Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 572
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-1-5381-3510-5 • Hardback • October 2019 • $158.00 • (£123.00)
978-1-5381-5902-6 • Paperback • August 2022 • $53.00 • (£41.00)
978-1-5381-3511-2 • eBook • October 2019 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
John W. Dardess (1937–2020) was professor emeritus of history at the University of Kansas. His books include Ming China, 1368–1644: A Concise History of a Resilient Empire; Governing China, 150–1850; A Political Life in Ming China: A Grand Secretary and His Times; and Four Seasons: A Ming Emperor and His Grand Secretaries in Sixteenth-Century China.
Introduction 1 Laying the Foundations: Taizu, r. 1368–98 2 Defensive Buildup, Offensive Thrust: Yongle, r. 1403–24 3 A Zenith of Peace? Xuande, r. 1426–35 4 Troubles Mount: Zhengtong, r. 1436–49 5 Emperor in Captivity: Zhengtong, r. 1449–50 6 Recuperation: Jingtai, r. 1450–57 1837 A Surge in Violence: Tianshun, r. 1457–64 8 No Respite: Chenghua, r. 1465–87 9 The Stresses Intensify: Hongzhi, r. 1487–1505 10 A Warrior Emperor: Zhengde, r. 1505–21 11 Fortress China: Jiajing, r. 1521–67 12 Peace Dawns! Longqing, r. 1567–72 13 First Peace, Then Militancy: Wanli, r. 1572–162014 The Last Frontier: Liaodong, r. 1573–1627Cast of Principal Characters Notes Key Sources About the Author
More Than the Great Wall is an invaluable contribution to the fields of Ming political, military, and borderland history. It is a compelling and intimate chronology of how the Ming succeeded, managed, and failed in northern border defense, and illustrates how “for 276 years, despite many serious lapses and horrendous breakdowns, the system worked” (p. 2). Surely, students and researchers alike stand to benefit from the carefully crafted scholarship offered in this volume.
— International Journal of Asian Studies
With his impressive command of the sources, John Dardess has produced the comprehensive narrative of China’s northern frontier in Ming times.— Michael Szonyi, Harvard University
Drawing from an impressive array of primary sources and informed by recent secondary studies, this book offers a tremendous overview and analysis of the evolution of Ming defense policies concerning the northern frontier. Countering traditional narratives of stasis and decline, John Dardess reveals the dynamic resilience of the Ming bureaucratic-military infrastructure, providing keys to understanding the reasons the Ming maintained their hegemony in Asia for nearly three centuries. Particularly salient is the author's consideration of the characters and personal interests of the various Ming emperors in shaping policy. The picture that emerges is one of strategic flexibility based on realpolitikassessments but glossed with a veneer of stability. At the same time, the author is sensitive to the fluidity of steppe politics as they related to the Ming tributary system.— Kenneth Swope, United States Naval Academy
This is a truly extraordinary book that will become required reading for anyone studying Chinese history. The longitudinal study of northern border security over centuries puts into context the very human struggle of Ming emperors, statesmen, and generals to manage a persistent and ultimately insoluble external threat. Despite changes in emperors, officials, and policies, the drivers of barbarian incursions remained outside the grasp of the Ming government in Central Eurasia and the steppe. Dardess has done a great service to the field of Chinese history and security studies in driving home the unpleasant truth that foreign security threats can often only be reacted to rather than resolved.— Peter Lorge, Vanderbilt University