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RGGP: Xin Wen (Princeton): Landscape and Power in Post-Imperial Chang'an

Thursday, October 23, 2025 16:30
Sherbrooke 688 688 rue Sherbrooke Ouest, Montreal, QC, H3A 3R1, CA

East Asian Studies Speaker Series Talk
"Landscape and Power in Post-Imperial Chang'an"

Professor Xin Wen, Princeton University
Thursday October 23, 4:35 PM
680 Sherbrooke Room 1041
Co-sponsored by the Research Group on Global Pasts of the Yan Lin Centre and the Centre for Global Chinese Studies

Abstract:
Chang鈥檃n, the capital of the Tang (618鈥907) dynasty, had a walled area of 84 square kilometers and a population of one million, making it the largest city in the medieval world. After the fall of the Tang, a new Chang鈥檃n emerged within the old city. This smaller Chang鈥檃n, about 6 percent in landmass compared to the old city, continued to function as a regional center to this day. This lecture explores the landscape of this smaller city in the period from tenth through the fourteenth century. Although urban historians of China paid little attention to Chang鈥檃n after it lost the status of the imperial capital, I show that the rich material remains from Chang鈥檃n, perhaps the best documented of any Chinese city in this period, allow a detailed account of its urban morphology. By telling how new monasteries and residential quarters were built while old palaces were abandoned and old monuments repurposed, I show that the power that drove the landscape changes in post-imperial Chang鈥檃n was not primarily the commercial one. Instead, a negotiation between itinerant imperial representatives and local magnates determined the shape of the city. This case study of Chang鈥檃n helps us recognize a southern bias in the study of the city in Middle Period China, and compels us to rethink the role of the 鈥渕edieval commercial revolution鈥 in China鈥檚 urban history.

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