WANG Wenchen. On the Marketplaces for Monopoly Market Trade between Southern Song Dynasty and Jin Dynasty[J]. Journal of Neijiang Normal University, 2024, 39(3): 66-69. DOI: 10.13603/j.cnki.51-1621/z.2024.03.011
Citation: WANG Wenchen. On the Marketplaces for Monopoly Market Trade between Southern Song Dynasty and Jin Dynasty[J]. Journal of Neijiang Normal University, 2024, 39(3): 66-69. DOI: 10.13603/j.cnki.51-1621/z.2024.03.011

On the Marketplaces for Monopoly Market Trade between Southern Song Dynasty and Jin Dynasty

  • After Shaoxing Peace Treaty(1141), the Southern Song and Jin Dynasties officially established marketplaces for monopoly market trade. The Southern Song Dynasty established six market places, instead of twelve. Among them, the Dengcheng Marketplace was relocated from the original Zaoyang Marketplace, and there were five coexisting marketplaces. The six places, including Beishenzhen in Chuzhou, should not be considered as the locations of marketplaces by Southern Song Dynasty. The Southern Song Dynasty had marketplaces in Sichuan and Shaanxi, with the Shaanxi Marketplace located in the Zaojiao Fortress of Tianshui Army. The Jin Dynasty established a total of eleven marketplaces, not twelve. The marketplace named Xizhou in the eighth year of Taihe Reign (1208) was actually a renamed Caizhou Marketplace.
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