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- books?vid=ISBN0731509013 accessdate "2015-01-02".
- books?vid=ISBN0731509013 author1 "Rafe de Crespigny".
- books?vid=ISBN0731509013 authorlink1 "Rafe de Crespigny".
- books?vid=ISBN0731509013 chapter "Chapter 8 Empire in the South".
- books?vid=ISBN0731509013 chapter "Empire in the South".
- books?vid=ISBN0731509013 date "1990".
- books?vid=ISBN0731509013 edition "2004 Internet".
- books?vid=ISBN0731509013 first "Rafe".
- books?vid=ISBN0731509013 isCitedBy Eastern_Wu.
- books?vid=ISBN0731509013 isbn "0731509013".
- books?vid=ISBN0731509013 last "de Crespigny".
- books?vid=ISBN0731509013 location "Cambera".
- books?vid=ISBN0731509013 publisher "Australian National University, Faculty of Asian Studies".
- books?vid=ISBN0731509013 publisher "Faculty of Asian Studies, The Australian National University".
- books?vid=ISBN0731509013 quote "Outside the court and the capital, moreover, great independent authority was held by these local families, which consolidated their power through the acquisition of tenants and other dependents who sought protection from the uncertainty of the times and the demands of government. This development, already begun in the time of Han, meant that the power of the central government was limited, and its capacity to exploit the resources of the state was heavily restricted. To a degree, the state of Wu was run for the protection and the benefit of the great families who were its nominal subjects.".
- books?vid=ISBN0731509013 quote "Politics at court were largely dominated by the intrigues and conflicts of powerful individuals and families. In particular, unlike the bureaucracy of Han, substantial official positions, and particularly those involving the command of troops, were regularly transferred by inheritance from one generation to the next. In the course of time, however, there was a shift of influence in the central government from the first generation of men who had risen to power in the early years of the state, many of them from the north and all chosen for their personal ability and loyalty, to men from south of the Yangzi, whose families had prospered under the Sun regime.".
- books?vid=ISBN0731509013 quote "Though Sun Quan had claimed the imperial title in 229, and made some pretence of establishing the forms of an imperial court, the government of Wu continued to reflect the structure of a warlord state. In human terms, the time of the foundation of Wu was dominated by military commanders who held authority through their personal courage and energy, and were celebrated for their individualism, and it was no small achievement that Sun Quan was able to keep such a group under control.".
- books?vid=ISBN0731509013 ref "harv".
- books?vid=ISBN0731509013 title "Generals of the South: The Foundation and Early History of the Three Kingdoms State of Wu".
- books?vid=ISBN0731509013 title "Generals of the south : the foundation and early history of the Three Kingdoms state of Wu".
- books?vid=ISBN0731509013 url gos_index.html.
- books?vid=ISBN0731509013 url "https://digitalcollections.anu.edu.au/html/1885/42048/gos_ch8.pdf".
- books?vid=ISBN0731509013 year "1990".