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Qing dynasty
(redirected from Qing dynasties)

   Also found in: Wikipedia 0.04 sec.

Qing dynasty

 or Ch'ing dynasty or Manchu dynasty

(1644–1911/12) Last of the imperial dynasties in China. The name Qing was first applied to the dynasty established by the Manchu in 1636 in Manchuria and then applied by extension to their rule in China. During the Qing dynasty, China's territory and population expanded tremendously. Cultural attitudes were strongly conservative and Neo-Confucianism was the dominant philosophy. The arts flourished: literati painting was popular, novels in the vernacular developed substantially, and jingxi (Peking opera) developed. Qing porcelain, textiles, tea, paper, sugar, and steel were exported to all parts of the world. Military campaigns in the latter part of the 18th century depleted government finances, and corruption grew. These conditions, combined with population pressures and natural disasters, led to the Opium Wars and the Taiping and Nian rebellions, which in turn so weakened the dynasty that it was unable to rebuff the demands of foreign powers. The dynasty ended with the republican revolution of 1911 and the abdication of the last emperor in 1912.



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Over the course of the Ming and Qing dynasties, women's inheritance rights changed significantly.
The fact that they must have is obvious if one considers as an ensemble (1) the virtually universal early female first marriage in China, mostly around the (Western) age of 17, (2) the mortality rates implied by most reconstructed life-tables, (3) the birth rates implied under these conditions by an unrestricted 'natural' fertility, and (4) the actual rate of growth of the historical Chinese population under the Ming and Qing dynasties.
The last time was more than 20 years ago) --"Treasures from Shanghai" features bronze and ancient oracle bones from the Shang dynasty, jade and porcelain from the Son and Qing dynasties, to a myriad of exquisite and historically relevant lacquer boxes, paintings and calligraphy.
 
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