The qualities that made buildings beautiful in premodern Chinese cities also made them dangerously flammable, and fire was a constant threat.
King Ling of Chu’s preference for his officials to be thin-waisted saw them practically starve themselves in efforts to win royal approval.
Used to train soldiers long before its benefits were taught to regular folk, exercise has become a matter of national resilience in China.
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s fall from prince to commoner mirrors how many disgraced royals in imperial China also lost their titles.
Asean’s consensus-driven approach, based on non-aggression, generally fosters regional peace, unlike the factious alliances in China’s past.
Many monuments built by the emperors of old were architectural marvels and stunning spectacles of power, but perilous in consequence.
The contradictory portraits of Zhu Yuanzhang, one of China’s most controversial rulers, reflect his complex historical image.
Long ago, the Chinese state of Song repeatedly helped end conflicts between powerful neighbours with a diplomatic heft that belied its size.
Christian groups prophesise paradisiacal new beginnings today, but similar visions existed throughout imperial Chinese history.
Zhonghang Yue’s reforming of Xiongnu puts the negative attitude often seen towards Malaysians-turned-Singaporeans into perspective.
From homes to temples, lion figures are ubiquitous in China. Why is an animal that has never lived in the wild there so culturally relevant?
New system to get durians to northern China faster reminds of how lychees were rushed to Emperor Xuanzong’s favourite consort at great cost.
For centuries, the ‘Three Departments, Six Ministries’ system, which included a Ministry of War, was at the heart of China’s governance.
Honorary titles have existed in China for millennia, and apart from a rejection of such notions in the 20th century, are still awarded.
The resolution of the temple’s recent shameful episode is much more civilised than the violent purges of Buddhism in China’s history.
Libraries were the preserve of rulers and officials for much of China’s history, but that started to change at the turn of the 20th century.
China and Russia have forged a deepening strategic partnership in recent years, but relations between the two have not always been so warm.
The Han, Tang, Song, Yuan, Ming and Qing dynasties were some of China’s most prominent. What was happening with them six decades in?
Opponents of Hong Kong’s Registration of Same-sex Partnerships Bill cite traditional values, but China has a history of being more accepting.
Tang dynasty poet Wang Bo’s poem on friends separated is a bittersweet encapsulation of what I feel towards my recently departed pal.
The Chinese started playing early forms of football and polo more than 2,000 years ago, and later games resembling modern golf and bowling.
Predicting the future was serious business during China’s Shang dynasty, when ‘oracle bones’ helped kings make big calls.
While emperors in Imperial China generally kept religion and governance separate, true theocracies could be found among breakaway regimes.
As China has shown at various periods in its history, the greater a civilisation, the more open and magnanimous it is to foreigners.
Yang Zhi’s insistence that his convoy hurry in the height of summer comes back to bite him in the Ming-dynasty novel Outlaws of the Marsh.
A complex series of ceremonies, the Three Letters and Six Rites aimed to ensure social recognition, family consent and spiritual blessing.
Muslims celebrate Eid al-Adha this weekend, which involves ritual animal sacrifice, something Chinese started performing in the Zhou dynasty.
Whether or not customs of Duanwu or Tuen Ng Festival can truly be ascribed to Qu Yuan’s drowning in 278BC, his life is worthy of celebration.
Donald Trump’s lies are so ludicrous only idiots or lapdogs could believe them. In Qin dynasty China, aides parroted a counsellor’s lie too.
How Chinese emperors’ titles, like papal ones, reflected their legacies and why their birth names were considered taboo during their reigns.