East Asia

Author: www.NiNa.Az
Feb 04, 2025 / 17:26

East Asia is a geographical and cultural region of Asia including China Japan Mongolia North Korea South Korea and Taiwa

East Asia
East Asia
East Asia

East Asia is a geographical and cultural region of Asia including China, Japan, Mongolia, North Korea, South Korea, and Taiwan. Additionally, Hong Kong and Macau are the two special administrative regions of China. The economies of China, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan are among the world's largest and most prosperous. East Asia borders North Asia to the north, Southeast Asia to the south, South Asia to the southwest, and Central Asia to the west. To its east is the Pacific Ocean.

East Asia
image
Area11,840,000 km2 (4,570,000 sq mi) (3rd)
Population1.6 billion (2023; 2nd)
Population density141.9 km2 (54.8 sq mi)
GDP (PPP)$47.6 trillion (2024)
GDP (nominal)$25.7 trillion (2024)
GDP per capita$16,000 (nominal)
DemonymEast Asian
Countries
6 countries
Dependencies
Two special administrative regions of China
  • image Hong Kong
  • image Macau
Languages
Time zonesUTC+7, UTC+8 & UTC+9
Largest citiesList of urban areas:
  • Beijing
  • Busan
  • Chengdu
  • Daegu
  • Guangzhou
  • Hangzhou
  • Hong Kong
  • Kaohsiung
  • Macau
  • Nagoya
  • Nanjing
  • Osaka
  • Seoul
  • Shanghai
  • Shenzhen
  • Taipei
  • Tokyo
  • Yokohama
UN M49 code030 – Eastern Asia
142Asia
001World
East Asia
Chinese name
Simplified Chinese东亚/东亚细亚
Traditional Chinese東亞/東亞細亞
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinDōngyǎ/Dōngyà or Dōng Yǎxìyǎ/Dōng Yàxìyà
Wade–GilesTung1-ya3
Wu
Romanizationton ia
Gan
RomanizationTung1 nga3
Hakka
Romanizationdung24 a31
Yue: Cantonese
Jyutpingdung1 aa3
Southern Min
Hokkien POJTang-a
Tibetan name
Tibetanཨེ་ཤ་ཡ་ཤར་མ་
Korean name
Hangul동아시아/동아세아/동아
Hanja東아시아/東亞細亞/東亞
Transcriptions
Revised RomanizationDong Asia/Dong Asea/Dong A
Mongolian name
Mongolian CyrillicЗүүн Ази
ᠵᠡᠭᠦᠨ ᠠᠽᠢ
Transcriptions
SASM/GNCDzuun Azi
Japanese name
Kanaひがしアジア/とうあ
Kyūjitai東亞細亞/東亞
Shinjitai東亜細亜(東アジア)/東亜
Transcriptions
Revised HepburnHigashi Ajia/Tō-A
Kunrei-shikiHigasi Azia/Tou-A
Uyghur name
Uyghurشەرقىي ئاسىي
Transcriptions
Latin Yëziqisherqiy asiy

East Asia, especially Chinese civilization, is regarded as one of the earliest cradles of civilization. Other ancient civilizations in East Asia that still exist as independent countries in the present day include the Japanese, Korean, and Mongolian civilizations. Various other civilizations existed as independent polities in East Asia in the past but have since been absorbed into neighbouring civilizations in the present day, such as Tibet, Manchuria, and Ryukyu (Okinawa), among many others. Taiwan has a relatively young history in the region after the prehistoric era; originally, it was a major site of Austronesian civilisation prior to colonisation by European colonial powers and China from the 17th century onward. For thousands of years, China was the leading civilization in the region, exerting influence on its neighbours. Historically, societies in East Asia have fallen within the Chinese sphere of influence, and East Asian vocabularies and scripts are often derived from Classical Chinese and Chinese script. The Chinese calendar serves as the root from which many other East Asian calendars are derived.

Major religions in East Asia include Buddhism (mostly Mahayana),Confucianism and Neo-Confucianism, Taoism,ancestral worship, and Chinese folk religion in Mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan, Shinto in Japan, and Christianity and Musok in Korea.Tengerism and Tibetan Buddhism are prevalent among Mongols and Tibetans while other religions such as Shamanism are widespread among the indigenous populations of northeastern China such as the Manchus. The major languages in East Asia include Mandarin Chinese, Japanese, and Korean. The major ethnic groups of East Asia include the Han in China and Taiwan, Yamato in Japan, Koreans in North and South Korea, and Mongols in Mongolia. There are 76 officially-recognized minority or indigenous ethnic groups in East Asia; 55 native to mainland China (including Hui, Manchus, Chinese Mongols, Tibetans, Uyghurs, and Zhuang in the frontier regions), 16 native to the island of Taiwan (collectively known as Taiwanese indigenous peoples), one native to the major Japanese island of Hokkaido (the Ainu) and four native to Mongolia (Turkic peoples). The Ryukyuan people are an unrecognized ethnic group indigenous to the Ryukyu Islands in southern Japan, which stretch from Kyushu to Taiwan. There are also several unrecognized indigenous ethnic groups in mainland China and Taiwan.

East Asians comprise around 1.7 billion people, making up about 33% of the population in Continental Asia and 20% of the global population.[needs update] The region is home to major world metropolises such as BeijingTianjin, BusanDaeguUlsanChangwon, Guangzhou, Hong Kong, OsakaKyotoKobe, Seoul, Shanghai, Shenzhen, Taipei, and Tokyo. Although the coastal and riparian areas of the region form one of the world's most populated places, the population in Mongolia and Western China, both landlocked areas, is very sparsely distributed, with Mongolia having the lowest population density of a sovereign state. The overall population density of the region is 133 inhabitants per square kilometre (340/sq mi), about three times the world average of 45/km2 (120/sq mi).[when?][citation needed]

History

Ancient era

China was the first region settled in East Asia and was undoubtedly the core of East Asian civilization from where other parts of East Asia were formed. The various other regions in East Asia were selective in the Chinese influences they adopted into their local customs. Historian Ping-ti Ho referred to China as the cradle of Eastern civilization, in parallel with the cradle of Middle Eastern civilization along the Fertile Crescent encompassing Mesopotamia and Ancient Egypt as well as the cradle of Western civilization encompassing Ancient Greece.

Chinese civilization emerged early, and prefigured other East Asian civilisations. Throughout history, imperial China would exert cultural, economic, technological, and political influence on its neighbours. Succeeding Chinese dynasties exerted enormous influence across East Asia culturally, economically, politically and militarily for over two millennia. The tributary system of China shaped much of East Asia's history for over two millennia due to Imperial China's economic and cultural influence over the region, and thus played a huge role in the history of East Asia in particular. Imperial China's cultural preeminence not only led the country to become East Asia's first literate nation in the entire region, it also supplied Japan and Korea with Chinese loanwords and linguistic influences rooted in their writing systems.

Under Emperor Wu of Han, the Han dynasty made China the regional powerhouse in East Asia, projecting much of its imperial influence onto its neighbours. Han China hosted the largest unified population in East Asia, the most literate and urbanised as well as being the most economically developed, as well as the most technologically and culturally advanced civilization in the region at the time. Cultural and religious interaction between the Chinese and other regional East Asian dynasties and kingdoms occurred. China's impact and influence on Korea began with the Han dynasty's northeastern expansion in 108 BC when the Han Chinese conquered the northern part of the Korean peninsula and established a province called Lelang. Chinese influences were transmitted and soon took root in Korea through the inclusion of the Chinese writing system, monetary system, rice culture, philosophical schools of thought, and Confucian political institutions. Jomon society in ancient Japan incorporated wet-rice cultivation and metallurgy through its contact with Korea. Starting in the fourth century AD, Japan adopted Chinese characters, which remain integral to the Japanese writing system. Utilizing the Chinese writing system allowed the Japanese to conduct their daily activities, maintain historical records and give form to various ideas, thoughts, and philosophies.

Medieval era

image
Map showing the boundary of the 13th-century Mongol Empire compared to today's Mongols

During the Tang dynasty, China exerted its greatest influence on East Asia as various aspects of Chinese culture spread to Japan and Korea. The establishment of the medieval Tang dynasty rekindled the impetus of Chinese expansionism across the geopolitical confines of East Asia. Similar to its Han predecessor, Tang China reasserted itself as the center of East Asian geopolitical influence during the early medieval period which spearheaded and marked another golden age in Chinese history. During the Tang dynasty, China exerted its greatest influence on East Asia as various aspects of Chinese culture spread to Japan and Korea. In addition, Tang China also managed to maintain control over northern Vietnam and northern Korea.

As full-fledged medieval East Asian states were established, Korea by the fourth century AD and Japan by the seventh century AD, Japan and Korea actively began to incorporate Chinese influences such as Confucianism, the use of Chinese characters, architecture, state institutions, political philosophies, religion, urban planning, and various scientific and technological methods into their culture and society through direct contacts with Tang China and succeeding Chinese dynasties. Drawing inspiration from the Tang political system, Prince Naka no oe launched the Taika Reform in 645 AD where he radically transformed Japan's political bureaucracy into a more centralised bureaucratic empire. The Japanese also adopted Mahayana Buddhism, Chinese style architecture, and the imperial court's rituals and ceremonies, including the orchestral music and state dances had Tang influences. Written Chinese gained prestige and aspects of Tang culture such as poetry, calligraphy, and landscape painting became widespread. During the Nara period, Japan began to aggressively import Chinese culture and styles of government which included Confucian protocol that served as a foundation for Japanese culture as well as political and social philosophy. The Japanese also created laws adopted from the Chinese legal system that was used to govern in addition to the kimono, which was inspired from Chinese hanfu during the eighth century.

Modern era

image
The 17th century Qing conquest of the Ming and expansion of the empire

For many centuries, most notably from the 7th to the 14th centuries, China stood as East Asia's most advanced civilization and foremost military and economic power, exerting its influence as the transmission of advanced Chinese cultural practices and ways of thinking greatly shaped the region up until the nineteenth century. From third century through the eighteenth century, diplomatic and trade relations between China and other East Asian countries and the steppe kingdoms was governed through a tributary system.: 13–14  Under this system, the Chinese emperor received tribute from other rulers and in return received political benefits (like recognition or non-aggression agreements) or physical gifts, like porcelain and silks.: 14  Through this system, the Chinese emperor conferred legitimacy on other rulers.: 14 

As East Asia's connections with Europe and the Western world strengthened during the late nineteenth century, China's power began to decline. By the mid-nineteenth century, the weakening Qing dynasty became fraught with political corruption, obstacles and stagnation that was incapable of rejuvenating itself as a world power in contrast to the industrializing Imperial European colonial powers and a rapidly modernizing Japan. The United States Commodore Matthew C. Perry would open Japan to Western influence, and the country would expand in earnest after the 1860s. Around the same time, the Meiji Restoration in Japan sparked rapid societal transformation from an isolated feudal state into East Asia's first industrialised nation. The modern and militarily powerful Japan would galvanise its position in the Orient as East Asia's greatest power with a global mission poised to advance to lead the entire world. By the early 1900s, the Empire of Japan succeeded in asserting itself as East Asia's most dominant geopolitical force.

image
Colonies and spheres of influence in East Asia and Oceania, circa 1914

With its newly found international status, Japan would begin to challenge the European colonial powers and inextricably took on a more active role within the East Asian geopolitical order and world affairs at large. Flexing its nascent political and military might, Japan soundly defeated the stagnant Qing dynasty during the First Sino-Japanese War as well as defeating Russia in the Russo-Japanese War in 1905; the first major military victory in the modern era of an East Asian power over a European one. Its hegemony was the heart of an empire that would include Taiwan and Korea. During World War II, Japanese expansionism with its imperialist aspirations through the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere would incorporate Korea, Taiwan, much of eastern China and Manchuria, Hong Kong, and Southeast Asia under its control establishing itself as a maritime colonial power in East Asia.

Contemporary era

After a century of exploitation by the European and Japanese colonialists, post-colonial East Asia saw the defeat and occupation of Japan by the victorious Allies. The end of World War II did not result in east Asian countries obtaining independence or national unification.: 4  Independence and national unification were primary concerns for the first generation of east Asian post-World War II leaders.: 4 

The Chinese Civil War resumed after the defeat of the Japanese, with the Communists defeating the Nationalist Republic of China government. The government of the Republic of China retreated to Taiwan and the People's Republic of China was proclaimed on 1 October 1949.

Post-war, the Korean peninsula was partitioned, leading to the development of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (North Korea) and the Republic of Korea (South Korea). The Korean War (1950–1953) increased regional and international tensions.: 163  The northeast part of east Asia hardened along communist and anti-communist lines.: 163  South Korea, Taiwan, and the United States increased their ties.: 163 

During the latter half of the twentieth century, the region would see the post war economic miracle of Japan, which ushered in three decades of unprecedented growth, only to experience an economic slowdown during the 1990s, but nonetheless Japan continues to remain a global economic power. East Asia would also see the economic rise of Hong Kong, South Korea, and Taiwan, in addition to the respective handovers of Hong Kong and Macau near the end of the twentieth century.

The onset of the 21st-century in East Asia led to the integration of Mainland China into the global economy through its entry in the World Trade Organization while also enhancing its emerging international status as a potential world power reinforced with its aim of restoring its historical established significance and enduring international prominence in the world economy.

As of at least 2022, the region is more peaceful, integrated, wealthy, and stable than any time in the previous 150 years.: 183 

Definitions

image
Three sets of possible boundaries for the Central Asia region that overlap with conceptions of East Asia

In common usage, the term "East Asia" typically refers to a region including Greater China, Japan, Korea and Mongolia.

China, Japan, and Korea represent the three core countries and civilizations of traditional East Asia, as they once had a shared written language, a shared culture, and a shared Confucian societal value system (involving shared Confucian philosophical tenets) once instituted by Imperial China. Other usages define China, Hong Kong, Macau, Japan, North Korea, South Korea and Taiwan as countries that constitute East Asia based on their geographic proximity as well as historical and modern cultural and economic ties, particularly with Japan and Korea in having retained strong cultural influences that originated from China. Some scholars include Vietnam as part of East Asia as it has been considered part of the greater Chinese cultural sphere. Though Confucianism continues to play an important role in Vietnamese culture, Chinese characters are no longer used in its written language and many scholarly organizations classify Vietnam as a Southeast Asian country. Mongolia is geographically north of Mainland China yet Confucianism and the Chinese writing system and culture had limited impact on Mongolian society. Thus, Mongolia is sometimes grouped with Central Asian countries such as Turkmenistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Kazakhstan.Xinjiang and Tibet are sometimes seen as part of Central Asia (see also Greater Central Asia).

Broader and looser definitions by international agencies and organisations such as the World Bank refer to East Asia as the "three major Northeast Asian economies, i.e. mainland China, Japan, and South Korea", as well as Mongolia, North Korea, the Russian Far East, and Siberia. The Council on Foreign Relations includes the Russia Far East, Mongolia, and Nepal. The World Bank also acknowledges the roles of Chinese special administrative regions Hong Kong and Macau, as well as Taiwan, a country with limited recognition. The Economic Research Institute for Northeast Asia defines the region as "China, Japan, the Koreas, Nepal, Mongolia, and eastern regions of the Russian Federation".

image
The countries of East Asia also form the core of Northeast Asia, which itself is a broader region.
image
The United Nations Statistics Division (UNSD) geoscheme for Asia works with subregions defined in terms of UN political geography statistics. The UNSD geoscheme is based on statistic convenience rather than implying any assumption regarding political or other affiliation of countries or territories:
  East Asia

The UNSD definition of East Asia is based on statistical convenience, but others commonly use the same definition of Mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau, Mongolia, North Korea, South Korea, Taiwan, and Japan.

Certain Japanese islands are associated with Oceania due to non-continental geology, distance from mainland Asia or biogeographical similarities with Micronesia. Some groups, such as the World Health Organization, categorize China, Japan and Korea with Australia and the rest of Oceania. The World Health Organization label this region the "Western Pacific", with East Asia not being used in their concept of major world regions. Their definition of this region further includes Mongolia and the adjacent area of Cambodia, as well as the countries of the South East Asia Archipelago (excluding East Timor and Indonesia).

Alternative definitions

In the context of business and economics, "East Asia" is sometimes used to refer to the geographical area covering ten Southeast Asian countries in ASEAN, Greater China, Japan, and Korea. However, in this context, the term "Far East" is used by the Europeans to cover ASEAN countries and the countries in East Asia. On rare occasions, the term is also sometimes taken to include India and other South Asian countries that are not situated within the bounds of the Asia-Pacific, although the term Indo-Pacific is more commonly used for such a definition.

Observers preferring a broader definition of "East Asia" often use the term Northeast Asia to refer to China, the Korean Peninsula, and Japan, with the region of Southeast Asia covering the ten ASEAN countries. This usage, which is seen in economic and diplomatic discussions, is at odds with the historical meanings of both "East Asia" and "Northeast Asia". The Council on Foreign Relations of the United States defines Northeast Asia as Japan and Korea.

Climate

image
East Asia map of Köppen climate classification.

East Asia is home to many climatic zones. It also has unique weather patterns such as the East Asian rainy season and the East Asian Monsoon.

Climate change

image
Climate change is expected to exacerbate heat stress over at the North China Plain, which is particularly vulnerable as widespread irrigation results in very moist air. There is a risk that agricultural labourers will be physically unable to work outdoors on hot summer days at the end of the century, particularly under the scenario of greatest emissions and warming.

Like the rest of the world, East Asia has been getting warmer due to climate change, and there had been a measurable increase in the frequency and severity of heatwaves.: 1464  The region is also expected to see the intensification of its monsoon, leading to more flooding.: 1459  China has notably embarked on the sponge cities program, where cities are designed to increase the area of urban green spaces and permeable pavings in order to help deal with flash floods caused by greater precipitation extremes.: 1504  Under high-warming scenarios, "critical health thresholds" for heat stress during the 21st century will be at times breached,: 1465  in areas like the North China Plain.

China, Japan and the Republic of Korea are expected to see some of the largest economic losses caused by sea level rise. The city of Guangzhou is projected to experience the single largest annual economic losses from sea level rise in the world, potentially reaching US$254 million by 2050. Under the highest climate change scenario and in the absence of adaptation, cumulative economic losses caused by sea level rise in Guangzhou would exceed US$1 trillion by 2100.Shanghai is also expected to experience annual losses of around 1% of the local GDP in the absence of adaptation. The Yangtze River basin is a sensitive and biodiverse ecosystem, yet around 20% of its species may be lost throughout the century under 2 °C (3.6 °F) and ~43% under 4.5 °C (8.1 °F).: 1476 

Economy

Customs territory GDP nominal
billions of USD (2024)
GDP nominal per capita
USD (2024)
GDP PPP
billions of USD (2024)
GDP PPP per capita
USD (2024)
image People's Republic of China 18,532,633 13,136 35,291,015 25,015
image Hong Kong 406,775 53,606 570,082 75,128
image Macau 54,677 78,962 92,885 125,510
image Japan 4,110,452 33,138 6,720,962 54,184
image Mongolia 21,943 6,182 58,580 16,504
image North Korea N/A N/A N/A N/A
image South Korea 1,760,947 34,165 3,057,995 59,330
image Taiwan 802,958 34,432 1,792,349 76,858
East Asia $25,690,385 $15,612 $47,583,868 $28,916

Territorial and regional data

China, North Korea, South Korea and Taiwan are all unrecognised by at least one other East Asian state because of severe ongoing political tensions in the region, specifically the division of Korea and the political status of Taiwan.

Etymology

Flag Common Name Official name ISO 3166 Country Codes
Exonym Endonym Exonym Endonym ISO Short Name Alpha-2 Code Alpha-3 Code Numeric
image China 中国 People's Republic of China 中华人民共和国 China CN CHN 156
image Hong Kong 香港 Hong Kong Special Administrative Region
of the People's Republic of China
中華人民共和國香港特別行政區 Hong Kong HK HKG 344
image Macau 澳門 Macao Special Administrative Region
of the People's Republic of China
中華人民共和國澳門特別行政區 Macao MO MAC 446
image Japan 日本 Japan 日本国 Japan JP JPN 392
image Mongolia Монгол улс / ᠮᠣᠩᠭᠣᠯ
ᠤᠯᠤᠰ
Mongolia Монгол Улс (ᠮᠣᠩᠭᠣᠯ
ᠤᠯᠤᠰ
)
Mongolia MN MNG 496
image North Korea 조선 Democratic People's Republic of Korea 조선민주주의인민공화국 Korea (the Democratic People's Republic of) KP PRK 408
image South Korea 한국 Republic of Korea 대한민국 Korea (the Republic of) KR KOR 410
image Taiwan 臺灣 / 台灣 Republic of China 中華民國 Taiwan (Province of China) TW TWN 158

Demographics

image
Population pyramid of East Asia in 2023
image
Historical distribution map of linguistic groups in China
State/Territory Area km2 Population in

thousands (2023)

% of East Asia % of World Population density
per km2
HDI Capital/Administrative Centre
image China 9,640,011 1,425,671 85.76% 17.72% 138 0.788 Beijing
image Hong Kong 1,104 7,492 0.45% 0.093% 6,390 0.956 Hong Kong
image Macau 30 704 0.042% 0.0087% 18,662 0.925 Macao
image Japan 377,930 123,295 7.42% 1.53% 337 0.920 Tokyo
image Mongolia 1,564,100 3,447 0.2% 0.042% 2 0.741 Ulaanbaatar
image North Korea 120,538 26,161 1.57% 0.33% 198 0.733[citation needed] Pyongyang
image South Korea 100,210 51,784 3.11% 0.64% 500 0.929 Seoul
image Taiwan 36,197 23,923 1.44% 0.297% 639 0.926 Taipei
East Asia 11,840,000 1,662,477 100% 20.66% 141

Religion

<div style="border:solid transparent;background-color:initial;position:absolute;width:100px;line-height:0;

Religion in East Asia (2020)

  Chinese Folk Religion (52.10%)
  Buddhism (19.65%)
  No Religion (19.62%)
  Christianity (5.56%)
  Islam (1.57%)
  Other (1.44%)
Religion Native name Creator/Current Leader Founded Time Main Denomination Major book Type Est. Followers Ethnic groups States/territories
Chinese folk religion 中國民間信仰 or 中国民间信仰 Spontaneous formation Prehistoric period Salvationist, Wuism, Nuo Chinese classics, Huangdi Sijing, precious scrolls, etc. Prehistoric, pantheism, and polytheism ~900,000,000 Han, Hmong, Qiang, Tujia (worship of the same ancestor-gods) image (image image) image
Taoism 道教 Zhang Daoling, Wang Chongyang (Quanzhen School) 125 AD Eastern Han dynasty[citation needed] Zhengyi, Quanzhen Tao Te Ching Pantheism, polytheism ~20,000,000 Han, Zhuang, Hmong, Yao, Qiang, Tujia image (image image) image
East Asian Buddhism/Chinese Buddhism 漢傳佛教 or 汉传佛教 Emperor Ming of Han (introduced to China), Mālānanda (introduced to Baekje), King Seong of Baekje (introduced to Japan) 67 AD Eastern Han dynasty Mahayana Diamond Sutra Non-God, Dualism. ~300,000,000 Han, Koreans, Yamato image (image image) image image image image
Tibetan Buddhism 藏傳佛教 or 藏传佛教/བོད་བརྒྱུད་ནང་བསྟན། Tonpa Shenrab Miwoche 1800 years ago Mahayana, Bon Anuttarayoga Tantra Non-God ~10,000,000 Tibetans, Manchus, Mongols image image
Shamanism 薩滿教 or Бөө мөргөл Spontaneous formation Prehistoric period N/A Prehistoric, polytheism, and pantheism N/A Manchus, Mongols, Oroqens image image
Shinto 神道 Spontaneous formation Yayoi period Shinto sects Kojiki, Nihon Shoki Prehistoric, pantheism, and polytheism N/A Yamato image
Korean shamanism 무속 (巫俗) or 무교 (巫敎) Spontaneous formation N/A Shamanism sects N/A Prehistoric, pantheism, and polytheism N/A Koreans image image
Ryukyuan religion 琉球神道 or ニライカナイ信仰 Spontaneous formation N/A N/A N/A Prehistoric, pantheism, and polytheism N/A Ryukyuans image (image)

Ethnic groups

Ethnicity Native name Population Language(s) Writing system(s) Major states/territories* Traditional attire
Han/Chinese 漢族 or 汉族 1,313,345,856 Chinese (Mandarin, Min, Wu, Yue, Jin, Gan, Hakka, Xiang, Huizhou, Pinghua, etc.) Simplified Han characters, Traditional Han characters image(image image) image image
Yamato/Japanese 大和民族 125,117,000 Japanese Han characters (Kanji), Katakana, Hiragana image image
Korean 조선민족 (朝鮮民族)
한민족 (韓民族)
84,790,105 Korean Hangul, Han characters (Hanja) image image image
Bai 白族 2,091,543 Bai, Southwestern Mandarin Simplified characters, Latin script image image
Hui 回族 11,377,914 Northwestern Mandarin, other Chinese Dialects, Huihui language, etc. Simplified characters image image
Mongols Монголчууд ᠮᠣᠩᠭᠣᠯᠴᠤᠳ
Монгол/ᠮᠣᠩᠭᠣᠯ
8,942,528 Mongolian Mongol script, Cyrillic script image image image image
Zhuang 壮族/Bouxcuengh 19,568,546 Zhuang, Southwestern Mandarin, etc. Simplified Han characters, Latin script image image
Uyghurs 维吾尔族/ئۇيغۇر 11,774,538 Uyghur Arabic alphabet, Latin script image image
Manchus 满族/ᠮᠠᠨᠵᡠ 10,423,303 Northeastern Mandarin, Manchu language Simplified Han characters, Mongol script imageimage image
Hmong/Miao 苗族/Ghaob Xongb/Hmub/Mongb 11,067,929 Hmong/Miao, Southwestern Mandarin Latin script, Simplified Han characters image image
Tibetans 藏族/བོད་པ་ 7,060,731 Tibetan, Rgyal Rong, Rgu, etc. Tibetan script image image
Yi 彝族/ꆈꌠ 9,830,327 Various Loloish, Southwestern Mandarin Yi script, Simplified Han characters image image
Tujia 土家族 9,587,732 Northern Tujia, Southern Tujia Simplified Han characters image image
Kam 侗族/Gaeml 3,495,993 Gaeml Simplified Han characters, Latin script image image
Tu 土族/Monguor 289,565 Tu, Northwestern Mandarin Simplified Han characters image image
Daur 达斡尔族/ᠳᠠᠭᠤᠷ 131,992 Daur, Northeastern Mandarin Mongol script, Simplified Han characters image image image
Indigenous Taiwanese 臺灣原住民/ 高山族/ Yincomin/ Kasetaivang/ Inanuwayan 533,600 Austronesian languages (Amis, Yami), etc. Latin script, Traditional Han characters image

image

Ryukyuan 琉球民族 1,900,000 Japanese
Ryukyuan
Han characters (Kanji), Katakana, Hiragana image image
Ainu アイヌ/ Aynu/ Айну 200,000 Japanese
Ainu
Ainu uses both the Katakana and Latin scripts image image
  • Note: The order of states/territories follows the population ranking of each ethnicity, within East Asia only.

Culture

Overview

The culture of East Asia has been deeply influenced by China, as it was the civilization that had the most dominant influence in the region throughout the ages that ultimately laid the foundation for East Asian civilization. The vast knowledge and ingenuity of Chinese civilization and the classics of Chinese literature and culture were seen as the foundations for a civilized life in East Asia. Imperial China served as a vehicle through which the adoption of Confucian ethical philosophy, Chinese calendar system, political and legal systems, architectural style, diet, terminology, institutions, religious beliefs, imperial examinations that emphasised a knowledge of Chinese classics, political philosophy and cultural value systems, as well as historically sharing a common writing system reflected in the histories of Japan and Korea.

The Imperial Chinese tributary system was the bedrock of network of trade and foreign relations between China and its East Asian tributaries, which helped to shape much of East Asian affairs during the ancient and medieval eras. Through the tributary system, the various dynasties of Imperial China facilitated frequent economic and cultural exchange that influenced the cultures of Japan and Korea and drew them into a Chinese international order. The Imperial Chinese tributary system shaped much of East Asia's foreign policy and trade for over two millennia due to Imperial China's economic and cultural dominance over the region, and thus played a huge role in the history of East Asia in particular. The relationship between China and its cultural influence on East Asia has been compared to the historical influence of Greco-Roman civilization on classical Western civilisation.

Since the late 19th century, the initially unequal encounter with Western influences has also shaped East Asia.

Festivals

Festival Native Name Other name Calendar Date Gregorian date Activity Religious practices Food Major ethnicities Major states/territories
Chinese New Year 農曆新年/农历新年 or 春節/春节 Spring Festival Chinese Month 1 Day 1 21 Jan–20 Feb Family Reunion, Ancestors Worship, Tomb Sweeping, Fireworks Worship the King of Gods Nian gao Han, Manchus etc. image (image image) image image
Korean New Year 설날 or Seollal Korean Month 1 Day 1 21 Jan–20 Feb Ancestors Worship, Family Reunion, Tomb Sweeping N/A Tteokguk Koreans image image
Losar or Tsagaan Sar 藏历新年/ལོ་གསར་ or 查干萨日/Цагаан сар White Moon Tibetan, Mongolian Month 1 Day 1 25 Jan – 2 Mar Family Reunion, Ancestors Worship, Tomb Sweeping, Fireworks N/A Chhaang or Buuz Tibetans, Mongols, Tu etc. image image
New Year 元旦 Yuan Dan Gregorian 1 Jan 1 Jan Fireworks N/A N/A N/A image (image image) image image image image image
Lantern Festival 元宵節 or 元宵节 Upper Yuan Festival (上元节) Chinese Month 1 Day 15 4 Feb – 6 Mar Lanterns Expo, Ancestors Worship, Tomb Sweeping Birthdate of the God of Sky-officer Yuanxiao Han image (image image) image
Daeboreum 대보름 or 정월 대보름 Great Full Moon Korean Month 1 Day 15 4 Feb – 6 Mar Greeting of the moon, kite-flying, Jwibulnori, eating nuts (Bureom) Bonfires (daljip taeugi) Ogok-bap, namul, nuts Korean image image
Hanshi Festival 寒食節 or 寒食节 Cold Food Festival Solar term Traditionally, on the 105th day after the Winter solstice. Revised to 1 day before the Qingming Festival by Johann Adam Schall von Bell (Chinese: 汤若望) during the Qing dynasty. April 3–5 Ancestors Worship, Tomb Sweeping, No cooking hot meal/setting fire, Cold food only. Cuju, etc. (People used to mix this one with the Qingming Festival due to their close dates) In Memory of a loyal Ancient named Jie Zhitui (Chinese: 介子推), ordered by the Monarch of the Jin (Chinese state), Duke Wen of Jin (Chinese: 重耳) Cold Food, e.g. Qingtuan Han, Koreans, Mongols image (image image) image image image
Qingming Festival 清明節 or 清明节 or Ханш нээх Tomb Sweeping Day Solar term 15th day after the Vernal Equinox. Just 1 day after the Hanshi Festival, but in much higher repute. April 4–6th Ancestors Worship, Tomb Sweeping, Excursion, Planting trees, Flying kites, Tug of war, Cuju, etc. (Almost the same with the Hanshi Festival's, due to their close dates) Burning Hell money for deceased family members. Planting willow branches to keep ghosts away from houses. Boiled eggs Han, Koreans, Mongols image (image image) image image image image
Dragon Boat Festival 端午節 or 端午节 or 단오 Duanwu Festival / Dano (Surit-nal) Chinese / Korean Month 5 Day 5 Driving poisons & plague away. (China: Dragon Boat Race, Wearing coloured lines, Hanging felon herb on the front door.) / (Korea: Washing hair with iris water, ssireum) Worship various Gods Zongzi / Surichwitteok (rice cake with herbs) Han, Koreans, Yamato image (image image) image image image image
Ghost Festival 中元節 or 中元节 or 백중 Mid Yuan Festival Chinese Month 7 Day 15 Ancestors Worship, Tomb Sweeping Birthdate of the God of Earth-officer Han, Koreans, Yamato image (image image) image image image image
Mid-Autumn Festival 中秋節 or 中秋节 中秋祭 Chinese Month 8 Day 15 Family Reunion, Enjoying Moon view Worship the Moon Goddess Mooncake Han image (image image) image
Chuseok 추석 or 한가위 Hangawi Korean Month 8 Day 15 Family Reunion, Ancestors Worship, Tomb Sweeping, Enjoying Moon view N/A Songpyeon, Torantang (Taro soup) Koreans image image
Tsukimi 月見 or お月見 Tsukimi or Otsukimi Gregorian Month 8 Day 15 Family Reunion, Enjoying Moon view Worship the Moon Tsukimi Dango, Sweet Potato Yamato image *
Double Ninth Festival 重陽節 or 重阳节 Double Positive Festival Chinese Month 9 Day 09 Climbing Mountain, Taking care of elderly, Wearing Cornus. Worship various Gods Han, Korean, Yamato image (image image) image image image image*
Lower Yuan Festival 下元節 or 下元节 N/A Chinese Month 10 Day 15 Ancestors Worship, Tomb Sweeping Birthdate of the God of Water-officer Ciba Han image (image image) image
Dongzhi Festival 冬至 or 동지 or 冬至 N/A Gregorian Between Dec 21 and Dec 23 Between Dec 21 and Dec 23 Ancestors Worship, Rites to dispel bad spirits N/A Tangyuan, Patjuk, Zenzai, Kabocha Han, Koreans, Yamato image (image image) image image image image
Small New Year 小年 Jizao (祭灶) Chinese Month 12 Day 23 Cleaning Houses Worship the God of Hearth tanggua Han, Mongols image (image image) image image

*Japan switched the date to the Gregorian calendar after the Meiji Restoration.
*Not always on that Gregorian date, sometimes April 4.

Entertainment

East Asian popular culture, such as anime and manga from Japan and K-pop and K-dramas from South Korea, have become highly popular worldwide in the 21st century.

Sports

image
Japan vs Mongolia in baseball at the 2014 Asian Games

Baseball is one of the main sports in East Asia, having been introduced through mid-19th century American contact and further spread by the Japanese Empire. The game has gained millions of fans in China since the 2010s.

East Asian Youth Games

Formerly the East Asian Games, it is a multi-sport event organized by the East Asian Games Association (EAGA) and held every four years since 2019 among athletes from East Asian countries and territories of the Olympic Council of Asia (OCA), as well as the Pacific island of Guam, which is a member of the Oceania National Olympic Committees.

It is one of five Regional Games of the OCA. The others are the Central Asian Games, the Southeast Asian Games (SEA Games), the South Asian Games and the West Asian Games.

Collaboration

Free trade agreements

Name of agreement Parties Leaders at the time Negotiation begins Signing date Starting time Current status
China–South Korea FTA image image Xi Jinping, Park Geun-hye May, 2012 Jun 01, 2015 Dec 30, 2015 Enforced
China–Japan–South Korea FTA image image image Xi Jinping, Shinzō Abe, Park Geun-hye Mar 26, 2013 N/A N/A 10 round negotiation
Japan-Mongolia EPA image image Shinzō Abe, Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj - Feb 10, 2015 - Enforced
China-Mongolia FTA image image Xi Jinping, Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj N/A N/A N/A Officially proposed
China-HK CEPA image image Jiang Zemin, Tung Chee-hwa - Jun 29, 2003 - Enforced
China-Macau CEPA image image Jiang Zemin, Edmund Ho Hau-wah - Oct 18, 2003 - Enforced
Hong Kong-Macau CEPA image image Carrie Lam, Fernando Chui Oct 09, 2015 N/A N/A Negotiating
ECFA image image Hu Jintao, Ma Ying-jeou Jan 26, 2010 Jun 29, 2010 Aug 17, 2010 Enforced
CSSTA (Based on ECFA) image image Xi Jinping, Ma Ying-jeou Mar, 2011 Jun 21, 2013 N/A Abolished
CSGTA (Based on ECFA) image image Hu Jintao, Ma Ying-jeou Feb 22, 2011 N/A N/A Suspended

Military alliances

Name Parties within the region
Sino-North Korean Mutual Aid and Cooperation Friendship Treaty image image
Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security between the United States and Japan image image
Mutual Defense Treaty Between the United States and the Republic of Korea image image

Major cities

 
Largest population centres of East Asia
Rank City name Country Pop.


image
Tokyo

image
Seoul

1 Tokyo Japan 38,140,000
2 Seoul South Korea 25,520,000
3 Shanghai China 24,484,000
4 Beijing China 21,240,000
5 Osaka Japan 20,337,000
6 Chongqing China 13,744,000
7 Guangzhou China 13,070,000
8 Tianjin China 11,558,000
9 Shenzhen China 10,828,000
10 Chengdu China 10,104,000

See also

  • East Asia–United States relations
  • East Asian Community
  • China–Japan–South Korea trilateral summit
  • East Asia Summit
  • East Asian studies

Notes

  1. Listed as "Hong Kong SAR" by IMF
  2. Listed as "Macao SAR" by IMF
  3. Listed as "Taiwan, Province of China" by IMF
  4. Includes all area which under PRC's government control (excluding "South Tibet" and disputed islands).[citation needed]
  5. A note by the United Nations: "For statistical purposes, the data for China do not include Hong Kong and Macao, Special Administrative Regions (SAR) of China, and Taiwan Province of China."

References

  1. "Report for Selected Countries and Subjects: April 2024". imf.org. International Monetary Fund.
  2. Kort, Michael (2005). The Handbook Of East Asia. Lerner. p. 7. ISBN 978-0-761-32672-4.
  3. "East Asia". rand.org. RAND Corporation. Archived from the original on 2011-01-02. Retrieved 12 August 2021.
  4. "Countries of Asia". nationsonline.org. Nations Online. Archived from the original on 2001-07-01. Retrieved 12 August 2021.
  5. Zaharna, R. S.; Arsenault, Amelia; Fisher, Ali (2013). Relational, Networked and Collaborative Approaches to Public Diplomacy: The Connective Mindshift. Routledge. p. 93. ISBN 978-0-415-63607-0.
  6. Holcombe, Charles (2017). A History of East Asia: From the Origins of Civilization to the Twenty-First Century. Cambridge University Press. p. 13. ISBN 978-1-107-54489-5.
  7. Szonyi, Michael (2017). A Companion to Chinese History. Wiley–Blackwell. p. 90. ISBN 978-1-118-62460-9.
  8. Selin, Helaine (2010). Nature Across Cultures: Views of Nature and the Environment in Non-Western Cultures. Springer. p. 350. ISBN 978-9-048-16271-0.
  9. Laozi; Mair, Victor H. (1998). Tao Te Ching: The Classic Book of Integrity and the Way. New York: Quality Paperback Book Club. pp. x. ISBN 978-0-965-06475-0.
  10. Salkind, Neil J. (2008). Encyclopedia of Educational Psychology. Sage Publications. p. 56. ISBN 978-1-412-91688-2.
  11. Kim, Chongho (2003). Korean Shamanism: The Cultural Paradox. Ashgate. ISBN 978-0-754-63185-9.
  12. Andreas Anangguru Yewangoe, "Theologia crucis in Asia", 1987 Rodopi
  13. Heissig, Walther (2000). The Religions of Mongolia. Translated by Samuel, Geoffrey. Kegan Paul International. p. 46. ISBN 978-0-710-30685-2.
  14. Wang, Yuchen; Lu, Dongsheng; Chung, Yeun-Jun; Xu, Shuhua (2018). "Genetic structure, divergence and admixture of Han Chinese, Japanese and Korean populations". Hereditas. 155: 19. doi:10.1186/s41065-018-0057-5. PMC 5889524. PMID 29636655.
  15. Holcombe, Charles (2017). A History of East Asia. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-11873-7.
  16. Ball, Desmond (2005). The Transformation of Security in the Asia/Pacific Region. Routledge. p. 104. ISBN 978-0-714-64661-9.
  17. Chua, Amy; Rubenfeld, Jed (2014). The Triple Package: How Three Unlikely Traits Explain the Rise and Fall of Cultural Groups in America. Penguin. p. 121. ISBN 978-1-594-20546-0.
  18. Kang, David C. (2012). East Asia Before the West: Five Centuries of Trade and Tribute. Columbia University Press. pp. 33–34. ISBN 978-0-2-311-5319-5.
  19. Goucher, Candice; Walton, Linda (2012). World History: Journeys from Past to Present. Routledge. p. 232. ISBN 978-0-415-67002-9.
  20. Smolnikov, Sergey (2018). Great Power Conduct and Credibility in World Politics. Springer. ISBN 978-3-319-71885-9.
  21. Lone, Stewart (2007). Daily Lives of Civilians in Wartime Asia: From the Taiping Rebellion to the Vietnam War. Greenwood. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-313-33684-3.
  22. Cohen, Warren I. (2000). East Asia at the Center: Four Thousand Years of Engagement with the World. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-10108-2.
  23. Norman, Jerry (1988). Chinese. Cambridge University Press. p. 17. ISBN 978-0-521-29653-3.
  24. Cohen 2000, p. 60.
  25. Chua, Amy (2009). Day of Empire: How Hyperpowers Rise to Global Dominance—and Why They Fall. Anchor. p. 62. ISBN 978-1-400-07741-0.
  26. Leibo, Steve (2012). East and Southeast Asia 2012. Stryker-Post. p. 19. ISBN 978-1-610-48885-3.
  27. Tsai, Henry (2009). Maritime Taiwan: Historical Encounters with the East and the West. Routledge. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-765-62328-7.
  28. Lockard, Craig (1999). "Tang Civilization and the Chinese Centuries" (PDF). Encarta Historical Essays: 2–3, 7.
  29. Lockard 1999, p. 7
  30. Injae, Lee; Miller, Owen; Jinhoon, Park; Hyun-Hae, Yi (2014). Korean History in Maps. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-09846-6 – via Google Books.
  31. Fagan, Brian M. (1999). The Oxford Companion to Archaeology. Oxford University Press. p. 362. ISBN 978-0-195-07618-9.
  32. Lockard 1999, p. 8
  33. Lockard, Craig A. (2009). Societies Networks And Transitions: Volume B From 600 To 1750. Wadsworth. pp. 290–291. ISBN 978-1-439-08540-0.
  34. Embree, Ainslie; Gluck, Carol (1997). Asia in Western and World History: A Guide for Teaching. M. E. Sharpe. p. 352. ISBN 978-1-563-24265-6.
  35. Lind, Jennifer (February 13, 2018). "Life in China's Asia: What Regional Hegemony Would Look Like". Foreign Affairs. Vol. 97, no. March/April 2018.
  36. Lockard 1999
  37. Ellington, Lucien (2009). Japan. Nations in Focus. Bloomsbury. p. 21. ISBN 978-1-598-84163-3.
  38. Li, Xiaobing (2018). The Cold War in East Asia. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-138-65179-1.
  39. Roberts, John M. (1997). A Short History of the World. Oxford University Press. p. 272. ISBN 0-195-11504-X.
  40. Hayes, Louis D. (2009). Political Systems of East Asia: China, Korea, and Japan. Greenlight. p. xi. ISBN 978-0-765-61786-6.
  41. Hayes 2009, p. 15
  42. Tindall, George Brown; Shi, David E. (2009). America: A Narrative History. W. W. Norton. p. 926. ISBN 978-0-393-934083.
  43. April, K.; Shockley, M. (2007). Diversity: New Realities in a Changing World. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 163. ISBN 978-0-230-00133-6.
  44. Cohen 2000, p. 3
  45. Batty, David (2005-01-17). Japan's War in Colour (documentary). TWI.
  46. Goldman, Merie; Gordon, Andrew (2000). Diversity: New Realities in a Changing World. Harvard University Press. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-674-00097-1.
  47. Cohen 2000, p. 273.
  48. Hua, Shiping; Hu, Amelia (2014). East Asian Development Model: Twenty-first century perspectives. Routledge. pp. 78–79. ISBN 978-0-415-73727-2.
  49. Lee, Yong Wook; Key, Young Son (2014). China's Rise and Regional Integration in East Asia: Hegemony or community?. Routledge. p. 45. ISBN 978-0-313-35082-5.
  50. "Sino-Japanese War (1894–95)". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 12 November 2012.
  51. Tindall & Shi 2009, p. 1147
  52. Liff, Adam P.; Lee, Chaewon (2024). "Korea-Taiwan "Unofficial" Relations after 30 Years (1992-2022): Reassessing Seoul's "One China" Policy". In Zhao, Suisheng (ed.). The Taiwan Question in Xi Jinping's Era: Beijing's Evolving Taiwan Policy and Taiwan's Internal and External Dynamics. London and New York: Routledge. ISBN 9781032861661.
  53. Northrup, Cynthia Clark; Bentley, Jerry H.; Eckes, Alfred E. Jr. (2004). Encyclopedia of World Trade: From Ancient Times to the Present. Routledge. p. 297. ISBN 978-0-765-68058-7.
  54. Paul, Erik (2012). Neoliberal Australia and US Imperialism in East Asia. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 114. ISBN 978-1-137-27277-5.
  55. Maddison, Angus (2007). Contours of the World Economy 1–2030 AD: Essays in Macro-Economic History. Oxford University Press. p. 379. ISBN 978-0-191-64758-1.
  56. Dahlman, Carl J; Aubert, Jean-Eric. "China and the Knowledge Economy: Seizing the 21st Century. WBI Development Studies". Institute of Education Sciences. Retrieved 26 July 2014.
  57. "Angus Maddison. Chinese Economic Performance in the Long Run. Development Centre Studies" (PDF). p. 29. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09. Retrieved 15 September 2017.
  58. Dahlman, Carl J; Aubert, Jean-Eric. China and the Knowledge Economy: Seizing the 21st Century. WBI Development Studies. World Bank publications. Accessed January 30, 2008.
  59. Angus Maddison. Chinese Economic Performance in the Long Run Archived 2014-10-15 at the Wayback Machine. Development Centre Studies. Accessed 2007. p.29 See the "Table 1.3. Levels of Chinese and European GDP Per Capita, 1–1700 AD" in page 29, Chinese GDP Per Capita was 450 and European GDP Per Capital was 422 in 960AD. Chinese GDP Per Capita was 600 while European was 576. During this time, Chinese per capita income rose by about a third.
  60. Ma, Xinru; Kang, David C. (2024). Beyond Power Transitions: The Lessons of East Asian History and the Future of U.S.-China Relations. Columbia Studies in International Order and Politics. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-55597-5.
  61. "Introducing East Asian Peoples" (PDF). International Mission Board. September 10, 2016.
  62. Gilbet Rozman (2004), Northeast Asia's stunted regionalism: bilateral distrust in the shadow of globalization. Cambridge University Press, pp. 3–4
  63. "Northeast Asia dominates patent filing growth." Retrieved on August 8, 2001.
  64. "Paper: Economic Integration in Northeast Asia."[dead link] Retrieved on August 8, 2011.
  65. Hua & Hu 2014, p. 3.
  66. Ness, Immanuel; Bellwood, Peter (2014). The Global Prehistory of Human Migration. Wiley-Blackwell. p. 217. ISBN 978-1-118-97059-1.
  67. Kort 2005, pp. 7–9
  68. Prescott, Anne (2015). East Asia in the World: An Introduction. Routledge. p. 3. ISBN 978-0765643223.
  69. Ikeo, Aiko (1996). Economic Development in Twentieth-Century East Asia: The International Context. Routledge. p. 1. ISBN 978-0-415-14900-6.
  70. Yoshimatsu, H. (2014). Comparing Institution-Building in East Asia: Power Politics, Governance, and Critical Junctures. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 1. ISBN 978-1-137-37054-9.
  71. Kim, Mikyoung (2015). Routledge Handbook of Memory and Reconciliation in East Asia. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-83513-8.
  72. Hazen, Dan; Spohrer, James H. (2005). Building Area Studies Collections. Otto Harrassowitz. p. 130. ISBN 978-3-447-05512-3.
  73. Grabowski, Richard; Self, Sharmistha; Shields, William (2012). Economic Development: A Regional, Institutional, and Historical Approach (2nd ed.). Routledge (published September 25, 2012). p. 59. ISBN 978-0-765-63353-8.
  74. Currie, Lorenzo (2013). Through the Eyes of the Pack. Xlibris Corp. p. 163. ISBN 978-1-493-14517-1.
  75. Asato, Noriko (2013). Handbook for Asian Studies Specialists: A Guide to Research Materials and Collection Building Tools. Libraries Unlimited. p. 1. ISBN 978-1-598-84842-7.
  76. Prescott 2015, p. 6
  77. Miller, David Y. (2007). Modern East Asia: An Introductory History. Routledge. p. xi. ISBN 978-0-765-61822-1.
  78. "Central Themes for a Unit on China r Educators". afe.easia.columbia.edu. Columbia University. Retrieved 2018-12-01. "Within the Pacific region, China is potentially a major economic and political force. Its relations with Japan, Korea, and its Southeast Asian neighbours, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, and the Philippines, will be determined by how they perceive this power will be used."
  79. Cummings, Sally N. (2013). Understanding Central Asia: Politics and Contested Transformations. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-43319-3.
  80. Saez, Lawrence (2012). The South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC): An emerging collaboration architecture. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-67108-1.
  81. Cornell, Svante E. Modernization and Regional Cooperation in Central Asia: A New Spring? (PDF). Central Asia-Caucasus Institute and the Silk Road Studies.
  82. Aminian, Nathalie; Fung, K. C.; Ng, Francis. "Integration of Markets vs. Integration by Agreements" (PDF). Policy Research Working Paper. World Bank.
  83. "Northeast Asia". Council on Foreign Relations. Retrieved August 10, 2009.
  84. Economic Research Institute for Northeast Asia (1999). Japan and Russia in Northeast Asia: Partners in the 21st Century. Greenwood. p. 248.
  85. "UNSD — Methodology". unstats.un.org. Retrieved 2023-12-10.
  86. "United Nations Statistics Division – Standard Country and Area Codes Classifications (M49)". United Nations Statistics Division. 2015-05-06. Retrieved 2010-07-24.
  87. "East Asia". Encarta. Microsoft. Archived from the original on 2009-11-09. Retrieved 2008-01-12. the countries and regions of Mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau, Taiwan, Mongolia, South Korea, North Korea and Japan.
  88. "Composition of macro geographical (continental) regions, geographical sub-regions, and selected economic and other groupings". United Nations Statistics Division. 11 February 2013. Retrieved 28 May 2013.
  89. Todd, Ian (1974). Island Realm: A Pacific Panorama. Angus & Robertson. p. 190. ISBN 978-0-207-127618-.
  90. Udvardy, Miklos D. F. "A Classification of the Biogeographical Provinces of the World" (PDF). UNESCO. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 February 2022. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
  91. "IMAGE: Countries and areas in WHO's Western Pacific Region" – via ResearchGate.
  92. "Forget Asia-Pacific, it's Indo-Pacific now. Where is that?". 15 September 2021.
  93. Dent, Christopher M. (2008). East Asian regionalism. Routledge. pp. 1–8.
  94. Harvie, Charles; Fukunari, Kimura; Lee, Hyun-Hoon (2005). New East Asian regionalism. Edward Elgar. pp. 3–6.
  95. Katzenstein, Peter J.; Takashi, Shiraishi (2006). Beyond Japan: the dynamics of East Asian regionalism. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. pp. 1–33.
  96. An, Z (April 2000). "Asynchronous Holocene optimum of the East Asian monsoon". Quaternary Science Reviews. 19 (8): 743–762. Bibcode:2000QSRv...19..743A. doi:10.1016/S0277-3791(99)00031-1.
  97. Kang, Suchul; Eltahir, Elfatih A. B. (31 July 2018). "North China Plain threatened by deadly heatwaves due to climate change and irrigation". Nature Communications. 9 (1): 3528. Bibcode:2023NatCo..14.3528K. doi:10.1038/s41467-023-38906-7. PMC 10319847. PMID 37402712.
  98. Shaw, R., Y. Luo, T. S. Cheong, S. Abdul Halim, S. Chaturvedi, M. Hashizume, G. E. Insarov, Y. Ishikawa, M. Jafari, A. Kitoh, J. Pulhin, C. Singh, K. Vasant, and Z. Zhang, 2022: Chapter 10: Asia. In Climate Change 2022: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability [H.-O. Pörtner, D. C. Roberts, M. Tignor, E. S. Poloczanska, K. Mintenbeck, A. Alegría, M. Craig, S. Langsdorf, S. Löschke, V. Möller, A. Okem, B. Rama (eds.)]. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom and New York, New York, US, pp. 1457–1579 |doi=10.1017/9781009325844.012.
  99. "Country codes". iso.org.
  100. "World Population Prospects 2022". United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division. Retrieved July 17, 2022.
  101. "World Population Prospects 2022: Demographic indicators by region, subregion and country, annually for 1950-2100" (XSLX) ("Total Population, as of 1 July (thousands)"). United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division. Retrieved July 17, 2022.
  102. "Human Development Reports". www.hdr.undp.org. January 2018. Retrieved 2018-10-14.
  103. "Religious Composition by Country, 2010-2050". Pew. 2 April 2015. Archived from the original on 2019-12-21. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
  104. Wenzel-Teuber, Katharina (2012). "People's Republic of China: Religions and Churches Statistical Overview 2011" (PDF). Religions & Christianity in Today's China. II (3): 29–54. ISSN 2192-9289. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 April 2017.
  105. Wenzel-Teuber, Katharina (2017). "Statistics on Religions and Churches in the People's Republic of China – Update for the Year 2016" (PDF). Religions & Christianity in Today's China. VII (2): 26–53. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 July 2017.
  106. Hardacre, Helen (2017). Shinto: a history. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 18. ISBN 978-0-190-62171-1.
  107. "CIA Factbook". Archived from the original on 2016-10-13. Retrieved 2018-03-17.
  108. 人口推計 – 平成 28年 12月 報(PDF). stat.go.jp.
  109. 주민등록 인구통계
  110. "Korea North". The World Factbook (2025 ed.). Central Intelligence Agency. Retrieved 8 April 2023. (Archived 2023 edition.)
  111. 재외동포현황 [Total number of overseas Koreans]. South Korea: Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade. 2021. Retrieved 1 February 2022.
  112. "China Statistical Yearbook 2021".
  113. Gordon, Raymond G. Jr., ed. (2005). Ethnologue: Languages of the World (15th ed.). Dallas: SIL International. ISBN 978-1-55671-159-6. OCLC 224749653.
  114. "Ainu language and alphabet".
  115. Goscha, Christopher (2016). The Penguin History of Modern Vietnam: A History. Allen Lane. ISBN 978-1-846-143106.
  116. Chua & Rubenfeld 2014, p. 122
  117. Lewis, Mark Edward (2012). China's Cosmopolitan Empire: The Tang Dynasty. Belknap. p. 156. ISBN 978-0-674-06401-0.
  118. Reischauer, Edwin O. (1974). "The Sinic World in Perspective". Foreign Affairs. 52 (2): 341–348. doi:10.2307/20038053. JSTOR 20038053.
  119. Chua & Rubenfeld 2014, p. 121–122
  120. Seo, Yongseok (2006-04-30), Dator, Jim; Pratt, Richard C.; Seo, Yongseok (eds.), "Chapter 22. East Asian Response to the Globalization of Culture: Perceptional Change and Cultural Policy", Fairness, Globalization, and Public Institutions: East Asia and Beyond, University of Hawaii Press, pp. 319–336, doi:10.1515/9780824841966-023/html?lang=en&srsltid=afmboorlr_g6zoxn9cj4zxog8odmpytphkz2ql0wqco_9yvf8y---dbx, ISBN 978-0-8248-4196-6, retrieved 2024-12-21
  121. Hollingsworth, Julia (2019-12-29). "Why the past decade saw the rise and rise of East Asian pop culture". CNN. Retrieved 2024-11-18.
  122. Cho, Younghan (2016). "Double binding of Japanese colonialism: trajectories of baseball in Japan, Taiwan, and Korea". Cultural Studies. 30 (6): 926–948. doi:10.1080/09502386.2015.1094498. ISSN 0950-2386.
  123. 杜娟. "MLB's China operation knocking it out the ball park". www.chinadaily.com.cn. Retrieved 2024-10-22.
  124. United Nations (March 12, 2017). "The World's Cities in 2016" (PDF). United Nations.
  125. 통계표명 : 주민등록 인구통계 (in Korean). Ministry of Government Administration and Home Affairs. Archived from the original on 3 March 2011. Retrieved 4 April 2015.

Further reading

  • Church, Peter. A short history of South-East Asia (John Wiley & Sons, 2017).
  • Chung, Eunbin. Pride, Not Prejudice: National Identity as a Pacifying Force in East Asia (University of Michigan Press, 2022) online reviews by six scholars
  • Clyde, Paul H., and Burton F. Beers. The Far East: A History of Western Impacts and Eastern Responses, 1830–1975 (1975) online 3rd edition 1958
  • Crofts, Alfred. A history of the Far East (1958) online free to borrow
  • Dennett, Tyler. Americans in Eastern Asia (1922) online free
  • Ebrey, Patricia Buckley, and Anne Walthall. East Asia: A cultural, social, and political history (Cengage Learning, 2013).
  • Embree, Ainslie T., ed. Encyclopedia of Asian history (1988)
    • vol. 1 online; vol 2 online; vol 3 online; vol 4 online
  • Fairbank, John K., Edwin Reischauer, and Albert M. Craig. East Asia: The great tradition and East Asia: The modern transformation (1960) [2 vol 1960] online free to borrow, famous textbook.
  • Flynn, Matthew J. China Contested: Western Powers in East Asia (2006), for secondary schools
  • Gelber, Harry. The dragon and the foreign devils: China and the world, 1100 BC to the present (2011).
  • Green, Michael J. By more than providence: grand strategy and American power in the Asia Pacific since 1783 (2017) a major scholarly survey excerpt
  • Hall, D.G.E. History of South East Asia (Macmillan International Higher Education, 1981).
  • Holcombe, Charles. A History of East Asia (2d ed. Cambridge UP, 2017). excerpt
  • Iriye, Akira. After Imperialism; The Search for a New Order in the Far East 1921–1931. (1965).
  • Jensen, Richard, Jon Davidann, and Yoneyuki Sugita, eds. Trans-Pacific Relations: America, Europe, and Asia in the Twentieth Century (Praeger, 2003), 304 pp online review
  • Keay, John. Empire's End: A History of the Far East from High Colonialism to Hong Kong (Scribner, 1997). online free to borrow
  • Levinson, David, and Karen Christensen, eds. Encyclopedia of Modern Asia. (6 vol. Charles Scribner's Sons, 2002).
  • Mackerras, Colin. Eastern Asia: an introductory history (Melbourne: Longman Cheshire, 1992).
  • Macnair, Harley F. & Donald Lach. Modern Far Eastern International Relations. (2nd ed 1955) 1950 edition online free>

East Asia is a geographical and cultural region of Asia including China Japan Mongolia North Korea South Korea and Taiwan Additionally Hong Kong and Macau are the two special administrative regions of China The economies of China Japan South Korea and Taiwan are among the world s largest and most prosperous East Asia borders North Asia to the north Southeast Asia to the south South Asia to the southwest and Central Asia to the west To its east is the Pacific Ocean East AsiaArea11 840 000 km2 4 570 000 sq mi 3rd Population1 6 billion 2023 2nd Population density141 9 km2 54 8 sq mi GDP PPP 47 6 trillion 2024 GDP nominal 25 7 trillion 2024 GDP per capita 16 000 nominal DemonymEast AsianCountries6 countries China Japan Mongolia North Korea South Korea TaiwanDependenciesTwo special administrative regions of China Hong Kong MacauLanguagesChinese Japanese Korean Mongolian Tibetan OthersTime zonesUTC 7 UTC 8 amp UTC 9Largest citiesList of urban areas BeijingBusanChengduDaeguGuangzhouHangzhouHong KongKaohsiungMacauNagoyaNanjingOsakaSeoulShanghaiShenzhenTaipeiTokyoYokohamaUN M49 code030 Eastern Asia 142 Asia 001 WorldEast AsiaChinese nameSimplified Chinese东亚 东亚细亚Traditional Chinese東亞 東亞細亞TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinDōngyǎ Dōngya or Dōng Yǎxiyǎ Dōng YaxiyaWade GilesTung1 ya3WuRomanizationton平 ia去GanRomanizationTung1 nga3HakkaRomanizationdung24 a31Yue CantoneseJyutpingdung1 aa3Southern MinHokkien POJTang aTibetan nameTibetanཨ ཤ ཡ ཤར མ Korean nameHangul동아시아 동아세아 동아Hanja東아시아 東亞細亞 東亞TranscriptionsRevised RomanizationDong Asia Dong Asea Dong AMongolian nameMongolian CyrillicZүүn Azi ᠵᠡᠭᠦᠨ ᠠᠽᠢTranscriptionsSASM GNCDzuun AziJapanese nameKanaひがしアジア とうあKyujitai東亞細亞 東亞Shinjitai東亜細亜 東アジア 東亜TranscriptionsRevised HepburnHigashi Ajia Tō AKunrei shikiHigasi Azia Tou AUyghur nameUyghurشەرقىي ئاسىي TranscriptionsLatin Yeziqisherqiy asiy East Asia especially Chinese civilization is regarded as one of the earliest cradles of civilization Other ancient civilizations in East Asia that still exist as independent countries in the present day include the Japanese Korean and Mongolian civilizations Various other civilizations existed as independent polities in East Asia in the past but have since been absorbed into neighbouring civilizations in the present day such as Tibet Manchuria and Ryukyu Okinawa among many others Taiwan has a relatively young history in the region after the prehistoric era originally it was a major site of Austronesian civilisation prior to colonisation by European colonial powers and China from the 17th century onward For thousands of years China was the leading civilization in the region exerting influence on its neighbours Historically societies in East Asia have fallen within the Chinese sphere of influence and East Asian vocabularies and scripts are often derived from Classical Chinese and Chinese script The Chinese calendar serves as the root from which many other East Asian calendars are derived Major religions in East Asia include Buddhism mostly Mahayana Confucianism and Neo Confucianism Taoism ancestral worship and Chinese folk religion in Mainland China Hong Kong Macau and Taiwan Shinto in Japan and Christianity and Musok in Korea Tengerism and Tibetan Buddhism are prevalent among Mongols and Tibetans while other religions such as Shamanism are widespread among the indigenous populations of northeastern China such as the Manchus The major languages in East Asia include Mandarin Chinese Japanese and Korean The major ethnic groups of East Asia include the Han in China and Taiwan Yamato in Japan Koreans in North and South Korea and Mongols in Mongolia There are 76 officially recognized minority or indigenous ethnic groups in East Asia 55 native to mainland China including Hui Manchus Chinese Mongols Tibetans Uyghurs and Zhuang in the frontier regions 16 native to the island of Taiwan collectively known as Taiwanese indigenous peoples one native to the major Japanese island of Hokkaido the Ainu and four native to Mongolia Turkic peoples The Ryukyuan people are an unrecognized ethnic group indigenous to the Ryukyu Islands in southern Japan which stretch from Kyushu to Taiwan There are also several unrecognized indigenous ethnic groups in mainland China and Taiwan East Asians comprise around 1 7 billion people making up about 33 of the population in Continental Asia and 20 of the global population needs update The region is home to major world metropolises such as Beijing Tianjin Busan Daegu Ulsan Changwon Guangzhou Hong Kong Osaka Kyoto Kobe Seoul Shanghai Shenzhen Taipei and Tokyo Although the coastal and riparian areas of the region form one of the world s most populated places the population in Mongolia and Western China both landlocked areas is very sparsely distributed with Mongolia having the lowest population density of a sovereign state The overall population density of the region is 133 inhabitants per square kilometre 340 sq mi about three times the world average of 45 km2 120 sq mi when citation needed HistoryAncient era China was the first region settled in East Asia and was undoubtedly the core of East Asian civilization from where other parts of East Asia were formed The various other regions in East Asia were selective in the Chinese influences they adopted into their local customs Historian Ping ti Ho referred to China as the cradle of Eastern civilization in parallel with the cradle of Middle Eastern civilization along the Fertile Crescent encompassing Mesopotamia and Ancient Egypt as well as the cradle of Western civilization encompassing Ancient Greece Chinese civilization emerged early and prefigured other East Asian civilisations Throughout history imperial China would exert cultural economic technological and political influence on its neighbours Succeeding Chinese dynasties exerted enormous influence across East Asia culturally economically politically and militarily for over two millennia The tributary system of China shaped much of East Asia s history for over two millennia due to Imperial China s economic and cultural influence over the region and thus played a huge role in the history of East Asia in particular Imperial China s cultural preeminence not only led the country to become East Asia s first literate nation in the entire region it also supplied Japan and Korea with Chinese loanwords and linguistic influences rooted in their writing systems Under Emperor Wu of Han the Han dynasty made China the regional powerhouse in East Asia projecting much of its imperial influence onto its neighbours Han China hosted the largest unified population in East Asia the most literate and urbanised as well as being the most economically developed as well as the most technologically and culturally advanced civilization in the region at the time Cultural and religious interaction between the Chinese and other regional East Asian dynasties and kingdoms occurred China s impact and influence on Korea began with the Han dynasty s northeastern expansion in 108 BC when the Han Chinese conquered the northern part of the Korean peninsula and established a province called Lelang Chinese influences were transmitted and soon took root in Korea through the inclusion of the Chinese writing system monetary system rice culture philosophical schools of thought and Confucian political institutions Jomon society in ancient Japan incorporated wet rice cultivation and metallurgy through its contact with Korea Starting in the fourth century AD Japan adopted Chinese characters which remain integral to the Japanese writing system Utilizing the Chinese writing system allowed the Japanese to conduct their daily activities maintain historical records and give form to various ideas thoughts and philosophies Medieval era Map showing the boundary of the 13th century Mongol Empire compared to today s Mongols During the Tang dynasty China exerted its greatest influence on East Asia as various aspects of Chinese culture spread to Japan and Korea The establishment of the medieval Tang dynasty rekindled the impetus of Chinese expansionism across the geopolitical confines of East Asia Similar to its Han predecessor Tang China reasserted itself as the center of East Asian geopolitical influence during the early medieval period which spearheaded and marked another golden age in Chinese history During the Tang dynasty China exerted its greatest influence on East Asia as various aspects of Chinese culture spread to Japan and Korea In addition Tang China also managed to maintain control over northern Vietnam and northern Korea As full fledged medieval East Asian states were established Korea by the fourth century AD and Japan by the seventh century AD Japan and Korea actively began to incorporate Chinese influences such as Confucianism the use of Chinese characters architecture state institutions political philosophies religion urban planning and various scientific and technological methods into their culture and society through direct contacts with Tang China and succeeding Chinese dynasties Drawing inspiration from the Tang political system Prince Naka no oe launched the Taika Reform in 645 AD where he radically transformed Japan s political bureaucracy into a more centralised bureaucratic empire The Japanese also adopted Mahayana Buddhism Chinese style architecture and the imperial court s rituals and ceremonies including the orchestral music and state dances had Tang influences Written Chinese gained prestige and aspects of Tang culture such as poetry calligraphy and landscape painting became widespread During the Nara period Japan began to aggressively import Chinese culture and styles of government which included Confucian protocol that served as a foundation for Japanese culture as well as political and social philosophy The Japanese also created laws adopted from the Chinese legal system that was used to govern in addition to the kimono which was inspired from Chinese hanfu during the eighth century Modern era The 17th century Qing conquest of the Ming and expansion of the empire For many centuries most notably from the 7th to the 14th centuries China stood as East Asia s most advanced civilization and foremost military and economic power exerting its influence as the transmission of advanced Chinese cultural practices and ways of thinking greatly shaped the region up until the nineteenth century From third century through the eighteenth century diplomatic and trade relations between China and other East Asian countries and the steppe kingdoms was governed through a tributary system 13 14 Under this system the Chinese emperor received tribute from other rulers and in return received political benefits like recognition or non aggression agreements or physical gifts like porcelain and silks 14 Through this system the Chinese emperor conferred legitimacy on other rulers 14 As East Asia s connections with Europe and the Western world strengthened during the late nineteenth century China s power began to decline By the mid nineteenth century the weakening Qing dynasty became fraught with political corruption obstacles and stagnation that was incapable of rejuvenating itself as a world power in contrast to the industrializing Imperial European colonial powers and a rapidly modernizing Japan The United States Commodore Matthew C Perry would open Japan to Western influence and the country would expand in earnest after the 1860s Around the same time the Meiji Restoration in Japan sparked rapid societal transformation from an isolated feudal state into East Asia s first industrialised nation The modern and militarily powerful Japan would galvanise its position in the Orient as East Asia s greatest power with a global mission poised to advance to lead the entire world By the early 1900s the Empire of Japan succeeded in asserting itself as East Asia s most dominant geopolitical force Colonies and spheres of influence in East Asia and Oceania circa 1914 With its newly found international status Japan would begin to challenge the European colonial powers and inextricably took on a more active role within the East Asian geopolitical order and world affairs at large Flexing its nascent political and military might Japan soundly defeated the stagnant Qing dynasty during the First Sino Japanese War as well as defeating Russia in the Russo Japanese War in 1905 the first major military victory in the modern era of an East Asian power over a European one Its hegemony was the heart of an empire that would include Taiwan and Korea During World War II Japanese expansionism with its imperialist aspirations through the Greater East Asia Co Prosperity Sphere would incorporate Korea Taiwan much of eastern China and Manchuria Hong Kong and Southeast Asia under its control establishing itself as a maritime colonial power in East Asia Contemporary era After a century of exploitation by the European and Japanese colonialists post colonial East Asia saw the defeat and occupation of Japan by the victorious Allies The end of World War II did not result in east Asian countries obtaining independence or national unification 4 Independence and national unification were primary concerns for the first generation of east Asian post World War II leaders 4 The Chinese Civil War resumed after the defeat of the Japanese with the Communists defeating the Nationalist Republic of China government The government of the Republic of China retreated to Taiwan and the People s Republic of China was proclaimed on 1 October 1949 Post war the Korean peninsula was partitioned leading to the development of the Democratic People s Republic of Korea North Korea and the Republic of Korea South Korea The Korean War 1950 1953 increased regional and international tensions 163 The northeast part of east Asia hardened along communist and anti communist lines 163 South Korea Taiwan and the United States increased their ties 163 During the latter half of the twentieth century the region would see the post war economic miracle of Japan which ushered in three decades of unprecedented growth only to experience an economic slowdown during the 1990s but nonetheless Japan continues to remain a global economic power East Asia would also see the economic rise of Hong Kong South Korea and Taiwan in addition to the respective handovers of Hong Kong and Macau near the end of the twentieth century The onset of the 21st century in East Asia led to the integration of Mainland China into the global economy through its entry in the World Trade Organization while also enhancing its emerging international status as a potential world power reinforced with its aim of restoring its historical established significance and enduring international prominence in the world economy As of at least 2022 the region is more peaceful integrated wealthy and stable than any time in the previous 150 years 183 DefinitionsThree sets of possible boundaries for the Central Asia region that overlap with conceptions of East Asia In common usage the term East Asia typically refers to a region including Greater China Japan Korea and Mongolia China Japan and Korea represent the three core countries and civilizations of traditional East Asia as they once had a shared written language a shared culture and a shared Confucian societal value system involving shared Confucian philosophical tenets once instituted by Imperial China Other usages define China Hong Kong Macau Japan North Korea South Korea and Taiwan as countries that constitute East Asia based on their geographic proximity as well as historical and modern cultural and economic ties particularly with Japan and Korea in having retained strong cultural influences that originated from China Some scholars include Vietnam as part of East Asia as it has been considered part of the greater Chinese cultural sphere Though Confucianism continues to play an important role in Vietnamese culture Chinese characters are no longer used in its written language and many scholarly organizations classify Vietnam as a Southeast Asian country Mongolia is geographically north of Mainland China yet Confucianism and the Chinese writing system and culture had limited impact on Mongolian society Thus Mongolia is sometimes grouped with Central Asian countries such as Turkmenistan Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan Xinjiang and Tibet are sometimes seen as part of Central Asia see also Greater Central Asia Broader and looser definitions by international agencies and organisations such as the World Bank refer to East Asia as the three major Northeast Asian economies i e mainland China Japan and South Korea as well as Mongolia North Korea the Russian Far East and Siberia The Council on Foreign Relations includes the Russia Far East Mongolia and Nepal The World Bank also acknowledges the roles of Chinese special administrative regions Hong Kong and Macau as well as Taiwan a country with limited recognition The Economic Research Institute for Northeast Asia defines the region as China Japan the Koreas Nepal Mongolia and eastern regions of the Russian Federation The countries of East Asia also form the core of Northeast Asia which itself is a broader region The United Nations Statistics Division UNSD geoscheme for Asia works with subregions defined in terms of UN political geography statistics The UNSD geoscheme is based on statistic convenience rather than implying any assumption regarding political or other affiliation of countries or territories North Asia Central Asia Western Asia South Asia East Asia Southeast Asia The UNSD definition of East Asia is based on statistical convenience but others commonly use the same definition of Mainland China Hong Kong Macau Mongolia North Korea South Korea Taiwan and Japan Certain Japanese islands are associated with Oceania due to non continental geology distance from mainland Asia or biogeographical similarities with Micronesia Some groups such as the World Health Organization categorize China Japan and Korea with Australia and the rest of Oceania The World Health Organization label this region the Western Pacific with East Asia not being used in their concept of major world regions Their definition of this region further includes Mongolia and the adjacent area of Cambodia as well as the countries of the South East Asia Archipelago excluding East Timor and Indonesia Alternative definitions In the context of business and economics East Asia is sometimes used to refer to the geographical area covering ten Southeast Asian countries in ASEAN Greater China Japan and Korea However in this context the term Far East is used by the Europeans to cover ASEAN countries and the countries in East Asia On rare occasions the term is also sometimes taken to include India and other South Asian countries that are not situated within the bounds of the Asia Pacific although the term Indo Pacific is more commonly used for such a definition Observers preferring a broader definition of East Asia often use the term Northeast Asia to refer to China the Korean Peninsula and Japan with the region of Southeast Asia covering the ten ASEAN countries This usage which is seen in economic and diplomatic discussions is at odds with the historical meanings of both East Asia and Northeast Asia The Council on Foreign Relations of the United States defines Northeast Asia as Japan and Korea ClimateEast Asia map of Koppen climate classification East Asia is home to many climatic zones It also has unique weather patterns such as the East Asian rainy season and the East Asian Monsoon Climate change Climate change is expected to exacerbate heat stress over at the North China Plain which is particularly vulnerable as widespread irrigation results in very moist air There is a risk that agricultural labourers will be physically unable to work outdoors on hot summer days at the end of the century particularly under the scenario of greatest emissions and warming Like the rest of the world East Asia has been getting warmer due to climate change and there had been a measurable increase in the frequency and severity of heatwaves 1464 The region is also expected to see the intensification of its monsoon leading to more flooding 1459 China has notably embarked on the sponge cities program where cities are designed to increase the area of urban green spaces and permeable pavings in order to help deal with flash floods caused by greater precipitation extremes 1504 Under high warming scenarios critical health thresholds for heat stress during the 21st century will be at times breached 1465 in areas like the North China Plain China Japan and the Republic of Korea are expected to see some of the largest economic losses caused by sea level rise The city of Guangzhou is projected to experience the single largest annual economic losses from sea level rise in the world potentially reaching US 254 million by 2050 Under the highest climate change scenario and in the absence of adaptation cumulative economic losses caused by sea level rise in Guangzhou would exceed US 1 trillion by 2100 Shanghai is also expected to experience annual losses of around 1 of the local GDP in the absence of adaptation The Yangtze River basin is a sensitive and biodiverse ecosystem yet around 20 of its species may be lost throughout the century under 2 C 3 6 F and 43 under 4 5 C 8 1 F 1476 EconomyCustoms territory GDP nominal billions of USD 2024 GDP nominal per capita USD 2024 GDP PPP billions of USD 2024 GDP PPP per capita USD 2024 People s Republic of China 18 532 633 13 136 35 291 015 25 015 Hong Kong 406 775 53 606 570 082 75 128 Macau 54 677 78 962 92 885 125 510 Japan 4 110 452 33 138 6 720 962 54 184 Mongolia 21 943 6 182 58 580 16 504 North Korea N A N A N A N A South Korea 1 760 947 34 165 3 057 995 59 330 Taiwan 802 958 34 432 1 792 349 76 858East Asia 25 690 385 15 612 47 583 868 28 916Territorial and regional dataChina North Korea South Korea and Taiwan are all unrecognised by at least one other East Asian state because of severe ongoing political tensions in the region specifically the division of Korea and the political status of Taiwan Etymology Flag Common Name Official name ISO 3166 Country CodesExonym Endonym Exonym Endonym ISO Short Name Alpha 2 Code Alpha 3 Code NumericChina 中国 People s Republic of China 中华人民共和国 China CN CHN 156Hong Kong 香港 Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People s Republic of China 中華人民共和國香港特別行政區 Hong Kong HK HKG 344Macau 澳門 Macao Special Administrative Region of the People s Republic of China 中華人民共和國澳門特別行政區 Macao MO MAC 446Japan 日本 Japan 日本国 Japan JP JPN 392Mongolia Mongol uls ᠮᠣᠩᠭᠣᠯ ᠤᠯᠤᠰ Mongolia Mongol Uls ᠮᠣᠩᠭᠣᠯ ᠤᠯᠤᠰ Mongolia MN MNG 496North Korea 조선 Democratic People s Republic of Korea 조선민주주의인민공화국 Korea the Democratic People s Republic of KP PRK 408South Korea 한국 Republic of Korea 대한민국 Korea the Republic of KR KOR 410Taiwan 臺灣 台灣 Republic of China 中華民國 Taiwan Province of China TW TWN 158DemographicsPopulation pyramid of East Asia in 2023Historical distribution map of linguistic groups in ChinaState Territory Area km2 Population in thousands 2023 of East Asia of World Population density per km2 HDI Capital Administrative Centre China 9 640 011 1 425 671 85 76 17 72 138 0 788 Beijing Hong Kong 1 104 7 492 0 45 0 093 6 390 0 956 Hong Kong Macau 30 704 0 042 0 0087 18 662 0 925 Macao Japan 377 930 123 295 7 42 1 53 337 0 920 Tokyo Mongolia 1 564 100 3 447 0 2 0 042 2 0 741 Ulaanbaatar North Korea 120 538 26 161 1 57 0 33 198 0 733 citation needed Pyongyang South Korea 100 210 51 784 3 11 0 64 500 0 929 Seoul Taiwan 36 197 23 923 1 44 0 297 639 0 926 TaipeiEast Asia 11 840 000 1 662 477 100 20 66 141Religion The template Pie chart is being considered for merging lt div style border solid transparent background color initial position absolute width 100px line height 0 Religion in East Asia 2020 Chinese Folk Religion 52 10 Buddhism 19 65 No Religion 19 62 Christianity 5 56 Islam 1 57 Other 1 44 Religion Native name Creator Current Leader Founded Time Main Denomination Major book Type Est Followers Ethnic groups States territoriesChinese folk religion 中國民間信仰 or 中国民间信仰 Spontaneous formation Prehistoric period Salvationist Wuism Nuo Chinese classics Huangdi Sijing precious scrolls etc Prehistoric pantheism and polytheism 900 000 000 Han Hmong Qiang Tujia worship of the same ancestor gods Taoism 道教 Zhang Daoling Wang Chongyang Quanzhen School 125 AD Eastern Han dynasty citation needed Zhengyi Quanzhen Tao Te Ching Pantheism polytheism 20 000 000 Han Zhuang Hmong Yao Qiang Tujia East Asian Buddhism Chinese Buddhism 漢傳佛教 or 汉传佛教 Emperor Ming of Han introduced to China Malananda introduced to Baekje King Seong of Baekje introduced to Japan 67 AD Eastern Han dynasty Mahayana Diamond Sutra Non God Dualism 300 000 000 Han Koreans Yamato Tibetan Buddhism 藏傳佛教 or 藏传佛教 བ ད བར ད ནང བས ན Tonpa Shenrab Miwoche 1800 years ago Mahayana Bon Anuttarayoga Tantra Non God 10 000 000 Tibetans Manchus MongolsShamanism 薩滿教 or Boo morgol Spontaneous formation Prehistoric period N A Prehistoric polytheism and pantheism N A Manchus Mongols OroqensShinto 神道 Spontaneous formation Yayoi period Shinto sects Kojiki Nihon Shoki Prehistoric pantheism and polytheism N A YamatoKorean shamanism 무속 巫俗 or 무교 巫敎 Spontaneous formation N A Shamanism sects N A Prehistoric pantheism and polytheism N A KoreansRyukyuan religion 琉球神道 or ニライカナイ信仰 Spontaneous formation N A N A N A Prehistoric pantheism and polytheism N A Ryukyuans Ethnic groups Ethnicity Native name Population Language s Writing system s Major states territories Traditional attireHan Chinese 漢族 or 汉族 1 313 345 856 Chinese Mandarin Min Wu Yue Jin Gan Hakka Xiang Huizhou Pinghua etc Simplified Han characters Traditional Han characters Yamato Japanese 大和民族 125 117 000 Japanese Han characters Kanji Katakana HiraganaKorean 조선민족 朝鮮民族 한민족 韓民族 84 790 105 Korean Hangul Han characters Hanja Bai 白族 2 091 543 Bai Southwestern Mandarin Simplified characters Latin scriptHui 回族 11 377 914 Northwestern Mandarin other Chinese Dialects Huihui language etc Simplified charactersMongols Mongolchuud ᠮᠣᠩᠭᠣᠯᠴᠤᠳ Mongol ᠮᠣᠩᠭᠣᠯ 8 942 528 Mongolian Mongol script Cyrillic scriptZhuang 壮族 Bouxcuengh 19 568 546 Zhuang Southwestern Mandarin etc Simplified Han characters Latin scriptUyghurs 维吾尔族 ئۇيغۇر 11 774 538 Uyghur Arabic alphabet Latin scriptManchus 满族 ᠮᠠᠨᠵᡠ 10 423 303 Northeastern Mandarin Manchu language Simplified Han characters Mongol scriptHmong Miao 苗族 Ghaob Xongb Hmub Mongb 11 067 929 Hmong Miao Southwestern Mandarin Latin script Simplified Han charactersTibetans 藏族 བ ད པ 7 060 731 Tibetan Rgyal Rong Rgu etc Tibetan scriptYi 彝族 ꆈꌠ 9 830 327 Various Loloish Southwestern Mandarin Yi script Simplified Han charactersTujia 土家族 9 587 732 Northern Tujia Southern Tujia Simplified Han charactersKam 侗族 Gaeml 3 495 993 Gaeml Simplified Han characters Latin scriptTu 土族 Monguor 289 565 Tu Northwestern Mandarin Simplified Han charactersDaur 达斡尔族 ᠳᠠᠭᠤᠷ 131 992 Daur Northeastern Mandarin Mongol script Simplified Han charactersIndigenous Taiwanese 臺灣原住民 高山族 Yincomin Kasetaivang Inanuwayan 533 600 Austronesian languages Amis Yami etc Latin script Traditional Han charactersRyukyuan 琉球民族 1 900 000 Japanese Ryukyuan Han characters Kanji Katakana HiraganaAinu アイヌ Aynu Ajnu 200 000 Japanese Ainu Ainu uses both the Katakana and Latin scriptsNote The order of states territories follows the population ranking of each ethnicity within East Asia only CultureOverview The culture of East Asia has been deeply influenced by China as it was the civilization that had the most dominant influence in the region throughout the ages that ultimately laid the foundation for East Asian civilization The vast knowledge and ingenuity of Chinese civilization and the classics of Chinese literature and culture were seen as the foundations for a civilized life in East Asia Imperial China served as a vehicle through which the adoption of Confucian ethical philosophy Chinese calendar system political and legal systems architectural style diet terminology institutions religious beliefs imperial examinations that emphasised a knowledge of Chinese classics political philosophy and cultural value systems as well as historically sharing a common writing system reflected in the histories of Japan and Korea The Imperial Chinese tributary system was the bedrock of network of trade and foreign relations between China and its East Asian tributaries which helped to shape much of East Asian affairs during the ancient and medieval eras Through the tributary system the various dynasties of Imperial China facilitated frequent economic and cultural exchange that influenced the cultures of Japan and Korea and drew them into a Chinese international order The Imperial Chinese tributary system shaped much of East Asia s foreign policy and trade for over two millennia due to Imperial China s economic and cultural dominance over the region and thus played a huge role in the history of East Asia in particular The relationship between China and its cultural influence on East Asia has been compared to the historical influence of Greco Roman civilization on classical Western civilisation Since the late 19th century the initially unequal encounter with Western influences has also shaped East Asia Festivals This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message Festival Native Name Other name Calendar Date Gregorian date Activity Religious practices Food Major ethnicities Major states territoriesChinese New Year 農曆新年 农历新年 or 春節 春节 Spring Festival Chinese Month 1 Day 1 21 Jan 20 Feb Family Reunion Ancestors Worship Tomb Sweeping Fireworks Worship the King of Gods Nian gao Han Manchus etc Korean New Year 설날 or 설 Seollal Korean Month 1 Day 1 21 Jan 20 Feb Ancestors Worship Family Reunion Tomb Sweeping N A Tteokguk KoreansLosar or Tsagaan Sar 藏历新年 ལ གསར or 查干萨日 Cagaan sar White Moon Tibetan Mongolian Month 1 Day 1 25 Jan 2 Mar Family Reunion Ancestors Worship Tomb Sweeping Fireworks N A Chhaang or Buuz Tibetans Mongols Tu etc New Year 元旦 Yuan Dan Gregorian 1 Jan 1 Jan Fireworks N A N A N A Lantern Festival 元宵節 or 元宵节 Upper Yuan Festival 上元节 Chinese Month 1 Day 15 4 Feb 6 Mar Lanterns Expo Ancestors Worship Tomb Sweeping Birthdate of the God of Sky officer Yuanxiao Han Daeboreum 대보름 or 정월 대보름 Great Full Moon Korean Month 1 Day 15 4 Feb 6 Mar Greeting of the moon kite flying Jwibulnori eating nuts Bureom Bonfires daljip taeugi Ogok bap namul nuts KoreanHanshi Festival 寒食節 or 寒食节 Cold Food Festival Solar term Traditionally on the 105th day after the Winter solstice Revised to 1 day before the Qingming Festival by Johann Adam Schall von Bell Chinese 汤若望 during the Qing dynasty April 3 5 Ancestors Worship Tomb Sweeping No cooking hot meal setting fire Cold food only Cuju etc People used to mix this one with the Qingming Festival due to their close dates In Memory of a loyal Ancient named Jie Zhitui Chinese 介子推 ordered by the Monarch of the Jin Chinese state Duke Wen of Jin Chinese 重耳 Cold Food e g Qingtuan Han Koreans Mongols Qingming Festival 清明節 or 清明节 or Hansh neeh Tomb Sweeping Day Solar term 15th day after the Vernal Equinox Just 1 day after the Hanshi Festival but in much higher repute April 4 6th Ancestors Worship Tomb Sweeping Excursion Planting trees Flying kites Tug of war Cuju etc Almost the same with the Hanshi Festival s due to their close dates Burning Hell money for deceased family members Planting willow branches to keep ghosts away from houses Boiled eggs Han Koreans Mongols Dragon Boat Festival 端午節 or 端午节 or 단오 Duanwu Festival Dano Surit nal Chinese Korean Month 5 Day 5 Driving poisons amp plague away China Dragon Boat Race Wearing coloured lines Hanging felon herb on the front door Korea Washing hair with iris water ssireum Worship various Gods Zongzi Surichwitteok rice cake with herbs Han Koreans Yamato Ghost Festival 中元節 or 中元节 or 백중 Mid Yuan Festival Chinese Month 7 Day 15 Ancestors Worship Tomb Sweeping Birthdate of the God of Earth officer Han Koreans Yamato Mid Autumn Festival 中秋節 or 中秋节 中秋祭 Chinese Month 8 Day 15 Family Reunion Enjoying Moon view Worship the Moon Goddess Mooncake Han Chuseok 추석 or 한가위 Hangawi Korean Month 8 Day 15 Family Reunion Ancestors Worship Tomb Sweeping Enjoying Moon view N A Songpyeon Torantang Taro soup KoreansTsukimi 月見 or お月見 Tsukimi or Otsukimi Gregorian Month 8 Day 15 Family Reunion Enjoying Moon view Worship the Moon Tsukimi Dango Sweet Potato Yamato Double Ninth Festival 重陽節 or 重阳节 Double Positive Festival Chinese Month 9 Day 09 Climbing Mountain Taking care of elderly Wearing Cornus Worship various Gods Han Korean Yamato Lower Yuan Festival 下元節 or 下元节 N A Chinese Month 10 Day 15 Ancestors Worship Tomb Sweeping Birthdate of the God of Water officer Ciba Han Dongzhi Festival 冬至 or 동지 or 冬至 N A Gregorian Between Dec 21 and Dec 23 Between Dec 21 and Dec 23 Ancestors Worship Rites to dispel bad spirits N A Tangyuan Patjuk Zenzai Kabocha Han Koreans Yamato Small New Year 小年 Jizao 祭灶 Chinese Month 12 Day 23 Cleaning Houses Worship the God of Hearth tanggua Han Mongols Japan switched the date to the Gregorian calendar after the Meiji Restoration Not always on that Gregorian date sometimes April 4 Entertainment East Asian popular culture such as anime and manga from Japan and K pop and K dramas from South Korea have become highly popular worldwide in the 21st century Sports Japan vs Mongolia in baseball at the 2014 Asian Games Baseball is one of the main sports in East Asia having been introduced through mid 19th century American contact and further spread by the Japanese Empire The game has gained millions of fans in China since the 2010s East Asian Youth Games This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message Formerly the East Asian Games it is a multi sport event organized by the East Asian Games Association EAGA and held every four years since 2019 among athletes from East Asian countries and territories of the Olympic Council of Asia OCA as well as the Pacific island of Guam which is a member of the Oceania National Olympic Committees It is one of five Regional Games of the OCA The others are the Central Asian Games the Southeast Asian Games SEA Games the South Asian Games and the West Asian Games CollaborationFree trade agreements This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message Name of agreement Parties Leaders at the time Negotiation begins Signing date Starting time Current statusChina South Korea FTA Xi Jinping Park Geun hye May 2012 Jun 01 2015 Dec 30 2015 EnforcedChina Japan South Korea FTA Xi Jinping Shinzō Abe Park Geun hye Mar 26 2013 N A N A 10 round negotiationJapan Mongolia EPA Shinzō Abe Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj Feb 10 2015 EnforcedChina Mongolia FTA Xi Jinping Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj N A N A N A Officially proposedChina HK CEPA Jiang Zemin Tung Chee hwa Jun 29 2003 EnforcedChina Macau CEPA Jiang Zemin Edmund Ho Hau wah Oct 18 2003 EnforcedHong Kong Macau CEPA Carrie Lam Fernando Chui Oct 09 2015 N A N A NegotiatingECFA Hu Jintao Ma Ying jeou Jan 26 2010 Jun 29 2010 Aug 17 2010 EnforcedCSSTA Based on ECFA Xi Jinping Ma Ying jeou Mar 2011 Jun 21 2013 N A AbolishedCSGTA Based on ECFA Hu Jintao Ma Ying jeou Feb 22 2011 N A N A SuspendedMilitary alliances Name Parties within the regionSino North Korean Mutual Aid and Cooperation Friendship TreatyTreaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security between the United States and JapanMutual Defense Treaty Between the United States and the Republic of KoreaMajor cities Largest population centres of East AsiaRank City name Country Pop Tokyo Seoul 1 Tokyo Japan 38 140 0002 Seoul South Korea 25 520 0003 Shanghai China 24 484 0004 Beijing China 21 240 0005 Osaka Japan 20 337 0006 Chongqing China 13 744 0007 Guangzhou China 13 070 0008 Tianjin China 11 558 0009 Shenzhen China 10 828 00010 Chengdu China 10 104 000 Tokyo is the capital of Japan and the world s largest city both in metropolitan population and economy Beijing is the capital of China It has a history of over 3300 years Seoul is the capital of South Korea Osaka is the second largest metropolitan area in Japan Guangzhou is one of the most important economic centers in southern China Nagoya is the third largest metropolitan area in Japan Nagoya is a major port city and the location of Lexus headquarters Kyoto was the imperial capital of Japan for eleven centuries Ulaanbaatar is the capital of Mongolia with a population of 1 6 million as of 2021 Taipei City is the capital of Taiwan with a population of 2 6 million Hong Kong is one of the global financial centres and is known as a cosmopolitan metropolis Busan is second largest city in South Korea and financial centre along with Seoul Pyongyang is the capital of North Korea and a major city on the Korean Peninsula Xi an or Chang an is the oldest of the Four Great Ancient Capitals of China source source source source source Pass of the ISS over Mongolia looking out west towards the Pacific Ocean China and Japan As the video progresses major cities along the Chinese coast and the Japanese islands on the Philippine Sea are visible The island of Guam can be seen further down the pass into the Philippine Sea and the pass ends just to the east of New Zealand See alsoGeography portalAsia portalChina portalHong Kong portalJapan portalNorth Korea portalSouth Korea portalTaiwan portalEast Asia United States relations East Asian Community China Japan South Korea trilateral summit East Asia Summit East Asian studiesNotesListed as Hong Kong SAR by IMF Listed as Macao SAR by IMF Listed as Taiwan Province of China by IMF Includes all area which under PRC s government control excluding South Tibet and disputed islands citation needed A note by the United Nations For statistical purposes the data for China do not include Hong Kong and Macao Special Administrative Regions SAR of China and Taiwan Province of China References Report for Selected Countries and Subjects April 2024 imf org International Monetary Fund Kort Michael 2005 The Handbook Of East Asia Lerner p 7 ISBN 978 0 761 32672 4 East Asia rand org RAND Corporation Archived from the original on 2011 01 02 Retrieved 12 August 2021 Countries of Asia nationsonline org Nations Online Archived from the original on 2001 07 01 Retrieved 12 August 2021 Zaharna R S Arsenault Amelia Fisher Ali 2013 Relational Networked and Collaborative Approaches to Public Diplomacy The Connective Mindshift Routledge p 93 ISBN 978 0 415 63607 0 Holcombe Charles 2017 A History of East Asia From the Origins of Civilization to the Twenty First Century Cambridge University Press p 13 ISBN 978 1 107 54489 5 Szonyi Michael 2017 A Companion to Chinese History Wiley Blackwell p 90 ISBN 978 1 118 62460 9 Selin Helaine 2010 Nature Across Cultures Views of Nature and the Environment in Non Western Cultures Springer p 350 ISBN 978 9 048 16271 0 Laozi Mair Victor H 1998 Tao Te Ching The Classic Book of Integrity and the Way New York Quality Paperback Book Club pp x ISBN 978 0 965 06475 0 Salkind Neil J 2008 Encyclopedia of Educational Psychology Sage Publications p 56 ISBN 978 1 412 91688 2 Kim Chongho 2003 Korean Shamanism The Cultural Paradox Ashgate ISBN 978 0 754 63185 9 Andreas Anangguru Yewangoe Theologia crucis in Asia 1987 Rodopi Heissig Walther 2000 The Religions of Mongolia Translated by Samuel Geoffrey Kegan Paul International p 46 ISBN 978 0 710 30685 2 Wang Yuchen Lu Dongsheng Chung Yeun Jun Xu Shuhua 2018 Genetic structure divergence and admixture of Han Chinese Japanese and Korean populations Hereditas 155 19 doi 10 1186 s41065 018 0057 5 PMC 5889524 PMID 29636655 Holcombe Charles 2017 A History of East Asia Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 11873 7 Ball Desmond 2005 The Transformation of Security in the Asia Pacific Region Routledge p 104 ISBN 978 0 714 64661 9 Chua Amy Rubenfeld Jed 2014 The Triple Package How Three Unlikely Traits Explain the Rise and Fall of Cultural Groups in America Penguin p 121 ISBN 978 1 594 20546 0 Kang David C 2012 East Asia Before the West Five Centuries of Trade and Tribute Columbia University Press pp 33 34 ISBN 978 0 2 311 5319 5 Goucher Candice Walton Linda 2012 World History Journeys from Past to Present Routledge p 232 ISBN 978 0 415 67002 9 Smolnikov Sergey 2018 Great Power Conduct and Credibility in World Politics Springer ISBN 978 3 319 71885 9 Lone Stewart 2007 Daily Lives of Civilians in Wartime Asia From the Taiping Rebellion to the Vietnam War Greenwood p 3 ISBN 978 0 313 33684 3 Cohen Warren I 2000 East Asia at the Center Four Thousand Years of Engagement with the World New York Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 10108 2 Norman Jerry 1988 Chinese Cambridge University Press p 17 ISBN 978 0 521 29653 3 Cohen 2000 p 60 Chua Amy 2009 Day of Empire How Hyperpowers Rise to Global Dominance and Why They Fall Anchor p 62 ISBN 978 1 400 07741 0 Leibo Steve 2012 East and Southeast Asia 2012 Stryker Post p 19 ISBN 978 1 610 48885 3 Tsai Henry 2009 Maritime Taiwan Historical Encounters with the East and the West Routledge p 3 ISBN 978 0 765 62328 7 Lockard Craig 1999 Tang Civilization and the Chinese Centuries PDF Encarta Historical Essays 2 3 7 Lockard 1999 p 7 Injae Lee Miller Owen Jinhoon Park Hyun Hae Yi 2014 Korean History in Maps Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 09846 6 via Google Books Fagan Brian M 1999 The Oxford Companion to Archaeology Oxford University Press p 362 ISBN 978 0 195 07618 9 Lockard 1999 p 8 Lockard Craig A 2009 Societies Networks And Transitions Volume B From 600 To 1750 Wadsworth pp 290 291 ISBN 978 1 439 08540 0 Embree Ainslie Gluck Carol 1997 Asia in Western and World History A Guide for Teaching M E Sharpe p 352 ISBN 978 1 563 24265 6 Lind Jennifer February 13 2018 Life in China s Asia What Regional Hegemony Would Look Like Foreign Affairs Vol 97 no March April 2018 Lockard 1999 Ellington Lucien 2009 Japan Nations in Focus Bloomsbury p 21 ISBN 978 1 598 84163 3 Li Xiaobing 2018 The Cold War in East Asia Abingdon Oxon Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 65179 1 Roberts John M 1997 A Short History of the World Oxford University Press p 272 ISBN 0 195 11504 X Hayes Louis D 2009 Political Systems of East Asia China Korea and Japan Greenlight p xi ISBN 978 0 765 61786 6 Hayes 2009 p 15 Tindall George Brown Shi David E 2009 America A Narrative History W W Norton p 926 ISBN 978 0 393 934083 April K Shockley M 2007 Diversity New Realities in a Changing World Palgrave Macmillan pp 163 ISBN 978 0 230 00133 6 Cohen 2000 p 3 Batty David 2005 01 17 Japan s War in Colour documentary TWI Goldman Merie Gordon Andrew 2000 Diversity New Realities in a Changing World Harvard University Press p 3 ISBN 978 0 674 00097 1 Cohen 2000 p 273 Hua Shiping Hu Amelia 2014 East Asian Development Model Twenty first century perspectives Routledge pp 78 79 ISBN 978 0 415 73727 2 Lee Yong Wook Key Young Son 2014 China s Rise and Regional Integration in East Asia Hegemony or community Routledge p 45 ISBN 978 0 313 35082 5 Sino Japanese War 1894 95 Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 12 November 2012 Tindall amp Shi 2009 p 1147 Liff Adam P Lee Chaewon 2024 Korea Taiwan Unofficial Relations after 30 Years 1992 2022 Reassessing Seoul s One China Policy In Zhao Suisheng ed The Taiwan Question in Xi Jinping s Era Beijing s Evolving Taiwan Policy and Taiwan s Internal and External Dynamics London and New York Routledge ISBN 9781032861661 Northrup Cynthia Clark Bentley Jerry H Eckes Alfred E Jr 2004 Encyclopedia of World Trade From Ancient Times to the Present Routledge p 297 ISBN 978 0 765 68058 7 Paul Erik 2012 Neoliberal Australia and US Imperialism in East Asia Palgrave Macmillan p 114 ISBN 978 1 137 27277 5 Maddison Angus 2007 Contours of the World Economy 1 2030 AD Essays in Macro Economic History Oxford University Press p 379 ISBN 978 0 191 64758 1 Dahlman Carl J Aubert Jean Eric China and the Knowledge Economy Seizing the 21st Century WBI Development Studies Institute of Education Sciences Retrieved 26 July 2014 Angus Maddison Chinese Economic Performance in the Long Run Development Centre Studies PDF p 29 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Retrieved 15 September 2017 Dahlman Carl J Aubert Jean Eric China and the Knowledge Economy Seizing the 21st Century WBI Development Studies World Bank publications Accessed January 30 2008 Angus Maddison Chinese Economic Performance in the Long Run Archived 2014 10 15 at the Wayback Machine Development Centre Studies Accessed 2007 p 29 See the Table 1 3 Levels of Chinese and European GDP Per Capita 1 1700 AD in page 29 Chinese GDP Per Capita was 450 and European GDP Per Capital was 422 in 960AD Chinese GDP Per Capita was 600 while European was 576 During this time Chinese per capita income rose by about a third Ma Xinru Kang David C 2024 Beyond Power Transitions The Lessons of East Asian History and the Future of U S China Relations Columbia Studies in International Order and Politics New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 55597 5 Introducing East Asian Peoples PDF International Mission Board September 10 2016 Gilbet Rozman 2004 Northeast Asia s stunted regionalism bilateral distrust in the shadow of globalization Cambridge University Press pp 3 4 Northeast Asia dominates patent filing growth Retrieved on August 8 2001 Paper Economic Integration in Northeast Asia dead link Retrieved on August 8 2011 Hua amp Hu 2014 p 3 Ness Immanuel Bellwood Peter 2014 The Global Prehistory of Human Migration Wiley Blackwell p 217 ISBN 978 1 118 97059 1 Kort 2005 pp 7 9 Prescott Anne 2015 East Asia in the World An Introduction Routledge p 3 ISBN 978 0765643223 Ikeo Aiko 1996 Economic Development in Twentieth Century East Asia The International Context Routledge p 1 ISBN 978 0 415 14900 6 Yoshimatsu H 2014 Comparing Institution Building in East Asia Power Politics Governance and Critical Junctures Palgrave Macmillan p 1 ISBN 978 1 137 37054 9 Kim Mikyoung 2015 Routledge Handbook of Memory and Reconciliation in East Asia Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 83513 8 Hazen Dan Spohrer James H 2005 Building Area Studies Collections Otto Harrassowitz p 130 ISBN 978 3 447 05512 3 Grabowski Richard Self Sharmistha Shields William 2012 Economic Development A Regional Institutional and Historical Approach 2nd ed Routledge published September 25 2012 p 59 ISBN 978 0 765 63353 8 Currie Lorenzo 2013 Through the Eyes of the Pack Xlibris Corp p 163 ISBN 978 1 493 14517 1 Asato Noriko 2013 Handbook for Asian Studies Specialists A Guide to Research Materials and Collection Building Tools Libraries Unlimited p 1 ISBN 978 1 598 84842 7 Prescott 2015 p 6 Miller David Y 2007 Modern East Asia An Introductory History Routledge p xi ISBN 978 0 765 61822 1 Central Themes for a Unit on China r Educators afe easia columbia edu Columbia University Retrieved 2018 12 01 Within the Pacific region China is potentially a major economic and political force Its relations with Japan Korea and its Southeast Asian neighbours Vietnam Cambodia Laos Malaysia Thailand Indonesia and the Philippines will be determined by how they perceive this power will be used Cummings Sally N 2013 Understanding Central Asia Politics and Contested Transformations Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 43319 3 Saez Lawrence 2012 The South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation SAARC An emerging collaboration architecture Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 67108 1 Cornell Svante E Modernization and Regional Cooperation in Central Asia A New Spring PDF Central Asia Caucasus Institute and the Silk Road Studies Aminian Nathalie Fung K C Ng Francis Integration of Markets vs Integration by Agreements PDF Policy Research Working Paper World Bank Northeast Asia Council on Foreign Relations Retrieved August 10 2009 Economic Research Institute for Northeast Asia 1999 Japan and Russia in Northeast Asia Partners in the 21st Century Greenwood p 248 UNSD Methodology unstats un org Retrieved 2023 12 10 United Nations Statistics Division Standard Country and Area Codes Classifications M49 United Nations Statistics Division 2015 05 06 Retrieved 2010 07 24 East Asia Encarta Microsoft Archived from the original on 2009 11 09 Retrieved 2008 01 12 the countries and regions of Mainland China Hong Kong Macau Taiwan Mongolia South Korea North Korea and Japan Composition of macro geographical continental regions geographical sub regions and selected economic and other groupings United Nations Statistics Division 11 February 2013 Retrieved 28 May 2013 Todd Ian 1974 Island Realm A Pacific Panorama Angus amp Robertson p 190 ISBN 978 0 207 127618 Udvardy Miklos D F A Classification of the Biogeographical Provinces of the World PDF UNESCO Archived from the original PDF on 18 February 2022 Retrieved 7 March 2022 IMAGE Countries and areas in WHO s Western Pacific Region via ResearchGate Forget Asia Pacific it s Indo Pacific now Where is that 15 September 2021 Dent Christopher M 2008 East Asian regionalism Routledge pp 1 8 Harvie Charles Fukunari Kimura Lee Hyun Hoon 2005 New East Asian regionalism Edward Elgar pp 3 6 Katzenstein Peter J Takashi Shiraishi 2006 Beyond Japan the dynamics of East Asian regionalism Ithaca Cornell University Press pp 1 33 An Z April 2000 Asynchronous Holocene optimum of the East Asian monsoon Quaternary Science Reviews 19 8 743 762 Bibcode 2000QSRv 19 743A doi 10 1016 S0277 3791 99 00031 1 Kang Suchul Eltahir Elfatih A B 31 July 2018 North China Plain threatened by deadly heatwaves due to climate change and irrigation Nature Communications 9 1 3528 Bibcode 2023NatCo 14 3528K doi 10 1038 s41467 023 38906 7 PMC 10319847 PMID 37402712 Shaw R Y Luo T S Cheong S Abdul Halim S Chaturvedi M Hashizume G E Insarov Y Ishikawa M Jafari A Kitoh J Pulhin C Singh K Vasant and Z Zhang 2022 Chapter 10 Asia In Climate Change 2022 Impacts Adaptation and Vulnerability H O Portner D C Roberts M Tignor E S Poloczanska K Mintenbeck A Alegria M Craig S Langsdorf S Loschke V Moller A Okem B Rama eds Cambridge University Press Cambridge United Kingdom and New York New York US pp 1457 1579 doi 10 1017 9781009325844 012 Country codes iso org World Population Prospects 2022 United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division Retrieved July 17 2022 World Population Prospects 2022 Demographic indicators by region subregion and country annually for 1950 2100 XSLX Total Population as of 1 July thousands United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division Retrieved July 17 2022 Human Development Reports www hdr undp org January 2018 Retrieved 2018 10 14 Religious Composition by Country 2010 2050 Pew 2 April 2015 Archived from the original on 2019 12 21 Retrieved 2020 10 18 Wenzel Teuber Katharina 2012 People s Republic of China Religions and Churches Statistical Overview 2011 PDF Religions amp Christianity in Today s China II 3 29 54 ISSN 2192 9289 Archived from the original PDF on 27 April 2017 Wenzel Teuber Katharina 2017 Statistics on Religions and Churches in the People s Republic of China Update for the Year 2016 PDF Religions amp Christianity in Today s China VII 2 26 53 Archived from the original PDF on 22 July 2017 Hardacre Helen 2017 Shinto a history New York Oxford University Press p 18 ISBN 978 0 190 62171 1 CIA Factbook Archived from the original on 2016 10 13 Retrieved 2018 03 17 人口推計 平成 28年 12月 報 PDF stat go jp 주민등록 인구통계 Korea North The World Factbook 2025 ed Central Intelligence Agency Retrieved 8 April 2023 Archived 2023 edition 재외동포현황 Total number of overseas Koreans South Korea Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade 2021 Retrieved 1 February 2022 China Statistical Yearbook 2021 Gordon Raymond G Jr ed 2005 Ethnologue Languages of the World 15th ed Dallas SIL International ISBN 978 1 55671 159 6 OCLC 224749653 Ainu language and alphabet Goscha Christopher 2016 The Penguin History of Modern Vietnam A History Allen Lane ISBN 978 1 846 143106 Chua amp Rubenfeld 2014 p 122 Lewis Mark Edward 2012 China s Cosmopolitan Empire The Tang Dynasty Belknap p 156 ISBN 978 0 674 06401 0 Reischauer Edwin O 1974 The Sinic World in Perspective Foreign Affairs 52 2 341 348 doi 10 2307 20038053 JSTOR 20038053 Chua amp Rubenfeld 2014 p 121 122 Seo Yongseok 2006 04 30 Dator Jim Pratt Richard C Seo Yongseok eds Chapter 22 East Asian Response to the Globalization of Culture Perceptional Change and Cultural Policy Fairness Globalization and Public Institutions East Asia and Beyond University of Hawaii Press pp 319 336 doi 10 1515 9780824841966 023 html lang en amp srsltid afmboorlr g6zoxn9cj4zxog8odmpytphkz2ql0wqco 9yvf8y dbx ISBN 978 0 8248 4196 6 retrieved 2024 12 21 Hollingsworth Julia 2019 12 29 Why the past decade saw the rise and rise of East Asian pop culture CNN Retrieved 2024 11 18 Cho Younghan 2016 Double binding of Japanese colonialism trajectories of baseball in Japan Taiwan and Korea Cultural Studies 30 6 926 948 doi 10 1080 09502386 2015 1094498 ISSN 0950 2386 杜娟 MLB s China operation knocking it out the ball park www chinadaily com cn Retrieved 2024 10 22 United Nations March 12 2017 The World s Cities in 2016 PDF United Nations 통계표명 주민등록 인구통계 in Korean Ministry of Government Administration and Home Affairs Archived from the original on 3 March 2011 Retrieved 4 April 2015 Further readingChurch Peter A short history of South East Asia John Wiley amp Sons 2017 Chung Eunbin Pride Not Prejudice National Identity as a Pacifying Force in East Asia University of Michigan Press 2022 online reviews by six scholars Clyde Paul H and Burton F Beers The Far East A History of Western Impacts and Eastern Responses 1830 1975 1975 online 3rd edition 1958 Crofts Alfred A history of the Far East 1958 online free to borrow Dennett Tyler Americans in Eastern Asia 1922 online free Ebrey Patricia Buckley and Anne Walthall East Asia A cultural social and political history Cengage Learning 2013 Embree Ainslie T ed Encyclopedia of Asian history 1988 vol 1 online vol 2 online vol 3 online vol 4 online Fairbank John K Edwin Reischauer and Albert M Craig East Asia The great tradition and East Asia The modern transformation 1960 2 vol 1960 online free to borrow famous textbook Flynn Matthew J China Contested Western Powers in East Asia 2006 for secondary schools Gelber Harry The dragon and the foreign devils China and the world 1100 BC to the present 2011 Green Michael J By more than providence grand strategy and American power in the Asia Pacific since 1783 2017 a major scholarly survey excerpt Hall D G E History of South East Asia Macmillan International Higher Education 1981 Holcombe Charles A History of East Asia 2d ed Cambridge UP 2017 excerpt Iriye Akira After Imperialism The Search for a New Order in the Far East 1921 1931 1965 Jensen Richard Jon Davidann and Yoneyuki Sugita eds Trans Pacific Relations America Europe and Asia in the Twentieth Century Praeger 2003 304 pp online review Keay John Empire s End A History of the Far East from High Colonialism to Hong Kong Scribner 1997 online free to borrow Levinson David and Karen Christensen eds Encyclopedia of Modern Asia 6 vol Charles Scribner s Sons 2002 Mackerras Colin Eastern Asia an introductory history Melbourne Longman Cheshire 1992 Macnair Harley F amp Donald Lach Modern Far Eastern International Relations 2nd ed 1955 1950 edition online free gt

rec-icon Recommended Topics
Share this article
Read the free encyclopedia and learn everything...
See more
Read the free encyclopedia. All information in Wikipedia is available. No payment required.
Share this article on
Share
XXX 0C
Saturday, 08 February, 2025
Follow Us On