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The Making of a New Rural Order in South China: Volume 1, Village, Land, and Lineage in Huizhou, 900–1600

A landmark study of the long-term dynamics of Chinese village history proposing a new framework for understanding pre-modern economies in Asia.

Joseph P. McDermott (Author)

9781107046221, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 28 November 2013

480 pages, 15 tables
23.6 x 15.6 x 3.1 cm, 0.82 kg

'Historians have long been aware that Huizhou, an isolated prefecture in the mountainous interior of modern Anhui province, has produced a body of documentation that is almost unparalleled in its coverage, detailing history at a local level beginning from the late Tang Dynasty through the twentieth century. The documents have attracted the attention of scholars for many decades, but now Joseph P. McDermott has used them to present a unique and incredibly valuable narrative of history at its most local level … This is an important book grounded in meticulous research …' Hugo Clark, The American Historical Review

Among the large caches of private documents discovered and collected in China, few rival the Huizhou sources for the insight they provide into Chinese local society and economy over the past millennium. Having spent decades researching these exceptionally rich sources, Joseph P. McDermott presents in two volumes his findings about the major social and economic changes in this important prefecture of south China from around 900 to 1700. In this first volume, we learn about village settlement, competition among village religious institutions, premodern agricultural production, the management of land and lineage, the rise of the lineage as the dominant institution, and its members' application of commercial practices to local forestry operations. This landmark study of religious life and economic activity, of lineage and land, and of rural residents and urban commercial practices provides a compelling new framework for understanding a distinctive path of economic and social development for premodern China and beyond.

Introduction
1. Village institutions in the Song and Yuan
2. Large communal families and lineages: kinship and property in the Song and Yuan
3. Village institutions in the early and mid Ming
4. Lineage trusts: success and adversity
5. Lineage trusts: reforms and their aftermath
6. Timber futures
Conclusion
Index.

Subject Areas: Economic history [KCZ], Anthropology [JHM], Early modern history: c 1450/1500 to c 1700 [HBLH], Early history: c 500 to c 1450/1500 [HBLC], Asian history [HBJF]

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