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{{Short description|Period of Chinese history (907–979)}} {{Use dmy dates|date=August 2017}} {{Use British English|date=August 2017}} {{Infobox Chinese |title=Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms |year_start = 907 |year_end = 960 |pic=Five Dynasties Ten Kingdoms 923 CE.png |piccap=The Later Liang (yellow) and contemporary kingdoms |t=五代十國|s=五代十国 |p=Wǔ dài shí guó |mi={{IPAc-cmn|u|3|.|d|ai|4|.|sh|r|2|.|g|uo|2}} |y=Ng<sup>5</sup> doi<sup>6</sup> sap<sup>6</sup> gwok<sup>3</sup> |ci={{IPAc-yue|ng|5|-|d|oi|6|-|s|ap|6|-|gw|ok|3}} |w=Wu<sup>3</sup> tai<sup>4</sup> shih<sup>2</sup> kuo<sup>2</sup> }} {{History of China|BC=1}} The '''Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period''' ({{lang-zh |t = 五代十國 }}) was an era of political upheaval and division in [[History of China#Imperial China|Imperial China]] from 907 to 979. Five [[Dynasties of China|dynastic states]] quickly succeeded one another in the [[Zhongyuan|Central Plain]], and more than a dozen concurrent dynastic states, collectively known as the Ten Kingdoms, were established elsewhere, mainly in [[South China]]. It was a prolonged period of multiple political divisions in Chinese imperial history.<ref name="Dudbridge" /> Traditionally, the era is seen as beginning with the fall of the [[Tang dynasty]] in 907 and reaching its climax with the founding of the [[Song dynasty]] in 960. In the following 19 years, Song gradually subdued the remaining states in South China, but the [[Liao dynasty]] still remained in China's north (eventually succeeded by the [[Jin dynasty (1115–1234)|Jin dynasty]]), and the [[Western Xia]] was eventually established in China's northwest. Many states had been ''[[de facto]]'' independent long before 907 as the late Tang dynasty's control over its numerous ''[[fanzhen]]'' officials waned, but the key event was their recognition as sovereign by foreign powers. After the Tang collapsed, several [[warlord]]s of the Central Plain crowned themselves emperor. During the 70-year period, there was near-constant warfare between the emerging kingdoms and the alliances they formed. All had the ultimate goal of controlling the Central Plain and establishing themselves as the Tang's successor. The last of the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms regimes was [[Northern Han]], which held out until Song conquered it in 979. For the next several centuries, although the Song controlled much of South China, they coexisted alongside the Liao dynasty, Jin dynasty, and various other regimes in China's north, until finally all of them were conquered by the [[Yuan dynasty]]. == Background == [[File:五代-北宋 佚名 乞巧圖 軸-Palace banquet MET DP251118.jpg|thumb|left|''Palace Banquet'' by Anonymous, Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period]] Towards the end of the Tang dynasty, the imperial government granted increased powers to the ''[[jiedushi]]'' ({{Lang-zh|c=節度使}}), the regional military governors. The [[An Lushan]] (755–763) and [[Huang Chao]] rebellions weakened the imperial government, and by the early 10th century the ''jiedushi'' commanded ''de facto'' independence from its authority. In the last decades of the Tang dynasty, they were not even appointed by the central court anymore, but developed hereditary systems, from father to son or from patron to protégé. They had their own armies rivaling the "palace armies" and amassed huge wealth, as testified by their sumptuous tombs.<ref name="Davis">{{harvnb|Xiu|2004|pp=lv–lxv}} The information was taken from Richard L. Davis's introduction.</ref> Due to the decline of Tang central authority after the An Lushan Rebellion, there was a growing tendency to superimpose large regional administrations over the old districts and prefectures that had been used since the [[Qin dynasty]] (221–206 BC). These administrations, known as circuit commissions, would become the boundaries of the later Southern regimes; many circuit commissioners became the emperors or kings of these states.<ref>{{harvnb|Hartwell|1982|p=397}}</ref> The historian Hugh Clark proposed a three-stage model of broad political trends during this time period. The first stage (880–910) consists of the period between the Huang Chao Rebellion and the formal end of the Tang dynasty, which saw chaotic fighting between warlords who controlled approximately one or two prefectures each. The second stage (910–950) saw the various warlords stabilize and gain enough legitimacy to proclaim new dynasties. The third stage (950–979) saw the forceful reunification of China by the [[Later Zhou|Later Zhou dynasty]] and its successor the Song dynasty, and the demilitarisation of the provinces. Southern China, divided into several independent dynastic kingdoms, was more stable than the North which saw constant regime change. Consequently, the Southern kingdoms were able to embark on trade, land reclamation, and infrastructure projects, laying the groundwork for the Song Dynasty economic boom. This economic shift to the south also led to a vast southward migration.<ref name="szo">{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VHmxDQAAQBAJ |title=A Companion to Chinese History |date=2017 |publisher=[[Wiley-Blackwell]] |isbn=978-1-118-62460-9 |editor-last=Szonyi |editor-first=Michael |series=Wiley Blackwell companions to world history |location=Chichester, West Sussex; Malden, MA |pages=127–128}}</ref> ===North=== According to Nicholas Tackett, the [[Three Fanzhen of Hebei|three provinces of Hebei]] (Chengde, Youzhou, Weibo) were able to maintain much greater autonomy from the central government in the aftermath of the An Lushan rebellion. With their administration under local military control, these provinces never submitted tax revenues, and governorships lapsed into hereditary succession. They engaged in occasional war with the central government, or against each other, and Youzhou seemed to conduct its own foreign policy. This meant that the culture of these northeastern provinces started diverging from the capital. Many of the elites in post-Tang China, including the future emperors of the Song dynasty, came from this region.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Tackett |first=Nicolas |title=The Destruction of the Medieval Chinese Aristocracy |date=2014 |publisher=[[Harvard University Asia Center]] |isbn=978-0-674-49205-9 |series=Harvard-Yenching Institute monograph series |location=Cambridge, Massachusetts |pages=151–184}}</ref> The administrations of the Five Dynasties and the early Song Dynasty shared a pattern of being disproportionately drawn from the families of military governors in northern and northwestern China ([[Hebei]], [[Shanxi]], [[Shaanxi]]), their personal staff, and the bureaucrats who served in the capitals of the Five dynasties. These families had risen to prominence due to the unraveling of central authority after the An Lushan Rebellion, despite lacking esteemed ancestry.<ref>{{harvnb|Hartwell|1982|p=408}}</ref> The historian [[Deng Xiaonan]] argued that many of these military families, including the [[House of Zhao|Song imperial family]], were of mixed Han Chinese-Turkic-[[Kumo Xi]] ancestry.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Tackett |first=Nicolas |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=G8k-DwAAQBAJ |title=The Origins of the Chinese Nation: Song China and the Forging of an East Asian World Order |date=2017 |publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] |isbn=978-1-107-19677-3 |location=Cambridge; New York, NY |page=100}}</ref> The term "Five Dynasties" was coined by Song dynasty historians and reflects the view that the successive regimes based in [[Kaifeng]], controlled the [[Zhongyuan|Central Plain]] and possessed the [[Mandate of Heaven]]. The first of the Five Dynasties was founded by [[Zhu Wen]], the rebel defector turned warlord who ultimately ended the Tang dynasty. The rest of the Five Dynasties as well as the Song dynasty all emerged from a military organization originally led by [[Shatuo|Shatuo Turks]] whose commanders replaced each other in frequent [[coup d'état]]. The [[Later Tang]] was founded by [[Li Cunxu]], the son of Shatuo leader [[Li Keyong]], who was the main military rival to Zhu Wen in the late Tang. The [[Later Jin (Five Dynasties)|Later Jin]] founder [[Shi Jingtang]] was the son of a Shatuo commander in Li Keyong's army and became the son-in-law of the Later Tang general and emperor [[Li Siyuan]], who was himself an adopted son of Li Keyong. The [[Later Han (Five Dynasties)|Later Han]] founder [[Liu Zhiyuan]] was a Shatuo officer under Li Siyuan and Shi Jintang. The father of the [[Later Zhou]] founder [[Guo Wei]] fought in Li Keyong's army and Guo served under Liu Zhiyuan. The [[Zhao Hongyin|father]] of Song founder [[Zhao Kuangyin]] served in the armies of Later Tang, Later Han, and Later Zhou. Zhao, also a professional soldier, rose through the ranks of the Later Zhou before seizing the throne in the [[Chenqiao Mutiny]] in 960, which ended the era of the Five Dynasties. The Qing historian [[Wang Fuzhi]] (1619–1692) wrote that this period could be compared to the earlier [[Warring States period]] of ancient China, remarking that none of the rulers could be described as "[[Son of Heaven]]". The Five Dynasties' rulers, despite claiming the status of [[Emperor of China|emperor]], sometimes dealt with each other on terms of diplomatic equality out of pragmatic concern. This concept of "sharing the Mandate of Heaven" as "sibling states" was the result of the brief balance of power. After the reunification of China by the Song dynasty, the Song embarked on a special effort to denounce such arrangements.<ref>{{harvnb|Tackett|2017|pp=72–73}}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Wang|2011|pp=2, 5–6, 8, 11–12, 115, 118, 122, 233, 247, 248}}</ref> ===South=== The Southern regimes generally had more stable and effective government during this period.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Eberhard |first=Wolfram |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mUofeN6WW_IC |title=A History of China |date=1977 |publisher=[[University of California Press]] |isbn=978-0-520-03268-2 |location=Berkeley; Los Angeles |translator-last=Dickes |translator-first=E. W. |chapter=The Epoch of the Second Division of China}}</ref> Even the rulers of the Southern states were almost all military leaders from the North with their key officers and elite forces also hailing from the North since the bulk of the Tang army was based in the North.<ref>{{harvnb|Wang|2011|p=82}}</ref> The founders of Wu and Former Shu were 'rogues' from [[Huainan]] and [[Xuchang]] respectively, the founder of Min was a minor government staffer from Huainan, the founder of Wuyue was a 'rogue' from [[Hangzhou]], the founder of Chu was (according to one source) a carpenter from Xuchang, the founder of Jingnan was a slave from [[Shanzhou]] and the founder of Southern Han was a southern tribal chief.<ref>{{harvnb|Lorge|2011|pp=51–78}}</ref> The Southern kingdoms were founded by men of low social status who rose up through superior military ability, who were later scorned as "bandits" by future scholars. However, once established, these rulers took great pains to portray themselves as promoters of culture and economic development so as to legitimize their rule; many wooed former Tang courtiers to help administer their states.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Brose |first=Benjamin |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=91cEEAAAQBAJ |title=Patrons and Patriarchs: Regional Rulers and Chan Monks During the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms |date=2015 |publisher=[[University of Hawaii Press]] |isbn=978-0-8248-5724-0 |location=Honolulu |pages=20–21}}</ref> The economies of each of the southern regions had prospered in the late Tang. Guangdong and Fujian were the sites of important port cities trading exotic goods, the middle Yangtze and Sichuan were centers of tea and porcelain production, and the Yangtze delta was a center of extremely high agricultural production and an entrepot for the other regions. The regions were economically interdependent. Sui and Tang's policies, while paying little attention to developing the South, gave the South room to innovate free of tight administrative controls. The dominant northern officials had been unwilling to serve in the South during the Tang, and so southerners were recruited by the Tang to serve in a local capacity under the "Southern Selection" supplemental system. These southern officials became the administrative core of the Ten Kingdoms and later dominated the bureaucracy by the mid-Song.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Clark |first=Hugh R. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=smQuEAAAQBAJ |title=China During the Tang-Song Interregnum, 878–978: New Approaches to the Southern Kingdoms |date=2021 |publisher=[[Routledge]] |isbn=978-1-000-42639-7 |series=Asian states and empires |location=New York |pages=101–103}}</ref> == Significant ''jiedushi'' == [[File:End of Tang Warlords.jpg|upright=1.6|thumb|Map of warlords ("jiedushi") in 902, before the end of Tang dynasty]] '''[[North China]]''' * [[Wang Rong (warlord)|Wang Rong]] at Zhenzhou (modern [[Zhengding County]], [[Hebei]] province) * [[Wang Chuzhi]] at Dingzhou (modern [[Dingzhou]], [[Hebei]]) * [[Li Keyong]] and [[Li Cunxu]] at [[Taiyuan]] (modern Taiyuan, [[Shanxi]]), precursor to [[Later Tang]] * [[Liu Rengong]] and [[Liu Shouguang]] at [[Youzhou]] (modern [[Beijing]]), precursor to [[Yan (Five Dynasties)|Yan]] * [[Li Maozhen]] at Fengxiang (modern [[Fengxiang County]], [[Shaanxi]] province), precursor to [[Qi (Five Dynasties)|Qi]] * [[Luo Shaowei]] at Weibo (modern [[Daming County]], [[Hebei]] province) *[[Li Sigong]] at [[Dingnan Jiedushi|Dingnan circuit]], precursor to [[Western Xia]] *[[Zhang Yichao]] at [[Guiyi Circuit|Guiyi]] *[[Zhu Wen]] at Bianzhou (modern [[Kaifeng]], [[Henan]]), precursor to [[Later Liang (Five Dynasties)|Later Liang]] '''[[South China]]''' * [[Qian Liu]] at [[Hangzhou]] (modern Hangzhou, [[Zhejiang]]), precursor to [[Wuyue]] * [[Ma Yin]] at [[Tanzhou (in modern Hunan)|Tanzhou]] (modern [[Changsha]], [[Hunan]]), precursor to [[Chu (Ten Kingdoms)|Chu]] * [[Wang Shenzhi]] at [[Fuzhou]] (modern Fuzhou, [[Fujian]]), precursor to [[Min (Ten Kingdoms)|Min]] * [[Liu Yin (Southern Han)|Liu Yin]] at [[Guangzhou]] (modern Guangzhou, [[Guangdong]]), precursor to [[Southern Han]] * [[Wang Jian (Former Shu)|Wang Jian]] at [[Chengdu]] (modern Chengdu, [[Sichuan]]), precursor to [[Former Shu]] * [[Yang Xingmi]] at [[Yangzhou]] (modern Yangzhou, [[Jiangsu]]), precursor to [[Wu (Ten Kingdoms)|Wu]] * [[Gao Jixing]] at [[Jingzhou]], precursor to [[Jingnan]] == Five Dynasties == ===Later Liang (907–923)=== {{main|Later Liang (Five Dynasties)}} [[File:Later Liang.png|thumb|upright=1.6|[[Later Liang (Five Dynasties)|Later Liang]] in 907 AD]] During the Tang dynasty, the warlord [[Zhu Wen]] was originally a member of [[Huang Chao]]'s rebel army, he took on a crucial role in suppressing the Huang Chao Rebellion. For this function, he was awarded the Xuanwu Jiedushi title. Within a few years, he had consolidated his power by destroying neighbours and forcing the move of the imperial capital to [[Luoyang]], which was within his region of influence. In 904, he executed [[Emperor Zhaozong of Tang]] and made Zhaozong's 13-year-old son [[Emperor Ai of Tang]] a subordinate ruler. Three years later, he induced the boy emperor to abdicate in his favour. He then proclaimed himself emperor, thus beginning the [[Later Liang (Five Dynasties)|Later Liang]]. ===Later Tang (923–936)=== {{main|Later Tang}} [[File:Later Tang.png|thumb|upright=1.6|[[Later Tang]] in 926 AD]] In the final years of the Tang dynasty, rival warlords declared independence in the provinces they governed—not all of which recognized the emperor's authority. [[Li Keyong]] was the jiedushi for the Hedong circuit in present Shanxi, forming a polity called Jin (晉). His son [[Li Cunxu]] and [[Liu Shouguang]] fiercely fought the regime forces to conquer northern China; [[Li Cunxu]] succeeded. He defeated Liu Shouguang (who had proclaimed a [[Yan (Five Dynasties)|Yan]] Empire in 911) in 915, and declared himself emperor in 923; within a few months, he brought down the Later Liang regime. Thus began the [[Shatuo]] Later Tang—the first in a long line of [[conquest dynasties]]. After reuniting much of northern China, in 924 Cunxu received the submission of Shaanxi's [[Qi (Li Maozhen's state)|Qi]] kingdom, and in 925 Cunxu conquered the [[Former Shu]], a regime that had been set up in [[Sichuan]]. ===Later Jin (937–947)=== {{main|Later Jin (Five Dynasties)}} [[File:Later Jin.png|thumb|upright=1.6|[[Later Jin (Five Dynasties)|Later Jin]] in 939 AD]] The Later Tang had a few years of relative calm, followed by unrest. In 934, Sichuan again asserted independence. In 936, [[Shi Jingtang]] rebelled against [[Li Congke]], the fourth emperor of the Later Tang. Shi Jingtang, a [[Shatuo]] [[jiedushi]] from [[Taiyuan]], was aided by the [[Khitan people|Khitan]]-led [[Liao dynasty]] in his rebellion. In return for their aid, Shi Jingtang promised annual tribute and the [[Sixteen Prefectures]] (modern northern [[Hebei]] and [[Beijing]]) to the Khitans. The rebellion succeeded, and Shi Jingtang became emperor in this same year. Not long after the founding of Later Jin, the Liao came to regard the emperor as a proxy ruler for China. In 943, the Khitans declared war and within three years seized the capital, [[Kaifeng]], marking the end of Later Jin. But while they had conquered vast regions of China, the Khitans were unable or unwilling to control those regions and retreated from them early in the next year. ===Later Han (947–951)=== {{main|Later Han (Five Dynasties)}} [[File:Later Han.png|thumb|upright=1.6|[[Later Han (Five Dynasties)|Later Han]] in 949 AD]] To fill the power vacuum, the jiedushi [[Liu Zhiyuan]] entered the imperial capital in 947 and proclaimed the advent of the [[Later Han (Five Dynasties)|Later Han]], establishing a third successive Shatuo reign. This was the shortest of the five dynasties. Following a coup in 951, General [[Guo Wei]], a [[Han Chinese]], was enthroned, thus beginning the [[Later Zhou]]. However, [[Liu Chong]], a member of the Later Han imperial family, established a rival [[Northern Han]] regime in [[Taiyuan]] and requested Khitan aid to defeat the Later Zhou. ===Later Zhou (951–960)=== {{main|Later Zhou}} [[File:Later Zhou.png|thumb|upright=1.6|[[Later Zhou]] in 951 AD]] After the death of [[Guo Wei]] in 954, his adopted son [[Chai Rong]] succeeded the throne and began a policy of expansion and reunification. One month after Chai Rong took the throne, Liu Chong, Emperor of [[Northern Han]], allied with [[Liao dynasty]] to launch an assault on Later Zhou. Against the advice of Minister Feng Dao, Chai Rong decided to lead his army against the incursion. When Chai Rong engaged Liu Chong at Gao Ping (in modern Jincheng), two of Chai's generals, Fan Aineng and He Hui, fled from the battlefield along with their troops. At this critical moment, Chai Rong risked his life to break through the defense and crushed Liu's forces. After this campaign, Chai Rong consolidated his power.<ref>{{cite wikisource |wslink=資治通鑑 |author=Zizhi Tongjian |wslanguage=zh |chapter=卷291}}</ref> Between 956 and 958, forces of Later Zhou [[Siege of Shouzhou|conquered]] much of [[Southern Tang]], the most powerful regime in southern China, which ceded all the territory north of the [[Yangtze]] in defeat. In 959, Chai Rong attacked the Liao in an attempt to recover territories ceded during the Later Jin. After many victories, he succumbed to illness. In 960, the general [[Zhao Kuangyin]] staged a coup and took the throne for himself, founding the [[Northern Song dynasty]]. This is the official end of the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period. During the next two decades, Zhao Kuangyin and his successor [[Zhao Kuangyi]] defeated the other remaining regimes in South China, conquering [[Northern Han]] in 979, starting the Song dynasty era in 982. == Ten Kingdoms == [[File:Dong Yuan - Riverbank - 2016.750 - Metropolitan Museum of Art.jpg|thumb|''Riverbank'' by [[Dong Yuan]] (932–962)]] [[Image:Guo Zhongshu - Summer Palace of Emperor Ming Huang - Google Art Project.jpg|thumb|''Summer Palace of [[Emperor Xuanzong of Tang|Emperor Ming]]'' (明皇避暑宮) by [[Guo Zhongshu]] (929–977)]] Unlike the dynasties of northern China, which succeeded one another in rapid succession, the regimes of [[South China]] were generally concurrent, each controlling a specific geographical area. These were known as "The Ten Kingdoms" (in fact, some claimed the title of Emperor, such as [[Former Shu]] and [[Later Shu]]). Each court was a center of artistic excellence. The period is noted for the vitality of its poetry and for its economic prosperity. Commerce grew so quickly that there was a shortage of metallic currency. This was partly addressed by the creation of bank drafts, or "flying money" (''feiqian''), as well as by certificates of deposit. Wood block printing became common during this period, 500 years before [[Johannes Gutenberg]]'s press. The Ten Kingdoms were: * [[Yang Wu]] (907–937) * [[Wuyue]] (907–978) * [[Min Kingdom|Min]] (909–945) * [[Ma Chu]] (907–951) * [[Southern Han]] (917–971) * [[Former Shu]] (907–925) * [[Later Shu]] (934–965) * [[Jingnan]] (924–963) * [[Southern Tang]] (937–976) * [[Northern Han]] (951–979) Only ten are traditionally listed, hence the era's name. Some historians, such as [[Bo Yang]], count eleven, including [[Yan (Five Dynasties)|Yan]] and [[Qi (Five Dynasties)|Qi]] but not the [[Northern Han]], viewing it as simply a continuation of Later Han. This era also coincided with the founding of the [[Liao dynasty]] in the north, and the [[Dali Kingdom]] in the southwest. Other regimes during this period include [[Zhao (Five Dynasties)|Zhao]], Yiwu Circuit, [[Dingnan Jiedushi|Dingnan Circuit]], Wuping Circuit, [[Qingyuan Circuit]], [[Yin (Ten Kingdoms)|Yin]], [[Ganzhou Uyghur Kingdom]], [[Guiyi Circuit]] and [[Xiliangfu]]. ===Yang Wu=== The [[Yang Wu]] (902–937) was established in modern-day [[Jiangsu]], [[Anhui]], and [[Jiangxi]]. It was founded by [[Yang Xingmi]], who became a [[Tang dynasty]] military governor in 892. The capital was initially at Guangling (present-day [[Yangzhou]]) and later moved to Jinling (present-day [[Nanjing]]). The kingdom fell in 937 when it was taken from within by the founder of the [[Southern Tang]]. ===Wuyue=== The [[Wuyue]] was the longest-lived (907–978) and among the most powerful of the southern states. Wuyue was known for its learning and culture. It was founded by [[Qian Liu]], who set up his capital at Xifu (modern-day [[Hangzhou]]). It was based mostly in modern Zhejiang province but also held parts of southern [[Jiangsu]]. Qian Liu was named the Prince of Yue by the Tang emperor in 902; the Prince of Wu was added in 904. After the fall of the Tang dynasty in 907, he declared himself king of Wuyue. Wuyue survived until the eighteenth year of the [[Song dynasty]], when Qian Shu surrendered to the expanding dynasty. ===Min=== The [[Min Kingdom|Min]] (909–945) was founded by Wang Shenzhi, who named himself the Prince of Min with its capital at Changle (present-day [[Fuzhou]]). One of Shenzhi's sons proclaimed the independent state of Yin in the northeast of Min territory. The [[Southern Tang]] took that territory after the Min asked for help. Despite declaring loyalty to the neighboring [[Wuyue]], the Southern Tang finished its conquest of Min in 945. ===Southern Han=== The [[Southern Han]] (917–971) was founded in [[Guangzhou]] by [[Liu Yan (Southern Han)|Liu Yan]]. His brother, [[Liu Yin (Southern Han)|Liu Yin]], was named regional governor by the Tang court. The kingdom included [[Guangdong]], [[Guangxi]], and [[Hainan]]. It was finally conquered by the Song dynasty. ===Ma Chu=== The [[Ma Chu]] (927–951) was founded by [[Ma Yin]] with the capital at [[Changsha]]. The kingdom held Hunan and northeastern [[Guangxi]]. Ma was named regional military governor by the Tang court in 896, and named himself the Prince of Chu with the fall of the Tang in 907. This status as the Prince of Chu was confirmed by the Southern Tang in 927. The [[Southern Tang]] absorbed the state in 951 and moved the royal family to its capital in [[Nanjing]], although Southern Tang rule of the region was temporary, as the next year former Chu military officers under the leadership of [[Liu Yan (Ten Kingdoms)|Liu Yan]] seized the territory. In the waning years of the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period, the region was ruled by [[Zhou Xingfeng]]. In 963, the region was annexed by Song dynasty. ===Northern Han=== {{main|Northern Han}} Though considered one of the ten kingdoms, the [[Northern Han]] was based in the traditional Shatuo stronghold of [[Shanxi]]. It was founded by Liu Min ({{lang|zh-Hant|劉旻}}), formerly known as Liu Chong ({{lang|zh-Hant|劉崇}}), after the [[Later Han (Five Dynasties)|Later Han]] fell to the Han Chinese-led [[Later Zhou]] in 951. With the protection of the powerful Liao dynasty, the Northern Han maintained nominal independence until the Song dynasty wrested it from the Khitans in 979. ===Jingnan (also known as Nanping)=== The smallest of the southern states, [[Jingnan]] (924–963), was founded by [[Gao Jichang]], a former general of Liang. It was based in Jiangling and held two other districts southwest of present-day [[Wuhan]] in [[Hubei]]. Gao was in the service of the [[Later Liang (Five Dynasties)|Later Liang]] (the successor of the Tang in North China). Gao's successors claimed the title of King of Nanping after the fall of the Later Liang in 924. It was a small and weak kingdom, and thus tried to maintain good relations with each of the Five Dynasties. The kingdom fell to advancing armies of the Song in 963. ===Former Shu=== [[File:Yueyanng Lookout.jpg|thumb|The ''[[Yueyang Tower]]'' by Li Sheng (fl. 908–925)]] [[Former Shu]] (907–925) was founded after the fall of the Tang dynasty by Wang Jian, who held his court in [[Chengdu]]. The kingdom held most of present-day [[Sichuan]], western [[Hubei]], and parts of southern [[Gansu]] and [[Shaanxi]]. Wang was named military governor of western Sichuan by the Tang court in 891. The kingdom fell when his son surrendered in the face of an advance by the [[Later Tang]] in 925. ===Later Shu=== The [[Later Shu]] (935–965) is essentially a resurrection of the previous Shu state that had fallen a decade earlier to the [[Later Tang]]. Because the Later Tang was in decline and Li Cunxu was killed in a revolt, Meng Zhixiang found the opportunity to reassert Shu's independence. Like the Former Shu, the capital was at Chengdu and it basically controlled the same territory as its predecessor. The kingdom was ruled well until forced to succumb to Song armies in 965. ===Southern Tang=== {{main|Southern Tang}} [[File:Чжоу Вэньцзюй 1.jpg|thumb|A painting depicting [[weiqi]] players by [[Zhou Wenju]] (fl. 942–961)]] The [[Southern Tang]] (937–975) was the successor state of [[Wu (Ten Kingdoms)|Wu]] as [[Emperor Liezu of Southern Tang|Li Bian]] (Emperor Liezu) took the state over from within in 937. Expanding from the original domains of [[Wu (Ten Kingdoms)|Wu]], it eventually took over Yin, Min, and Chu, holding present-day southern Anhui, southern Jiangsu, much of Jiangxi, Hunan, and eastern Hubei at its height. The kingdom became nominally subordinate to the expanding Song in 961 and was invaded outright in 975, when it was formally absorbed into the Song dynasty. ===Transitions between the Ten Kingdoms=== [[File:Conquest of Song Dynasty.png|thumb|upright=1.6|[[Song dynasty]]'s conquest of [[China]] (960–979)]] Although more stable than northern China as a whole, southern China was also torn apart by warfare. Wu quarreled with its neighbours, a trend that continued as Wu was replaced with Southern Tang. In the 940s Min and Chu underwent internal crises which Southern Tang handily took advantage of, destroying Min in 945 and Chu in 951. Remnants of Min and Chu, however, survived in the form of [[Qingyuan Jiedushi]] and {{ill|Wuping Jiedushi|zh|武平军节度使}} for many years after. With this, Southern Tang became the undisputedly most powerful regime in southern China. However, it was unable to defeat incursions by the Later Zhou between 956 and 958, and ceded all of its land north of the [[Yangtze River]]. The Song dynasty, established in 960, was determined to reunify China. Jingnan and Wuping Jiedushi were swept away in 963, Later Shu in 965, Southern Han in 971, and Southern Tang in 975. Finally, Wuyue and Qingyuan Jiedushi gave up their land to Northern Song in 978, bringing all of southern China under the control of the central government. In common with other periods of fragmentation, the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period resulted in a division between [[northern and southern China]]. The greater stability of the Ten Kingdoms, especially the longevity of Wuyue and Southern Han, would contribute to the development of distinct regional identities within China. The distinction was reinforced by the ''[[Old History of the Five Dynasties|Old History]]'' and the ''[[Historical Records of the Five Dynasties|New History]]''. Written from the northern viewpoint, these chronicles organized the history around the Five Dynasties (the north), presenting the Ten Kingdoms (the south) as illegitimate, self-absorbed and indulgent.<ref name="Davis" /> ==Culture== The Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period turned away from the international cultural mood of the [[Tang dynasty]] and appears as a transition towards the solidified national culture of the [[Song dynasty]].<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jcecAAAAQBAJ |title=The Culture of China |publisher=[[Britannica Educational Publications]] |year=2011 |isbn=978-1-61530-140-9 |editor-last=Kuiper |editor-first=Kathleen |series=Understanding China |location=New York |page=245}}</ref> Throughout the period, there was marked cultural and economic growth, rather than decline.<ref name="Dudbridge">{{harvnb|Dudbridge|2013|p=8}} Dudbridge actually quotes [[Edwin O. Reischauer|Reischauer]]'s ''Ennin's Travels''.</ref> Several Northern dynasties originated in the northeast, and centralisation of the north led to a migration of provincial elites into the capital, particularly northeasterners, creating a new metropolitan culture.<ref name= szo/> After the unification of China by the Song dynasty, the culture, arts and literature of the Southern states were incorporated into the new regime. The Song dynasty adopted a distinctively Southern Chinese cultural outlook. The preserved cultural traditions of Southern Tang, Wu Yue and Later Shu were used to rebuild the cultural landscape of the north. Southern libraries were transported north, Southeastern architecture was promoted in the new capital, and Southeastern Buddhist icons, clergy and relics were concentrated in the new capital so as to reintegrate these traditions into the imperial culture. This was distinct from the five Northern dynasties, who never supported extended monastic lineage networks but instead typically sought to restrict them and draw on their economic and military resources.<ref>{{harvnb|Brose|2015|pp=116–124}}</ref> Although short, the period saw cultural innovations in different areas. Pottery saw the appearance of "white ceramics"/ In painting, the "varied landscape" of China was inspired by [[Taoism]]. It emphasized the sacredness of mountains as places between heaven and earth and depicted the natural world as a source of harmony.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.museocineseparma.org/risorse/dinastie/china_5dynasties.htm|title=Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms|publisher=Museum of Chinese Art and Ethnography, Parma|access-date=4 February 2018|archive-date=5 February 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180205000905/http://www.museocineseparma.org/risorse/dinastie/china_5dynasties.htm|url-status=dead}}</ref> {{Gallery | title = Art from the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period | align = center | footer = | style = | state = | height = | width = | captionstyle = | File:Li Cheng Buddhist Temple in Mountain All.jpg | alt1=Painting by Chinese artist Li Cheng | Painting by Chinese artist [[Li Cheng (painter)|Li Cheng]] ({{Circa|919}}–967) | File:Xvxi1.jpg | alt2=Butterfly and Wisteria Flowers, a painting by Xu Xi | ''[[Butterfly]] and [[Wisteria]] Flowers'', by [[Xu Xi (painter)|Xu Xi]] (886–974) | File:Zhou Wenju's A Literary Garden.jpg | alt3=A Literary Garden, by Zhou Wenju | ''A Literary Garden'', by [[Zhou Wenju]] }} {{wide image|Zhao Gan. Traveling on the River in First Snow. 960-975. Ink and color on silk. 25,9x376,5cm. National Palace Museum, Taipei..jpg|dir=rtl|2000px|align-cap=center|''[[Early Snow on the River]]'' (五代南唐 趙幹 江行初雪圖); [[shan shui]] painting by [[Zhao Gan]].}} ==Law== In later tradition, the Five Dynasties is viewed as a period of judicial abuse and excessive punishment. This view reflects both actual problems with the administration of justice and the bias of Confucian historians, who disapproved of the decentralization and militarization that characterized this period. While Tang procedure called for delaying executions until appeals were exhausted, this was not generally the case in the Five Dynasties.<ref name="McKnight">{{Cite book |last=McKnight |first=Brian |title=Sung China, 960–1279 AD, Part 2 |date=2018 |publisher=Cambridge Univ. Press |isbn=978-1-108-46161-0 |editor-last=Chaffee |editor-first=John W. |editor-link=John W. Chaffee |series=The Cambridge History of China |volume=5 |location=Cambridge |chapter=Chapter 4: Chinese Law and the Legal System |editor-last2=Twitchett |editor-first2=Denis Crispin |editor-last3=Fairbank |editor-first3=John King}}</ref> Other abuses included the use of severe torture. The Later Han was the most notorious dynasty in this regard. Suspects could be tortured to death with long knives and nails. The military officer in charge of security of the capital is said to have executed suspects without inquiry.<ref name="McKnight" /> The Tang code of 737 was the basic statutory law for this period, together supplemental edicts and collections.<ref name="McKnight" /> The Later Liang promulgated a code in 909.<ref name="McKnight" /> This code was blamed for delays in the administration of justice and said to be excessively harsh with respect to economic crimes. The Later Tang, Later Jin, and Later Zhou also produced recompilations. The Later Han was in power too briefly to make a mark on the legal system.<ref name="McKnight" /> ==See also== {{Portal|China|History}} * [[Annam (province)|Annam (Chinese province)]] * [[Chinese sovereign]] * [[Song conquest of Southern Tang|Conquest of Southern Tang by Song]] * [[Dali Kingdom]] * [[Chinese emperors family tree (middle)#Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period|Family trees of the emperors of the Five Dynasties]] * [[Liao dynasty]] * ''[[Old History of the Five Dynasties]]'' * [[Tibetan Empire]] * [[Timeline of the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms]] * ''[[Zizhi Tongjian]]'' == References == {{Reflist}} == Further reading == * {{Cite book |last=Davis |first=Richard L. |year=2014 |title=From Warhorses to Ploughshares: The Later Tang Reign of Emperor Mingzong |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dG8fBQAAQBAJ |location=Hong Kong |publisher=[[Hong Kong University Press]] |isbn=978-988-8208-10-4 |oclc=904810968}} * {{Cite book |last=Dudbridge |first=Glen |year=2013 |title=A Portrait of Five Dynasties China: From the Memoirs of Wang Renyu (880-956) |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rEgjlZjMd7sC |series=Oxford Oriental Monographs |location=Oxford |publisher=[[Oxford University Press]] |isbn=978-0-19-967068-0}} * {{Cite book |last=Gungwu |first=Wang |author-link=Wang Gungwu |year=1963 |title=The Structure of Power in North China During the Five Dynasties |url=https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/34122/1/11015949.pdf |publisher=[[Stanford University Press]] |doi=10.2307/2753999 |jstor=2753999 |s2cid=165283486}} * {{Cite journal |last=Hartwell |first=Robert M. |date=December 1982 |title=Demographic, Political, and Social Transformations of China, 750–1550 |journal=[[Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies]] |volume=42 |issue=2 |pages=365–442 |doi=10.2307/2718941|jstor=2718941 }} * {{Cite book |last=Hung |first=Hing Ming |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cfhKBAAAQBAJ |title=Ten States, Five Dynasties, One Great Emperor: How Emperor Taizu Unified China in the Song Dynasty |publisher=Algora Publishing |year=2014 |isbn=978-1-62894-072-5 |location=New York}} * {{Cite book |last=Kurz |first=Johannes L. |year=2011 |title=China's Southern Tang Dynasty, 937–976 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sF90iFCoAsYC |series=Asian States and Empires |location=London |publisher=[[Routledge]] |isbn=978-1-136-80956-9}} * {{Cite book |editor-last=Lorge |editor-first=Peter Allan |year=2011 |title=Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms |location=Hong Kong |publisher=[[Chinese University Press]] |isbn=978-962-996-418-4 |oclc=748743890}} * {{Cite book |last=Schafer |first=Edward H. |author-link=Edward H. Schafer |year=1954 |title=Empire of Min: A South China Kingdom of the Tenth Century |location=Rutland, V |publisher=[[Tuttle Publishing]]t |oclc=411661}} * {{Cite book |last=Wang |first=Hongjie |year=2011 |title=Power and Politics in Tenth-century China: The Former Shu Regime |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hIgyZyIMprgC |location=Amherst, NY |publisher=[[Cambria Press]] |isbn=978-1-60497-764-6}} * {{Cite book |last=Xiu |first=Ouyang |author-link=Ouyang Xiu |year=2004 |orig-year=1077 |title=Historical Records of the Five Dynasties |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=R0QpslzUi50C |translator-last=Davis |translator-first=Richard L. |location=New York |publisher=[[Columbia University Press]] |isbn=978-0-231-50228-3}} == External links == {{Commons category|Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms}} {{S-start}} {{s-bef|before=[[Tang dynasty]]}} {{s-ttl|title=[[Dynasties in Chinese history]]|years=907–960}} {{s-aft|after=[[Song dynasty]]<br/>[[Liao dynasty]]}} {{s-end}} {{5d10k}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Five Dynasties And Ten Kingdoms Period}} [[Category:907 establishments]] [[Category:960 disestablishments]] [[Category:10th-century conflicts]] [[Category:10th-century disestablishments in China]] [[Category:10th-century establishments in China]] [[Category:10th century in China]] [[Category:Civil wars in China]] [[Category:Dynasties of China]] [[Category:Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms| ]] [[Category:Former countries in Chinese history]] [[Category:Geography of China]] [[Category:Historical eras]] [[Category:Medieval Asia]]
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