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the bureaucracy dominated Chinese government, and these officials were appointed by the emperor.
they didnt trust the chinese so they added more foreigners to the government. most chinese scholars became teachers
When foreigners made contact with the chinese the chinese
He did not trust the Chinese people.
The Chinese government was imperial.
Chinese regarded foreigners to be uncivilized, primitive, and inferior to themselves.
They tried to keep the Chinese out of high government offices because they thought the foreigners were more trustworthy because they had no local loyalties.
The Chinese considered all foreigners to be uncivilized and inferior to themselves. They regarded foreigners to be merchants
The ban was not a ban on foreigners. In 836 an imperial decree forbade the Chinese from having relations with "people of color" (foreigners). Provincial administrations were controlled by eunuch army supervisors, who were resented by officials, and factional conflicts between the Niu and Li political parties weakened the Tang regime. The ban was usefull in keeping the race intanct.
When foreigners made contact with the Chinese, they would often engage in trade, exchange of knowledge, and sometimes conflict. The Chinese government maintained a policy of isolationism at times, while also allowing limited interactions through designated ports and trade routes.
who were chinese scholor-officials
Confucius