The History Of China, as documented in ancient writings, dates
back some 3,300 years. Modern archaeological studies provide evidence of still more
ancient origins in a culture that flourished between 2500 and 2000 B.C. in what is now
central China and the lower Huang He ( orYellow River) Valley of north China. Centuries of
migration, amalgamation, and development brought about a distinctive system of writing,
philosophy, art, and political organization that came to be recognizable as Chinese
civilization. What makes the civilization unique in world history is its continuity
through over 4,000 years to the present century.
The Chinese have developed a strong sense of their real and mythological origins and have
kept voluminous records since very early times. It is largely as a result of these records
that knowledge concerning the ancient past, not only of China but also of its neighbors,
has survived.
Chinese history, until the twentieth century, was written mostly by members of the ruling
scholar-official class and was meant to provide the ruler with precedents to guide or
justify his policies. These accounts focused on dynastic politics and colorful court
histories and included developments among the commoners only as backdrops. The historians
described a Chinese political pattern of dynasties, one following another in a cycle of
ascent, achievement, decay, and rebirth under a new family.
Of the consistent traits identified by independent historians, a salient one has been the
capacity of the Chinese to absorb the people of surrounding areas into their own
civilization. Their success can be attributed to the superiority of their ideographic
written language, their technology, and their political institutions; the refinement of
their artistic and intellectual creativity; and the sheer weight of their numbers. The
process of assimilation continued over the centuries through conquest and colonization
until what is now known as China Proper was brought under unified rule. The Chinese also
left an enduring mark on people beyond their borders, especially the Koreans, Japanese,
and Vietnamese.
Another recurrent historical theme has been the unceasing struggle of the sedentary
Chinese against the threat posed to their safety and way of life by non-Chinese peoples on
the margins of their territory in the north, northeast, and northwest. In the thirteenth
century, the Mongols from the northern steppes became the first alien people to conquer
all China. Although not as culturally developed as the Chinese, they left some imprint on
Chinese civilization while heightening Chinese perceptions of threat from the north. China
came under alien rule for the second time in the mid-seventeenth century; the
conquerors--the Manchus--came again from the north and northeast.
For centuries virtually all the foreigners that Chinese rulers saw came from the less
developed societies along their land borders. This circumstance conditioned the Chinese
view of the outside world. The Chinese saw their domain as the self-sufficient center of
the universe and derived from this image the traditional (and still used) Chinese name for
their country--Zhongguo () , literally, Middle Kingdom or Central Nation. China saw itself
surrounded on all sides by so-called barbarian peoples whose cultures were demonstrably
inferior by Chinese standards. This China-centered ("sinocentric") view of the
world was still undisturbed in the nineteenth century, at the time of the first serious
confrontation with the West. China had taken it for granted that its relations with
Europeans would be conducted according to the tributary system that had evolved over the
centuries between the emperor and representatives of the lesser states on China's borders
as well as between the emperor and some earlier European visitors. But by the
mid-nineteenth century, humiliated militarily by superior Western weaponry and technology
and faced with imminent territorial dismemberment, China began to reassess its position
with respect to Western civilization. By 1911 the two-millennia-old dynastic system of
imperial government was brought down by its inability to make this adjustment
successfully.
Because of its length and complexity, the history of the Middle Kingdom lends itself to
varied interpretation. After the communist takeover in 1949, historians in mainland China
wrote their own version of the past--a history of China built on a Marxist model of
progression from primitive communism to slavery, feudalism, capitalism, and finally
socialism. The events of history came to be presented as a function of the class struggle.
Historiography became subordinated to proletarian politics fashioned and directed by the
Chinese Communist Party. A series of thought-reform and antirightist campaigns were
directed against intellectuals in the arts, sciences, and academic community. The Cultural
Revolution (1966-76) further altered the objectivity of historians. In the years after the
death of Mao Zedong in 1976, however, interest grew within the party, and outside it as
well, in restoring the integrity of historical inquiry. This trend was consistent with the
party's commitment to "seeking truth from facts." As a result, historians and
social scientists raised probing questions concerning the state of historiography in
China. Their investigations included not only historical study of traditional China but
penetrating inquiries into modern Chinese history and the history of the Chinese Communist
Party.
In post-Mao China, the discipline of historiography has not been separated from politics,
although a much greater range of historical topics has been discussed. Figures from
Confucius--who was bitterly excoriated for his "feudal" outlook by Cultural
Revolution-era historians--to Mao himself have been evaluated with increasing flexibility.
Among the criticisms made by Chinese social scientists is that Maoist-era historiography
distorted Marxist and Leninist interpretations. This meant that considerable revision of
historical texts was in order in the 1980s, although no substantive change away from the
conventional Marxist approach was likely. Historical institutes were restored within the
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, and a growing corps of trained historians, in
institutes and academia alike, returned to their work with the blessing of the Chinese
Communist Party. This in itself was a potentially significant development.
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