Manjugurun: Difference between revisions
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===Prehistoric and ancient eras=== | ===Prehistoric and ancient eras=== | ||
Several ethnic groups, including the Evenki, the Nanai, the Ulchs, the Khitans, and the Jurchens, inhabited today's Manjugurun in ancient times. Several Chinese dynasties ruled over parts of Manjugurun at various times throughout the history of the Manchus, usually along the coasts. The Chinese also established tributary relationships with the tribes. | |||
Manjugurun was also ruled by the Korean kingdoms of Goguryeo, Gojoseon, and Buyeo. The Korean kingdoms may feature sizable Tungusic-speaking minorities and perhaps a Tungusic aristocracy, according to Finnish scientist Juha Janhunen. | |||
The ancestors of the Jurchens were made to serve as tributaries when the Khitans of Inner Mongolia and Manchuria created the Liao kingdom, which ruled over Northern China and Manjugurun, between the tenth and eleventh centuries. The earliest state was the Khitan empire. | |||
===Qing era=== | ===Qing era=== |
Revision as of 00:39, 16 December 2022
Manjugurun is an independent state located in East Asia. It is bordered on the north by Russia, on the west by Mongolia, on the southwest by China, and on the southeast by Korea. Cacungga is the capital, and Mukden, the former capital, is the largest city. It has one of the world's largest populations, with 121,204,300 people. Manjugurun is a country formed by numerous ethnic groups such as the Xianbei, the Khitans, and the Jurchen which became the Manchus. After invading China in the 1600s, it established the Qing Dynasty until 1911. It fell under Japanese domination in 1932 and a puppet state was established there. After the Second World War, it became a Soviet satellite and after the fall of communism in 1991, it adopted representative democracy, but not without controversy.
History
Prehistoric and ancient eras
Several ethnic groups, including the Evenki, the Nanai, the Ulchs, the Khitans, and the Jurchens, inhabited today's Manjugurun in ancient times. Several Chinese dynasties ruled over parts of Manjugurun at various times throughout the history of the Manchus, usually along the coasts. The Chinese also established tributary relationships with the tribes.
Manjugurun was also ruled by the Korean kingdoms of Goguryeo, Gojoseon, and Buyeo. The Korean kingdoms may feature sizable Tungusic-speaking minorities and perhaps a Tungusic aristocracy, according to Finnish scientist Juha Janhunen. The ancestors of the Jurchens were made to serve as tributaries when the Khitans of Inner Mongolia and Manchuria created the Liao kingdom, which ruled over Northern China and Manjugurun, between the tenth and eleventh centuries. The earliest state was the Khitan empire.