enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Manchu people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manchu_people

    Shamanism has a long history in Manchu civilization and influenced them tremendously over thousands of years. John Keay states in A History of China, shaman is the single loan-word from Manchurian into the English language.

  3. Manchuria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manchuria

    In 1644, after peasant rebels sacked the Ming dynasty's capital of Beijing, the Jurchens (now called Manchus) allied with Ming general Wu Sangui and seized control of Beijing, overthrowing the short-lived Shun dynasty (1644–1649) and establishing Qing-dynasty rule (1644–1912) over all of China. The Manchu conquest of China involved the ...

  4. History of Manchuria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Manchuria

    From 698 to 926, the kingdom of Bohai ruled over all of Manchuria, including the northern Korean peninsula and Primorsky Krai.Balhae was composed predominantly of Goguryeo language and Tungusic-speaking peoples (Mohe people), and was an early feudal medieval state of Eastern Asia, which developed its industry, agriculture, animal husbandry, and had its own cultural traditions and art.

  5. Sinicization of the Manchus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sinicization_of_the_Manchus

    The Sinicization of the Manchus was the process in which the Manchu people became assimilated into the Han-dominated Chinese society. It occurred most prominently during the Qing dynasty when the new Manchu rulers actively attempted to assimilate themselves and their people with the Han to increase the legitimacy of the new dynasty.

  6. Jurchen people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jurchen_people

    Jurchen (Manchu: ᠵᡠᡧᡝᠨ, romanized: Jušen, ; Chinese: 女真, romanized: Nǚzhēn, [nỳ.ʈʂə́n]) is a term used to collectively describe a number of East Asian Tungusic-speaking people. [a] They lived in northeastern China, also known as Manchuria, before the 18th century.

  7. Transition from Ming to Qing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transition_from_Ming_to_Qing

    The transition from Ming to Qing (or simply the Ming-Qing transition [4]) or the Manchu conquest of China from 1618 to 1683 saw the transition between two major dynasties in Chinese history. It was a decades-long conflict between the emerging Qing dynasty, the incumbent Ming dynasty, and several smaller factions (like the Shun dynasty and Xi ...

  8. Eight Banners - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eight_Banners

    Select groups of Han Chinese bannermen were mass transferred into Manchu Banners by the Qing, changing their ethnicity from Han Chinese to Manchu. Han Chinese bannermen of Tai Nikan 台尼堪 (watchpost Chinese) and Fusi Nikan 撫順尼堪 (Fushun Chinese) [70] backgrounds into the Manchu banners in 1740 by order of the Qing Qianlong emperor. [71]

  9. List of emperors of the Qing dynasty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_emperors_of_the...

    The Qing dynasty (1644–1912) was a Manchu-led imperial Chinese dynasty and the last imperial dynasty of China. It was officially proclaimed in 1636 in Shenyang in what is now Northeast China, but only captured Beijing and succeeded the Ming dynasty in China proper in 1644.