Nurhaci
Nurhaci | |||||||||||||
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Khan of the Later Jin dynasty | |||||||||||||
Reign | 17 February 1616 – 30 September 1626 | ||||||||||||
Predecessor |
None (dynasty established) | ||||||||||||
Successor | Hong Taiji | ||||||||||||
1st Emperor of the Qing dynasty | |||||||||||||
Predecessor |
None (awarded posthumously) | ||||||||||||
Successor | Hong Taiji | ||||||||||||
Born | 21 February 1559 | ||||||||||||
Died |
30 September 1626 67) Ningyuan, Manchuria | (aged||||||||||||
Spouse |
Consort Yuan Consort Ji Empress Xiaocigao Empress Xiaoliewu Grand Consort Shoukang Lady Irgen-Gioro Lady Yehenara Lady Joogiya Lady Niohuru Lady Silin-Gioro Lady Giyamuhut-Gioro Lady Irgen-Gioro Ajigen Deyinze | ||||||||||||
Issue |
Cuyen Daišan Abai Tangguldai Manggūltai Tabai Abatai Hong Taiji Babutai Degelei Babuhai Ajige Laimbu Dorgon Dodo Fiyanggu Princess Dongguo Princess Nunje Mangguji Mukushen four other daughters | ||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||
House | Aisin Gioro | ||||||||||||
Father | Taksi | ||||||||||||
Mother | Lady Hitara |
Nurhaci (Manchu: ᠨᡠᡵᡤᠠᠴᡳ; Möllendorff: Nurgaci; Abkai: Nurgaqi; simplified Chinese: 努尔哈赤; traditional Chinese: 努爾哈赤; pinyin: Nǔ'ěrhāchì; alternatively Nurhachi; 21 February 1559 – 30 September 1626) was a Jurchen chieftain who rose to prominence in the late 16th century in Manchuria. Nurhaci was part of the Aisin Gioro clan, and reigned from 1616 to his death in September 1626.
Nurhaci reorganised and united various Jurchen tribes (the later "Manchu"), consolidated the Eight Banners military system, and eventually launched attacks on Ming China and Joseon Korea. His conquest of Ming China's northeastern Liaoning province laid the groundwork for the conquest of the rest of China by his descendants, who founded the Qing dynasty in 1644. He is also generally credited with ordering the creation of a new written script for the Manchu language based on the Mongolian vertical script.
Name and titles
Nurhaci is written as ᠨᡠᡵᡤᠠᠴᡳ in the Manchu language. The meaning of the name in the Manchu language is "the skin of a wild boar". Regarded as the founding father of the Qing dynasty, he is given the customary temple name of Taizu, which is traditionally assigned to founders of dynasties. His name is also alternatively spelled Nurgaci, Nurhachi, or Nu-er-ha-chi (the last of these simply the transcription of the Chinese characters used to write his name).
Nurhaci was the last chieftain of the Jianzhou Jurchens and First Khan of the Later Jin dynasty. His title in Manchu as Khan was Geren gurun-be ujire genggiyen Han ᡤᡝᡵᡝᠨ
ᡤᡠᡵᡠᠨ ᠪᡝ
ᡠᠵᡳᡵᡝ
ᡤᡝᠩᡤᡳᠶᡝᠨ
ᡥᠠᠨ ("Brilliant Khan Who Benefits All Nations"). His regnal name was Tianming (Chinese: 天命; Wade–Giles: T'ien-ming; Manchu:ᠠᠪᡴᠠᡳ
ᡶᡠᠯᡳᠩᡤᠠ Abkai fulingga), in Mongolian Tengri-yin Süldetü. It means "The Emperor of Heaven's Mandate." He was given a posthumous name in 1736 (see infobox), the shortened form of which was "Emperor Gao" (Wade–Giles: Emperor Kao; Chinese: 高皇帝).
Early life
Nurhaci was born in 1559. Being a member of the Gioro clan of the Suksuhu River tribe, Nurhaci also claimed descent from Möngke Temür, a Jurchen headman who lived some two centuries earlier. According to Chinese sources, the young man grew up as a soldier in the household of the Ming dynasty general Li Chengliang in Fushun, where he learned Chinese. He named his clan Aisin Gioro around 1612, when he formally ascended the throne as the Khan of the Later Jin dynasty.
In 1582, Nurhaci's father Taksi and grandfather Giocangga were killed in an attack on Gure (now a village in Xinbin Manchu Autonomous County) by a rival Jurchen chieftain, Nikan Wailan ("Nikan Wailan" means "secretary of Chinese people" in the Jurchen language, thus his existence is suspected by some historians.) while being led by Li Chengliang. The following year, Nurhaci began to unify the Jurchen bands around his area.
In 1584, when Nurhaci was 25, he attacked Nikan Wailan at Tulun (today a village in Xinbin too) to avenge the deaths of his father and grandfather, who are said to have left him nothing but thirteen suits of armor. Nikan Wailan fled away to Erhun, which Nurhaci attacked again in 1587. Nikan Wailan this time fled to Li Chengliang's territory. Later, as a way to build relationship, Li gave Nikan Wailan to Nurhaci, who beheaded Nikan Wailan immediately. With Li's support, Nurhaci gradually grew his strength in the following years.
Unifying the Jurchen tribes
In 1593, an alliance of nine tribes composed of Yehe, Hada, Ula, Hoifa, Khorchin, Sibe, Guwalca, Jušeri, and Neyen attacked Nurhaci and were defeated at the Battle of Gure.[1]
From 1599 to 1618, Nurhaci set out on a campaign against the four Hulun tribes. He began by attacking the Hada in 1599 and conquering them in 1603. Then in 1607, Hoifa was also conquered with the death of its beile Baindari, followed by an expedition against Ula and its beile Bujantai in 1613, and finally the Yehe and its beile Gintaisi at the Battle of Sarhu in 1619.
In 1599, Nurhaci gave two of his translators, Erdeni Bagshi and Dahai Jarguchi, the task of creating a Manchu alphabet by adapting the Mongolian script.
In 1606, he was granted the title of Kundulun Khan by the Mongols.
In 1616, Nurhaci declared himself Khan and founded the Jin dynasty (aisin gurun), often called the Later Jin in reference to the legacy of the earlier Jurchen Jin dynasty of the 12th century. He constructed a palace at Mukden (present-day Shenyang, Liaoning). The "Later Jin" was renamed to "Qing" by his son Hong Taiji after his death in 1626, however Nurhaci is usually referred to as the founder of the Qing dynasty.
In order to help with the newly organized administration, five of his trusted companions were appointed as his chief councilors, Anfiyanggū, Eidu, Hūrhan, Fiongdon, and Hohori.
Only after he became Khan did he finally unify the Ula (clan of his consort Lady Abahai, mentioned below) and the Yehe Nara clan, the clan of his consort Monggo.
Nurhaci chose to variously emphasize either differences or similarities in lifestyles with other peoples like the Mongols for political reasons.[2] Nurhaci said to the Mongols that "The languages of the Chinese and Koreans are different, but their clothing and way of life is the same. It is the same with us Manchus (Jušen) and Mongols. Our languages are different, but our clothing and way of life is the same." Later Nurhaci indicated that the bond with the Mongols was not based in any real shared culture, rather it was for pragmatic reasons of "mutual opportunism", when he said to the Mongols: "You Mongols raise livestock, eat meat and wear pelts. My people till the fields and live on grain. We two are not one country and we have different languages."[3]
Challenging Ming China
In 1618, Nurhaci commissioned a document entitled the Seven Grievances in which he enumerated seven problems with Ming rule and began to rebel against the domination of the Ming dynasty. A majority of the grievances dealt with conflicts against Yehe, and Ming favouritism of Yehe.
Nurhaci led many successful engagements against the Ming Chinese, the Koreans, the Mongols, and other Jurchen clans, greatly enlarging the territory under his control.
The first capitals of the state established by Nurhaci were Fe Ala and Hetu Ala.[4][5][6][7][8] Han Chinese participated in the construction of Hetu Ala, the capital of Nurhaci's state.[9]
Defectors from the Ming side played a massive role in the Qing conquest of the Ming. Ming generals who defected to the Manchus were often married to women from the Aisin Gioro clan while lower-ranked defectors were given non-imperial Manchu women as wives. Nurhaci arranged for a marriage between one of his granddaughters and the Ming general Li Yongfang (李永芳) after Li surrendered Fushun in Liaoning to the Manchus in 1618.[10][11][12][13][14] His son Abatai's daughter was married to Li Yongfang.[15][16][17][18] The offspring of Li received the "Third Class Viscount" (三等子爵; sān děng zǐjué) title.[19] Li Yongfang was the great great great grandfather of Li Shiyao 李侍堯.[20][21]
The Han prisoner of war Gong Zhenglu (Onoi) was appointed to instruct Nurhaci's sons and received gifts of slaves, wives, and a domicile from Nurhaci after Nurhaci rejected offers of payment to release him back to his relatives.[22]
Nurhaci had treated Han in Liaodong differently according to how much grain they had, those with less than 5 to 7 sin were treated like chattel while those with more than that amount were rewarded with property. Due to a revolt by Han in Liaodong in 1623, Nurhachi, who previously gave concessions to conquered Han subjects in Liaodong, turned against them and ordered that they no longer be trusted and enacted discriminatory policies and killings against them, while ordering that Han who assimilated to the Jurchen (in Jilin) before 1619 be treated equally as Jurchens were and not like the conquered Han in Liaodong.
By May 1621, Nurhaci had conquered the cities of Liaoyang and Shenyang. In April 1625, he designated Shenyang the new capital city, which would hold that status until the Qing conquest of the Ming in 1644.[23]
Finally in 1626, Nurhaci suffered the first serious military defeat of his life at the hands of the Ming general Yuan Chonghuan. Nurhaci was wounded by the Portuguese-made cannons in Yuan's army at the Battle of Ningyuan. Unable to recover either physically or mentally, he died two days later in Aiji Fort (靉雞堡; in present-day Da'aijinbao Village, Dijia Township, Yuhong District, Shenyang) on 30 September at the age of 68. His tomb (Chinese: 福陵; pinyin: Fúlíng) is located east of Shenyang.
The first Manchu translations of Chinese works were the Liu-t'ao 六韜, Su-shu 素書, and San-lueh 三略- alll Chinese military texts dedicated to the arts of war due to the Manchu interests in the topic, like Sun-Tzu's work The Art of War.[24][25][26] The military related texts which were translated into Manchu from Chinese were translated by Dahai.[27] Manchu translations of Chinese texts included the Ming penal code and military texts were performed by Dahai.[28] These translations were requested of Dahai by Nurhaci.[29] The military text Wu-tzu was translated into Manchu along with Sun-Tzu's work The Art of War.[30] Chinese history, Chinese law, and Chinese military theory classical texts were translated into Manchu during the rule of Hong Taiji in Mukden with Manchus placing significance upon military and governance related Chinese texts.[31] A Manchu translation was made of the military themed Chinese novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms.[32][33] Chinese literature, military theory and legal texts were translated into Manchu by Dahai and Erdeni.[34] The translations were ordered in 1629.[35][36] The translation of the military texts San-lüeh, Su-shu, and the Ta Ming hui-tien (the Ming law) done by Dahai was ordered by Nurhaci.[37] While it was mainly administrative and ethical guidance which made up most of San-lüeh and Su Shu, military science was indeed found in the Liu-t'ao and Chinese military manuals were eagerly translated by the Manchus and the Manchus were also attracted to the military content in Romance of the Three Kingdoms which is why it was translated.[38] The The Art of War was translated into Manchu as ᠴᠣᠣᡥᠠᡳ
ᠪᠠᡳᡨᠠ
ᠪᡝ
ᡤᡳᠰᡠᡵᡝᠩᡤᡝ Wylie: Tchauhai paita be gisurengge,[35][39] Möllendorff: Coohai baita de gisurengge, Discourse on the art of War.[40] Another later Manchu translation was made by Aisin Gioro Qiying.[41]
Legacy
Among the most lasting contributions Nurhaci left his descendants was the establishment of the Eight Banners, which would eventually form the backbone of the military that dominated the Qing Empire. The status of Banners did not change much over the course of Nurhaci's lifetime, nor in subsequent reigns, remaining mostly under the control of the royal family. The two elite Yellow Banners were consistently under Nurhaci's control. The two Blue Banners were controlled by Nurhaci's brother Šurhaci until he died, at which point the Blue Banners were given to Šurhaci's two sons, Chiurhala and Amin. Nurhaci's eldest son, Cuyen, controlled the White Banner for most of his father's reign until he rebelled. Then the Bordered White Banner was given to Nurhaci's grandson and the Plain White was given to his eighth son and heir, Hong Taiji. However, by the end of Nurhaci's reign, Hong Taiji controlled both White Banners. Finally, the Red Banner was run by Nurhaci's second son Daišan. Later in Nurhaci's reign, the Bordered Red Banner was handed down to his son. Daišan and his son would continue holding the two Red Banners well into the end of Hong Taiji's reign.
The details of Hong Taiji's succession as the Khan of the Later Jin dynasty are unclear.[42] When he died in late 1626, Nurhaci did not designate an heir; instead he encouraged his sons to rule collegially.[43] Three of his sons and a nephew were the "four senior beiles": Daišan (43 years old), Amin (son of Nurhaci's brother Šurhaci; 40 or 41), Manggūltai (38 or 39), and Hong Taiji himself (33).[44] On the day after Nurhaci's death, they coerced his primary consort Lady Abahai (1590–1626)––who had borne him three sons: Ajige, Dorgon, and Dodo––to commit suicide to accompany him in death.[45] This gesture has made some historians suspect that Nurhaci had in fact named the fifteen-year-old Dorgon as a successor, with Daišan as regent.[46] By forcing Dorgon's mother to kill herself, the princes removed a strong base of support for Dorgon. The reason such intrigue was necessary is that Nurhaci had left the two elite Yellow Banners to Dorgun and Dodo, who were the sons of Lady Abahai. Hong Taiji exchanged control of his two White Banners for that of the two Yellow Banners, shifting their influence and power from his young brothers onto himself.
According to Hong Taiji's later recollections, Amin and the other beile were willing to accept Hong Taiji as Khan, but Amin then would have wanted to leave with his Bordered Blue Banner, threatening to dissolve Nurhaci's unification of the Jurchens.[47] Eventually the older Daišan worked out a compromise that allowed Hong Taiji as the Khan, but almost equal to the other three senior beiles.[48] Hong Taiji would eventually find ways to become the undisputed leader.
Primary sources
Information concerning Nurhaci can be found in later, propagandistic works such as the Manchu Veritable Records (in Chinese, Mǎnzhōu Shílù 滿洲實錄; in Manchu, Yargiyan kooli). Good contemporary sources are also available. For instance, much material concerning Nurhaci's rise is preserved within Korean sources such as the Annals of the Joseon Dynasty (Joseon Wangjo Sillok 朝鮮王朝實錄), especially the Seonjo Sillok and the Gwanghaegun Ilgi. Indeed, the record of Sin Chung-il's trip to Jianzhou is preserved in the Seonjo Sillok.
The original Manchu-language records from Nurhaci's reign also survive. A revised transcription of these records (with the dots and circles added to the script) was commissioned by the Qianlong Emperor. This has been translated into Japanese, under the title Manbun roto, and Chinese, under the title Manwen Laodang (Chinese:满文老檔). A project is currently under way at Harvard to translate them into English, as The Old Manchu Chronicles.[49]
Family
Ancestors
- Great-Great-Grandfather
- Möngke Temür (1370–1433), personal name Mengtemu (孟特穆), posthumously honored as Emperor Yuan (原皇帝, Da Hūwangdi) with the temple name of Zhaozu (肇祖, Deribuhe Mafa)
- Great-Great-Grandmother or step-great-great-grandmother
- Mengtemu's wife, posthumously honored as Empress Yuan (原皇后 Da Hūwanghu)
- Great-Grandfather
- Fuman, posthumously honored as Emperor Zhi (直皇帝, Tondo Hūwangdi) with the temple name of Xingzu (興祖, Yendibuhe Mafa)
- Great-grandmother or step-great-grandmother
- Lady Hitara (喜塔拉氏), Fuman's wife, daughter of Captain Doulijin (都督 都理金), posthumously honored as Empress Zhi (直皇后)
- Grandfather
- Giocangga (died 1583), posthumously honored as Emperor Yi (翼皇帝, Gosingga Hūwangdi) with the temple name of Jingzu (景祖, Mukdembuhe Mafa)
- Grandmother or step-grandmother
- Giocangga's wife, posthumously honored as Empress Yi (翼皇后, Gosingga Hūwanghu)
- Father
- Taksi (died 1583), posthumously honored as Emperor Xuan (宣皇帝, Hafumbuha Hūwangdi) with the temple name of Xianzu (顯祖, Iletuleha Mafa)
- Mother
- Lady Hitara (喜塔拉氏) (died 1569), Taksi's wife, daughter of Captain Agu (都督 阿古), granddaughter of Captain Cancha (都督 參察), great-granddaughter of Captain Doulijin (都督 都里吉), posthumously honored as Empress Xuan (宣皇后, Hafumbuha Hūwanghu)
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Siblings
- Brothers (same mother)
- Šurhaci (舒爾哈齊) (1564–1611)
- Yarhaci (雅爾哈齊)
- Sister (same mother)
- Lady Aisin Gioro (愛新覺羅氏), married Gahašan Hasihu (噶哈善哈斯虎)
- Half-Brothers
- Bayara (巴雅齊)
- Murhaci (穆爾哈齊) (1582–1624)
Consorts
Nurhaci had a total of 14 consorts.
Title / Posthumous title | Name | Born | Died | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Consort Yuan 元妃 ("Original Consort") | Tunggiya Hahana-Jacing 佟佳‧哈哈納扎青 | 1560 | 1592 | Nurhaci's first primary consort |
Consort Ji 繼妃 ("Successor Consort") | Fuca Gundei 富察‧袞代 | unknown | 1620 | Nurhaci's second primary consort |
Empress Xiaocigao 孝慈高皇后 | Yehenara Monggo-Jerjer 葉赫那拉‧孟古哲哲 | 1575 | 1603 | Daughter of Yangginu (楊吉砮); Married Nurhaci in October 1588; Nurhaci's secondary consort |
Empress Xiaoliewu 孝烈武皇后 | Ulanara Abahai 烏喇那拉‧阿巴亥 | 1590 | 1626 | Daughter of Mantai (滿泰); Married Nurhaci in 1602; Nurhaci's secondary consort |
Grand Consort Shoukang 壽康太妃 | Lady Borjigit 博爾濟吉特氏 | unknown | 1665 | Nurhaci's secondary consort |
none | Lady Irgen-Gioro 伊爾根覺羅氏 | unknown | unknown | Nurhaci's secondary consort |
none | Lady Yehenara 葉赫那拉氏 | unknown | unknown | Nurhaci's secondary consort; Empress Xiaocigao's younger sister |
none | Lady Joogiya 兆佳氏 | unknown | unknown | Nurhaci's ordinary consort |
none | Lady Niohuru 鈕祜祿氏 | unknown | unknown | Nurhaci's ordinary consort |
none | Lady Silin-Gioro 西林覺羅氏 | unknown | unknown | Nurhaci's ordinary consort |
none | Lady Giyamuhut-Gioro 嘉穆瑚覺羅氏 | unknown | unknown | Nurhaci's ordinary consort |
none | Lady Irgen-Gioro 伊爾根覺羅氏 | unknown | unknown | Nurhaci's ordinary consort |
none | Ajigen 阿濟根 | unknown | unknown | Nurhaci's ordinary consort |
none | Deyinze 德因澤 | unknown | 1626 | Nurhaci's ordinary consort; Forced to commit suicide to join Nurhaci |
Sons
# | Title / Posthumous title | Name | Born | Died | Mother | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Crown Prince Guanglue 廣略太子 | Cuyen 褚英 | 1580 | 1615 | Consort Yuan | Nurhaci's first heir apparent; Put to death by Nurhaci |
2 | Prince Lilie of the First Rank 禮烈親王 | Daišan 代善 | 19 August 1583 | 25 November 1648 | Consort Yuan | One of the Four Great Beiles |
3 | Zhenguo Qinmin Gong 鎮國勤敏公 | Abai 阿拜 | 8 September 1585 | 14 March 1648 | Lady Joogiya | Had seven sons |
4 | Zhenguo Kejie Jiangjun 鎮國克潔將軍 | Tangguldai 湯古代 | 24 December 1585 | 3 November 1640 | Lady Niohuru | Had two sons |
5 | stripped of his title | Manggūltai 莽古爾泰 | 1587 | 11 January 1633 | Consort Ji | One of the Four Great Beiles |
6 | Fuguo Quehou Gong 輔國愨厚公 | Tabai 塔拜 | 2 April 1589 | 6 September 1639 | Lady Niohuru | Had eight sons |
7 | Prince Raoyumin of the Second Rank 饒餘敏郡王 | Abatai 阿巴泰 | 27 July 1589 | 10 May 1646 | Lady Irgen-Gioro | |
8 | Emperor Taizongwen 太宗文皇帝 | Hong Taiji 皇太極 | 28 November 1592 | 21 September 1643 | Empress Xiaocigao | Nurhaci's successor; previously one of the Four Great Beiles |
9 | Zhenguo Kexi Gong 鎮國恪僖公 | Babutai 巴布泰 | 13 December 1592 | 27 February 1655 | Lady Giyamuhut-Gioro | |
10 | stripped of his title | Degelei 德格類 | 16 December 1592 | 11 November 1635 | Consort Ji | |
11 | stripped of his title | Babuhai 巴布海 | 15 January 1597 | 1643 | Lady Giyamuhut-Gioro | Had three sons |
12 | stripped of his title | Ajige 阿濟格 | 28 August 1605 | 28 November 1651 | Empress Xiaoliewu | Initially Prince Ying of the First Rank; Had three sons |
13 | Fuguo Jiezhi Gong 輔國介直公 | Laimbu 賴慕布 | 26 January 1612 | 23 June 1646 | Lady Silin-Gioro | |
14 | Prince Ruizhong of the First Rank 睿忠親王 | Dorgon 多爾袞 | 17 November 1612 | 31 December 1650 | Empress Xiaoliewu | Served as Prince-Regent during the Shunzhi Emperor's reign |
15 | Prince Yutong of the First Rank 豫通親王 | Dodo 多鐸 | 2 April 1614 | 29 April 1649 | Empress Xiaoliewu | |
16 | none | Fiyanggu 費揚果 | November 1620 | unknown | unknown | Had four sons |
Daughters
# | Title / Posthumous title | Name | Born | Died | Mother | Spouse | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Gulun Princess 固倫公主 | Princess Dongguo 東果格格 | 1578 | 1652 | Consort Yuan | Hohori (何和禮; 1561–1624), married in 1588 | |
2 | Heshuo Princess 和碩公主 | Princess Nunje 嫩哲格格 | 1587 | 1646 | Lady Irgen-Gioro | Darkhan (達爾漢) | |
3 | none | Mangguji 莽古濟 | 1590 | 1635 | Consort Ji | Worgudai (吳爾古代), married in 1601; Suonuomuduling (瑣諾木杜凌), married in 1627 | Had two daughters with Worgudai |
4 | none | Mukushen 穆庫什 | 1595 | unknown | Lady Giyamuhut-Gioro | Bujantai, married in 1608 | |
5 | none | name unknown | 1597 | 1613 | Lady Giyamuhut-Gioro | Daki (達啟), married in 1608 | |
6 | none | name unknown | 1600 | 1646 | Lady Giyamuhut-Gioro | Suna (蘇納), married in 1613 | |
7 | none | name unknown | April 1604 | August 1685 | Lady Irgen-Gioro | Ezhayi (鄂札伊), married in 1619 | |
8 | Heshuo Princess 和碩公主 | name unknown | 1612 | 1646 | Lady Yehenara | Gorbushi (固爾布什), married in 1625 | |
In popular culture
In the opening scene of the 1984 film Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, Indiana Jones trades the remains of Nurhaci (contained in a small, ornate jade urn) for a diamond owned by Shanghai mobster Lao Che.
Science
The genus Nurhachius, a pterodactyloid pterosaur, is named after Nurhaci.
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nurhaci. |
Notes
- ↑ Narangoa 2014, p. 24.
- ↑ Perdue 2009, p. 127.
- ↑ Peterson 2002, p. 31.
- ↑ Frederic E. Wakeman (1985). The Great Enterprise: The Manchu Reconstruction of Imperial Order in Seventeenth-century China. University of California Press. pp. 45–. ISBN 978-0-520-04804-1.
- ↑ Gertraude Roth Li (2010). Manchu: A Textbook for Reading Documents. Natl Foreign Lg Resource Ctr. pp. 285–. ISBN 978-0-9800459-5-6.
- ↑ Jonathan D. Spence; John E. Wills, Jr. (1 January 1979). From Ming to Ch'ing: Conquest, Region, and Continuity in Seventeenth-century China. Yale University Press. pp. 35–. ISBN 978-0-300-02672-6.
- ↑ Mark C. Elliott (2001). The Manchu Way: The Eight Banners and Ethnic Identity in Late Imperial China. Stanford University Press. pp. 54–. ISBN 978-0-8047-4684-7.
- ↑ http://www.dartmouth.edu/~qing/WEB/NURHACI.html
- ↑ Frederic E. Wakeman (1985). The Great Enterprise: The Manchu Reconstruction of Imperial Order in Seventeenth-century China. University of California Press. pp. 47–. ISBN 978-0-520-04804-1.
- ↑ Anne Walthall (2008). Servants of the Dynasty: Palace Women in World History. University of California Press. pp. 148–. ISBN 978-0-520-25444-2.
- ↑ Frederic Wakeman (1 January 1977). Fall of Imperial China. Simon and Schuster. pp. 79–. ISBN 978-0-02-933680-9.
- ↑ Kenneth M. Swope (23 January 2014). The Military Collapse of China's Ming Dynasty, 1618-44. Routledge. pp. 13–. ISBN 978-1-134-46209-4.
- ↑ Frederic E. Wakeman (1985). The Great Enterprise: The Manchu Reconstruction of Imperial Order in Seventeenth-century China. University of California Press. pp. 61–. ISBN 978-0-520-04804-1.
- ↑ Mark C. Elliott (2001). The Manchu Way: The Eight Banners and Ethnic Identity in Late Imperial China. Stanford University Press. pp. 76–. ISBN 978-0-8047-4684-7.
- ↑ http://www.lishiquwen.com/news/7356.html
- ↑ http://www.fs7000.com/wap/?9179.html
- ↑ http://www.75800.com.cn/lx2/pAjRqK/9N6KahmKbgWLa1mRb1iyc_.html
- ↑ https://read01.com/aP055D.html
- ↑ Evelyn S. Rawski (15 November 1998). The Last Emperors: A Social History of Qing Imperial Institutions. University of California Press. pp. 72–. ISBN 978-0-520-92679-0.
- ↑ http://www.dartmouth.edu/~qing/WEB/LI_SHIH-YAO.html
- ↑ http://12103081.wenhua.danyy.com/library1210shtml30810106630060.html
- ↑ Pamela Kyle Crossley (15 February 2000). A Translucent Mirror: History and Identity in Qing Imperial Ideology. University of California Press. pp. 101–. ISBN 978-0-520-92884-8.
- ↑ Arthur W. Hummel, Eminent Chinese of the Ch’ing Period, (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1943), p. 597
- ↑ Early China. Society for the Study of Early China. 1975. p. 53.
- ↑ DURRANT, STEPHEN. 1977. “MANCHU TRANSLATIONS OF CHOU DYNASTY TEXTS”. Early China 3. [Cambridge University Press, Society for the Study of Early China]: 52–54. http://www.jstor.org/stable/23351361.
- ↑ DURRANT, STEPHEN. 1977. “MANCHU TRANSLATIONS OF CHOU DYNASTY TEXTS”. Early China 3. [Cambridge University Press, Society for the Study of Early China]: 53. http://www.jstor.org/stable/23351361?seq=2.
- ↑ Sin-wai Chan (2009). A Chronology of Translation in China and the West: From the Legendary Period to 2004. Chinese University Press. pp. 60–61. ISBN 978-962-996-355-2.
- ↑ Peter C Perdue (30 June 2009). China Marches West: The Qing Conquest of Central Eurasia. Harvard University Press. pp. 122–. ISBN 978-0-674-04202-5.
- ↑ FREDERIC WAKEMAN JR. (1985). The Great Enterprise: The Manchu Reconstruction of Imperial Order in Seventeenth-century China. University of California Press. pp. 44–. ISBN 978-0-520-04804-1.
- ↑ Early China. Society for the Study of Early China. 1977. p. 53.
- ↑ Claudine Salmon (13 November 2013). Literary Migrations: Traditional Chinese Fiction in Asia (17th-20th Centuries). Institute of Southeast Asian Studies. pp. 94–. ISBN 978-981-4414-32-6.
- ↑ Cultural Hybridity in Manchu Bannermen Tales (zidishu). ProQuest. 2007. pp. 25–. ISBN 978-0-549-44084-0.
- ↑ West, Andrew. "The Textual History of Sanguo Yanyi: The Manchu Translation". Retrieved 11 October 2016.
- ↑ Arthur W. Hummel (1991). Eminent Chinese of the Ch'ing period: 1644-1912. SMC publ. p. vi. ISBN 978-957-638-066-2.
- 1 2 Shou-p'ing Wu Ko (1855). Translation (by A. Wylie) of the Ts'ing wan k'e mung, a Chinese grammar of the Manchu Tartar language (by Woo Kĭh Show-ping, revised and ed. by Ching Ming-yuen Pei-ho) with intr. notes on Manchu literature. pp. xxxvi–.
- ↑ Translation of the Ts'ing wan k'e mung, a Chinese Grammar of the Manchu Tartar Language; with introductory notes on Manchu Literature: (translated by A. Wylie.). Mission Press. 1855. pp. xxxvi–.
- ↑ http://www.dartmouth.edu/~qing/WEB/DAHAI.html
- ↑ Durrant, Stephen. 1979. “Sino-manchu Translations at the Mukden Court”. Journal of the American Oriental Society 99 (4). American Oriental Society: 653–61. doi:10.2307/601450. http://www.jstor.org/stable/601450?seq=2 pp. 654-656.
- ↑ http://library.umac.mo/ebooks/b31043252.pdf
- ↑ Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland. North China Branch, Shanghai (1890). Journal of the North China Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society. Kelly & Walsh. pp. 40–.
- ↑ http://sino-platonic.org/complete/spp178_art_of_war.pdf p. 82
- ↑ Roth Li 2002, p. 52.
- ↑ Wakeman 1985, p. 157.
- ↑ Wakeman 1985, p. 158.
- ↑ Roth Li 2002, p. 51.
- ↑ Roth Li 2002, p. 52, note 127, citing Fuchs 1935.
- ↑ Wakeman 1985, pp. 158–60.
- ↑ Wakeman 1985, p. 160.
- ↑ The Old Manchu Chronicles, Harvard University.
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Nurhaci Born: 1558 Died: 30 September 1626 | ||
Regnal titles | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Taksi |
Chieftain of the Jianzhou Jurchens 1583–1616 |
Succeeded by Hong Taiji |
Preceded by none (Dynasty established) |
Khan of Later Jin 1616–1626 |