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This Open Access book marks the beginning of a new era in the study of Chinese history. Since the beginning of the computer age, quantitative techniques have been increasingly used to study specific topics like family, population, and living standards in China's past. However, sample sizes have usually been small due to either historical archives' availability constraints or limited human processing capacity. With much increased computing power and machine-assisted reading/processing capacity, many big historical databases have become available, offering quantitative historians and social scientists great opportunities to study China's past development experience. This volume showcases a collection of new findings concerning China's political, social, and economic history and typically based on newly constructed large historical datasets. Most of the work has involved an interdisciplinary team of economists, sociologists, political scientists, historians and econometricians, demonstrating how new big data and quantitative methods may be brought to bear on some of the biggest questions related to China's development over the past three millennia and on the implications of distant past events on contemporary China. Topics covered range from the roles of war, state formation, religion, culture, finance and institutions in long-run development and technological innovations, to regicide history, to the organization and capacity of the bureaucracy. Contributors include leading figures in the quantitative study of China's long-run socioeconomic and political history. This volume will be of value to anyone with an interest in Chinese economic, political, social and/or institutional history as well as anyone interested in quantitative history more generally.
List of contents
War and Demand for Technology: How Unification Disincentivized Innovations in Historical China.- War and Demand for Technology: Archaeological Evidence from Early China.- Quantitative History of Regicide in China.- War Breeds Warriors: Long-term Impact of Historical Conflicts on Warrior Culture Formation.- Origin and Deployment of Qing Military Officers by Province, 1786-1908 CE.- The Impact of Crises on the Careers of County Magistrates in Qing China, 1830-1912 CE.- How to Finance Wars: The Rise of the Securities in Northern Song China during the 1040s Crises.- Fiscal Revenue in Ming and Qing China (1368-1911 CE): a Quantification.- Why Did Qing China Fail to Establish Fiscal Federalism between the Central and Local Governments.-The Rise and Fall of Traditional Banks in Historical China: A Political Explanation.- Protestantism and Agricultural Development: Evidence from China, 1920s-30s.- Name Index.- Subject Index.