Transcend,
From a book I got called the history of China. I just finished reading most of it, and yes An Lushan was hardly the only rebellion of that nature. The comment is certainly not racist. Its a general rule throughout history that mercenaries are less loyal to the state. They're from out of the state, and you pay them good money to try and keep them loyal, but it doesn't always work. An interesting phenomenon with barbarians near China is they could be incredibly loyal, but to a leader, not the state, since in tribal politics there was no stable nation-state, but people swore loyalty to specific leaders. When a leader would come along who commanded their respect, like Genghis Khan, they would be fiercely loyal, but when that person died, often their kingdom would die with them.
So my point is not that barbarians were inherently backstabbing people, but that their societies had different conceptions of what one expressed loyalty towards. Just one of many profound differences between nomadic, non-literate and agricultural, mostly literate (in medieval China) peoples.
Fred,
The Chin came from one of the northern border provinces, and as such, were better at cavalry than most Chinese. But their opponents lived in many walled cities, so to conquer China they used Chinese tactics: huge armies of infantry and crossbowmen, with plenty of siege weapons. You'll find infantry and crossbowmen make up the vast majority of figures in the First Emperor's tomb.
From a book I got called the history of China. I just finished reading most of it, and yes An Lushan was hardly the only rebellion of that nature. The comment is certainly not racist. Its a general rule throughout history that mercenaries are less loyal to the state. They're from out of the state, and you pay them good money to try and keep them loyal, but it doesn't always work. An interesting phenomenon with barbarians near China is they could be incredibly loyal, but to a leader, not the state, since in tribal politics there was no stable nation-state, but people swore loyalty to specific leaders. When a leader would come along who commanded their respect, like Genghis Khan, they would be fiercely loyal, but when that person died, often their kingdom would die with them.
So my point is not that barbarians were inherently backstabbing people, but that their societies had different conceptions of what one expressed loyalty towards. Just one of many profound differences between nomadic, non-literate and agricultural, mostly literate (in medieval China) peoples.
Fred,
The Chin came from one of the northern border provinces, and as such, were better at cavalry than most Chinese. But their opponents lived in many walled cities, so to conquer China they used Chinese tactics: huge armies of infantry and crossbowmen, with plenty of siege weapons. You'll find infantry and crossbowmen make up the vast majority of figures in the First Emperor's tomb.
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