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People: Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury

Maritime East Asia (964 – 1107 CE): …

Years: 964 - 1107

Maritime East Asia (964 – 1107 CE): Song Transformation, Goryeo Consolidation, Heian Aristocracy, and Austronesian Taiwan

Geographic and Environmental Context

Maritime East Asia includes Japan, the Korean Peninsula, Taiwan, southern China (including Yunnan and Guangxi), northeastern China (including Liaoning, Jilin, and Manchuria/Heilongjiang), and the Sichuan Basin.

  • Southern China: rice lands of the Yangtze, fertile Sichuan Basin, and maritime provinces (Fujian, Guangdong, Zhejiang). Yunnan and Guangxi remained frontier uplands, inhabited by non-Han groups, loosely tied to Song authority.

  • Northeastern China: Liaoning plains and Jilin–Manchuria were contested by the Khitan Liao dynasty (907–1125), limiting Song power in the north.

  • Korea: Goryeo unified the peninsula, sustaining Buddhist culture.

  • Japan: Heian court life in Kyoto reached cultural peaks, even as provincial militarization advanced.

  • Taiwan: Austronesian villages continued horticulture and coastal trade with Luzon and Fujian.


Societies and Political Developments

  • China (Song, 960–1279):

    • The Northern Song (960–1127) reunited much of China but never controlled Liaoning or Manchuria, which were under the Khitan Liao.

    • Southern provinces + Sichuan Basin became the agrarian core, supported by double-cropping rice.

    • Yunnan (Dali Kingdom, 937–1253) succeeded Nanzhao, independent of Song but interacting through trade.

    • Guangxi uplands remained semi-autonomous, with local Zhuang peoples maintaining distinctive traditions.

  • Korea (Goryeo, 918–1392): Aristocracy and Buddhist institutions flourished; woodblock printing advanced.

  • Japan: Fujiwara dominance continued, but provincial warriors foreshadowed samurai rule; literary heights with The Tale of Genji.

  • Taiwan: Austronesian swidden fields and fishing villages supplied shell ornaments, forest goods, and engaged in cross-Strait exchange.


Long-Term Significance

By 1107 CE, Maritime East Asia was a mosaic of powerful dynasties and resilient peripheries:

  • Song China: rich, populous, technologically innovative, but geopolitically constrained by the Liao in the northeast and the Dali Kingdom in Yunnan.

  • Goryeo Korea: stable and prosperous, balancing Buddhist devotion with Confucian bureaucracy.

  • Japan: Heian culture at its zenith, with early samurai forming in provinces.

  • Taiwan’s Austronesians: continued their role as maritime intermediaries in the South China Sea.

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