Southern Material Culture

Kieser Annette

Research article (book contribution) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

During the Six Dynasties, much as in the North, the South was also subject to enormous changes in the composition of its population. Even before the fall of the Western Jin, large parts of the northern elite lineages fled south in several waves of migration that would last until the mid-fifth century. In the South, the refugees found themselves a minority in an unfamiliar environment, but they still maintained control of what remained of their state; in 317, Jiankang (modern-day Nanjing) was established as the capital of what we term the Eastern Jin. But Jiankang was not the only destination of the northern refugees. Some chose the middle reaches of the Yangzi, or settled in the southeastern coastal regions, while some headed even further south toward modern Guangzhou. These population movements clearly manifest themselves in the archaeological evidence.

Details about the publication

PublisherDien Albert E., Knapp Keith N.
Book titleThe Cambridge History of China, Vol. 2, The Six Dynasties, 220-581
Page range418-442
Publishing companyCambridge University Press
Place of publicationCambridge
StatusPublished
Release year2019
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
ISBN978-1-107-02077-1
DOI10.1017/9781139107334.021

Authors from the University of Münster

Kieser, Annette
Institute of Sinology and East Asian Studies