Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of maps
- Acknowledgments
- Scholarly conventions
- Topographical map of China
- Chronology of Western Zhou kings
- The sixty-day circle
- Introduction
- 1 Foundation of the Western Zhou state: constructing the political space
- 2 Disorder and decline: the political crisis of the Western Zhou state
- 3 Enemies at the gate: the war against the Xianyun and the northwestern frontier
- 4 The fall of the Western Zhou: partisan struggle and spatial collapse
- 5 The eastward migration: reconfiguring the Western Zhou state
- 6 The legacy of the Western Zhou
- Conclusion
- Appendix 1 The periphery: the Western Zhou state at its maximum geographical extent
- Appendix 2 The relationship between the Quanrong and the Xianyun
- Appendix 3 The Bamboo Annals and issues of the chronology of King You's reign
- Bibliography
- Index to inscribed bronzes
- General index
3 - Enemies at the gate: the war against the Xianyun and the northwestern frontier
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of maps
- Acknowledgments
- Scholarly conventions
- Topographical map of China
- Chronology of Western Zhou kings
- The sixty-day circle
- Introduction
- 1 Foundation of the Western Zhou state: constructing the political space
- 2 Disorder and decline: the political crisis of the Western Zhou state
- 3 Enemies at the gate: the war against the Xianyun and the northwestern frontier
- 4 The fall of the Western Zhou: partisan struggle and spatial collapse
- 5 The eastward migration: reconfiguring the Western Zhou state
- 6 The legacy of the Western Zhou
- Conclusion
- Appendix 1 The periphery: the Western Zhou state at its maximum geographical extent
- Appendix 2 The relationship between the Quanrong and the Xianyun
- Appendix 3 The Bamboo Annals and issues of the chronology of King You's reign
- Bibliography
- Index to inscribed bronzes
- General index
Summary
In the preceding chapter, I have analyzed problems in the sociopolitical structure of the Western Zhou state. Now, I turn to Zhou's relationship with the outside world and examine external pressures that may have accelerated the political disintegration of the Western Zhou state. However, this is not to offer a general survey of Zhou's foreign relations; instead, the present chapter will concentrate on a particular region, the upper Jing River valley, as the battleground between the Zhou and their northwestern enemies who had directly threatened the Zhou heartland in the Wei River valley. By focusing on one region, we will have a better chance of actually demonstrating the geopolitical crisis facing the Western Zhou state and its possible responses. The study will further enhance our understanding of the degree to which the internal and external problems had profoundly perplexed the Zhou regime.
As demonstrated in chapter 1, the Wei River valley in central Shaanxi was the heartland of the Western Zhou state and the locus of Zhou royal administration. However, if we look at a map of the Zhou realm, we find that the Zhou capitals Feng and Hao were not located in the geographical center of the Zhou state, where the eastern center Luoyi was favorably located, but were close to the western border. Through much of the dynasty, the Zhou effort to expand was focused on the east, but this could not be done without the core being secured from attacks from the west.
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- Information
- Landscape and Power in Early ChinaThe Crisis and Fall of the Western Zhou 1045–771 BC, pp. 141 - 192Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006