetan historian accompanying him recorded the imperial reception to the lama in the following words:
On the first day of the first month of the Fire Hog year, we arrived at the outskirts of Nanking, the capital of the Ming. Officials and noblemen on horses welcomed us and placed Karmapa on an elephant. At the city gate of Nanking, the Emperor himself received Karmapa Lama. Gifts were exchanged. Karmapa presented a gold model of a wheel and a scarf to the Emperor, and received in return a conch shell and a scarf. After the Emperor had returned to his palace, Karmapa was escorted to the guest house.
It should be noted that the Emperor came out of his palace to receive the lama, and that there was no question of kowtow by the latter to the former. We might say their relations, though not on equal footing, were characterized by mutual respect and implicit compromise politics. An even higher level of state reception was accorded to the V Dalai Lama by the Qing Emperor Shen Xhi [sic] in 1652. The Lama's state visit was an unprecedented event in the history of Qing-Tibetan relations. As William Rockhill writes, "He [the V Dalai Lama] had been treated with all the ceremony which could have been accorded to any independent sovereign, and nothing can be found in the Chinese works that he was looked upon in any other light.
Aside from Dawa Norbu's strange spelling of "Emperor Shen Xhi" (???), this is yet again a very useful passage in my argument about Tibet's status. It had quite a unique status among the vassal entities paying tribute to the Ming court, but it was not part of the Ming.--Pericles of AthensTalk 05:08, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
On Page 58 of the same book:
According to Chinese communist historians, "The Ming Dynasty basically followed the system introduced by the Yuan Dynasty in exercising rule over the Tibetan areas." This was true of the Amdo and Kham areas (Inner Tibet) but not of Outer Tibet (U-Tsang and Ngari) where, as we have seen, three successive nationalistic regimes came into existence, which Communist historians prefer to ignore.
On the other hand, Tibetan nationalist historians such as Shakabpa maintain that "Tibet gained its independence from the Mongols in the time of Changchub Gyaltsen (1302-64), and China gained hers in 1368 under the leadership of Chu Yuan-chang." Shakabpa is only partially correct. Changchub Gyaltsen's Tibet included only U-Tsang and Ngari (Outer Tibet) and not Amdo and Kham whose lamaas and chieftans continued to have flourishing tribute-cum-trade relations with the Ming dynasty, as we shall see later.
This creates more problems. If the SinoPress Map is trying to include Inner Tibet (or rather, the eastern half of Tibet) as a place ruled by the Ming (through suzerainty), then why does it include Outer Tibet (the western half of Tibet) as well, which did not acknowledge the Ming? This is another reason why I think it's a bad idea to use SinoPress, which didn't do a very good job on their map if the right intent should be showing that the Ming had suzerainty over Inner Tibet, not Outer Tibet.--Pericles of AthensTalk 05:24, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- The Ming never sent conquering troops to Tibet and never sent troops to garrison in Tibet.? I cite a website with .edu ending as you like, [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] [ cc dot purdue dot edu /~wtv/tibet/history7 dot html ], it says Ming court sent several military expeditionary forces to pacify Tibet. So you still stick to your opinion? Moreover, this website has also drawn the map of Tibet under Ming dynasty. [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] [ cc dot purdue dot edu /~wtv/tibet/map dot html ] You just cite the arguments of scholars who have the same opinion with you, frankly. Now that you accept the map of SinoMap Press and want to place it in the text. Why? If it's exact, we can place it everywhere. I also said above that I can offer a detailed map of Tibet under the administration of Ming China and it will be suitable to be placed in the section about Tibet. You think readers will be confused by ming_1443.png, but I've already negotiated to make a relatively different color over Tibet in Ming China, in noting there's a debate in the issue of Tibet and more details will be shown in the section of Tibet that you opened. Thus, ming_1443.png can include the opinions of TWO sides, but your map completely dismisses one side's opinion. Can you understand? You also posed some questions like When did the Ming conquer Tibet? or If it was conquered, when did the Ming lose control of it?, etc, how can you give a definitive negative answer yourself? It's so funny. Besides, all of the questions that you posed can be answered in the section that you created, I'll cite the arguments in the same time. At last, where did you see that Outer Tibet was not included in Ming China? E-Li-Si Army-Civilian Marshal Office (俄力思軍民元帥府) was instituted by Ming court (1376) in Ngari (western Tibet). Could you please read more before wild talking? Thanks. --LaGrandefr (talk) 12:16, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- Quite frankly, websites, even those end with .edu, are not enough. Why? Because at this minute I could put up some crazy stuff like saying Tibet was colonized by Martins in 1000 AD on my website, which is hosted by my university that ends with .edu. At least try some books published by publishers with good reputation (like Cambridge History of China). If you're really serious to prove your claims, you should look for papers in peer-reviewed journals. You see, all the sources Pericles of Athens quoted are reliable. True, I didn't know about Turrell V. Wylie a few days ago. But a little internet search shows that he published a paper titled "A Short History of Tibet" in The Journal of Asian Studies, which is a very good journal. Then I know he's no cheat and what he says carries some weights. Josuechan (talk) 13:18, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
I cite a website with .edu ending as you like, [11], it says Ming court sent several military expeditionary forces to pacify Tibet. So you still stick to your opinion? It's not an opinion, LaGrandefr (I'm sensing you're getting a bit hostile, tone it down), it's a fact stated even by the scholars who support your claim, Wang and Nyima. Go sit on that for a while and come back with a cooler head (and preferably credible book and journal sources on your part, which you have not yet fulfilled).--Pericles of AthensTalk 13:58, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
I just followed the home page of the ".edu" link you provided, [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] [ cc dot purdue dot edu / which says]:
If you plan to create a personal home page and place it in the World Wide Web, you should be familiar with PUCC policies on the proper use of the Purdue University computing facilities.
Nuts-and-Bolts on Personal Home Pages
You can create a personal World Wide Web home page on this machine. Your WWW documents must be stored in a subdirectory named WWW under your home directory, and this directory (~/WWW) must be world-executable and world-readable. Note: your home directory "~" must be world-executable.
This is clearly not a scholarly published article; it's a student's personal web page, not a peer-reviewed or acknowledged source. You're really clutching at straws here, LaGrandefr.--Pericles of AthensTalk 14:04, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
I strongly demand the intervention of admins in this discussion!
- To some guys above: At the beginning, you suspected I made a map myself, and I cited the original map in no time. Later you accused it's pro-communist(PRC), I cited dozens of websites of different origins (no blog, Internet forum, ect.) to prove it. After you only wanted the websites with .edu ending, I cited this kind of website immediately. And you changed to want a book, I cited Historical Atlas of China, SinoMap Press, ISBN 7503103841, but you rejected it once again. Even when I cited a officially compiled historical works (there're only 24 in the whole history of China), you can still deny it. User:PericlesofAthens suspected me to be a WP:SOCKPUPPET, contrarily, I doubt you, how can it exist a gang of persons that have a opinion and act so unified? I don't know what I can do right now. OK, I'll wait, just wait the response of admins.
- To User:PericlesofAthens: I cited [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] [ cc dot purdue dot edu /~wtv/tibet/map dot html ] and just want to satisfy your anxiety of websites with .edu ending. The website is sponsored by Tibet Study Association (formerly America-Tibet Association) and I chanced to find it. You want to finally clarify the relation between Tibet and Ming court, I still cited Mingshi, Dbus-Gtsang Itinerant High Commandery (烏思藏行都指揮使司) and Mdo-khams Itinerant High Commandery (朵甘行都指揮使司) in eastern Tibet, E-Li-Si Army-Civilian Marshal Office (俄力思軍民元帥府) in western Tibet were settled by Ming court. There're many more administrative divisions settled by Ming court at that epoch. You can don't accept all of these, but please allow others' opinion. Briefly, both of us realize the existence of different opinions. Why don't we present all of them? You still didn't respond my proposal of negotiation. Please take in consideration. Thanks.--LaGrandefr (talk) 14:52, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
LaGrandefr, you are contradicting yourself
Hi, Pericles here. Well, LaGrandefr, I would love to negotiate with you, but you now seem to be contradicting yourself. Earlier, you said:
Sorry, I made this map on the basis of the original map made by Sinomap Press, ISBN:7503103841. I won't and can't change it according to my personal willing. Thanks.
I can't disagree with that, but now you are saying this:
You think readers will be confused by ming_1443.png, but I've already negotiated to make a relatively different color over Tibet in Ming China, in noting there's a debate in the issue of Tibet and more details will be shown in the section of Tibet that you opened. Thus, ming_1443.png can include the opinions of TWO sides, but your map completely dismisses one side's opinion.
So tell me, LaGrandefr, this new map you are speaking of with a different color for Tibet and China proper, are you deriving this from a scholarly-sourced map that you have yet to present here with a link? If you were to alter the SinoPress Map to differentiate Tibet and China proper with colors, would that not be a faithful copy of the SinoPress Map, and therefore become your own map that you custom made without a proper source? I hope you see how this contradicts what you stated earlier. If I am understanding you correclty, you are now saying you are abandoning the SinoPress map for another source with a different map that I have not yet seen?--Pericles of AthensTalk 17:57, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
Another issue: the Ming never conquered or occupied Tibet
That personal web page of the Purdue University student you used states:
Ming court sent several military expeditionary forces to pacify Tibet.
But is this true? In which year did the Ming send an army and in which years were they garrisoned in Tibet? Which Ming military officer commanded the troops that conquered Tibet? How long was the campaign and conquest of Tibet? Is this information in the Mingshi or another source, perhaps? I ask this because the two scholars I cited in the Ming Dynasty article who are in favor of LaGrandefr's argument that Tibet was part of China, Wang Jiawei and Nyima Gyaincain, on page 38 of their The Historical Status of China's Tibet (中国西藏历史地位英, 1997, China Intercontinental Press, ISBN 7801133048), state this:
The Ming Dynasty, which toppled the Yuan Dynasty and took control of China, was not as powerful in national military might as the Yuan had been. Although the Ming Dynasty court was harsh enough to punish law-breaking Tibetan officials, it refrained from sending troops to subdue Tibet or from garrisoning troops in Tibet. However, exploiting the fact that the local forces of Tibet could survive and fare well only with the support of the emperor, the Ming Dynasty court granted official posts and titles of honor to local Tibetan leaders, who vied to pay tribute to the Ming Dynasty court, and granted them handsome rewards. The Ming Dynasty was very successful in expanding influence in the Tibetan areas and in strengthening ties with local forces through these measures.
So there you have it, Wang and Nyima state that the Ming never sent troops to Tibet, and they are the ones supporting your argument! In addition, Dawa Norbu, who I cited above, states that the Mongols to the north were the main threat to the Ming, as the Ming had no worries of military problems rising on the western borders with Tibet so long as a cordial tribute relationship was effective. Strangely enough, Wang and Nyima never elaborate on how the Ming "[punished] law-breaking Tibetan officials," or even why they believe the local forces in Tibet were so heavily indebted to the Ming emperor's support for their very survival; they make a pretty weak point by not backing it up with facts to follow, unlike the other scholars Norbu, Wylie, Hoffman, Riggs, etc. I have shown here.--Pericles of AthensTalk 18:24, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
Also, you state this:
You want to finally clarify the relation between Tibet and Ming court, I still cited Mingshi, Dbus-Gtsang Itinerant High Commandery (烏思藏行都指揮使司) and Mdo-khams Itinerant High Commandery (朵甘行都指揮使司) in eastern Tibet, E-Li-Si Army-Civilian Marshal Office (俄力思軍民元帥府) in western Tibet were settled by Ming court.
LaGrandefr, we've been over this already, as proven by scholar Turrell V. Wylie, you cannot trust the Mingshi as an accurate source when it comes to Tibet. Furthermore, you are using a primary source document that should be analyzed by historians; you are not a historian, so what you are doing amounts to original research, which is not allowed. I'm sorry, but any more direct references to the Mingshi will be ignored as invalid material not checked by modern credible scholars.--Pericles of AthensTalk 18:33, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
It seems that you're tending to accept the negotiation. Thank you for the concern that I MAYBE risk of going back to my words. Your concern is superfluous since I don't want modify Ming_1443.png, what I suggested is that we make a combination of 2 maps in order to present 2 sides' opinions. This is a common method in Wikipedia to debated issues. (I'm a new comer of English wiki, not a new user.)
- About the issue of Tibet, it's debated among the scholars, so why are you so willing to draw a one-sided self-approbation decision? Could you PLEASE don't give your personal thoughts in Wikipedia? The source that you cited Historical Status of China's Tibet, it says Ming refrained from … the authors used refrained, not prohibited. During the whole dynasty, Ming didn't carry out large military actions in Tibet, but it did some times. 1370, General DENG Yu was sent by the court to conquer the West … Mdo-khams and Dbus-Gtsang showed submission to Ming court. (洪武三年…大將軍出定西…朵甘、烏斯藏諸部悉歸附) Do you really find a seesaw battle very interesting, as each side shows their sources endlessly? The issue of Tibet during Ming China is DABATED, not concluded, both of us cannot (neither qualified not authorized) to decide whether Tibet was in Ming China or not, so I advice you not to conclude so easily and so carelessly.
- Besides, according to Mingshi-Military, a detailed and complete administration system was even recorded, two Itinerant High Commandery 都指揮使司, one Itinerant Commandery 指揮使司, three Pacification Commissioner's Office 宣尉使司, six Expedition Commissioner's Office 招討司, four Wanhu offices 萬戶府 (myriarchies each in command of 10,000 households), seventeen Qianhu offices 千戶所 (chiliarchies each in command of 1,000 households). I will show all the details in the new section about Tibet. (In fact, to be a featured article, Ming Dynasty should introduce a detailed administration division of the whole country, I'm glad to offer all sources that I own.) If you can still deny all of these, I'll have no alternative but wait the admins' response, since I've shown my greatest goodwill to negotiate. Regards.--LaGrandefr (talk) 13:18, 6 April 2008 (UTC)
Lead infobox map and a possible new article
For goodness sake, why are you now always putting your responses in quotation form? This page would be very hard to read for any newcomer in this debate, as I've already quoted you above using that method. Anyway, you state this:
It seems that you're tending to accept the negotiation. Thank you for the concern that I MAYBE risk of going back to my words. Your concern is superfluous since I don't want modify Ming_1443.png, what I suggested is that we make a combination of 2 maps in order to present 2 sides' opinions. This is a common method in Wikipedia to debated issues. (I'm a new comer of English wiki, not a new user.)
No, you haven't suggested that at all up until this point; before, as seen on your user page, you did not include two maps, but you do have a completely new map because you altered the colors of Tibet and China Proper (and then I asked which scholarly-source you based this new altered map from). As I made clear earlier, I'm not against having a map that shows different colors for Tibet and China Proper, but the boundaries of it has to be based off of a map from a scholarly source, not just something out of thin air that we contrived (that would be original research).
So let me get this straight: you are suggesting that the lead infobox contain both the Harvard University Press map and the SinoMap Press map, side-by-side, without one or the other being altered? If so, I wouldn't object to the idea, if you can have it done.--Pericles of AthensTalk 14:19, 6 April 2008 (UTC)
1370, General DENG Yu
Finally! A name and a year...but those areas only reportedly "submitted" on his western campaign; was there an actual battle we're missing here, though? There certainly wasn't an occupation.--Pericles of AthensTalk 14:19, 6 April 2008 (UTC)
Do you really find a seesaw battle very interesting, as each side shows their sources endlessly?
Well, you seem pretty gung-ho in plugging your map into the article without bringing scholarly sources to the table; in fact, I'm the only one who's done that so far. I'm the one who brought Wang and Nyima to the fore; I could have just chosen to ignore the opposing side, but since you've sparked an interest in the issue, I found it necessary to include opposing views to understand the full argument. If this is a seesaw game, I'm sitting on one end by myself without any partner of equal weight.--Pericles of AthensTalk 14:19, 6 April 2008 (UTC)
The issue of Tibet during Ming China is DABATED, not concluded, both of us cannot (neither qualified not authorized) to decide whether Tibet was in Ming China or not, so I advice you not to conclude so easily and so carelessly.
You advise me, huh? That's ironic, since I've repeatedly had to tell you the same thing on this issue. It's good to see someone's taking my advice.--Pericles of AthensTalk 14:19, 6 April 2008 (UTC)
I will show all the details in the new section about Tibet. (In fact, to be a featured article, Ming Dynasty should introduce a detailed administration division of the whole country, I'm glad to offer all sources that I own.)
Well, well, so far I was unaware that you owned any scholarly sources, since you've been so careful to avoid showing them here. As to expanding the Tibet section in this article, no, that will not do. This article has already ballooned in size to a near unacceptable level since I've expanded it beginning in December 2007; there were also complaints in the FAC discussion about how large the overall "History" section was becoming in comparison to the following sections. If you want to include all of this new textual information from "sources that I own", I would suggest creating a separate main article that can be linked in the Tibet sub-section of this article. "Tibet during the Ming Dynasty", perhaps?--Pericles of AthensTalk 14:19, 6 April 2008 (UTC)
- It's not me who started to use quotation form (actually it's you). Briefly, you finally accept the negotiation, a new map that shows the different scholarly opinions about Tibet during Ming Dynasty. The map in my user page is my proposal several days ago, please be more concentrated to the discussion, OK? The new map will be shown in the right.
- As for other discussion about the article, we shall make it in the section you created. I'm somewhat exhausted, frankly.
- PS: Still that sentence, don't be a sceptic, it's not good. Of course I owned the scholarly sources, I showed the original texts it's because I wanna close some ones' mouths by the historical records. Regards. --LaGrandefr (talk) 12:43, 7 April 2008 (UTC)
Well, I started quoting you in that quotation format, but that's different from crafting all my responses in quotation format. As for the map, since you acknowledged in the image description that it's based off of both maps, SinoPress and Harvard University Press, I suppose that it is acceptable. As for additional textual information on Tibet during the Ming, that can go in a new separate article linked here as a sister article to this article and a main article for the Tibet section, as the latter in this article is already a bit long as it stands. I think now we can end this long 'seesaw' tirade, as you decribe it. Let's finally have this edit lock removed so that the article can get back on track, shall we?--Pericles of AthensTalk 02:40, 8 April 2008 (UTC)
- Finally we reached the agreement. I already asked User:Steve Crossin to unlock this article and watch it at the same time. It's a good idea to create a new article about Tibet during that period. Shall we name it Tibet during the Ming Dynasty or Relations between Ming court and Tibet?
- PS: I wish some guys above not to modify the article just because you don't believe it. It's a respect to others' work and the vandalism is also discouraged in wikipedia. --LaGrandefr (talk) 12:36, 8 April 2008 (UTC)
One more sentence
I added a sentence about Wylie's book chapter to wrap up the argument of the side in favor of the view that Tibet was more autonomous than Wang and Nyima assert. Any more info can be placed in a new article, if someone wishes to create one.--Pericles of AthensTalk 17:55, 8 April 2008 (UTC)
Annam in your map
Quick question about the new map that I somehow didn't notice before: why is Annam shown as part of Ming China in 1443? The Ming Dynasty was pushed out of Vietnam in 1428, and the Ming court recognized the new Lê Dynasty as an independent state in 1431; this has been mentioned in the Ming Dynasty article for quite a while now. I hate to say it, but this creates an entirely new problem with your map, no? If you have the time, please revise the map. I'll wait a week for you to revise it, but after that time I think I will replace it. Thank you.--Pericles of AthensTalk 18:06, 8 April 2008 (UTC)
- The north and centre of Manchuria also was never a part of Ming China. --91.64.142.250 (talk) 20:11, 9 April 2008 (UTC)
- The negotiation is a combination of 2 maps. Annam is in the map of Havard University, the north and centre of Manchuria is in the map of Sinomap.--LaGrandefr (talk) 12:35, 11 April 2008 (UTC)
- So? That's not a good argument to keep the map, if it is totally inaccurate, since Lê Nhân Tông was the king of all Vietnam in 1443 and was recognized as such by the Ming court. How does that validate China's claim to Annam in 1443, the year your map supposedly portrays? That doesn't make any sense, LaGrandefr. Do you have any conception of what a timeline is? And what the difference is between 1424 and 1443? If you don't revise the map by Tuesday then I will replace your map, as I asserted above, because it is inaccurate in terms of Vietnam. And this time, I have very good grounds to replace it.--Pericles of AthensTalk 13:36, 11 April 2008 (UTC)
- You're so cute, I will change it, Ok? I'm really dead. -_-|| --LaGrandefr (talk) 13:56, 11 April 2008 (UTC)
- Thanks, sugar bumps. I'm glad you see how much sense this makes.--Pericles of AthensTalk 14:00, 11 April 2008 (UTC)
- You're so cute, I will change it, Ok? I'm really dead. -_-|| --LaGrandefr (talk) 13:56, 11 April 2008 (UTC)
- So? That's not a good argument to keep the map, if it is totally inaccurate, since Lê Nhân Tông was the king of all Vietnam in 1443 and was recognized as such by the Ming court. How does that validate China's claim to Annam in 1443, the year your map supposedly portrays? That doesn't make any sense, LaGrandefr. Do you have any conception of what a timeline is? And what the difference is between 1424 and 1443? If you don't revise the map by Tuesday then I will replace your map, as I asserted above, because it is inaccurate in terms of Vietnam. And this time, I have very good grounds to replace it.--Pericles of AthensTalk 13:36, 11 April 2008 (UTC)
- The negotiation is a combination of 2 maps. Annam is in the map of Havard University, the north and centre of Manchuria is in the map of Sinomap.--LaGrandefr (talk) 12:35, 11 April 2008 (UTC)
Manchuria too
Sinomap is not a neutral academic source, it's worthless. Take a look in The Cambridge History of China Vol. 7 - The Ming Dynasty 1368–1644 Part 1. Result: north and centre of Manchuria was never subject to Ming China! --91.64.142.25 (talk) 11:17, 14 April 2008 (UTC)
Now that you mention it, from page 14 of the Cambridge History book (the bolding of text is my own doing for emphasis):
In order to oversee the Jurchen guards and subdue additional tribes, the Ming in 1409 established a Nurgan Regional Military Commission...near the mouth of the Amur River. Supplying provisions to this northern Ming outpost proved expensive, and the Nurgan Regional Military Commission was abandoned in 1435. The Ming retreat meant the loss of contact with many of the more northerly tribes. Though the existence of Jurchen guards consisted of nothing more than Ming diplomatic and commercial recognition, Jurchen chiefs bore military titles and were viewed as Ming local officials. Since the Ming neither occupied Jurchen territory nor made efforts to tax its population, the Jurchen tribes acquiesced in the fiction of Ming authority. They employed the Ming calendar rather than the traditional twelve-animal cycle; they went by their guard names and their Ming official titles; and they presented tribute and submitted to the required ritual of the Ming court.
Once again, as with Tibet, the Ming did not bother to garrison troops in north and central Manchuria, did not bother to uphold formal taxation like they would in any normal province of the empire, and relied on alliances by granting titles to local rulers who simply paid tribute to the Ming court and kept the Mongols in check.--Pericles of AthensTalk 20:16, 14 April 2008 (UTC)
- LaGrandefr, I've given you plenty of time to revise the map, in fact the entire week which I promised above. I'm sure that somewhere in your busy schedule you could have taken a moment to revise the map considering the Annam issue. I have no choice but to replace your map, since it is terribly inaccurate. You could sit there and argue about Tibet and Manchuria all day long, but the Ming recognized the Le Dynasty of Vietnam as a totally independent state by 1431, and your map is supposed to represent 1443. If I had realized this earlier, I would have never agreed to settle on the current map. If you wish to place your map back into the article, it must first be revised according to the Annam issue above.--Pericles of AthensTalk 04:22, 15 April 2008 (UTC)
- I'm sorry for being late to revise the map. The new map is offered now and all the scholarly debate could be shown in the sections of article. Regards.--LaGrandefr (talk) 13:17, 16 April 2008 (UTC)
Still a problem
I appreciate your efforts, but in your newly revised map, Image:MingEmpire.png, Annam is no longer colored the same as directly-ruled territories, but you have it under the same color as Tibet and Manchuria. What are you getting at here? If you were simply coloring all of the Ming's tributaries as light blue, then why not color Korea light blue as well? After all, it was a tributary to the Ming. Like the Joseon Dynasty of Korea, the Le Dynasty of Vietnam is not contested, the latter was fully independent after 1431, and your map is supposed to represent 1443. I can't believe you still don't get this. Please revise your map again, this time with Vietnam as a blank color, as it is not contested by scholars as being ruled by the Ming, but a well-known fact that it was independent (although paying tribute like Korea, Malacca, Borneo, etc.)--Pericles of AthensTalk 19:16, 18 April 2008 (UTC)
Protected again
Due to established users editwarring, mostly over the map again, I've protected the article. Please try to reach a consensus this time. I recommend actively reaching out to prior editors of the article, relevant wiki-projects, and any others likely to be able to offer an informed opinion. GRBerry 15:33, 18 April 2008 (UTC)
Disappointing
What the hell are you guys doing now? Why does the page have to be protected again? And LaGrandefr, if you're going to edit an English Wikipedia, try learning English grammar first. Your nefarious passage on Tibet and the Mingshi that you slopped together in a disheveled fashion without regarding the narrative flow of the sub-section displays an atrocious understanding of English grammar and will be deleted as soon as I can edit the article. With total disregard for the negotiation we had above, you added a gigantic block of new text to a section that we agreed needs its own split article if there was to be further elaboration on the subject of Tibet. Your unthoughtful and poorly-decided placement of the Tibet sub-section in the main government section is unwelcome, as you did not approach any of the editors here to ask their opinion about the organization of the article and where the Tibet sub-section is relevant. Also, how many times on Talk:Ming Dynasty have I been over this issue of the Mingshi with you? You are not qualified to write anything about the Mingshi in regards to Tibet. Period. End of story. No more discussion. If you wish to contribute something, you will do so with secondary scholarly literature. I can't believe that after all this time, after all this debate, you still haven't learned how to obey that fundamental rule about Wikipedia: No Original Research by using primary sources.--Pericles of AthensTalk 15:55, 18 April 2008 (UTC)
Mingshi and Wylie
In fact, I have a better idea! The Mingshi information you have placed in the article (which I should note you haven't even cited accordingly) can easily be countered by Turrell V. Wylie on why the Mingshi is not a source to be trusted in regards to Tibet. In a way, LaGrandefr, you sort of shot yourself in the foot by adding that information which is simply going to be debunked in the article. Actually, since we agreed above that any new material added should go in a separate article (as this main article is already too large), I will provide Wylie's interpretation of the Mingshi in a separate article I will create called Sino-Tibetan relations during the Ming Dynasty, which will, of course, have your Mingshi info intact (I do ask that you properly cite your sources for goodness sake, at least try to act professional).--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:42, 18 April 2008 (UTC)
Maps and the pathetic passage
It's interesting to note that LaGrandefr is the only editor who wants to use that sinomap dot com map or whatever it is. On the other hand, editors who reverted it back to the original Harvard map include: Balthazarduju, Bertport, Angelo De La Paz, PericlesofAthens, Neo-Jay and myself. Doesn't it tell you something?
For the love of Wikipedia and the English language, please do not add any unsourced, horribly written passage to the article. 1) Mingshi has over a hundred volumes. So saying "according to Mingshi" is not enough; you need inline citations. 2) the passage is simply pathetic, to put it lightly. What does "the Chinese historical official works" mean anyway? And the flow and GRAMMAR! 3) Mingshi is not a reliable source regarding Tibet as argued by PericlesofAthens. So citing Mingshi violates Wikipedia's Reliable Sources guideline.
So my question is, Shall we put a stop to this? Josuechan (talk) 23:24, 18 April 2008 (UTC)
New article on Ming relations with Tibet
About your new sub-section "Maps and the pathetic passage", those are my exact sentiments, Josuechan. On another note, I've recently created an article on this very topic, calling it Sino-Tibetan relations during the Ming Dynasty.--Pericles of AthensTalk 23:49, 18 April 2008 (UTC)
Although I still detest LaGrandefr's map, he does have a point, in that some scholars still cling to the ridiculous point of view that Tibet was part of the Ming Dynasty. Because of this, his map of the combination of SinoPress and Harvard University maps is warranted, and even as despicable as the former is, it is still a legitimate scholarly viewpoint in the People's Republic of China (I haven't read or heard of any scholars outside of the PRC who support it though). All of this hype really doesn't matter though, because this new article I've created exposes all the smelly BS that LaGrandefr is propagating here. If people want to know the truth about Ming-Tibetan relations, they can simply visit the link to this new article which I will place in this main article's Tibet sub-section once the edit ban is lifted.--Pericles of AthensTalk 23:49, 18 April 2008 (UTC)
- Nice work on the new article! It's really charitable of you to spend your valuable time to edit that horrible passage. But I still think that the passage eventually needs some citations, since as it stands now there's no way for anyone to verify the claims. Of course I'm not suggesting you to do that. Josuechan (talk) 00:44, 19 April 2008 (UTC)
- Great point. I have placed "citation needed" tags on the sentences about the Mingshi in the article.--Pericles of AthensTalk 21:08, 19 April 2008 (UTC)
- It's so funny, liar exists in the dead of liars. Anyway, all citations are pasted. (In fact, I've already the citations above and PericlesofAthens participate all the discussion, how can you pretend not to know.) For Amnam, one question: was it be part of Ming China? The answer is YES. And the new map donesn't show the date, so it's accurate.
- I may not be able to watch this article all the time, but I hope some guys could think over it.--LaGrandefr (talk) 12:55, 21 April 2008 (UTC)
Alright, since you don't speak English I'm not going to make fun of you for these remarks here (although I am laughing right now). Tell me, sweetie pie, where exactly in our discussion above did you properly cite the Mingshi? You did not. You made statements about the Mingshi, but you never gave us proper citations here, or in the Ming article. So to call me a liar for that is a bit slanderous, LaGrandefr, unless you have some evidence (which you don't). Oh, and your recent addition of citations as of this morning to the Tibet during the Ming Dynasty article doesn't count in your argument that I am a "liar", because you just added them today. Also, your refusal to fix Annam spawns a new problem with your map, which I have discussed with you again, and again, and again, etc. etc. I can't believe you still don't understand the difference between Yongle's reign era (1402–1424) when the Ming Dynasty ruled Vietnam, and the year 1443 which your map is supposed to represent, which is 12 years after the Ming court recognized Vietnam as a fully independent state with its own emperor. Why would you want to include a map in an article that doesn't have a definite year for it? That's some lazy-headed slipshod work right there. You're pretty much conceding at this point that your map is inaccurate, but you don't really care, do you! It is grounds for me to keep it out of this article until you revise it. So why don't you fix it for me and come back here, sugar bumps, and then I'll wholeheartedly accept a balanced, non-bias map that has NPOV and accurately portrays the year 1443 as SinoMap Press claims it does. Ok, sweetie-pie?--Pericles of AthensTalk 13:34, 21 April 2008 (UTC)
Speaking of lying I posted this comment recently on Talk:Sino-Tibetan relations during the Ming Dynasty
- Lying about sources cited
- I find it ironic that, earlier today at Talk:Ming Dynasty, User:LaGrandefr accused me of lying when I stated that he never provided any citations for the Mingshi in the main Ming Dynasty article (and not even in Talk:Ming Dynasty, look for yourselves in the long collapsible discussion). He has the audacity to call me a liar, and then creates a huge, disingenuous, and quite unpardonable lie himself on the same day. He cited Patricia Ebrey's 1999 book the Cambridge Illustrated History of China as a source for the campaigns of Deng Yu and Mu Ying and put words into Ebrey's mouth that she did not say (of course, LaGrandefr did not provide a page number). Unfortunately for LaGrandefr, I own the book and am looking at it right now. He used an unknown page from Ebrey's book to make this claim:
- Moreover, The Cambridge Illustrated History of China records Ming's several military expeditions to Tibet in the beginning of the dynasty, DENG Yu (鄧愈) and MU Ying (沐英) were sent by the imperial court to conquer Tibet in 1373 and 1378, as a result, Tibetan tribes showed submission to Ming court.
- Looking through the index (I'm holding Ebrey's book in my hand right now), Tibet is only mentioned on pages 13, 110, 118, 129, 130, 164, 173, 175, 227, 267, 295, 303, 305, and 331. And guess what? Not only is Deng Yu or Mu Ying never mentioned in her book, but she also claims the opposite of what LaGrandefr is saying. On page 227, in writing about the later Qing Dynasty conquest of Tibet from 1717 to 1720, Ebrey states this:
- Previously Tibet (like Korea and other neighboring states) had acquiesced to tributary status but had not had troops or governors from China proper stationed in its territory. Still, the Qing interfered relatively little in Tibetan affairs, allowing local leaders to do most of the actual governing.
- So tell me, LaGrandefr, what other sources are you using in order to lie and put words into other people's mouths that should never be attributed to them? There's a whole bunch of your statements in this article that I've tagged with {{page needed}} tags, but I wonder how many of them are falsely attributed because of you twisting the sources to say what you want. And don't think this is some issue I have with the Deng Yu and Mu Ying campaigns, since I've recently updated the article using John D. Langlois' Cambridge book chapter to include the info on Ming military intervention. No, this is about honesty, and apparently you have none.--Pericles of AthensTalk 00:40, 22 April 2008 (UTC)
That is exactly what I'm worried about: someone just makes up some claims about Mingshi without any proper citations (publisher, edition, vol, page number) and then pretends the burden lies on the readers to dig through the 300+ volumes to find something that might very well not be there. And LaGrandefr, please refrain yourself from making accusations when you have basically nothing to back up. You're just making fun of yourself and it's not a pretty sight. Josuechan (talk) 10:04, 22 April 2008 (UTC)
- Since your good buddy Josuechan has deleted your statements, I don't want to undo his undo in taking a risk by going against his will. So, first of all, do US men have the addiction of responding their own questions? Why do you always ask me a question and then respond it at once? It's funny. Your buddy added Mingshi vol. 40 志第十六 地理一 at 16:36, 1 April 2008, but your pretend to know nothing and added citation needed at the end of each sentence of Tibet during the Ming Dynasty#Assertions in the Mingshi.
- In addition, the new map is a combination of two maps, no longer is the map of SinoMap Press. Annam is shown in your map and it's certainly shown in the new map according to the negotiation. Moreover, Annam isn't shown in the same color with Ming China proper, which can fully satisfy its halfway independence statute, isn't it? I can understand your anxiety of a definite year for the new map, in fact, there's really a moment that Tibet, Jurchens and Vietnam were in Ming China before Vietnamese independence, if we avoid the debates of Tibet. So the new map is technically accurate.
- For Cambridge Illustrated History of China, it's really my lapsus due to the Chinese book name, the citation should be P87, P92 and P23 of the Cambridge History of China ISBN 7500453531. As you also added many other citations to support my argument, I hope we can take it to be a lesson and be careful responsible to our arguments. I know you have Ebey's book since the beginning, so I think I'm not so crazy to do some stupid things like so-called false attribution. Please don't initiate an issue on another one under discussion, you and me should avoid further errors like this. Regards.--LaGrandefr (talk) 11:08, 23 April 2008 (UTC)
- Since most of us do not have access to the Chinese version of that work, would you perharps care to give us author, chapter, section, subsection, context etc., so that we can compare if the english version says the same (I of course assume your "Cambridge History" is a translation of the original one). Or even better, maybe you can give the corresponding page numbers in the english version. Rossabi in the "The Ming and Inner Asia" chapter writes that Tibet even "scarcely had diplomatic relations with the Ming" (vol. 8, p.241, beginning of section "The Ming and the disunited land of the Lamas") and that "neither in the economic nor in the political realms did the Tibetans perceive themselves to be subjects of the Ming court" (p.245, end of section). Yaan (talk) 16:33, 24 April 2008 (UTC)
- P.S. I now see there is a campaign into Qinghai mentioned on p.130 of vol.7: "In May 1377, Teng Yü and and Mu Ying (1345-92), one of the emperor's adopted sons, were put in charge of a punitive expedition to chastise a Tibetan chieftain who had refused to acknowledge Ming rule. This expedition went deep into the region of Kokonor in modern Tsinghai, marching as far west as the K'un-lun mountains. Teng Yü's army pursued the chieftain and his followers relentlessly, killing thousands of them and capturing over a hundred thousand animals. The emperor then ordered Teng Yü to recall his army from this remote region and summoned him back to Nanking. However, Teng died on the way back at the age of forty." etc. It does not seem to mention anything about submission, though, and I did not find references for anything in 1373. Yaan (talk) 17:15, 24 April 2008 (UTC)
- P.P.S. the 1378 expedition is dealt with on p.139. It is mentioned that the expedition was to pacify Tibet and western Sichuan, that a first major victory was won in February 1379 "near T'ao-chou in modern Kansu", that a garrison was established there etc. No mention of any other places, though, and no mention of any submission by Tibetans. Yaan (talk) 17:27, 24 April 2008 (UTC)
- Also, from page 139 of vol. 7, it describes another venture by Mu Ying in 1379 where 30,000 Tibetans and 200,000 domesticated animals were captured. However, the only other instance of Ming armed intervention in Tibet that I have read about is on pages 417–418, the failed venture of the eunuch Liu Yun from 1515–1516, where the secular Tibetan Rinbung prince and the Karmapa lama ambushed Liu's camp and killed half of his entourage (Liu Yun had departed for Tibet from Sichuan with a cavalry host of 1,000 troops). On page 161 it talks about how Tibetans actually invaded Sichuan in 1390 and had to be repelled by Ming forces.--Pericles of AthensTalk 17:29, 24 April 2008 (UTC)
- Since most of us do not have access to the Chinese version of that work, would you perharps care to give us author, chapter, section, subsection, context etc., so that we can compare if the english version says the same (I of course assume your "Cambridge History" is a translation of the original one). Or even better, maybe you can give the corresponding page numbers in the english version. Rossabi in the "The Ming and Inner Asia" chapter writes that Tibet even "scarcely had diplomatic relations with the Ming" (vol. 8, p.241, beginning of section "The Ming and the disunited land of the Lamas") and that "neither in the economic nor in the political realms did the Tibetans perceive themselves to be subjects of the Ming court" (p.245, end of section). Yaan (talk) 16:33, 24 April 2008 (UTC)
Now I don't even know what you're babbling about, LaGrandefr. One, what exactly is it that Josuechan deleted? And two, Josuechan said this on April 1 at 16:36 -->
Certainly Mingshi is much more reliable than Sinomap. However, the map LaGrandefr proposed here is not from Mingshi, but Sinomap. So it's an "official" map in the sense that it's approved by the PRC government. Worse, according to the quoted sentence (計明初封略,東起朝鮮,西據吐番,南包安南,北距大磧用), Vietnam should also be part of Ming, but how come the map didn't include it? So is LaGrandefr opposing his own map? Interesting. In fact, Vietnam has a better claim to be part of Ming because 1) an administrative unit (布政使司) was set up there; 2) Ming army actually occupied the region till mid-Ming. (see Mingshi vol. 40 志第十六 地理一). But these didn't happen to Tibet.
User:Josuechan cited that Mingshi volume in regards to Vietnam, not Tibet. What, you don't know the difference between the two? I'm surprised that you expect me to remember that he cited something about Vietnam, a completely different issue. You never provided any citations for your statements about the Mingshi until you added them to the Tibet during the Ming Dynasty article on the morning of April 21st. That is a fact. So, LaGrandefr, before you delve into another needless rant on the talk page, let's discuss your map a bit further.--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:55, 24 April 2008 (UTC)
Per WP:CITE, a Chinese translation of Ebrey's Cambridge History of China should not be used as a reference in English Wikipedia, since the English version is available. "Because this is the English Wikipedia, English-language sources should be given whenever possible, and should always be used in preference to other language sources of equal caliber." (Let alone, inferior caliber.) Bertport (talk) 20:06, 24 April 2008 (UTC)
interwiki sw
sw:Ming (nasaba)
Dispute....again?
I couldn't help but notice that the article is under dispute yet again. Does this article require mediation again? If so, well, I suppose I should be the one to do it. Steve Crossin (talk) (anon talk) 01:30, 27 April 2008 (UTC)
Image:MingEmpire.png deleted
In short, crap image with a dubious licence, so it's been deleted. If you re-upload or want it undeleted, I want evidence it's actually copyright expired material, thanks. Nick (talk) 01:48, 27 April 2008 (UTC)
- Hah! Well, User:Steve Crossin, it appears that there is little for you to mediate now, since the premier object and focus of this contentious issue has just now been squashed by User:Nick, a Wiki administrator. I will request that this article be unblocked from editing now. I can't wait to fix LaGrandefr's atrocious grammatical mistakes.--Pericles of AthensTalk 03:12, 27 April 2008 (UTC)
- With all due respect, I was the one who asked the admin about the image. Feel free to confirm this with the administrator. I raised the image concern after I saw the dispute again. Note that us mediators are here to help, we are uninvolved in the dispute in any way. Steve Crossin (talk) (review) 03:54, 27 April 2008 (UTC)
- Um...ok? I'm not exactly sure how I've offended you (i.e. "With all due respect...") by simply pointing out that there's nothing left for you to mediate (since the whole issue was over the map). In any case this issue over maps should be (temporarily) put aside. What matters most is the substance of the text, which I will get to in a moment.--Pericles of AthensTalk 04:23, 27 April 2008 (UTC)
I just felt the "Hah! Well, User:Steve Crossin, it appears that there is little for you to mediate now...." bit was directed at me. Oh well. It's all good and well :). I'll keep an eye on the page for a few days, just in case it flares up again. Cheers. Steve Crossin (talk) (review) 05:05, 27 April 2008 (UTC)
Chinese characters do not display correctly.
In 3 different browsers (Internet Explorer, Firefox and Google Chrome) the symbols are incorrectly displayed. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 72.45.107.22 (talk) 12:32, 29 October 2008 (UTC)
- Which ones? Those in the first sentence look OK to me. Yaan (talk) 13:38, 29 October 2008 (UTC)
Ming emperors' images were distorted
Editors of Ming should begin looking for better (and true) copies of Ming emperor's images, for example: [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] [ baidubar1234 dot blogspot dot com/ a much better picture], because during Manchu's 300 years reign, Manchu barbarians had tried their best to demonize the Ming.Arilang1234 (talk) 23:09, 10 November 2008 (UTC)
- What proof exists out there which would even suggest that the Qing emperors tampered with, altered, or fabricated Ming Dynasty imperial portrait paintings? Where did you hear or read this? You say that [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] [ baidubar1234 dot blogspot dot com/ a picture from a blog] is more trustworthy than one already uploaded to Wikimedia Commons? Please, provide solid and scholarly evidence for such strong claims (or heck, evidence for any claim). No blogs please; Wikipedia is not a blog.--Pericles of AthensTalk 03:19, 11 November 2008 (UTC)
- The Cambridge History of China
by:Willard J. Peterson, John K. Fairbank, Denis Twitchett Page 290.
“ | BY one estimate, the literary inquisition's two big book-collecting agencies in Kiangsu supplied at least 63,000 of the 151,723 volumes(Chinese:pu) the inquisition destroyed. Kwangtung, however, apparently supplied very few(289), fewer even than Yunnan or Szechwan or Kwangsi.
A broad mixture of new and old motives drove the government's book burners of the 1770s and 1780s. Books were condemned if they were hostile or disrespectful to Ching rmperors after 1644. Books were condemned if they insulted previous non-Chinese dynasties that might be considered related to the Ching. Books were condemned if they presented inflammaatory chronicles of the Ching conquest of China. They were condemned if they contained geographical information related to the frontiers or the coast which might assist rebels. As an afterthought(beginning at the end of 1780) the scripts of popular plays could also be censored or destroyed for vulgar language as well as anti-Manchu references. Books could be condemned for being nothing more than the products of prominent opponents of the dynasty, such as Lu Liu-liang(1629-1683). And, reflecting a very old motive in Chinese history for book censorship or suppression, they could be condemned if they indecently questioned established interpretations of the Confucian classic. P290. The inquisition, like political purges in modern China, facilitated the expression of local ambitions and rivalries that had little to do with the ruler's own political interests....The inquisition generated interclass, as well as intraclass, warfare; commoners could lay charges against scholars. Nothing demonstrated the Chien-lung emperor's political doubleness or calculated hybridity more than his parasitic attempt to develop a historically denatured version of the great Ming martyrs' creed of loyalty to the throne, from which the Ming martyrs of no use to him, and the Ming house itself, had been subtracted. His literary inquisition could no more stamp out Ming loyalism than his two empirewide efforts to repress Christian communities, in 1746 and 1784, could stamp out Christianity. Chien-lung's failure to propose any new theories of political obligation, instead of recycling the old, meant that the memories of the Ming dynasty he had most to repress could reemerge a century later, endowed with the added value his inquisition had given them. P293. |
” |
- Hi guys! I know of a portrait of Zhu Yuanzhang where his face looks monstrously distorted and pock-marked, but I don't see it on this page. Honestly, I don't see anything wrong with the paintings that are currently posted. Most of these portraits were actually made at the Ming court under imperial commission, and I've never heard the supposition that the Qing court might have tampered with them. Arilang1234: the CHC passage you cite shows that the Qing tried to re-interpret Ming loyalism as loyalism to the imperial throne in general (for their own purposes, of course), but this doesn't show that the Qing modified or fabricated imperial paintings to make the Ming emperors literally look bad! If you present proper evidence for your original claim, I think no one will object to changing the paintings, but I haven't seen the evidence yet. You could also tell us what exactly you think is wrong with the current portraits. Cheers to all! --Madalibi (talk) 04:16, 11 November 2008 (UTC)
- That picture of Xuande emperor at Ming Dynasty#Population looks ugly, that's all.Arilang1234 (talk) 05:08, 11 November 2008 (UTC)
Well, maybe the guy was ugly! And I don't think he actually looks that bad. Take a look at Qing emperor Daoguang: I think Xuande looks handsome in comparison!--Madalibi (talk) 05:53, 11 November 2008 (UTC)
- Qin Shi Huang once burned many books, yet there was no noticeable purge of visual art (not that professional portrait painting even existed during the Qin period). The Qing censorship and banning of books has really nothing to do with visual artwork, especially something as benign as portrait painting. And Madalibi raises a great point: what if Xuande was ugly? Leave the poor ugly guy alone, he's probably rolling around in his grave right now. Lol.--Pericles of AthensTalk 06:02, 11 November 2008 (UTC)
- Well it is true that he might be ugly in real life. Leave it there at the moment is a good idea.Arilang1234 (talk) 06:59, 11 November 2008 (UTC)
- This image has clearer facial explassion. [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] [ www dot chinaheritagenewsletter dot org /002/_pix/zhenghe2 dot jpg Ming emperor ] Arilang talk 21:14, 14 November 2008 (UTC)
- [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] [ content answers com/main/content/wp/en-commons/thumb/c/c5/250px-Yongle-Emperor1 dot jpg Ming emperor] the peculiar dark looking face, much darker than the other one.
- [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] [ lh3 dot ggpht dot com /_V6jK-Lml5ug/RzusyvD5KvI/AAAAAAAABFo/tra7RXG5Be4/P1000357 dot JPG bronze statue] this one looks good.
- [ www dot yesallasian dot com /syssite/home/shop/1/pictures/productsimg/small/1851 dot jpg red face]
- [ www dot yesallasian dot com /syssite/home/shop/1/pictures/productsimg/small/1851 dot jpg red face]
- [ www dot chinavista dot com /travel/13tomb/ling12 dot jpg funny face]
- [ www dot chinavista dot com /travel/13tomb/ling12 dot jpg funny face]
- [ www dot chinapage dot com/emperor/images/yongle dot jpg old looking face]
- [ www dot chinapage dot com/emperor/images/yongle dot jpg old looking face]
- Many images of various emperors guys, this site is a good one. All the photos are from the book called Portraits of Chinese Emperors , my uncle used to own such a book, all the photos look very good.
Arilang talk 21:37, 14 November 2008 (UTC)
- Many images of various emperors guys, this site is a good one. All the photos are from the book called Portraits of Chinese Emperors , my uncle used to own such a book, all the photos look very good.
Really ugly and deformed face
- [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] [ www dot denniscox dot com /Ming1stEmpCL131-2 dot jpg ] Arilang talk 22:01, 14 November 2008 (UTC)
Hah! This portrait of Hongwu (Ming Taizu) is featured in Patricia Ebrey's Cambridge History of China (1999), where she says on page 191, QUOTE:
Emperor Taizu's detractors described him as ugly and pockmarked, with a protruding lower jaw. Although some of the portraits preserved in the palace collection show him to have been as handsome as any other emperor, several survive that match the most negative descriptions.
Of course, long before the Ming Dynasty, negative physical characteristics were attributed to rulers who were hated by others or those who failed to succeed and were given bad comments in posterity. For example, while Liu Bang was described as contemporaries as having auspicious looks which made him destined to be the ruler of China, Wang Mang was later slandered by Ban Gu as having ugly features which could be read as inauspicious signs revealing that he was to fail on the throne and never truly gain Heaven's mandate.--Pericles of AthensTalk 22:52, 14 November 2008 (UTC)
- The picture of Liu Bang looks odd, to say the least. This one looks better. [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] [ www dot ce dot cn /culture/anecdote/200609/04/W020060904461542049012 dot jpg ] Arilang talk 01:50, 15 November 2008 (UTC)
- You are aware that neither of the two portraits are contemporary, but rather painted long after Liu Bang had died, and even long after the Han Dynasty had fallen? The picture you have shared here from www dot ce dot cn is, if I am not mistaken, a depiction rendered by a modern-day artist.--Pericles of AthensTalk 20:51, 17 November 2008 (UTC)
- I am fully aware of this fact. However, since no one is able to tell us(or the readers) which portrait represents the true image of Liu Bang, why not we choose a slightly better looking one? No harm in doing so. Or we can add a gallery of different portraits, for the readers to pick their whichever they like? Arilang talk 21:03, 17 November 2008 (UTC)
- I just have another look at the Liu Bang portrait, the background is very blurry, there is some kind of unclear writings, and the color seems all wrong. I don't think that is a good portrait of Liu Bang. Arilang talk 21:13, 17 November 2008 (UTC)
Yongle Emperor
About Yongle's "dark" face, look at this portrait I uploaded and scanned from Michael Sullivan's The Arts of China: Fourth Edition (1999):
- The skin tone of the face and that of the hand does not match, another sign of tempering. "red complexions", yes, but not "dark brown". "面如冠玉" is a term reserved for "good looking guy" in Chinese literature. Zhang Fei was a "武將", it is good for him to look fierce and salvage, but emperors normally do have those benovalent look.
- The skin tone of the face and that of the hand does not match, another sign of tempering. "red complexions", yes, but not "dark brown". "面如冠玉" is a term reserved for "good looking guy" in Chinese literature. Zhang Fei was a "武將", it is good for him to look fierce and salvage, but emperors normally do have those benovalent look.
It is the same "complexion" found in this article's portrait you are criticizing:
The picture you provided from [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] [ www dot chinaheritagenewsletter dot org /002/_pix/zhenghe2.jpg ChinaHeritageNewsletter dot org ] in itself looks blurry and tampered with. You are aware that Chinese painters often painted people with dark brown or red complexions not to reflect reality, but to reflect vitality and other noble attributes? For example, this can be seen in many painted depictions of the Three Kingdoms general and god of war, Guan Yu.
Compared to the skin color of Liu Bei in this 18th century painting, Zhang Fei looks more like an average Mexican in skin tone, kind of like Cheech Marin! Lol.
This diminishes the main point of your criticism substantially.--Pericles of AthensTalk 22:52, 14 November 2008 (UTC)
- [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] [ images dot google dot com/imgres?imgurl= www dot chinapage dot com /emperor/images/yongle.jpg&imgrefurl= www dot chinapage dot com/emperor dot html&usg=__FynSeI8QcCk5P2F4QQfy89bkumk=&h=768&w=513&sz=128&hl=en&start=83&tbnid=kaHoOMiS9RlFEM:&tbnh=142&tbnw=95&prev=/images%3Fq%3DMing%2BYongle%2BEmperor%26start%3D80%26gbv%3D2%26ndsp%3D20%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DN chinapage dot com] I think the book 錦绣中华 has some good emperors pictures. At least they have more realistic look. Arilang talk 01:23, 15 November 2008 (UTC)
- Actually, I believe many of the Chinese emperors' portrait paintings uploaded to Wikimedia Commons were taken from this particular site.--Pericles of AthensTalk 20:49, 17 November 2008 (UTC)
Korean version of Ming history, True or false?
As I was reading Japanese invasions of Korea (1592–1598), I came across this section about a secret peace talk between Ming and Japan.Japanese invasions of Korea (1592–1598)#Negotiations and truce between China and Japan (1594–1596), I am beginning to wonder what is the ratio of truth vs falsehood in that article as a hole. As that war was an engagement of Ming, Japan and Korea military forces, I think it is appropriate to start a discussion on this talk page, may be editors of Ming are able to point out those errors at that article? Arilang talk 20:38, 17 November 2008 (UTC)
- I'm not sure about the total validity or reliability of this account (including Hideyoshi wearing Hanfu robes and cowtowing to the Ming envoy, yet the request for a Chinese princess bride seems fitting). I have to admit, it seems like a very interesting episode within the Imjin War. Regardless, this article, the Ming Dynasty, only briefly mentions the Imjin War and such detail is unwarranted for inclusion. I think this talk page is really not the best place to have this discussion; I think you should consider cutting and pasting this conversation to the talk page of the Japanese invasions of Korea, since this talk page here is reserved for editors' comments on how to improve or edit this specific article, the Ming Dynasty. That said, I'm glad you brought this to attention, since it is an aspect of the Japanese invasion that I am almost entirely ignorant about.--Pericles of AthensTalk 20:45, 17 November 2008 (UTC)
- Quote:The Ming ambassador met Hideyoshi in October 1596. When Hideyoshi met the Ming ambassador, Hideyoshi wore Ming Dynasty costume and kowtowed (kneel 5 times on the ground and hit his head 3 times on the ground) to Chinese envoy, to show his vassal status to the Chinese Ming Dynasty.Unquoted.
I think this phrase is worth further expanding on Ming, which is very much lacking on Ming-Korea-Japan relationship; moreover, from the Confucius teachings prospective, all three countries did(and still do) advocate the teaching of Confucius. Arilang talk 21:27, 17 November 2008 (UTC)
- Quotation from zh:Wikipedia:亦有說法指,秀吉曾向明朝開列的條件,包括明朝把公主下嫁天皇(和親),割讓朝鮮南部領土,將朝鮮世子作人質等才退兵。(曰割朝鮮四道與我、曰封通聘、曰封爵,其餘逸而不傳。)數年後,亦即文祿五年(1596年)九月,秀吉歡喜地迎接明朝使者,明、朝議和使來日,秀吉宴饗之。然宣讀國書,始知議和實為冊封,大明欲封秀吉為日本國王。秀吉方覺受騙,大怒道:「吾掌握日本,欲王則王,何待髯虜之封!且吾而為王,何以對天皇!」,並欲殺明、朝使節,為旁人勸止,於是下令驅逐明、朝使節。[1]秀吉不久後再次遣兵入侵朝鮮。日軍盤據釜山,再進逼漢陽。然而明朝援軍(約8萬)加入戰鬥行列後,日軍陷入困境,被迫死守於海岸各城堡。史稱-「慶長之役」)Unquoted.zh:豐臣秀吉#征伐朝鮮及晚年 Arilang talk 21:37, 17 November 2008 (UTC)
- Quote:Because of his failure to capture Korea, Hideyoshi's forces were unable to invade China. Rather than strengthen his position, the military expeditions left his clan's coffers decreased, his vassals at odds over responsibility for the failure, and the clans that were loyal to the Toyotomi name weakened. The dream of a Japanese empire throughout Asia ended with Hideyoshi. The Tokugawa government not only prevented any military expeditions to the mainland, but closed Japan to nearly all foreigners. It was not until the late 19th century that Japan would again fight a war against China through Korea, using much the same route that Hideyoshi's invasion force had used.Unquoted. Toyotomi Hideyoshi#Decline and death We all know what happened next:First Sino-Japanese War. My opinion(POV?) is, if we miss out this three-kingdoms relationship, we shall have a big hole in the long and winding tapestry of ancient Chinese history, do you agree? Arilang talk 21:58, 17 November 2008 (UTC)
- Another link worth looking at? zh:萬曆朝鮮戰爭 Arilang talk 22:13, 17 November 2008 (UTC)
- That's a fair argument. Although this is not an article covering Sino-Japanese-Korean foreign relations per se, maybe it would be alright to add a small mentioning of the significance of this invasion in terms of Japan's overall sporadic involvement in Korea throughout the centuries (invasion in the 7th century, then here in the 16th century, then again in the 19th century). That fails to mention Kublai Khan's failed invasions of Japan in the 13th century. Keeping that in mind, let's not fly off the handlebars and get way too off-topic. Maybe just a sentence or two, to inform the reader of how the Imjin War fits with the overall history of Japanese-Korean-Chinese relations, wouldn't hurt.--Pericles of AthensTalk 03:10, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
Wanli and the Imjin War
Wanli Emperor#Middle Reign (1582-1600) has a bit of describition, not into very detail Imjin War. I probably leave the writing to other editors, since there are better English writer than me. Arilang talk 08:22, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
Little ice age
I found this graph on Commons :
I think this graph indicates clearly Ming was indeed under the grip of the "Little ice age", which might be part of the reasons why there were so many famines and peasants uprisings?
I propose adding this graph onto the Ming article. Any suggestions? Arilang talk 01:53, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
- It's well-sourced, that in an of itself is the most important thing. I can't think of a reason why I would object to adding it, since it clearly demonstrates a dramatic global temperature drop during the Ming period. Question is, where to put it in the article? Where to make room? Adding another picture or two wouldn't hurt the article much, but I don't like things to be cluttered with pictures.--Pericles of AthensTalk 02:55, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
- I suggest to add a 'gallery' section, and have spare images stored at talk page, and the images can be rotated on a monthly, or even weekly basic. Arilang talk 07:59, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
- A rotation is fine, but please do not add a gallery on the article page, as this is extremely frowned upon by Wiki editors, especially those who would have no reservations criticizing it in a future Featured Article Review. However, if you meant a gallery here on the talk page, by all means, feel free to create one to store the images. There's nothing wrong with that, spare that there is already a mountain worth of images for the Ming Dynasty available at Wikimedia Commons.--Pericles of AthensTalk 08:26, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
Rotating images
I propose rotating this beautiful image with that of the 'giraffe'ipg.
- Yes, a very neat image indeed. However, I don't quite see how Christopher Columbus or the relative size of his carrack, the Santa María (ship), compared to Zheng's treasure ship is really relevant to this article on the Ming Dynasty. The ship looks nice, but it is a modern scale model (not meant to be 100% accurate), whereas the image of the giraffe is an actual Ming Dynasty painting. I think this ship picture would be better used in the article on the treasure ship or Zheng He.--Pericles of AthensTalk 03:01, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
- I have uploaded a new version of the treasure ship, let me know what you think. Arilang talk 01:15, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
- Well, I'm glad that the primary focus is now on the treasure ship, but like I said before, this is a modern scale model that is not meant to be 100% accurate and was created by a modern scale model artist who does not have access to the real thing (then again, no one does, because only the remains of an stern rudder from a treasure ship has survived). If we could somehow dredge from the waters of the South China Sea an entire (or at least partial) real-life treasure ship, that would be awesome! And worthy of inclusion in this article, but this model is perhaps best placed in the articles on Zheng He and treasure ship, where it is already on display. Plus, the giraffe image is a contemporary painting made during the Ming era, and I think perfectly illustrates the exotic locations (in this case Africa) visited by Zheng's fleet.--Pericles of AthensTalk 07:45, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
Zheng Zhilong
Arilang talk 07:53, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
Zheng Zhilong I think this name is worth mentioning in Ming article.Quote:Zheng Zhilong (traditional Chinese: 鄭芝龍; pinyin: Zhèng Zhīlóng; Wade-Giles: Cheng Chih-lung; 1604 – 1661) also known as Nicholas Iquan Gaspard was a 17th century Chinese merchant, pirate and admiral for the Ming Empire. He was the father of Zheng Chenggong (Koxinga), also a military leader. His company was known as Iquan's Party. Arilang talk 02:25, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
- He would be worth mentioning if you could somehow tie him into the significance of Zheng Chenggong, but I haven't even mentioned the latter in this article. For now, you could put Zheng Zhilong in the "See also" section until we can find a more suitable place for him and find out how to weave him into the narrative of the history section.--Pericles of AthensTalk 03:05, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
- Thanks PericlesofAthens
- I put Koxinga stature.jpg here for your coming section.
- Well, I don't think the two deserve an entire independent section, given that their weight within the overall topic of the Ming Dynasty is not relevant enough to write wholesale paragraphs on them here. But yes, they are relevant enough to mention in a few sentences, perhaps towards the very end in the section on the collapse of Ming.--Pericles of AthensTalk 08:23, 21 November 2008 (UTC)
Giant statue of Koxinga
Southern Ming?
One way to integrate Arilang's proposed additions on Zheng Zhilong and Koxinga would be to build something better on the "Southern Ming" dynasty. The current link on Southern Ming redirects to the main page on the Ming Dynasty, and a new Wiki called Southern Ming Dynasty is only one-sentence long. I think the Southern Ming deserves more substantial treatment! For starters, a lot of info can be found in Lynn Struve's book The Southern Ming; see also the relevant sections of Frederic Wakeman's The Great Enterprise. Good news: there is already a lot on the Southern Ming in the Wiki under the names of individual Ming princes who tried to build up resistance against the Qing:
- Zhu Yousong, Prince of Fu
- Prince of Tang (Shaowu)
- Zhu Yujian, Prince of Tang
- Zhu Youlang, Prince of Gui
Someone (Arilang?) could try to integrate the content of these articles (and those on Koxinga and Zheng Zhilong) into a larger wiki on the southern Ming. Once this new page is clean and free of controversies, I propose adding a section on the Southern Ming to the page called History of the Ming Dynasty and to add one or two paragraphs on the Southern Ming at the end of the history section of the Ming Dynasty page. What do you all think? --Madalibi (talk) 02:32, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
- That sounds absolutely fine. I'm heavily focused on Han Dynasty right now. Arilang, would you be so bold as to tackle this little mission? Just as long as the current article here on the Ming Dynasty does not balloon in size; just a paragraph or two on the Southern Ming would be sufficient.--Pericles of AthensTalk 04:43, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
One way of making sure the new paragraph(s) is the best it can would be to base it on a longer narrative that doesn't exist yet but will eventually be found in the page on the Southern Ming Dynasty. In any case, since Ming Dynasty is a featured article, we should discuss any substantial new addition here in the talk page. Cheers! --Madalibi (talk) 05:37, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
- Guys, I will try my best. You all know that my English is elementary. Arilang talk 06:54, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
No problem! Present the results here and we can all work on it together. --Madalibi (talk) 07:01, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
- That's ok, Arilang. Just submit the content here on the talk page and we will work out the kinks, so to speak, by editing it, correcting spelling mistakes, fixing grammar mistakes, etc. What matters is the judicious use of content and sources available to you. If you don't feel confident enough, you could find a good source and simply quote it word for word here, so that we can paraphrase the material and condense it to an appropriate size for this (already very lengthy) article.--Pericles of AthensTalk 07:38, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
Most of Lynn Struve's article on the "Southern Ming" in the first Ming volume (1988) of the Cambridge History of China is available here. Too bad the last two or three pages are missing. --Madalibi (talk) 07:53, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
- Thanks again guys. The best I can do is direct translation from 南明史, and then we all work out the NPOV problem. To tell the truth, this NPOV issue, I am still not very sure about it. And one more thing, you guys have to forgive my Chinglish, because I read and write Chinese more often then I read and write English. Arilang talk 08:09, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
Another way would be to cut-and-paste relevant paragraphs from the four wikis on Southern-Ming princes and to weave them into an article. That would take care of the "English" problem! You could then borrow missing details from the Chinese wiki.--Madalibi (talk) 08:19, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
- If it makes you feel any better, Arilang, my Mandarin Chinese is atrocious compared to your English. Then again, I've only taken 2 Mandarin classes, and am now taking my 3rd class.--Pericles of AthensTalk 08:39, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
- @ PericlesofAthens, to be frank, I admire your courage and ability now I know you are just a beginner on Mandarin classes . What I am saying is you do miss out a lot of primary sources, by that I mean folk stories, songs, poems, movies, TV dramas(CCTV 漢武大帝), 霍去病, 霍元甲, etc etc etc. CCTV 漢武大帝 is a "must see", since you are doing Han history. Arilang talk 09:54, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
- Come, come now. You can't just assume I have never watched CCTV dramas (with English subtitles) just because I'm a White American. Their rendition of the Romance of the Three Kingdoms, and the litany of incredible actors they gathered, was one of the most awesome film productions in human history. Period. Lol. You may be right about poems and songs (since many original thoughts are lost in translation to English), but I nonetheless intend to include subjects of poetry and music in my work on the Han Dynasty article's culture section.--Pericles of AthensTalk 10:35, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
- I think Western scholars are fine if they carefully dissemble their Western attitudes, notions, and beliefs while studying primary source documents, realizing they are reading the thoughts and writings of not only a foreign people, but a foreign people belonging to an entirely different age with completely different sets of values, beliefs, attitudes, etc. Not many Chinese living today really understand what historical conditions were like in Imperial China, because they belong to the 'here and now' and, unlike Western scholars, the average Chinese person does not have access to mountains of historical material to sift through and analyze. And I'm not solely talking about the Twenty-Four Histories; when I say "historical material", I also mean ancient private letters, memorials and petitions to the throne, police and postal reports, diaries, memoirs, edicts, announcement plaques, ancient versions of classic texts, etc.--Pericles of AthensTalk 10:35, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
@user PericlesofAthens, my apology to you if my remarks sound sacarstic, I am not, because I had always assumed that you are oversea Chinese like me, until 2 minutes ago I went to look at your user page and very surprised to find out you are an American. I also assumed that user Malilibi is oversea Chinese, because he can read and write Mandarin. But then I might be wrong. Again please accept my appology for 'sounding' like sacarstic, which I am not. Arilang talk 10:39, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
- No offense taken, Arilang. A little sarcasm here and there isn't going to hurt anybody. :)--Pericles of AthensTalk 10:46, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
- Thanks PericlesofAthens, I know you have got a big heart.
- Thanks PericlesofAthens, I know you have got a big heart.
That say, another must see is [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] [ www dot youku dot com /playlist show/id 1510930 dot html ] TV dramas Zhū Yuanzhang, is quite good.
My advice on your learning of mandarin(1) Forget pinyin, learn the hard way by memorize each character. (2) Learn the old text, not the simplify text. (3) Learn zh:成語, phrases with only four characters. Since you are doing Han article, 成語:zh:约法三章 is a must learn. Arilang talk 11:12, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
- Why thank you! I'll try and see the drama on Zhu Yuanzhang if I have any free time this month to dedicate myself to watching another entire series. I am actually learning both Simplified and Traditional (I know, very difficult!), and will learn both Mandarin and Cantonese, as I intend on traveling to Singapore and already know people who will tutor me in both writing systems and languages.--Pericles of AthensTalk 11:25, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
- Do not accept just any teacher, because the wrong teacher will deliver the wrong knowledge to you. When I say 'wrong', I mean teachers from mainland China, many of them were the products of years and years of communist indoctrination, they themselves have become 'bonsai', so their students will never grow up to become giants, if you can excuse my analogy.
- Do not accept just any teacher, because the wrong teacher will deliver the wrong knowledge to you. When I say 'wrong', I mean teachers from mainland China, many of them were the products of years and years of communist indoctrination, they themselves have become 'bonsai', so their students will never grow up to become giants, if you can excuse my analogy.
One more thing on CCTV, 98% of their TV dramas are propaganda rubbish, with a few exceptions Towards the Republic is 'extremely good'. If you can only afford limited time, I would suggest you watch Towards the Republic first. Among all the TV dramas dished out by CCTV, TR is top, a 'must must see'(not a typo, but Chinglish)
- The dialogue of Towards the Republic will serve as a superb Chinese language text book for you. Please try to find a teacher who can teach you TR's dialogue, to many Chinese movie buffs, TR's dialogue is the best among the best. Arilang talk 12:30, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
- Will do, thanks for the suggestion. And no, they are not mainlanders, they were born and bred in Singapore. Also, do you still have trouble understanding NPOV (Non-Point-of-View)? I can think of a few illustrative examples if you still have trouble comprehending this. Here is a classic model of a POV statement that I will just make up right now:
Due to the grand size of his treasure fleets and conquests, the Yongle Emperor was the best emperor in Chinese history, followed only by Emperor Wu of Han.
- See, this is just a personal opinion, and thus a Point of View (POV). If there was some sort of scholarly consensus that the Yongle Emperor was the best in Chinese history, that would be worth reporting, but what serious scholar is even going to make such an audacious claim? No one really has the authority to say which emperor is the best or worst (well, I guess some emperors were REALLY bad, Emperor Ling of Han for one). Here's an example of a NPOV statement:
Due to the grand size of his treasure fleets and conquests, the Yongle Emperor gained international prestige by gathering tribute from many foreign countries.
- In order to make sure that this is not just your own opinion/view/attitude/belief, always follow up statements like this with a citation from a scholar who asserts that this is true. Use this tag to create an inline citation that turns into a footnote at the bottom of the article: <ref></ref>. And write out the appropriate source like this (as an example, with last name first, then year of publication, then page number):
<ref>Spence (1998), 116.</ref>
- I hope this answers some questions.--Pericles of AthensTalk 20:35, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
- Thanks buddy, I think I can only improve. By the way, I have done just a bit of translation on Southern Ming Dynasty, if you have time please have a look. The Chinese text(either from zh:wiki or [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] www dot baike dot baidu dot com) is on the talk page, you can see the progress of translation there. Please let me know of any short comings, and I shall try to fix them. Also please have a look at Anti-Qing sentiment, I did it on my own. Let me know what you feel. Arilang talk 00:12, 25 November 2008 (UTC)
- No problem. I fixed some grammatical mistakes in Southern Ming Dynasty for you. You're off to a great start. Now all you have to do is find books written by notable historians so that you can cite authors and page numbers to verify all the events covered in the article so far. As for Anti-Qing sentiment, I added a single category at the bottom since it was still uncategorized. The quotes in the article will eventually have to be converted into prose (as in normal paragraphs summarizing what the quoted people are saying). Unfortunately, you can't have an article that is composed of nothing but quotations; someone is going to give you a complaint sometime in the near future if this is not resolved. I should know; the same complaint was levelled at me when I had too many quotations in the article for Shen Kuo.--Pericles of AthensTalk 00:42, 25 November 2008 (UTC)
- Thanks buddy, I think I can only improve. By the way, I have done just a bit of translation on Southern Ming Dynasty, if you have time please have a look. The Chinese text(either from zh:wiki or [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] www dot baike dot baidu dot com) is on the talk page, you can see the progress of translation there. Please let me know of any short comings, and I shall try to fix them. Also please have a look at Anti-Qing sentiment, I did it on my own. Let me know what you feel. Arilang talk 00:12, 25 November 2008 (UTC)
I improved the section on the Hongguang reign on the Southern Ming Dynasty page. Maybe it's a bit too detailed, but I think it looks pretty good! --Madalibi (talk) 03:43, 25 November 2008 (UTC)
漢武大帝
Page Copy alert
[some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] killthelink- dot -wapedia dot mobi/en/Ming Dynasty?t=3 - The link has been slightly edited to disable link to malware, but that sire is a complete copy of this Wiki's page. 72.64.103.65 (talk) 17:03, 28 November 2008 (UTC)
- Hmm...Google images? I hope the attribution license you used is acceptable; otherwise, some Wiki administrator could delete these pictures. Browse through this link and make sure that the images you uploaded will be accepted by Wikimedia Commons.--Pericles of AthensTalk 01:36, 29 November 2008 (UTC)
Sorry guys, looks like I still have this copy right problems, I will remove the images until problems solved. Arilang talk 06:59, 29 November 2008 (UTC) More images:
PericlesofAthens, I will make double sure all the images are under Creative Commons license. If you need any images for Han Dynasty, I will search for them. Arilang talk 01:42, 29 November 2008 (UTC)
Sorry again. Arilang talk 07:01, 29 November 2008 (UTC)
On the Ming population
Hi everybody,
I notice that this page discusses the Ming population without mentioning the latest estimates by Martin Heijdra in the second Ming volume of the Cambridge History of China (1998). Heijdra's article is titled "The socio-economic development of rural China during the Ming." On p. 438, Heijdra gives the following "low," "middle," and "high" estimates for 1500, 1600, and 1650:
- 1500: 137 - 155 - 175 million
- 1600: 185 - 231 - 289 million
- 1650: 204 - 268 - 353 million
- 1500: 137 - 155 - 175 million
He estimates that the actual population figures must have been between the middle and the high hypotheses (the claim straddles pp. 438 and 439). His figures for 1650 are controversial because he seems to have underestimated the effect of wars, famines, and epidemics on the population (as pointed out in [some links edited for Wikipedia spam filter] [ web dot whittier dot edu /people/webpages/personalwebpages/rmarks/PDF/Env dot _panel_remarks dot pdf] this paper, which wrongly calls Heijdra's hypothesis the "Mote revision"), but his other figures seem cogent. For one thing, they're based on very conservative growth rates for the entire period. In any case, since Heijdra's article is a serious scholarly source that is now taken very seriously in the field, I think we should integrate his figures into the wiki: in the lead paragraph (next to note 2), and of course in the Population section. Any thoughts? --Madalibi (talk) 07:41, 30 November 2008 (UTC)
- Good find, Madalibi, Heijdra's article was published the same year that Brook published his Confusions of Pleasure, so Heijdra's latest figures are not mentioned by Brook. Feel free to incorporate Heijdra's figures into the population section (or even the lead, but keep the amount of words in the lead to a minimum).--Pericles of AthensTalk 20:50, 30 November 2008 (UTC)
I can do what you suggest after you confirm that what Ebrey and Brook call "the late Ming" means roughly 1600. Also, which Heijdra figure should I use? "Middle"? "High"? "In-between" with an explanation? Let's just reach some kind of consensus on this before I make the changes. Happy Thanksgiving! --Madalibi (talk) 00:50, 1 December 2008 (UTC)
Ebrey is rather vague about the date or time frame in reference to the population being as large as 200 million in the later part of the dynasty, but Brook explicitly says around the year 1600 the population was as large as 175 million (p. 162):
The standard estimate suggests that China was approaching 150 million by 1600, though working from a modestly higher base figure suggests that it may have approached 175 million.
As for middle and high, you could simply state the middle and high figures and note Heijdra's inclination towards a pop size in between those two figures.--Pericles of AthensTalk 08:19, 1 December 2008 (UTC)
No copy right issue
- Hi guys, I have upload(This time the image is in Public Domain, so no copy right issue) another portrait of Yongle, with a fairer complexion, so that you guys can have a look. I hope it should be OK. Arilang talk 02:12, 1 December 2008 (UTC)
- The picture quality actually looks a little more blurry than the other portrait picture where his complexion seems darker. Speaking of which (since you wrote on the image page that it has been "digitally altered" by you), did you actually alter the original pigmentation of his skin?--Pericles of AthensTalk 08:05, 1 December 2008 (UTC)
- No color tone was changed, only the scale of the lighter/darker ratio of the whole picture. That means overall color has become lighter, the face included, of cause. You could compare the original image at the source. Arilang talk 12:47, 1 December 2008 (UTC)
- That's perfectly acceptable, Arilang. The photo, although blurry, does at least look brighter than the version of the portrait. I was afraid, however, that you had only digitally altered his face! Lol. That would be a big "no no" in Wikipedia. Take care.--Pericles of AthensTalk 17:18, 1 December 2008 (UTC)
Blank page when printing
Has anyone else noticed that there are multiple blank pages when printing? There are whole blank pages with a header and footer, but missing all content. It happens in this article, and others. It's easily checked by going to print preview and paging through. This happens to me on multiple Windows computers using Internet Explorer. However, Firefox manages to show all of the content, but there are large white spaces between some headers and the text.
75.144.38.1 (talk) 12:47, 10 December 2008 (UTC)
U of C authoritative?
Happy New Year!
I certainly wouldn't want to belittle the status of the University of Calgary—but is that institution really so authoritative in this field that it deserves to be mentioned in the 2nd para of the lead? Couldn't the citation be given without mentioning the U of C in the text? Eg:
- The Ming created "one of the greatest eras of orderly government and social stability in human history".[3]
--NigelG (or Ndsg) | Talk 10:56, 14 January 2009 (UTC)
- PS The fact that neither the word China nor Chinese even occurs in the University of Calgary article only strengthens my doubts about this citation. --NigelG (or Ndsg) | Talk 11:05, 14 January 2009 (UTC)
- I've gone ahead and removed the reference to the U of C, as suggested above. The citation & footnote are unchanged. --NigelG (or Ndsg) | Talk 10:28, 15 January 2009 (UTC)
- I'm not opposed to it, but perhaps the whole original sentence (including the mentioning of U of C as the institution being quoted) could be kept if it was simply moved to the government section of the article, where it is arguably more relevant.--Pericles of AthensTalk 11:14, 15 January 2009 (UTC)
- I've moved the quote up to the first para, where it seems to fit in more naturally. (I took the opportunity to drop the parenthesis explaining who the Hans are: this is already covered by the link.)
- I'm not opposed to it, but perhaps the whole original sentence (including the mentioning of U of C as the institution being quoted) could be kept if it was simply moved to the government section of the article, where it is arguably more relevant.--Pericles of AthensTalk 11:14, 15 January 2009 (UTC)
- I've gone ahead and removed the reference to the U of C, as suggested above. The citation & footnote are unchanged. --NigelG (or Ndsg) | Talk 10:28, 15 January 2009 (UTC)
- By all means repeat the quote in the Govt section if you think it appropriate. --NigelG (or Ndsg) | Talk 14:46, 15 January 2009 (UTC)
- Actually, I think it looks fine there. Nevermind! Good job.--Pericles of AthensTalk 14:48, 15 January 2009 (UTC)
- By all means repeat the quote in the Govt section if you think it appropriate. --NigelG (or Ndsg) | Talk 14:46, 15 January 2009 (UTC)
Too long
Since History of the Ming Dynasty is formed, shouldn't the History section be written in summary style? --Redtigerxyz Talk 14:24, 29 January 2009 (UTC)
- It was never my intention to create History of the Ming Dynasty; someone else did. There is more information over there than here in the main article. Also, did you actually check to see if the prose of this article was too large (KB size) before you placed the tag at the top of the article? Or is this just a wild guess?--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:25, 29 January 2009 (UTC)
- 13,206 words equals roughly 65 KB; that's the size of the prose content in this article as of now. It takes roughly 20,000 words to obtain the big bad 100 KB size. This article falls very short of that; any article that is over 60 KB is one where editors should begin consideration for reducing its size, but some articles that have a large scope are exempted (I would place Ming Dynasty in that category, as it covers three centuries of history). Despite your concerns about summary, I'm removing the tag, since WP:SIZE puts this article in very safe size limits.--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:44, 29 January 2009 (UTC)
- At this moment: Prose size (text only): 83 kB (13562 words) "readable prose size". Calculated with "Page size" tool. Also the article is TOO LONG, NOT just of it's size but because there is too much to read, and after a while, one tends to lose interest. "Readers may become tired of reading a page much longer than about 30 to 50 KB." A shorter article would be appreciated, this article can be written in summary style. Even if User:PericlesofAthens did not create History of the Ming Dynasty, that does mean this article should hae virtually the same info in same detail that is in History article. Readding tag. Please do not remove tag unless article is < or = 60 kb. --Redtigerxyz Talk 12:35, 1 February 2009 (UTC)
- What are you talking about? 2,000 words equal 10 KB. 20,000 words equal 100 KB. WP:SIZE even states that 30 KB is roughly 6,000 words and 50 KB is roughly 10,000 words. It is simple math. I don't know what "page size" tool you are using, but your math is incorrect (by about 20 KB!). Plus, how did you get 13,562 words when I got 13,206 words? Another thing that doesn't sound right on your end. Can I remove the tag now?--Pericles of AthensTalk 18:22, 1 February 2009 (UTC)
- Moreover, either your math is correct and WP:SIZE is incorrect, or your math is incorrect and WP:SIZE is correct. If the former is the case, someone needs to edit WP:SIZE immediately to fix a mistake. However, you cannot both be correct and I have a hunch that WP:SIZE is fine how it is.--Pericles of AthensTalk 19:03, 1 February 2009 (UTC)
- Both my math and WP:SIZE are correct. "2,000 words equal 10 KB" equation is wrong, as page size is calculated on basis of characters, not words because words vary in length. Also, I are not talking just about the technical "60 KB" mark, I am talking about the ease of readers. Also, the "Page size" tool I am talking about is User:Dr pda/prosesize.js, which is primarily used for DYK readable prose size calculation. --Redtigerxyz Talk 12:53, 2 February 2009 (UTC)
- That is really strange; I must be using a lot of incredibly long words in every section and throughout the article to bump it up roughly 20 KB more than it should be. I might have time later to draft a new history section for the Ming as a summary to the existing history article, but this will have to wait for my Han Dynasty project, as I have History of the Han Dynasty up and running already, with more articles to come.--Pericles of AthensTalk 15:36, 2 February 2009 (UTC)
- Both my math and WP:SIZE are correct. "2,000 words equal 10 KB" equation is wrong, as page size is calculated on basis of characters, not words because words vary in length. Also, I are not talking just about the technical "60 KB" mark, I am talking about the ease of readers. Also, the "Page size" tool I am talking about is User:Dr pda/prosesize.js, which is primarily used for DYK readable prose size calculation. --Redtigerxyz Talk 12:53, 2 February 2009 (UTC)
- Moreover, either your math is correct and WP:SIZE is incorrect, or your math is incorrect and WP:SIZE is correct. If the former is the case, someone needs to edit WP:SIZE immediately to fix a mistake. However, you cannot both be correct and I have a hunch that WP:SIZE is fine how it is.--Pericles of AthensTalk 19:03, 1 February 2009 (UTC)
- What are you talking about? 2,000 words equal 10 KB. 20,000 words equal 100 KB. WP:SIZE even states that 30 KB is roughly 6,000 words and 50 KB is roughly 10,000 words. It is simple math. I don't know what "page size" tool you are using, but your math is incorrect (by about 20 KB!). Plus, how did you get 13,562 words when I got 13,206 words? Another thing that doesn't sound right on your end. Can I remove the tag now?--Pericles of AthensTalk 18:22, 1 February 2009 (UTC)
- At this moment: Prose size (text only): 83 kB (13562 words) "readable prose size". Calculated with "Page size" tool. Also the article is TOO LONG, NOT just of it's size but because there is too much to read, and after a while, one tends to lose interest. "Readers may become tired of reading a page much longer than about 30 to 50 KB." A shorter article would be appreciated, this article can be written in summary style. Even if User:PericlesofAthens did not create History of the Ming Dynasty, that does mean this article should hae virtually the same info in same detail that is in History article. Readding tag. Please do not remove tag unless article is < or = 60 kb. --Redtigerxyz Talk 12:35, 1 February 2009 (UTC)
- 13,206 words equals roughly 65 KB; that's the size of the prose content in this article as of now. It takes roughly 20,000 words to obtain the big bad 100 KB size. This article falls very short of that; any article that is over 60 KB is one where editors should begin consideration for reducing its size, but some articles that have a large scope are exempted (I would place Ming Dynasty in that category, as it covers three centuries of history). Despite your concerns about summary, I'm removing the tag, since WP:SIZE puts this article in very safe size limits.--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:44, 29 January 2009 (UTC)
- It was never my intention to create History of the Ming Dynasty; someone else did. There is more information over there than here in the main article. Also, did you actually check to see if the prose of this article was too large (KB size) before you placed the tag at the top of the article? Or is this just a wild guess?--Pericles of AthensTalk 16:25, 29 January 2009 (UTC)
Fall of Ming
What happened to all these Ming military officials and aristocrats/royals when Ming surrendered to Manchu warlords(Jin)? What happened ti some of the survivals that became refugee and fled to neighboring states like Korea, Vietnam etc..?--Korsentry 07:13, 5 May 2009 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by KoreanSentry (talk • contribs)
- That's a good question. I don't have a source immediately on hand, but I do remember that one of the sources I consulted for the "Fall of the Ming" sub-section (perhaps it was Spence's book) detailed the Manchu entry into Beijing where they calmed the local inhabitants and tried to immediately return things to normal after Li Zicheng's brief reign of terror there (by raiding, plundering, looting, burning, etc.). This won the Manchu some credibility in the eyes of the Han Chinese populace. At other times, though, the Manchus (aided by their Han Chinese subordinates) were brutally suppressive of Han Chinese resistance.--Pericles of AthensTalk 13:40, 5 May 2009 (UTC)
Assessment comment
The comment(s) below were originally left at Talk:Ming dynasty/Comments, and are posted here for posterity. Following several discussions in past years, these subpages are now deprecated. The comments may be irrelevant or outdated; if so, please feel free to remove this section.
This article has plenty of good info, but now it needs references. --Danaman5 21:51, 13 January 2007 (UTC)
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Last edited at 15:03, 21 March 2014 (UTC). Substituted at 15:24, 1 May 2016 (UTC)