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| {{DISPLAYTITLE:Chinese Nobility}} | | {{DISPLAYTITLE:Chinese Nobility}} |
| {{breadcrumb | | {{Chinese-sidebar}}{{breadcrumb |
| | link1=[[Chinese Genealogy|Chinese Genealogy]] | | | link1=[[Chinese Genealogy|Chinese Genealogy]] |
| | link2= | | | link2= |
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| | link5=[[Chinese Nobility|Nobility]] | | | link5=[[Chinese Nobility|Nobility]] |
| }}{{Chinese-sidebar}} | | }}<br> |
| <br> | | [[Image:Geographylogo.png|20px|Geographylogo.png]] '''In other languages:''' [[Chinese:華人名門望族|中文]] | [[Chinese Nobility|English]]<br><br> |
| The aristocratic families in China were never a single, unified group. It took centuries for a clearly defined aristocracy to emerge, and even then, new families appeared as old ones died out or declined. Moreover, the country was politically divided for extended periods of time, with parts ruled by non-Chinese. This created regional and ethnic differences, which eventually distinguished groups of aristocratic families as a social category. | | The aristocratic families in China were never a single, unified group. It took centuries for a clearly defined aristocracy to emerge, and even then, new families appeared as old ones died out or declined. Moreover, the country was politically divided for extended periods of time, with parts ruled by non-Chinese. This created regional and ethnic differences, which eventually distinguished groups of aristocratic families as a social category. |
| __TOC__ | | __TOC__ |