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Connectivity, Imperialism, and the Han Iron Industry Wengcheong Lam (Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology and Department of History, Chinese University of Hong Kong)

Connectivity, Imperialism, and the Han Iron Industry By Wengcheong Lam (Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology and Department of History, Chinese University of Hong Kong)

Summary

This book examines the rise of the iron industry during the Warring States and Western Han periods (ca. 400 BCE- 9 CE) in ancient China, which is characterized not only by various technological innovations but also as a remarkable phenomenon, which led to the widespread distribution of iron implements and the emergence of massive ironworks.

Connectivity, Imperialism, and the Han Iron Industry Summary

Connectivity, Imperialism, and the Han Iron Industry by Wengcheong Lam (Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology and Department of History, Chinese University of Hong Kong)

With Connectivity, Imperialism, and the Han Iron Industry, Lam Wengcheong combines archaeological and historical analyses to piece together fragmentary evidence and to refocus our gaze onto the economic and political mechanism that gave birth to an iron industry unique in the ancient world. Guiding readers through the macroscopic social settings of the iron industry and distribution patterns of iron implements to the microscopic organization of workplace and workers' foodways, Lam explores how iron production and transportation processes intersected with the transformation of the Han capital region in the Guanzhong basin. Using various lines of evidence of iron production in Guanzhong and its connection with other production centers, this book shows how the production and transportation of iron at various scales played a significant role in generating the connectivity between various parts of the Western Han empire, and casts new light on the workings of the economic system in imperial China.

Connectivity, Imperialism, and the Han Iron Industry will appeal to anyone interested in Chinese archaeology, the history of the Han empire, and the history of science and engineering in ancient China, as well as to scholars working on the comparative study of ancient imperialism, market exchange, and economic history.

About Wengcheong Lam (Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology and Department of History, Chinese University of Hong Kong)

Lam Wengcheong is Assistant Professor in the Department of Anthropology and Department of History at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. His work focuses on the economic system, development of metal techniques, and exchange network in early ancient China.

Table of Contents

Introduction; Part I: 1 The rise of iron and imperial state power; 2 The rise of the capital region and the management of craft industry during the Han Dynasty; 3 Iron making in the center of the Han state; Part II: 4 Organization and labor division of ironworks; 5 Food and economic embeddedness of iron production communities; 6 Market integration and the distribution system for iron goods; Conclusion: management of iron and the shihuo system; Glossary; Bibliography; Index.

Additional information

NPB9781032194479
9781032194479
1032194472
Connectivity, Imperialism, and the Han Iron Industry by Wengcheong Lam (Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology and Department of History, Chinese University of Hong Kong)
New
Hardback
Taylor & Francis Ltd
2022-08-05
304
N/A
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