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Fēngjiàn (封建 or "Honours and Awards") is the political ideology of the Zhou Dynasty of ancient China. Fengjian is a "decentralized enfiefment system of government,"[1] comparable to European feudalism, though recent scholarship has suggested that fengjian lacks some of the fundamental aspects of feudalism. An ideology is an organized collection of ideas. ...
Boundaries of the Western Zhou Dynasty (1050 - 771 BC) in China The Zhou Dynasty (Chinese: ; pinyin: ; Wade-Giles: Chou Ch`ao; 1122 BC to 256 BC (ref) followed the Shang (Yin) Dynasty and preceded the Qin Dynasty in China. ...
Roland pledges his fealty to Charlemagne; from a manuscript of a chanson de geste. ...
Ranks
The sizes of troops and domains a male noble would command would be determined by his rank of peerage: - gong (duke or prince, ch. 公(爵) gōng),
- hou (marquis or marquess, ch. 侯(爵) hóu),
- bo (count or earl, ch. 伯(爵) bó),
- zi (viscount, ch. 子(爵) zǐ),
- nan (baron, ch. 男(爵) nán).
While before the Han Dynasty a peer with a place name in his title actually governed that place, it had only been nominally true since. Any male member of the nobility or gentry could be called a gongzi (公子 gōng zǐ) (or wangzi (王子 wáng zǐ) if he is a son of a king, i.e. prince). Later Han redirects here. ...
Zongfa Zongfa (宗法, Clan Law), which applied to all social classes, governed the primogeniture of rank and succession of other siblings. The eldest son of the consort would inherit the title and retained the same rank within the system. Other sons from the consort, concubines and mistresses would be given titles one rank lower than their father. As time went by, all terms had lost their original meanings nonetheless. Qing (卿), Daifu (大夫) and Shi (士) became synonyms of court officials. Physicians were often called Daifu during Late Imperial China. Referring to a male or self-reference of a male as Gongzi eventually became a way to raise one's mianzi (refer to Face (social custom)), and would indeed be considered flattery today.
Historiographic Implications Fengjian is particularly important to Marxist historiographical interpretation of Chinese history, as it signals the passage, in China, from slave society to feudal society.[2] Marxismtakes its name from the praxis â the synthesis of philosophy and political action â of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels. ...
Historiography is the study of the practice of history. ...
// i hate uuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu this is a stupd way og goverment that my teacher is wasting his time teaching me i dont care about Europe Peasants plowing in front of a castle, French manuscript c. ...
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