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*''Dates: [[1368]]-[[1644]]''
*''Chinese/Japanese'': 明 ''(Ming / Min)''
The Ming Dynasty was the last Chinese dynasty to be ruled by a [[Han Chinese]] Imperial line. The dynasty began with the [[1368]] overthrow of the [[Mongol]] [[Yuan Dynasty]] by Han Chinese rebels, and ended with the fall of [[Beijing]] to [[Manchu]] invaders in [[1644]], marking the beginning of the [[Qing Dynasty]], China's last imperial dynasty.
The Ming is known for numerous prominent cultural developments, including the voyages of [[Zheng He]], the development of ''[[kunqu]]'' drama, and the rise of [[literati painting]] (and concordant decline in appreciation for court painting), and the reconstruction of the [[Great Wall]] and [[Forbidden City]]. Much of the Ming elements of the Great Wall and Forbidden City survive today.
The Ming Dynasty was also the first to establish [[tribute]] relations with Japan (briefly, under the [[Ashikaga shogunate]]), and with the [[Ryukyu Kingdom|Ryûkyû Kingdom]]. Though the Ming, at times, implemented strict policies of [[hai jin|maritime restrictions]], in other ways, or at other times, it was also a high point of trade and foreign relations.
==Foreign Relations==
Having overthrown the Mongols, the first foreign (barbarian) group to conquer all of China, and who ruled for nearly a hundred years, the Ming have been described as perpetually paranoid about the Mongols. The Ming Court rebuilt and expanded the Great Wall of China, and in the 1410s-20s launched numerous military expeditions deep into Mongolia. The Dynasty remained at war with various Mongol groups on and off for two hundred years, with one Emperor being captured by the Mongols in [[1449]], and a Mongol army at one point in the mid-16th century making its way to the very walls of Beijing. It was not until [[1571]] that the Ming managed to establish an official peace with the Mongols; and, only a few decades later, a separate group, the Manchus, came knocking on China's door.
==The Fall of the Ming==
The Ming suffered their first defeat to the Manchus in [[1619]], and lost Beijing in 1644. Ming loyalists remained active in southern China and [[Taiwan]] into the 1680s, however, and the Ming continued to live on in the popular imagination throughout the region. Japanese popular publications continued to associate the Ming with the true Chinese rulers, or the true Chinese culture, down into the 19th century, and the royal courts & aristocracies of [[Joseon Dynasty|Korea]] and Ryûkyû considered themselves, in certain respects, the successors to the Ming tradition - the inheritors of the true Chinese civilization, as China proper had fallen to the "barbarians" (the Manchus).
<center>
{| border="3" align="center"
|- align="center"
|width="32%"|Preceded by:<br>'''[[Yuan Dynasty]]'''
|width="35%"|'''Ming Dynasty'''<br> [[1368]]-[[1644]]
|width="32%"|Succeeded by:<br>'''[[Qing Dynasty]]'''
|}
</center>
==References==
*Valerie Hansen, ''The Open Empire'', New York: W.W. Norton & Company (2000), 369-407.
[[Category:Historical Periods]]