1665 in China
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See also: | Other events of 1665 History of China • Timeline • Years |
Events from the year 1665 in China.
Incumbents
- Kangxi Emperor (4th year)
Viceroys
- Viceroy of Zhili — Miao Cheng (to July 4)
- Viceroy of Zhili, Shandong and Henan — Zhu Changzuo (July 13 –)
- Viceroy of Zhejiang — Zhao Tingchen
- Viceroy of Fujian — Zhu Changzuo
- Viceroy of Huguang — Zhang Changgeng
- Viceroy of Shaanxi — Bai Rumei
- Viceroy of Guangdong — Li Qifeng[note 1]
- Viceroy of Guangxi — Qu Jinmei[note 2]
- Viceroy of Liangguang — Lu Xingzu [note 3]
- Viceroy of Yun-Gui — Bian Sanyuan [note 4]
- Viceroy of Sichuan — Li Guoying
- Viceroy of Jiangnan — Lang Tingzuo
- authority transferred to Viceroy of Liangguang
- authority transferred to Viceroy of Liangguang
- office consolidated from Guangdong and Guangxi Viceroities
- office consolidated from Yunnan and Guizhou Viceroities
Events
- October or November — Kangxi Emperor marries Lady Hešeri, grand-daughter of his regent Sonin and she becomes Empress Xiaochengren[1]
- Another planned Qing invasion of the Kingdom of Tungning fails to occur due to a typhoon[2][3]
- An embassy from the East-India Company, a Dutch-language account of China by Johan Nieuhof is published. The book served as a major influence in the rise of chinoiserie in the early eighteenth century[4]
- Sino-Russian border conflicts
References
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- Wang, Sizhi; Feng, Erkang, eds. (2010), Kangxi shidian 康熙事典 [Events of the Kangxi reign], Beijing: Forbidden City Press, pp. 64–65, ISBN 9787513400190
- Spence, Jonathan D. In Search of Modern China. W. W. Norton & Company. p. 44.
- Wong, Young-tsu (2017). China’s Conquest of Taiwan in the Seventeenth Century: Victory at Full Moon. Springer. p. 113.
- Nieuhof, Johan. "An embassy from the East-India Company of the United Provinces, to the Grand Tartar Cham, emperor of China; Englished and set forth with their several sculptures by John Ogilby". Jacob van Meurs. Retrieved 7 May 2014.
- Zhao, Erxun (1928). Draft History of Qing (Qing Shi Gao) (in Chinese).
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