Nouveauté
The Northern Song Dynasty: A History of China. A History of China, #21
Par :Formats :
Disponible dans votre compte client Decitre ou Furet du Nord dès validation de votre commande. Le format ePub est :
- Compatible avec une lecture sur My Vivlio (smartphone, tablette, ordinateur)
- Compatible avec une lecture sur liseuses Vivlio
- Pour les liseuses autres que Vivlio, vous devez utiliser le logiciel Adobe Digital Edition. Non compatible avec la lecture sur les liseuses Kindle, Remarkable et Sony

Notre partenaire de plateforme de lecture numérique où vous retrouverez l'ensemble de vos ebooks gratuitement
Pour en savoir plus sur nos ebooks, consultez notre aide en ligne ici
- FormatePub
- ISBN978-91-89998-62-9
- EAN9789189998629
- Date de parution27/07/2025
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurHui Wang
Résumé
The Northern Song Dynasty: A History of China, PART THREE, takes you straight into the thick of one of China's most turbulent eras, where big dreams met brutal politics. Wang Anshi's sweeping reforms promised a stronger country-but what followed was tension, resistance, and court infighting that never let up. The emperor backed him, then doubted him. Ministers were pushed out, dragged back, and pushed out again.
And when poets started getting punished just for writing the wrong lines (hello, Wutai Poetry Case), things got ugly fast. Behind the scenes, everyone wanted a piece of the throne. Cai Que wasn't just playing politics-he was gunning for power. While the emperor sat in the shadows, others called the shots. Reforms were scrapped, then revived, and suddenly everyone had to choose a side. The Yuanyou Party Struggles weren't just about policy-they were about survival.
Meanwhile, the "avenger emperor" took the throne, tossing aside his own empress and rewriting the game. Then came Huizong. Young, gifted, and totally unprepared. With art on his mind and chaos at his feet, he walked into a court already on fire. The Cai family tightened its grip, and before long, real power lived outside the throne. Eunuchs stirred the pot. Ministers played king. And the emperor? He painted.
As the empire cracked, nobody noticed-until it was too late. You'll meet chancellors who pulled strings like puppet masters, and emperors who didn't see the storm until it hit. Cai Jing rose like a rocket, surrounded by flatterers and backstabbers. The court turned into a battleground where loyalty got you nowhere and silence was safer than truth. These weren't just bad decisions-they were disasters waiting to happen.
It all builds to the Jingkang Incident-where everything crashes. You'll feel it coming, but when it hits, it still shocks. This isn't just history. It's a slow-motion train wreck you can't stop watching. Packed with drama, ambition, and betrayal, this book pulls you into the final chapters of the Northern Song-and doesn't let go.
And when poets started getting punished just for writing the wrong lines (hello, Wutai Poetry Case), things got ugly fast. Behind the scenes, everyone wanted a piece of the throne. Cai Que wasn't just playing politics-he was gunning for power. While the emperor sat in the shadows, others called the shots. Reforms were scrapped, then revived, and suddenly everyone had to choose a side. The Yuanyou Party Struggles weren't just about policy-they were about survival.
Meanwhile, the "avenger emperor" took the throne, tossing aside his own empress and rewriting the game. Then came Huizong. Young, gifted, and totally unprepared. With art on his mind and chaos at his feet, he walked into a court already on fire. The Cai family tightened its grip, and before long, real power lived outside the throne. Eunuchs stirred the pot. Ministers played king. And the emperor? He painted.
As the empire cracked, nobody noticed-until it was too late. You'll meet chancellors who pulled strings like puppet masters, and emperors who didn't see the storm until it hit. Cai Jing rose like a rocket, surrounded by flatterers and backstabbers. The court turned into a battleground where loyalty got you nowhere and silence was safer than truth. These weren't just bad decisions-they were disasters waiting to happen.
It all builds to the Jingkang Incident-where everything crashes. You'll feel it coming, but when it hits, it still shocks. This isn't just history. It's a slow-motion train wreck you can't stop watching. Packed with drama, ambition, and betrayal, this book pulls you into the final chapters of the Northern Song-and doesn't let go.
The Northern Song Dynasty: A History of China, PART THREE, takes you straight into the thick of one of China's most turbulent eras, where big dreams met brutal politics. Wang Anshi's sweeping reforms promised a stronger country-but what followed was tension, resistance, and court infighting that never let up. The emperor backed him, then doubted him. Ministers were pushed out, dragged back, and pushed out again.
And when poets started getting punished just for writing the wrong lines (hello, Wutai Poetry Case), things got ugly fast. Behind the scenes, everyone wanted a piece of the throne. Cai Que wasn't just playing politics-he was gunning for power. While the emperor sat in the shadows, others called the shots. Reforms were scrapped, then revived, and suddenly everyone had to choose a side. The Yuanyou Party Struggles weren't just about policy-they were about survival.
Meanwhile, the "avenger emperor" took the throne, tossing aside his own empress and rewriting the game. Then came Huizong. Young, gifted, and totally unprepared. With art on his mind and chaos at his feet, he walked into a court already on fire. The Cai family tightened its grip, and before long, real power lived outside the throne. Eunuchs stirred the pot. Ministers played king. And the emperor? He painted.
As the empire cracked, nobody noticed-until it was too late. You'll meet chancellors who pulled strings like puppet masters, and emperors who didn't see the storm until it hit. Cai Jing rose like a rocket, surrounded by flatterers and backstabbers. The court turned into a battleground where loyalty got you nowhere and silence was safer than truth. These weren't just bad decisions-they were disasters waiting to happen.
It all builds to the Jingkang Incident-where everything crashes. You'll feel it coming, but when it hits, it still shocks. This isn't just history. It's a slow-motion train wreck you can't stop watching. Packed with drama, ambition, and betrayal, this book pulls you into the final chapters of the Northern Song-and doesn't let go.
And when poets started getting punished just for writing the wrong lines (hello, Wutai Poetry Case), things got ugly fast. Behind the scenes, everyone wanted a piece of the throne. Cai Que wasn't just playing politics-he was gunning for power. While the emperor sat in the shadows, others called the shots. Reforms were scrapped, then revived, and suddenly everyone had to choose a side. The Yuanyou Party Struggles weren't just about policy-they were about survival.
Meanwhile, the "avenger emperor" took the throne, tossing aside his own empress and rewriting the game. Then came Huizong. Young, gifted, and totally unprepared. With art on his mind and chaos at his feet, he walked into a court already on fire. The Cai family tightened its grip, and before long, real power lived outside the throne. Eunuchs stirred the pot. Ministers played king. And the emperor? He painted.
As the empire cracked, nobody noticed-until it was too late. You'll meet chancellors who pulled strings like puppet masters, and emperors who didn't see the storm until it hit. Cai Jing rose like a rocket, surrounded by flatterers and backstabbers. The court turned into a battleground where loyalty got you nowhere and silence was safer than truth. These weren't just bad decisions-they were disasters waiting to happen.
It all builds to the Jingkang Incident-where everything crashes. You'll feel it coming, but when it hits, it still shocks. This isn't just history. It's a slow-motion train wreck you can't stop watching. Packed with drama, ambition, and betrayal, this book pulls you into the final chapters of the Northern Song-and doesn't let go.