Dear colleagues and friends,
Dr. Yuan CHEN and Dr. Ian Miller are going to deliver online talks at the
Ca'Foscari University of Venice. Please see below for details.
Sincerely,
Ya Zuo
Secretary, Society for Song, Yuan, and Conquest Dynasties
Online Virtual Lectures, April 29th, 15:30 (CEST)
Ca' Foscari University of Venice
(Zoom link below)
Yuan Julian Chen (Duke University): "Militarizing Nature in Medieval
Warfare: A Case Study from Medieval China. 960-1125"
Abstract: This talk will trace the history of the inception, preservation,
and destruction of an extensive defensive forest that once stood between
China’s Northern Song dynasty (960-1127) and the nomadic Kitan Liao empire
(916-1125). From early imperial China to the modern PRC, the Chinese state
has a long tradition of militarizing nature – rivers, forests, islands, and
so on – in warfare. The highly centralized state was (and still is) able to
rapidly mobilize massive manpower and resources to modify landscapes to
achieve its utilitarian goals in the short-term. Yet the social and
environmental consequences in the long-term often carried much little
weight in such large-scale landscape transformations. This talk provides
one case study from medieval history and also offers food for thought for
current affairs.
Ian Miller (St. John’s College): "Fir and Empire: Forestry, the State and
the Market in Early Modern China"
*Abstract: *Forestry was important to state-building efforts in the early
modern world. Timber and fuel were strategic goods needed for shipbuilding,
civil engineering, urban construction, iron smelting, and coin minting.
Many states in both Europe and Northeast Asia developed rules and
institutions to better control domestic supplies, while others without
substantial domestic woodlands turned to imports. But because it had
neither a large forestry bureaucracy nor chartered merchant companies,
China was often assumed to lack an effective forestry system entirely. In
fact, China long relied on a third strategy: a domestic forest market
dominated by small-scale, private producers. As early as 1150, and with
growing prevalence after 1500, landowners invested in planting timber. They
registered their property with the government, creating a de facto private
property regime. And they used private litigation–formally illegal–as they
developed simple land deeds and tenancy contracts into timber securities.
This private forestry enabled a large-scale environmental transformation,
as people cleared mixed forests across much of the south and replaced them
with plantations of fir (Cunninghamia lanceolata), pine, bamboo, and a
handful of other commercial species. In the short term, this forestry
market looked arguably more modern than its contemporaries elsewhere in the
world; in the long-run, it may have short-circuited the development of land
oversight and environmental science.
Zoom link HERE
https://unive.zoom.us/j/83051042967?pwd=M1BXelZkakdZZjd4c2h6TkpRVFYrQT09
Meeting ID: 830 5104 2967
Passcode: Dw6vcv
More information HERE https://www.unive.it/data/33113/26/60211
For further queries please write to niche@unive.it