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  2. Treaty of Aigun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Aigun

    The Treaty of Aigun was an 1858 treaty between the Russian Empire and Yishan, official of the Qing dynasty of China. It established much of the modern border between the Russian Far East and China by ceding much of Manchuria (the ancestral homeland of the Manchu people), now known as Northeast China. [1]

  3. Qing dynasty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qing_dynasty

    The multi-ethnic Qing dynasty assembled the territorial base for modern China. The Qing controlled the most territory of any dynasty in Chinese history, and in 1790 represented the fourth-largest empire in world history to that point. With over 426 million citizens in 1907, [15] it was the most populous country in the world at the time.

  4. Legacy of the Qing dynasty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legacy_of_the_Qing_dynasty

    The Qing dynasty in 1911. The Qing dynasty (1644–1912) was the largest political entity ever to center itself on China as known today. Succeeding the Ming dynasty, the Qing dynasty more than doubled the geographical extent of the Ming dynasty, which it displayed in 1644, and also tripled the Ming population, reaching a size of about half a billion people in its last years.

  5. Debate on the Chineseness of the Yuan and Qing dynasties

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debate_on_the_Chineseness...

    Unlike the Yuan dynasty, the Qing dynasty referred consistently to all Qing subjects regardless of ethnicity as "Chinese", [4] and the Qing was widely recognized as "China" (or the Chinese Empire) by the international community with treaties and modern diplomacy during its period. In 1909, the Qing dynasty enacted the Chinese nationality law.

  6. Qing dynasty in Inner Asia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qing_dynasty_in_Inner_Asia

    Official map of the Qing Empire published by the Qing in 1905. The Qing dynasty in Inner Asia was the expansion of the Qing dynasty's realm in Inner Asia in the 17th and the 18th century AD, including both Inner Mongolia and Outer Mongolia, both Manchuria (Northeast China) and Outer Manchuria, Tibet, Qinghai and Xinjiang.

  7. Foreign relations of imperial China - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreign_relations_of...

    The Yongle Emperor (r. 1402–1424). During his reign, Admiral Zheng He led a gigantic maritime tributary fleet abroad on the seven treasure voyages.. In premodern times, the theory of foreign relations of China held that the Chinese Empire was the Celestial Dynasty, the center of world civilization, with the Emperor of China being the leader of the civilized world.

  8. Sino-Russian border conflicts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sino-Russian_border_conflicts

    The Sino-Russian border conflicts [3] (1652–1689) were a series of intermittent skirmishes between the Qing dynasty of China, with assistance from the Joseon dynasty of Korea, and the Tsardom of Russia by the Cossacks in which the latter tried and failed to gain the land north of the Amur River with disputes over the Amur region.

  9. Convention of Peking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convention_of_Peking

    According to the Institute of Qing History the ceding of territory which created the modern border between Russia and North Korea and blocks China's access to the Sea of Japan was caused as a result of mismanagement during the demarcation process: Article 1 of the 1860 Sino-Russian Peking Convention stipulates that the southeastern section of ...