Abstract

Abstract. In ancient China, shifts in regional productivity of agriculture and animal husbandry, caused by climate change, either led to wars or peaceful relations between nomadic and farming groups. During the period spanning the Western Han Dynasty to the Tang Dynasty, 367 wars were waged between these groups. While 69 % of the wars were initiated by nomads, 62.4 % were won by the farming groups. On a centennial timescale, the battlegrounds were mostly in northern areas (at an average latitude of 38.92° N) during warm periods, moving southward (at an average latitude of 34.66° N) during cold periods. On a decadal timescale, warm climates corresponded to a high incidence of wars (a correlation coefficient of 0.293). While farming groups were inclined to initiate wars during dry and cold periods, their chances of achieving victory were reduced at such times. The main reasons for this are, first, that a warm climate provided a solid material foundation for nomadic and farming groups, contributing especially to enhanced productivity among the former. However, the overriding desire of nomadic groups to expand essential subsistence means led to wars. Second, during cold periods, farming groups moved to and settled in the south, while nomadic groups occupied the Central Plain. Thus, the locations of the battlefields also changed. While other factors also influenced these wars, climate change served as a backdrop, playing an indirect role in wars between these groups.

Highlights

  • The association between violent conflicts and environmental change has attracted much attention recently

  • This paper focuses on the relationship between climate change and wars of invasion between nomadic and farming groups in northern China in 206 BC–AD 906

  • This paper focuses on the period from the Western Han Dynasty to the Tang Dynasty, constructs the sequence of the interethnic wars at this time based on historical documents, and compares this sequence with that of simultaneous climate changes to analyse the influence of climate change on these wars

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Summary

Introduction

The association between violent conflicts and environmental change has attracted much attention recently. Based on the ancient administrative divisions in the Historical Atlas of China (Tan, 1982), Wang Huichang studied the latitude change in the southern boundary of the national system of government established in the southward migration process of the northern nomadic groups, starting with the Qin and Han dynasties. He concluded that in warm periods, the nomadic and farming groups maintained a peaceful relationship, while in cold periods, the nomads moved southward, leading to instability of the Central Plain system and confrontations between the two groups (Wang, 1996). This paper focuses on the period from the Western Han Dynasty to the Tang Dynasty, constructs the sequence of the interethnic wars at this time based on historical documents, and compares this sequence with that of simultaneous climate changes to analyse the influence of climate change on these wars

Reconstruction of the sequence of wars between nomadic and farming groups
Climate change sequences
War frequency
Initiators and victors of war
Classification of war periods
Impact of the climate on ethnic wars
Ethnic wars and climate change
Discussion
Findings
Other factors influencing wars between the farming and nomadic groups
Conclusions
Full Text
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