Ten Kingdoms

Chinese history
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Also known as: Shi-kuo, Shiguo
Quick Facts
Chinese (Pinyin):
Shiguo, or
(Wade-Giles romanization):
Shi-kuo
Date:
907 - c. 960
Location:
China
Major Events:
Former Shu
Later Shu
Min
Northern Han
Nan Han
Key People:
Li Yu

Ten Kingdoms, (907–960), period in Chinese history when southern China was ruled by nine small independent kingdoms, with one more small kingdom in the far north. It corresponded generally with the Five Dynasties period, or rule, in the north; and, like the northern period, it was a time of unrest and political confusion. In neither case, however, were the economic condition and cultural level of the society seriously disrupted.

The Ten Kingdoms were mostly situated in the valley of the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang) and farther south. They were the Wu (902–937), the Nan (Southern) Tang (937–975/976), the Nan Ping (924–963), the Chu (927–951), the Qian (Former) Shu (907–925) and Hou (Later) Shu (934–965), the Min (909–945), the Nan Han (917–971), and the Wu-Yue (907–978), the latter near the Yangtze delta; the one northern state was the Bei (Northern) Han (951–979). Some of these regimes were relatively stable, but none was powerful enough to unify the south. The cultural legacy of the Tang dynasty found fertile ground in these southern parts. Religious thought moved toward a synthesis of Buddhism, Daoism, and Confucianism. The southern landscape gave new vitality to the ancient traditions of poetry. The flourishing courts of the south gave great impetus to pottery in the region, and a fine celadon was produced in the kingdom of Wu-Yue. One king of the Nan Tang was a noted poet.

The Ten Kingdoms were also marked by their relative economic prosperity. Intensive farming techniques using irrigation and selective crops contributed bountiful harvests to a flourishing economy. Technological advances in the production of iron and growing regional and overseas trade further stimulated commercial activity.

China
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China: The Shiguo (Ten Kingdoms)

The Ten Kingdoms period is generally given as the nearly six decades between the demise of the Tang in 907 and the founding of the Song dynasty in 960. Over the next two decades the Song absorbed the southern kingdoms back into a unified China under its domination. However, throughout this transition period, southeastern China retained its cultural excellence and economic vitality.