The period 221
BC to
AD 1279 saw the establishment of a unified
China, initially under the harsh regime of the
Qin dynasty (221206
BC), and then under the
Han dynasty (206
BC
AD 220). Division of the empire occurred during the so-called Six Dynasties or
Three Kingdoms period (220581); the term Three Kingdoms is sometimes applied only to the period 220280 when the Wei, Shu, and Wu struggled for supremacy. The disunity ended with the advent of the
Sui dynasty (581618). The mighty
Tang dynasty (618907) expanded the empire westwards to eastern Persia and the Caspian Sea and northwards to the Korean border. The
Song dynasty (9601279) was more noted for its cultural and technological achievements, and was pushed south by the
Liao and
Jin dynasties. However, from 1203 both the Jin and the Song were pushed aside by the onslaught of the
Mongols.
Other landmarks of the period include the beginning of the Great Wall and China's canal system under the Qin, the establishment of the Confucian system of government under the Han, and the rise of Taoist and Buddhist philosophy and theories.
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