I wasn’t clear, happens a lot with me.
What the Chinese,
Han and other “minorities,” learned from the Mongols, especially, was the “art of empire.”
Prior to about 1115, when the
Jin (金) (as opposed to the other
Jin (晋)) took over, the Chinese – except for the remarkable and
sui generis Tang (唐) – were generally inept imperialists, in fact they were so divided that they couldn’t even unite their own “country” much less make it into an empire.
The
Han, because of their sheer numbers and the richness of their culture,
Sinicized the invaders but there are still perceived “differences.”
(Parenthetical anecdote: Some years ago some friends, a married couple, invited me to join them at a luncheon in honour of the husband’s parents. I was a little reluctant because I understood that the wife and her mother-in-law were, to be kind,
at daggers drawn. (Chinese mothers-in-law are a bit notorious and put most of the
dragons in our, Western, mother-in-law jokes to shame.) Anyway I went and, because my Chinese is totally inadequate, the conversations were able to flow past me like deep water over a pebble. My friends translated bits and pieces, to keep me “in the loop” but it was obvious, thanks to body language and facial expressions – which are pretty much the same in China as in the West, that mother-in-law was “putting the boots” to daughter-in-law, while father-in-law and husband tried to divert my (and the children’s) attention away from them. But, suddenly, it all changed: mother-in-law went quite pale, then blushed furiously, daughter-in-law/wife beamed and the body language reversed itself: mother-in-law was submissive. An hour or so later, as we walked away, I finally said: “OK, what was
all that about?” Wife, still beaming, said,
“I reminded her that she and her oh so smart son,” (husband has a PhD in physics from China’s famous
Tsinghua University)
”married above their station. I am Han,” she pronounced,
”and they are Manchu.” Now, the
Manchu “minority” is, for all intents and purposes, gone, fully
Sinicized for
generations centuries – more so, I would suggest, that the Scots are
Anglicized, but the
Han still look down their noses at them!)
My point, finally, is that the Chinese
were a great empire; it crumbled and was rebuilt and crumbled again and is, right now, being rebuilt yet again. This is the difference between China and Europe: the Chinese have rebounded because, I
think they “learn” from their history. (I know Mussolini tried, but he was hardly a Trajan, was he?)
(Another parenthetical anecdote: the Chinese may be the only people to “celebrate” their
humiliations. During those interminably boring,
Stalinist 60th anniversary celebrations there were several references to China’s great
national humiliations. One, of which I took note, involved the flag raising. There were a carefully noted 169 steps to the flag pole, representing the 169 years since
1840, when, in the 1st Opium War the British humiliated the Chinese at the Pearl River Delta. The goal, discussed in the English TV coverage, was to remind the Chinese viewers that China is recovering (not
has recovered) from humiliation by foreigners. (Westerners are, generally, called
foreigners, Russians (and many others) are still, very often, called
barbarians - if the speaker thinks the stranger might not understand.)
The Chinese are different and culture does matter, but I
think that the calculus of imperialism is pretty standard, across the board. It
appears to me that the Chinese have the ability to comprehend that calculus (so, probably, does everyone else) and they have the resources (geopolitical “position,” population and hard and soft power) and the
will to apply it in their region and the world. That’s what I
believe they learned from the
barbarians.
This is the
Social bit in the title.
Edit: two typos