Centre for Quantitative History

States and Wars: China’s Long March Towards Unity and its Consequences, 221 BC – 1911 AD

States and Wars: China’s Long March Towards Unity and its Consequences, 221 BC – 1911 AD

Published Date
Published Date
November 16, 2024
Master Category
Research Cluster
State Capacity, Institutions and Development
Series
Series
CQH Working Paper No. 0008
Copyright
Copyright

We examine the long-term pattern of state formation and the mythical historical Chinese unity under one single political regime based on the compilation of a large geocoded annual data series of political regimes and incidences of warfare between 221 BC and 1911 AD. Guided by a carefully constructed historical framework and narrative, we classify our data sets into two types of regimes – agrarian and nomadic – and three types of warfare– agrarian/nomadic, agrarian/agrarian and internal rebellions – and applying an Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) model, we find that nomadic-agrarian warfare and internal rebellion strengthens unification but agrarian/agrarian warfare entrenches fragmentation. Our paper offers a comprehensive analysis on both the historical processes and driving force leading to China’s eventual unity in a comparative and global context.

Author(s)