Population collapses in the pre-modern period: case study of the Fuping County,Northwest China |
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Authors: | Jie Fei David D Zhang |
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Institution: | 1. Institute of Chinese Historical Geography, Fudan University, Shanghai, China;2. Department of Geography, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China |
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Abstract: | The pre-modern history of population change in the Fuping County (Shaanxi Province, China) during the Ming and Qing Dynasties (AD 1368–1911) was reconstructed using historical sources. The Fuping County experienced two major population collapses, i.e. the late Ming Dynasty (1550–1640s) and the 1860–1880s. The first one was caused by the great AD 1556 earthquake and the extreme droughts and warfare in the 1630–1640s. The second one was caused by warfare and extreme droughts. As a whole, natural disasters, including extreme drought and great earthquake, were the key direct causes of population collapse, and climatic cooling would be a potential indirect cause. It is very interesting that population collapses occurred almost synchronously in the Fuping County and whole China, and the trends of population change were also very similar. Climate–population relationship in China would be valid at finer geographic level, and climatic cooling could be a potential indirect cause of population collapse. |
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Keywords: | Population collapse Fuping County earthquake extreme drought |
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