英文摘要 |
This paper examines Emperor K'ang-his's heir-selection, frontier expansion and arrangement for his historical evaluation to explain his reaction to the long lasting anxiety. Using the psychological concept of "anxiety," this paper explores three aspects that troubled Emperor K'ang-hsi's latter part of reign. First, after K'ang-hsi was crowned over 30 years, tensions between the emperor and the crown prince intensified for the crown prince failed his task when K'ang-his went on the Galden expedition. Second, when the increasing military pressure from Junggar Khanate Galdan and their successors impeded the empire's frontier expansion, the imperial authority was challenged not only from outer military campaigns, but also from the unsettled heir succession process, which also led to, thirdly, the anxiety of K'ang-hsi emperor's reflection upon his own historical evaluation. Through resolution of internal power struggle, diversion of imperial frontier expansion towards inner Asia, and exercise of influence upon possible historical evaluation in advance, Emperor K'ang-hsi copied with his anxieties active measures in order to consolidate imperial power. |