China in World History

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

72 China in World History


Hangzhou

Beijing

Kaifeng

Fuzhou
Yangzhou

Chengdu

Guangzhou

Khotan

Kashgar

Samarkand

Bukhara

Venice

Jerusalem

Delhi

Ormuz Lahore

Baghdad

Kiev

Moscow
Bolgar

Lhasa

Karakorum

Pegu
(Burma)

Sea of
Japan

Lake
Baikal
Aral
Sea

Persian
Gulf
East
China
Sea

South
China
Sea

Bay of
Bengal

Arabian
Sea

Indian Ocean

Yangzi
Riv
er

Yello

w

River

Bla
ck
Se
a

Ca

sp

ia

nSea

AmurRiv
er

Ind

us

Riv

er

igT
ris
R.

Eu
ph
rat
es
R.

Me
kon
gRi
ver

Brahm
aputraR.
GangesR
.

Keru

len

R.

Volg

aRiv

er

Japan

Borneo

Sumatra
Java

Ceylon

SULTANATE
OF DELHI

INDIA

ARABIA

RUSSIA
SIBERIA
EUROPE
KHANATE OF THE
GOLDEN HORDE

EMPIRE OF THE GREAT KHAN

CHAGATAI
KHANATE

IL-KHAN
EMPIRE

Him
alay
anM
ounta
ins

1277,
1287

1257–58

1285–88

1292–93

(^12191215)
1219
1207
(^1224)
, (^1236)
(^12)
(^24)
1223
(^1237) –
(^42)
(^1220) , 1221
1281
1273
1296–1307
0
(^0) 600 km
400 mi
Mongol campaigns
Area controlled by Southern Song
(1127–1276)
Area lost in 1126 by the
Northern Song
Border of Northern Song (960–1126)
Mongol Empire borders
Cities
THEMONGOLEMPIRES,
CA. 1280 CE,
WITHEARLIER
SONGBOUNDARIES
the Chinese have regarded Yue Fei as a great heroic patriot and Qin Gui
as the ultimate traitor to his nation.
The fate of General Yue Fei refl ected the Song dynasty’s assertion of
civilian control over the military and some shifting cultural assumptions
in the Song that helped prevent an aggressive military campaign against
the Jin regime in the north. Song Confucian offi cials were much more

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