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Chinese Economic History up to 1949 (2 vols)
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The development of China’s economy has long been an enigma to Western historians. Did it consist of centuries of stagnation followed by a period of collapse or was it a process of steady developmen...
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07 August 2008

The development of China’s economy has long been an enigma to Western historians. Did it consist of centuries of stagnation followed by a period of collapse or was it a process of steady development, reaching a high point by the eighteenth century? What is certain is that China’s economic growth never developed into a full industrial revolution and China was overtaken by the West, but the reasons for this are highly contested both within and outside China. Topics of the Key Papers here include land use and land ownership, handicraft industries and early industrialization, trade and commerce, transport and communication and taxation and finance. It begins with papers on the earliest development of the economy in the Qin and Han dynasties, but concentrates on the periods of greatest interest and most significant development, namely the commercial revolution of the Song dynasty, the industrial and commercial expansion of the mid-Ming and the impact of Western and Japanese trade and investment in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Price: $511.00
Pages: 686
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Key Papers
Publication Date:
07 August 2008
ISBN: 9781905246526
Format: Hardcover
Michael Dillon has a BA in Chinese Studies and a PhD in Chinese history from Leeds University. He formerly taught Chinese and Chinese history at the University of Durham. His books include China: A Historical and Cultural Dictionary, China's Muslim Hui Community: Migration, Settlement and Sects and Xinjiang: China’s Muslim Far Northwest. He is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and the Royal Asiatic Society.