Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
INTRODUCTION
The founding of the Liao dynasty at the beginning of the tenth century opened a second period of extensive foreign dominance in China, a period that would last for almost half a millennium and that reached its climax with the conquest by the Mongols of all of China in 1279. Never before had China suffered such a degree of political and military domination by foreign peoples for such a protracted period. The Khitan Liao, the Tangut Hsi Hsia, the Jurchen Chin, and the Mongol Yüan in turn exercised an ever-increasing control over Chinese territory. The surviving Chinese regimes were forced to acknowledge these conquest dynasties on Chinese soil as equal if not superior powers, to establish permanent diplomatic relations with them on an equal footing, and to pay them annual subsidies or tribute. Such a state of affairs was totally at variance with the traditional Chinese worldview, which saw China as the center of the civilized world around which other peoples and nations had to orbit, and to which they were expected to display submission and deference.
Nothing better illustrates the new power of the north Asian tribal peoples than the fact that throughout Eurasia the name of the Khitan, the founders of the Liao dynasty, in such forms as Kitaia, Cathaia, or Cathay, became a synonym for China. In Russia and throughout the Slavonic world it still remains the standard designation for China.
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