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Burning books and burying scholars: on the policies of the short-lived Qin Dynasty in ancient China (221-207 BC)

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-17, 16:35 authored by X Fang
In 221 BC, the battle-hardened warriors of the Qin state, the western frontier state and the most aggressive of the Warring States, subjugated the last of its rival states, thus establishing the Qin dynasty, with its capital in Xianyang, near the modern Xi’an. The Qin dynasty is customarily regarded by Chinese and Western scholars as the beginning of a new age – the Chinese empire – that lasted until 1911 AD. The dynasty lasted only fifteen years. This study examines the main policies of the Qin dynasty and seeks to address the question what brought the quick downfall of the Qin rule. This paper takes the cultural and political contexts carefully into consideration, and argues that the Qin annexation of its rival states might be better understood as an end of an old era as much as a beginning of a new epoch.

History

Journal

International journal of liberal arts and social science

Volume

3

Article number

6

Pagination

54-61

Location

Birmingham, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

2307-924X

Language

eng

Publication classification

CN Other journal article

Copyright notice

2015, Centre for Enhancing Knowledge

Issue

7

Publisher

Centre for Enhancing Knowledge