1 / 20

Reunification of China Sui, Tang and Song Dynasties

Reunification of China Sui, Tang and Song Dynasties. After the Han Centuries of disunity 589; Sui, Tang then Song dynasties centralize & revitalize China. II. Sui Dynasty - 589 A. Ruler Wendi reestablished centralized state 1. Repaired Great Wall 2. New conquests

george
Download Presentation

Reunification of China Sui, Tang and Song Dynasties

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Reunification of ChinaSui, Tang and Song Dynasties

  2. After the Han • Centuries of disunity • 589; Sui, Tang then Song dynasties centralize & revitalize China.

  3. II. Sui Dynasty - 589 • A. Ruler Wendi reestablished centralized state • 1. Repaired Great Wall • 2. New conquests • - Vietnam, Taiwan • 3. Revolts due to high taxes ended Sui dynasty • - Tang dynasty emerged

  4. III. Tang Dynasty – Golden Era of Chinese History • A. Expanded influence • 1. Formed protectorates (defender of) over Tibet, Vietnam, Korea = spread Chinese institutions • 2. Tribute from Japan • - foreign envoys performed Kowtow before the emperor

  5. B. Strengthened Central Gov’t • 1. Empress Wu (one of few female rulers) • Reduced powers of landlords • Removed their tax power; state taxed peasants directly. • Accurate censuses = fair & reliable taxation • C. Civil Service Exam Revived • 1. Stricter • 2. Education counting more than birthright • 3. Aristocrat’s role faded in favor of scholar-bureaucrats Empress Wu – 625-705

  6. D. Extended gov’t functions • 1. Regulate trade • 2. Roads & canals • Grand Canal linking southern rice fields to pop. Centers in the north • 3. Flying Money = early currency • Credit instrument = redeemed at end of voyage • Reduced danger of robbery • Led to paper money

  7. E. Attack on Buddhism • 1. Revival of Confucianism – “Neo-Confucianism” • 2. Buddhism = potentially subversive element • Favored early on; rejected later as alien. • Thousands of shrines, monasteries destroyed. • Remained important minority but… • Period of growth halted • 3. Tang felt right and duty to regulate beliefs of subjects

  8. F. Tang Decline - Late 700’s • 1. Poverty, taxes, nomadic invasions = protest • 2. 906 - civil war • 3. 960 - Song comes to power

  9. IV. Song Dynasty • A. Controlled less land than Tang • 1. North dominated by nomads; • - Jurchens= Jin Dynasty • 2. Control focused on southern regions

  10. B. Economically Dynamic • 1. Tax revenues up; focused on merchants not peasants; revolts down • 2. Domestic (in China) trade increased = tea, cotton • 3. Foreign trade flourished • a. Highly developed manufacturing sector • sophisticated ships/tech.; Junks • 4. Imports limited mostly to raw materials • a. full consumer society does not develop • b. Why? clashed with Confucian ideals against excesses & self-reliance

  11. C. Improved Ag. Productivity & Coal & Iron Output • 1. Quick-growing Champa rice from Vietnam & fertilizers = more harvests & yields • 2. Massive pop. growth; 100 mill. + • 3. Expansion of urban life; Big Cities! - Hangzhou

  12. D. Arts & Culture During Tang and Song • 1. Art, architecture, literature reflected Buddhist, Daoist influence • a. Pagoda introduced • b. Art & lit. reliance on natural subjects • c. Traditional order of Neo-Confucianism combined with love of nature inspired by Daoists & Buddhists

  13. E. Scientific Advancement of Tang and Song • 1. Gov’t-sponsored map making & astronomical observation • a. expanded knowledge of universe

  14. 2. Most significant? • a. Explosive powder • - 1st for fireworks • - Then weaponry: land mines, hand grenades, projectiles

  15. b. Wood-Block printing • - By 10th cent. - books of all types & every classic in print • - paper currency & playing cards followed • c. These techs. spread to West by 15th cent.

  16. F. Neo-Confucianism during Song Era • 1. Revival of Confucian ideology • a. Emphasis on tradition • b. Less receptive to outside ideas; solutions drawn from past • c. Limited long-term innovation • d. Reinforced role of patriarch; submissive/inferior role of women • e. Worsened conditions for women by Later song Era

  17. Foot binding – Song Dynasty to early 20th century

  18. G. Song Dynasty Replaced by Mongols • 1. Yuan Dynasty forms under Kublai Khan • a. China regains control under Ming dynasty

More Related