When preparing your manuscript for submission, consider how reviewers will read it. Avoid self-reference to keep the review blind. Put footnotes at the bottom of the page and insert illustrations and tables approximately where they would appear in the published article so that the reviewer sees them as a reader would. Insert Chinese characters as needed. Authors are encouraged to follow the Journal style for spelling, punctuation, number, and so on (under Preparing Your Manuscript), but that is not necessary at the submission stage.
Manuscripts must be submitted as electronic files (as DOC or RTF files). Include an abstract of no more than 150 words and three to five keywords. Manuscripts should be submitted via the journal's submission system at https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/jchist. The cover letter should give full contact details for the corresponding author. Full author names and academic affiliations, including country, are required for all co-authors. These details should not be in the text of the manuscript to facilitate anonymous peer review.
Contributions written in English are welcomed from all countries. Authors, particularly those whose first language is not English, may wish to have their English-language manuscripts checked by a native speaker before submission. This is optional, but may help to ensure that the academic content of the paper is fully understood by the editor and any reviewers. Cambridge offers a service which authors can learn about here. Please note that the use of any of these services is voluntary, and at the author's own expense. Use of these services does not guarantee that the manuscript will be accepted for publication, nor does it restrict the author to submitting to a Cambridge published journal.
Queries may be submitted to the journal editorial office,
References and notes: All sources must be fully referenced. To prepare the footnotes to match the Journal style, see Preparing Accepted Manuscripts for Copyediting and Publication below. Alternative systems may be used at the submission stage.
Preparing Accepted Manuscripts for Copyediting and Publication
Style: Use American spelling (color, program) and punctuation (double quotation marks, period before quotation marks). Spell out the numbers one through one hundred, and all round numbers, except when combined with "percent" or when numbers appear frequently within a paragraph. Thus: "twentieth century" and "thirty-nine steps." Provide dates, when known, for individuals following their first appearance.
For subheadings, center the top level subheading and put it in bold. If you need a second level, place it flush left and in italics.
Title: The title of the article should be concise, informative, and accurate. You may wish to include relevant keywords in your title to help guide readers who may be using search engines to find your paper. Try to avoid abbreviations and acronyms.
Chinese: Use pinyin Romanization. Put characters after the first reference to a person’s name or a book title, elsewhere only if needed (in other words, not for names of dynasties, jinshi, reign periods, modern provinces, major cities, and other commonly understood terms). In footnotes, give characters for the author and article title, but it is not necessary to give it for the journal title. When necessary, you may give the full Chinese text (punctuated) for indented quotations.
Acknowledgements: Any acknowledgements should appear as the first (unnumbered) footnote.
Footnotes: The first footnote should give full biographical details, including place of publication and publisher. To the extent possible please provide original date of publication as well as reprint information. Supply both Romanization and characters for works in Chinese and Japanese for the first reference, Romanization alone for subsequent references. In subsequent footnotes, use the author’s surname and a short title (not ibid. or op. cit.). The title of a book or journal should be italicized. Do not use p. or pp. before page numbers.
When formulating footnote references to Chinese sources, indicate original juan numbers, even if the work is a modern reprint: thus, Wu Zeng, Nenggai zhai manlu 12.368. If the work is a photographic reprint of a traditional folio edition, always cite to the original folio: thus, Songhui yao, “Chongru” 6.11a-12a.
Examples:
Rong Geng 容庚, Shang Zhou yiqi tongkao 商周彝器通考 (Taibei: Datong, 1973), 82-97.
Subsequent reference: Rong, Shang Zhou yiqi tongkao, 105.
Igor de Rachewiltz, “The Hsi-Yu Lu by Yeh-Lü Chʻu-Tsʻai,” Monumenta Serica 21 (1962), 1-128.
Jeffrey Christopher Moser, “Recasting Antiquity: Ancient Bronzes and Ritual Hermeneutics in the Song Dynasty” (PhD diss. Harvard University, 2010).
Nakajima Satoshi 中嶋敏, Tōyō shigaku ronshū -- Sōdaishi kenkyū to sono shūhen 東洋史學論集 -- 宋代史研究とその周邊 (Tokyo: Kyūko Shūen, 1988), 171.
Naomi Standen, “What Nomads Want: Raids, Invasions and the Liao Conquest of 947,” in Mongols, Turks, and Others: Eurasian Nomads and the Sedentary World, edited by Reuven Amitai and Michal Biran (Leiden: Brill, 2005), 129-74.
In the case of Chinese journals which use the year as the volume number, add the issue number to alert the reader:
Chen, Huiling 陳慧玲, “Lun Songdai jinshixue zhi fada jiqi jiazhi" 論宋代金石學之發達及其價值, Guoli bianyiguan guankan 1988.12, 245-58.
Artwork, figures and other graphics: All figures and tables should be supplied in separate files. Resolution: halftone images must be saved at 300 dpi at approximately the final size. Line drawings should be saved at 1000 dpi, or 1200 dpi if very fine line weights have been used. Combination figures must be saved at a minimum of 600 dpi. Cambridge Journals recommends that only TIFF, EPS or PDF formats are used for electronic artwork. For more detailed guidance on the preparation of illustrations, pictures and graphs in electronic format please see the Cambridge Journals Artwork Guide.
Permissions: Authors are responsible for obtaining permission from copyright holders for reproducing any illustrations, tables, figures or lengthy quotations previously published elsewhere. A copy of the paperwork granting permission should be provided to the Cambridge production editor. You may be asked to pay a permissions fee by the copyright holder; any permissions fees must be paid for by the author. For an example of a permissions request form please see the Cambridge Journals Artwork Guide.
Competing interests and contributions of funding organisations: All authors must include a competing interests declaration in the Title Page document they submit alongside their manuscript. This declaration will be subject to editorial review and may be published in the article. Competing interests are situations that could be perceived to exert an undue influence on the content or publication of an author’s work. They may include, but are not limited to, financial, professional, contractual or personal relationships or situations. If the manuscript has multiple authors, the author submitting must include competing interest declarations relevant to all contributing authors. Example wording for a declaration is as follows: “Competing interests: Author A is employed at company B. Author C owns shares in company D, is on the Board of company E and is a member of organisation F. Author G has received grants from company H.” If no competing interests exist, the declaration should state “Competing interests: The author(s) declare none”.
Supplementary Online Material: If the author has material that may be useful to the reader, but not essential to understanding the article, this can be supplied as supplementary material. Supplementary materials are peer reviewed but they will not be copyedited or typeset, so they should be supplied exactly as they are to appear online. The supplementary material should be supplied as a separate file, and should be referenced in the article.
Types of supplementary material include, but are not limited to, images, videos, podcasts and slideshows.
A statement should be added after the Conflicts of Interest statement to read:
“Supplementary Material
For supplementary material accompanying this paper, visit www.cambridge.org/[Journal]”.
The link will be replaced by your article’s DOI during the production process.
Policy on prior publication
When authors submit manuscripts to this journal, these manuscripts should not be under consideration, accepted for publication or in press within a different journal, book or similar entity, unless explicit permission or agreement has been sought from all entities involved. However, deposition of a preprint on the author’s personal website, in an institutional repository, or in a preprint archive shall not be viewed as prior or duplicate publication. Authors should follow the Cambridge University Press Preprint Policy regarding preprint archives and maintaining the version of record.
Author affiliations
Author affiliations should represent the institution(s) at which the research presented was conducted and/or supported and/or approved. For non-research content, any affiliations should represent the institution(s) with which each author is currently affiliated.
For more information, please see our author affiliation policy and author affiliation FAQs.
Authorship and contributorship
All authors listed on any papers submitted to this journal must be in agreement that the authors listed would all be considered authors according to disciplinary norms, and that no authors who would reasonably be considered an author have been excluded. For further details on this journal’s authorship policy, please see this journal's publishing ethics policies.
ORCID
We require all corresponding authors to identify themselves using ORCID when submitting a manuscript to this journal. ORCID provides a unique identifier for researchers and, through integration with key research workflows such as manuscript submission and grant applications, provides the following benefits:
- Discoverability: ORCID increases the discoverability of your publications, by enabling smarter publisher systems and by helping readers to reliably find work that you have authored.
- Convenience: As more organisations use ORCID, providing your iD or using it to register for services will automatically link activities to your ORCID record, and will enable you to share this information with other systems and platforms you use, saving you re-keying information multiple times.
- Keeping track: Your ORCID record is a neat place to store and (if you choose) share validated information about your research activities and affiliations.
See our ORCID FAQs for more information.
If you don’t already have an iD, you will need to create one if you decide to submit a manuscript to this journal. You can register for one directly from your user account on ScholarOne, or alternatively via https://ORCID.org/register.
If you already have an iD, please use this when submitting your manuscript, either by linking it to your ScholarOne account, or by supplying it during submission using the "Associate your existing ORCID iD" button.
ORCIDs can also be used if authors wish to communicate to readers up-to-date information about how they wish to be addressed or referred to (for example, they wish to include pronouns, additional titles, honorifics, name variations, etc.) alongside their published articles. We encourage authors to make use of the ORCID profile’s “Published Name” field for this purpose. This is entirely optional for authors who wish to communicate such information in connection with their article. Please note that this method is not currently recommended for author name changes: see Cambridge’s author name change policy if you want to change your name on an already published article. See our ORCID FAQs for more information.