2024-03-28T14:31:46Z
https://nagoya.repo.nii.ac.jp/oai
oai:nagoya.repo.nii.ac.jp:02000153
2023-01-16T05:14:31Z
326:521:2089:1621385347297
Qing China’s View of the Eastern Shan States and Northern Thailand in the Mid-eighteenth century
KATO, Kumiko
open access
Qing China
Shan States
Northern Thailand
mid-eighteenth century
Sipsongpanna
Qing China’s view of the eastern Shan States and Northern Thailand in the mid-eighteenth century was discussed. As for the border areas of Southernmost Yunnan and the Shan States of Burma, Qing China at that time was conscious of the boundary that separated the Chinese interior (neidi) from the exterior. Moengs in Sipsongpanna were inside the boundary and belonged to the ‘interior’. Cheng Tung, Cheng Khaeng, and Moeng Yawng were outside the boundary. The boundary line might be vague, but it was clearly recognised at the passes, which should be protected when disputes occurred outside the boundary. Qing China prohibited the chief of Sipsongpanna to go out to the ‘exterior’ because he had been appointed as Cheli Xuanweishi, which was an ‘interior’ tusi or native official. The Tai states in Southernmost Yunnan, the eastern Shan States of Burma, and Northern Thailand had native relationships with other Tai states and Burma. Such relationships might be unimaginable, or unacceptable, for China in the mid-eighteenth century.
名古屋大学人文学研究科
2021-03-31
eng
departmental bulletin paper
VoR
https://doi.org/10.18999/jouhunu.4.313
http://hdl.handle.net/2237/0002000153
https://nagoya.repo.nii.ac.jp/records/2000153
10.18999/jouhunu.4.313
2433-233X
名古屋大学人文学研究論集
4
313
324
https://nagoya.repo.nii.ac.jp/record/2000153/files/jouhunu_4_313.pdf
application/pdf
443 KB
2021-05-24