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CHAPTER 17 The East Asian World

CHAPTER 17 The East Asian World . China at its Apex. Why were the Manchu’s so successful at establishing a foreign dynasty in China? What were the main characteristics of Manchu Rule? Banners Dyarchy. Ming Dynasty (1369 – 1644) . Reign of Kublai Khan ended 1368

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CHAPTER 17 The East Asian World

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  1. CHAPTER 17The East Asian World

  2. China at its Apex • Why were the Manchu’s so successful at establishing a foreign dynasty in China? • What were the main characteristics of Manchu Rule? • Banners • Dyarchy

  3. Ming Dynasty (1369 – 1644) • Reign of Kublai Khan ended 1368 • Zhu Yuanzhang – Peasant rebellion • Period of expansion • Zheng He (1405-1433) • Portuguese Contact • Permitted to Occupy Macao • Direct trade limited • Strong Jesuit Influence

  4. 16th C Decline of Ming • Factors • Weak rulers • Era of corruption – concentration of land • English & Dutch disrupted silver trade • Decline of economy • decline of crop yields • Starvation & Epidemic • Peasant Rebellion • LiZicheng, occupied Beijing

  5. China and Its Enemies During the Late Ming Era

  6. Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) • Manchu's & Ming Military assumed the rebellion founded the Qing in 1644 • The Reign of Kangxi (1661-1722) • Stabilized imperial rule by pacifying the northern and western frontiers • Made the empire acceptable to the general public • Active patron of arts and letters • Supported scholars through projects • Western missionaries were permitted to be active

  7. Emperor KangxiThe Era of Peace & Prosperity © Hu Weibiao/Panorama/The Image Works

  8. Signs of Internal decay • The Reign of Qianlong (1736-1795) • Military overextended • Corrupt subordinates exploited their position • Court corruption, siphoned off imperial funds to family or favorites • Led to unrest in rural areas (higher taxes, pressure on land, population increase) • White Lotus Rebellion (1796-1804) was suppressed at great imperial expense

  9. Qing Politics • Factors of success for the Manchu's • Ability to adapt to new environment • Retained Ming Political system • Established legitimacy as rightful rulers by stressing their devotion to the principles of Confucianism

  10. Qing Politics • Factors of conflict? • Ethnically, linguistically and culturally different from subjects • Tried to protect unique identity (2% of population) • Legally defined as distinct from everyone else • Banners(stationed as separate units in various strategic positions throughout china) the bannerman were the primary fighting force of the empire • Dyarchy – all important administrative positions were shared equally by Chinese and Manchu's

  11. The Qing Empire in the Eighteenth Century

  12. Rise of European Dominance • End of the 17th C English became the dominant force in European trade • East Indian Company • trading unit and administrator of English territories • First trading post in Canton in 1699

  13. Canton in the Eighteenth Century

  14. European Warehouses at Canton End of the 18th C England demanded they be allowed access to other cities along the coast and that the country be opened up to manufactured goods. © The Art Archive/Marine Museum, Stockholm, Sweden/Gianni Dagli Orti

  15. Changing China • How did the economy and society change during the Ming and Qing eras? • To what degree did these changes seem to be leading toward an industrial revolution on the European Model?

  16. Social & Economic Changes • The Population explosion • During Ming and Qing 70-80 million in 1390 • Era of peace and stability under early Qing • Introduction of new crops – peanuts, sweet potatoes, maize • New species of faster growing rice • Seed of industrialization • Steady growth of manufacturing and commerce • Commercial networks began to operate regionally and nationally. • Exports outpaced imports

  17. Role of Women • Daily Life in Qing China • Subordinate to men • Secluded and virtuous (Spanish observation) • Could not divorce or inherit property • He could divorce her if she produced no male heirs • Patriarchal privilege: second wife or concubine for pleasure • Widows if they remarried , the in laws would inherit all of her previous property and original dowry • Female sacrifice & infanticide

  18. Tokugawa Japan • How did the society and economy of Japan change during the Tokugawa era? • How did Japanese culture reflect those changes? • Fudai Daimyo • Tozama Daimyo • Ronin

  19. The Three Great Unifiers • Oda Nobunaga & Toyotomi Hideyoshi • generals attempted to seize control and expand their rule. • Tokugawa Leyasu • named himself Shogun in 1603 • Most powerful and long lasting of all • Tokugawa rulers completed the restoration of central authority that previous rulers had begun.

  20. Tokugawa Japan Open to western trade & religion Restricted after missionaries acquired territory & used force to convert

  21. The Tokugawa “Great Peace” • Characteristics of Administration • Centralized Rule • Shogun ruled through Bakufu (coalition of Daimyo & council of elders • Shogunate’s dual role • Set national policy on behalf of Emp. Kyoto • Governed Shoguns domain • Domains or Han ruled by 250 Daimyo • Fudai (inside Daimyo subordinate to Shogun) • Tozama (Outside Daimyo, independent)

  22. Changes in Hierarchy • Daimyo- supported by taxes on their lands • Dual residence, family stayed in Edo to ensure their loyalty to the Shogunate • Reliance on rice cultivation - debt • Samurai Class size limited, ceased to be a warrior class but maintained class distinction

  23. Seeds of Capitalism • Rise in commerce and manufacturing • Tech advances in agriculture and expansion of arable land • Commercial expansion took place in major cities and castle towns for the most part • Merchants and artisans lived with samurai • Banking & paper currency • Merchants guilds established

  24. Beneficiaries of Changes • Emergence of a merchant Class • Played a significant role in the life of the nation • Early indigenous form of capitalism

  25. Non-beneficiaries of Changes • Samurai – barred from commercial activities • Fell into debt • “masterless samurai” or Ronin • Farmers • rice cultivation saw rising cost of living and decrease in profits • Transition to tenancy or wage labor • Peasant revolts

  26. Rigid Patriarchal Caste society • Intermarriage between classes not permitted • (warriors, artisans, peasant and merchant) • Eta –outcastes of society • Hereditary Status • Ruled by discriminatory laws • (where they could live, how they could dress and wear their hair)

  27. Role of Women (Upper class) • Women became more restricted than previous • (Confucian ideals more prominent in samurai class) • Patriarchs had broad authority over property, marriage, divorce • Wives were expected to obey on pain of death • Males took concubines or homosexual partners (Females were expected to remain chaste)

  28. Role of Women (lower class) • Women valued as child bearers and homemakers • Both sexes worked in the fields • Coeducational schools (25% students female) • Infant daughters put to death or sold into prostitution (poor families) • patrilocal marriage • If she did not meet expectations –she would be divorced

  29. Cultural Reflections of Change • Popular literature written for townspeople (urban fiction) • Five women who loved love by Saikaku • Homosexual liaisons among the samurai • Kabuki – the rise of the theater

  30. Korea & Vietnam • To what degree did developments in Korea during this period reflect conditions in China and Japan? • What were the unique aspects of Vietnamese civilization? • Yangban • Chonmin

  31. Similarities to Japan • Entry into the bureaucracy was restricted to members of the aristocratic class • (Yangban “two Groups” civilian and military classes) • Peasants remained in serf like conditions • worked on government estates or manors • Chonmin – class of slaves • served on government plantations • occupations such as butchers and entertainers (beneath dignity of the population)

  32. Changes • 15th C phonetic alphabet (Hangul) • Allowed for private correspondence and published fiction for popular audience • A rising commercial class began to displace the Yangban began to blur class distinction • (some became merchants, others peasants as the rising commercial class grew in power and strength)

  33. Dai Viet (Vietnam) • Isolated from maritime routes • Peripherally involved in the spice trade • Did not lose territory to European colonial powers • Followed an imperial path of its own • Expanded into the state of Champa to the south and into Old Angkor (Cambodia) • 17th C civil war split Dai Viet into two territories • Beginning of European involvement

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