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Xia: ca. 2071 BC – ca. 1600 BC
Shang: c. 1600 BC – c. 1046 BC
Zhou: Western Zhou: 11th century BC - 771 BC
Eastern Zhou: 770-771 BC
Spring and Autumn: 770-256 BC
Warring States: 475-221 BC
Qin: 221-206 BC
Han: Western Han Dynasty: 206 BC - 23 AD
Eastern Han Dynasty: 25-220
Three Kingdoms: Wei: 220-265
Shu: 221-263
Wu: 222-280
Jin: Western Jin: 265-316
Eastern Jin Dynasty: 317-420
Sixteen Kingdoms: 304-439
Northern and Southern Dynasties: Southern Dynasties: Song: 420-479
Qi: 479-502
Beam: 502-557
Chen: 557-589
Northern Dynasties: Northern Wei: 386-534
Eastern Wei: 534-550
Northern Qi: 550-557
Western Wei: 535-557
Northern Zhou: 557-581
Sui: 581-618
Tang: 618-907
Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms: Later Liang: 907-923
Later Tang: 923-936
Later Jin: 936-946
Later Han: 947-950
Next week: 951-960
Ten Kingdoms: 902-979
Song: Northern Song Dynasty: 960-1127
Southern Song Dynasty: 1127-1279
Liao: 907-1125
Western Xia: 1038-1227
Kim: 1115-1234
Yuan: 1279-1368
Ming: 1368-1644
Qing: 1644-1911
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When I was in elementary school, I learned a period song, so that's what I said.
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Liao Dynasty (907-1125); Xia Dynasty (c. 2070-1600 BC); Jin dynasty (1115–1234); Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368.
1. Liao Dynasty. The Liao Dynasty (907-1125) was a dynasty established by the Khitan people in Chinese history, with a total of nine emperors and 218 years of reign. In 907, Liao Taizu Yelu Abaoji became the Khitan Khan, in 947, Liao Taizong Yelu Deguang led the army south to the Central Plains, captured Bianjing (now Kaifeng, Henan), ascended the throne in Bianjing and called the emperor, changed the name of the country to "Great Liao", and was destroyed by the Jin Dynasty in 1125.
2. Jin Dynasty. During the Jin Dynasty (1115-1234), Jin Taizu Wanyan Aguda (Wanyan Min) unified the Jurchen tribes and raised troops against Liao. In 1115, he founded the state in Huining Mansion in Shangjing (now Acheng District, Harbin City, Heilongjiang Province), and in 1234, Jin was defeated in Caizhou by the Southern Song Dynasty and the northern and southern Mongols.
3. Xia Dynasty. The Xia Dynasty (c. 2070 BC, 1600 BC) was the first hereditary dynasty recorded in Chinese history books as the Chi Yan clan. It is generally believed that the Xia Dynasty was passed down for 14 generations, and the 17th generation (the Xia ruler was called "Hou" in his reign and "Emperor" after his death), which lasted for about 471 years and was destroyed by the Shang Dynasty.
4. Yuan Dynasty. The Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368) was the first unified dynasty established by ethnic minorities in Chinese history. It was 162 years from 1206 when Genghis Khan established the Mongol regime, and 98 years from Kublai Khan's establishment of the state name.
After the Yuan Dynasty withdrew from the Central Plains, the Northern Yuan regime lasted until 1402.
Historical Influence of the Liaoxia Jin Yuan:
The Liao Dynasty's military power and influence covered the Western Regions, so after the fall of the Tang Dynasty, Central Asia, West Asia, and Eastern Europe regarded the Liao Dynasty (Khitan) as a representative title for China.
The direct reason for the establishment of the Xia Dynasty is likely to come from the Yellow River that flooded in the era of the Three Emperors and Five Emperors, due to the flood that has long affected the production and life of the surrounding people, and Dayu mobilized all ethnic groups for 20 years of water control work not only unprecedentedly united the Chinese ancestors, but also greatly enhanced their prestige.
The Jin Dynasty laid the boundaries of northern China and played a foundational role in determining the territory of northern China. At its peak, the Jin Dynasty included Northeast China, North China, Guanzhong, and the Russian Far East. south to the line from Dasanguan to the Huai River, confronting the Southern Song Dynasty; the northwest and the Western Xia; The Tohoku region is bordered by the Outer Khingan Mountains and the Sea of Japan to the east.
The commodity economy of the Yuan Dynasty was more prosperous than overseas. During the Yuan Dynasty, diplomatic exchanges with various countries were frequent, and envoys, missionaries, and business travelers were sent from all over the country. In terms of culture, cultural forms such as Yuanqu appeared during the period, which were closer to secularization.
The above content reference: Encyclopedia - Liao Dynasty.
The above content reference: Encyclopedia - Xia Dynasty.
The above content reference: Encyclopedia - Jin Dynasty.
The above content reference: Encyclopedia - Yuan Code Scattered Dynasty.
Xia, Shang, Zhou [Western Zhou, Eastern Zhou (Spring and Autumn, Warring States)], Qin, Han (Western Han, Eastern Han), Three Kingdoms (Wei, Shu, Wu), Jin (Western Jin, Eastern Jin), Wuhu and Sixteen Kingdoms, Northern and Southern Dynasties [Southern Dynasties (Song, Qi, Liang, Chen), Northern Dynasties (Northern Wei, Eastern Wei, Western Wei, Northern Qi, Northern Zhou)], Sui, Tang, Five Dynasties (Later Liang, Later Tang, Later Jin, Later Han, Later Zhou), Ten Kingdoms [Former Shu, Later Shu, Wu, Southern Tang, Wu Yue, Fujian, Chu, Southern Han, Nanping (Jingnan), Northern Han], Song (Northern Song, Southern Song), Liao, Western Xia, Jin, Yuan, Ming, Qing.
Xia, Shang, Western Zhou, Eastern Zhou (Spring and Autumn, Warring States), Qin, Western Han, Eastern Han, Three Kingdoms, Western Jin Dynasty, Eastern Jin Dynasty, Northern and Southern Dynasties, Sui, Tang, Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms, Northern Song Dynasty (Liao, Western Xia...).), Southern Song Dynasty (Jin...).), Yuan, Ming, Qing.
Xia c. 2070 B.C. - c. 1600 B.C.
Shang c. 1600 BC - 1046 BC. >>>More
In 534 A.D., Gao Huan established Yuan Shanjian as Emperor Xiaojing, and the Northern Wei Dynasty became the Eastern Wei Dynasty. >>>More
Therefore, the herders entertain their guests, as usual, by offering a bowl of milk tea to the guests, followed by fried rice and a large bowl of dairy products such as cream, milk tofu and milk skins.