The Eight Banners is increasingly recognized as a key institution of the Qing dynasty administration. In this study, Professor Enatsu argues that at the end of the Qing, as this region was placed under civil administration, many Han bannermen in the newly created Fengtian Province came to local prominence, first as landlords, then as power elites - active participants in provincial politics - through the reforms of the late Qing and the early Republic. Key local leaders such as Yuan Jinkai, Zhang Rong, Zhang Huangxiang, Wu Jingliang, and Wang Yuquan may be traced to the roles of the Han Banners.
Drawing on classic Japanese and Chinese resources on the area and recent scholarship, Professor Enatsu presents a fine analysis of the interplay between historical Qing institutions and emerging modern political practices during this tumultuous period.
ISBN: | 9781938937002 |
Publication date: | 1st January 2004 |
Author: | Yoshiki Enatsu, University of Michigan |
Publisher: | Centre for Chinese Studies Publications an imprint of University of Michigan Press |
Format: | Paperback |
Pagination: | 176 pages |
Series: | Michigan Monographs in Chinese Studies |
Genres: |
Asian history |