1. Introduction; 2. Historiography, methodology, and Song military and political history; 3. The pivot of the tenth century; 4. Rebuilding the empire; 5. The army and the creation of the Song dynasty; 6. Personal politics and the campaigns of conquest; 7. Separating war and politics; 8. Fighting to become emperor; 9. Failure and rebellion; 10. The end of the beginning; 11. Conclusion; Bibliography; Index.
A groundbreaking work examining the military and political events that shaped the Song dynasty (960–1279) in China.
Peter Lorge specializes in tenth- and eleventh-century Chinese military history and thought, and is the author, most recently, of Chinese Martial Arts: From Antiquity to the Twenty-First Century (Cambridge, 2012), and editor of Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms (2010), and Debating War in Chinese History (2013) and Chinese and Indian Warfare: From the Classical Age to 1870 (with Kaushik Roy, 2014). His earlier books include War, Politics and Society in Early Modern China, 900–1795 (2005) and The Asian Military Revolution: From Gunpowder to the Bomb (Cambridge, 2008). He is also the editor of a book series with Routledge, Asian States and Empires. He is currently working on a history of Chinese military thought from the third to the thirteenth centuries.
'The Reunification of China offers a richly detailed narrative on
the founding of the Song empire, tracing its origins in the Five
Dynasties and extending forward to the critical turn toward
civilian rule during the second and third reigns. The reader is
reminded of the centrality of war to politics and simultaneously
the serendipity of history in the absence of grand plans. Peter
Lorge has shed invaluable light on this important period of
transition, which in turn enriches our understanding of the broader
history of China's middle period.' Richard L. Davis, Lingnan
University, Hong Kong
'This book challenges the conventional narrative of medieval
Chinese history in which the Song dynasty founders ended the chaos
of the Five Dynasties period in 960 because they offered a new
model of governance based on civil rather than military values.
Lorge's deeper look into early Song history makes a major
contribution to the military history of China.' Charles Hartman,
University at Albany, State University of New York
'This is the fullest account in any Western language of the
political and military dimensions of the founding of the Song
dynasty in 960 and the decades-long process of its consolidation
and stabilisation, culminating in 1005. I doubt any Sinologist in
the Western world knows more about tenth-century China than Lorge,
and his meticulous and penetrating monograph on it will stand as
the standard work for our time.' David Curtis Wright, University of
Calgary
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