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  2. Tributary system of China - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tributary_system_of_China

    The tributary system of China (simplified Chinese: 中华朝贡体系, traditional Chinese: 中華朝貢體系, pinyin: Zhōnghuá cháogòng tǐxì), or Cefeng system (simplified Chinese: 册封体制; traditional Chinese: 冊封體制; pinyin: Cèfēng tǐzhì) at its height was a network of loose international relations centered around China ...

  3. List of tributary states of China - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tributary_states...

    The tribute system was an economically profitable form of government trade, and Korea requested and successfully increased the number of tributes sent to Ming from once every three years to three times each year starting in 1400, and eventually four times each year starting in 1531.

  4. Tributary state - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tributary_state

    A formalised tribute system developed in East Asia with many neighbouring East, Central, and Southeast Asian countries and regions becoming tributary states of various Chinese dynasties. [2] [3] Historically, the Emperor of China saw himself as the emperor of the entire civilised world. It was not possible for such an emperor to have equal ...

  5. Tribute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tribute

    The relationship between China and Vietnam was a "hierarchic tributary system". [21] China ended its suzerainty over Vietnam with the Treaty of Tientsin (1885) following the Sino-French War . Thailand was always subordinate to China as a vassal or a tributary state since the Sui dynasty until the Taiping Rebellion of the late Qing dynasty in ...

  6. Sinocentrism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sinocentrism

    The Sinocentric tribute and trade system provided Northeast and Southeast Asia with a political and economic framework for international trade. Countries wishing to trade with China were required to submit to a suzerain-vassal relationship with the Chinese sovereign.

  7. Tianxia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tianxia

    The historical consensus is that a tianxia system existed at various points in Chinese history. Historical views differ, however, on exactly when it was in place. How a system of tianxia operated varied over time, ranging from vassal states accepted the authority of a Chinese emperor to when vassal states nominally paid tribute while in fact exercising their own authority.

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  9. Suzerainty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suzerainty

    John King Fairbank and Teng Ssu-yu created the "tribute system" theory in a series of articles in the early 1940s to describe "a set of ideas and practices developed and perpetuated by the rulers of China over many centuries." The Fairbank model presents the tribute system as an extension of the hierarchic and nonegalitarian Confucian social order.