music.wikisort.org - PoetSong Qi (Chinese: 宋祁; 998–1061), courtesy name Zijing (子京), was a Chinese essayist, historian, politician, and poet of the Northern Song dynasty.
Chinese statesman, historian and poet (998–1061)
In this Chinese name, the family name is Song.
Imperial advisor
Song was a Grand Councilor in the Imperial Chinese court.[1] In this role, he was called to become a military analyst:
- "The reason why our enemies to the north and west are able to withstand China is precisely because they have many horses and their men are adept at riding; this is their strength. China has few horses, and its men are not accustomed to riding; this is China's weakness.... The court constantly tries, with our weakness, to oppose our enemies' strength, so that we lose every battle .... Those who propose remedies for this situation merely wish to increase our armed forces in order to overwhelm the enemy. They do not realize that, without horses, we can never create an effective military force."[2]
While China had many men in Chinese cavalry, very few of them actually had horses to ride; and if they did actually have a horse, they did not ride well. In stark contrast, the military forces arising from Inner Asia had many horses and the men had excellent riding skills.
Historian
As an historian and writer, Song is best known for his work as co-author of New History of the Tang Dynasty (新唐書). This work was created in collaboration with Ouyang Xiu;[3] and it was officially presented to the emperor in 1060.
See also
China portal
History portal
Poetry portal
References
Citations
- Hon, Tze-Ki (2005). The Yijing and Chinese Politics: Classical Commentary and Literati Activism in the Northern Song Period, 960-1127, p. 126., p. 126, at Google Books
- Creel, Herlee Glessner. (1982). "The Role of the Horse in Chinese History," What is Taoism?, p. 181., p. 181, at Google Books
- Boyd, Kelly. (1999). Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing, Vol. 1, p. 228., p. 228, at Google Books
Sources
Song dynasty topics |
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History (Timeline) |
- Unification
- Later Shu
- Southern Han
- Southern Tang
- Gaoliang River
- Song–Đại Cồ Việt war
- Song–Xia wars
- Chanyuan Treaty
- Wang Ze rebellion
- Nong Zhigao rebellions
- Song–Viet war (1075–1077)
- Fang La rebellion
- Alliance Conducted at Sea
- Jin–Song Wars
- Jingkang
- Huangtiandang
- De'an
- Yancheng
- Treaty of Shaoxing
- Tangdao
- Caishi
- Caizhou
- Mongol conquest
- Diaoyucheng
- Xiangyang
- Yamen
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Government |
- Emperors
- Imperial examinations
- Administrative units
- Military
- Bureau of Military Affairs
- Qingli Reforms
- New Policies
- Baojia system
- Three Bureaus
Three Departments |
- Department of State Affairs
- Secretariat
- Chancellery
- (Secretariat-Chancellery)
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Six Ministries |
- Ministry of Personnel
- Ministry of Revenue
- Ministry of Rites
- Ministry of War
- Ministry of Justice
- Ministry of Works
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Culture |
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Economy |
- Wang Anshi (1021–1086)
- Joint-stock company
- Banknote
- Southern Song dynasty coinage
- Champa rice
- Nanhai One
- Zhu Fan Zhi
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Science and technology |
- Gunpowder
- Gunpowder weapons
- Wujing Zongyao
- Coke
- Early Bessemer process
- Endless power transmitting chain drive
- Astronomical clock
- Movable type
- Compass
- Pound lock
- Dry dock
- Watertight bulkhead
- Fishing reel
- Tianchi basin
- Horner's method
- Architecture
- Liaodi Pagoda
- Yingzao Fashi
- Forensic entomology
- Collected Cases of Injustice Rectified
- Dream Pool Essays
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Twenty-Four Histories |
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- Records of the Grand Historian (Sima Qian)
- Book of Han (Ban Gu)
- Book of the Later Han (Fan Ye)
- Records of the Three Kingdoms (Chen Shou)
- Book of Jin (Fang Xuanling et al.)
- Book of Song (Shen Yue)
- Book of Qi (Xiao Zixian)
- Book of Liang (Yao Silian)
- Book of Chen (Yao Silian)
- Book of Wei (Wei Shou)
- Book of Northern Qi (Li Baiyao)
- Book of Zhou (Linghu Defen et al.)
- Book of Sui (Wei Zheng et al.)
- History of the Southern Dynasties (Li Yanshou)
- History of the Northern Dynasties (Li Yanshou)
- Old Book of Tang (Liu Xu et al.)
- New Book of Tang (Ouyang Xiu, Song Qi et al.)
- Old History of the Five Dynasties (Xue Juzheng et al.)
- Historical Records of the Five Dynasties (Ouyang Xiu)
- History of Song (Toqto'a et al.)
- History of Liao (Toqto'a et al.)
- History of Jin (Toqto'a et al.)
- History of Yuan (Song Lian et al.)
- History of Ming (Zhang Tingyu et al.)
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Authority control  |
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National libraries | |
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На других языках
- [en] Song Qi
[fr] Song Qi
Song Qi (chinois simplifié : 宋祁 ; chinois traditionnel : 宋祁 ; pinyin : Sòng Qí), né en 998 et mort en 1061, est un homme d'État, historien, essayiste et poète chinois de la dynastie Song.
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