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Warmup

Warmup. Put the following in order: Qin Dynasty Shang Dynasty Warring States Period Zhou Dynasty Han Dynasty. 1368. Homework:. Tuesday: p.276-281 in the red book You may either do 2 pages of notes OR Give the significance of the following terms: Tang Empire Li Shimin

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Warmup

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  1. Warmup • Put the following in order: • Qin Dynasty • Shang Dynasty • Warring States Period • Zhou Dynasty • Han Dynasty

  2. 1368

  3. Homework: Tuesday: p.276-281 in the red book You may either do 2 pages of notes OR Give the significance of the following terms: Tang Empire Li Shimin Mahayana Buddhism tributary system Chang’an bubonic plague

  4. Homework: Wednesday: p.285-292 in the red book You may either do 2 pages of notes OR Give the significance of the following terms: Song Empire Liao Empire Jin Empire Song technology Chan Buddhism Hangzhou

  5. Why do we do SCRIPTED again? Imaginary CCOT: Analyze changes and continuities in China from 500 to 1200 CE.

  6. Why do we do SCRIPTED again? Imaginary CCOT: Analyze economic changes and continuities in China from 500 to 1200 CE.

  7. Introduction of Champa rice from Vietnam • What part of SCRIPTED is it? • If you want, it can beinteractionsbetween China and Vietnam • It could be demography, because it led to a population increase • It could be technology, because it involved new agricultural techniques • It could be economic, because it was traded widely as the most important food crop in China

  8. COLORS! • Red stuff is important, put it in your SCRIPTED • Blue means discuss it with a partner or partners

  9. RESURGENCE OF EMPIRE IN EAST ASIA CHINA UNDER THE SUI, TANG, AND SONG

  10. ANARCHY IN CHINA • Conflict and Change: 220-589 • Three Kingdoms 220-265 • Jin Dynasty 265-420 • Southern and Northern Dynasties 420-589 • Period Resembled Western European history after the collapse of the Romans • Disunity and civil war between nomads and Chinese warlords • Rival states, dynasties, each controlling a part of the old Han state • Confucianism in decline, Buddhism in ascendancy due to its relationship with the nomads • Confucian trained bureaucrats still held much influence • Common Chinese subject to taxes, warfare, drafting into army, frequent invasions, bandits

  11. BUDDHISM ARRIVES IN CHINA • Buddhism in China • Attraction: moral standards, intellectual sophistication, salvation, appeal to women, poor • Monasteries became large landowners, helped the poor and needy • Posed a challenge to Chinese cultural traditions • Buddhism and Daoism • Chinese monks explained Buddhist concepts in Daoist vocabulary • Dharma as dao • Teaching: one son in monastery would benefit whole family for 10 generations • Mahayana Buddhism • Buddha as a man became Buddha as a god, saint • Stupa became a pagoda; Buddha became fat or feminine • Chan Buddhism • A further evolution of Buddhism • Chan (or Zen in Japanese) was a popular Buddhist sect • Monasteries appeared in all major cities

  12. How do you think the Buddhists were treated in China as they gained power?

  13. BUDDHISM ARRIVES IN CHINA • Hostility to Buddhism • Resistance from Daoists and Confucians • Popular criticism focused on celibacy, alien origin, • Governmental criticism: unproductive land, could not tax • Persecution • Critics of Buddhism found allies in the imperial court • Tang emperor ordered closure of monasteries in 840s • Buddhism survived because of popular support

  14. How is the split in Buddhism into Chan and Mahayana Buddhism similar to developments in other religions?

  15. 1368

  16. SUI DYNASTY • After fall of the Han, turmoil lasted for more than 350 years • Three major states contended for rule; further fragmentation • Nomads constantly invaded, created their own states, dynasties • The rule of the Sui • Reunification by Yang Jian in 589 • Constructions of palaces and granaries, repairing the Great Wall • Military expeditions in central Asia and Korea • High taxes and compulsory labor services • The fall of the Sui • High taxes and forced labor generated hostility among the people • Military reverses in Korea • Sui Yangdi was assassinated in 618, the end of the dynasty

  17. In uniting China after a period of conflict, what other dynasty is the Sui similar to?

  18. Sui Dynasty: The Grand Canal • The Grand Canal • Linked the Yangtze and the Huang-Hi • The canal integrated the economies of the south and north

  19. 1368

  20. THE TANG DYNASTY • Founding of the Tang Dynasty (618 – 907 CE) • A rebel leader seized Chang'an, proclaimed a new dynasty, the Tang • Tang Taizong • 2nd Tang emperor, a ruthless but extremely competent ruler • China enjoyed an era of unusual stability and prosperity • Extensive networks of transportation and communications • Adopted the equal-field system • Bureaucracy of merit • Recruited government officials through civil service examinations • Career bureaucrats relied on central government, loyal to the dynasty • Restored Confucianism as state ideology, training for bureaucrats

  21. THE TANG DYNASTY • Foreign relations • Political theory: China was the Middle Kingdom, or the center of civilization • Tributary system became diplomatic policy • Tang decline • Casual and careless leadership led to dynastic crisis • Rebellion of An Lushan in 755, weakened the dynasty • A large scale peasant rebellion led by Huang Chao lasted from 875 to 884 • Regional commanders gained power, beyond control of the emperor

  22. THE TANG DYNASTY • Foreign relations • Political theory: China was the Middle Kingdom, or the center of civilization • Tributary system became diplomatic policy • Tang decline • Casual and careless leadership led to dynastic crisis • Rebellion of An Lushan in 755, weakened the dynasty • A large scale peasant rebellion led by Huang Chao lasted from 875 to 884 • Regional commanders gained power, beyond control of the emperor Who does THIS sound like?

  23. How is the fall of the Sui similar to the fall of the Tang?

  24. TANG CHINA

  25. What is right here?

  26. TANG ART

  27. 1368

  28. SONG DYNASTY (960-1279 C.E.) • Song weaknesses • Song never had military, diplomatic strength of Sui, Tang • Financial problems • Enormous bureaucracy with high salary devoured surplus • Forced to pay large tribute to nomads to avoid war • Military problems • Civil bureaucrats in charge of military forces • Military was largely foot soldiers at war with cavalry nomads

  29. SONG DYNASTY (960-1279 C.E.) • External pressures • Semi-nomadic Khitan, nomadic Jurchen attacked in north • Constant drain on treasury to pay tribute to nomads • The Song moved to the south, ruled south China until 1279 • Nomads invaded, overran northern Song lands • Song retreated to the South along Yangtze, moved capital • After defeat, constantly forced to pay tribute

  30. What is tribute and why is it usually a bad idea to pay it?

  31. THE SONG WORLDNORTHERN AND SOUTHERNDYNASTIES

  32. THE SONG ARTISTIC WORLDWhat do you notice about the art?

  33. DEMOGRAPHIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL DEVELOPMENTS • An agricultural revolution • Twice flowering, fast-ripening rice increased food supplies • New agricultural techniques increased production • Population growth • 45 to 115 million inhabitants • Between 600 and 1200 C.E. • Commercialized agriculture • Some regions depended on other regions for food • Extreme surplus of southern rice allowed cities to flourish

  34. CH’ANG-AN & HANGZHOUBecome two largest world cities • Urbanization: China most urbanized country in period • Chang'an had about 2 million residents • Hangzhou had about 1 million residents • Many cities boasted population of 100,000 or more

  35. NEO-CONFUCIANISM • Taoist, Buddhist Synthesis with Confucianism • Early Confucianism focused on practical issues • Politics, Public Morality, Social Relationships • Confucians drew inspiration • From Buddhism Spirituality • From Taoism Cosmology • Xenophobia Contributes, too • Invasions by nomads, Turks and Mongols threatened state • Foreign ideas began to circulate • Too many threats to society, traditions

  36. PATRIARCHAL SOCIETY • Developments reinforced patriarchal society • Chinese reaction to foreign ideas • Reaction to Buddhist’s gender equality • Neo-Confucianism emphasized patriarchy • Ancestor worship revived • Foot binding gained popularity during the Song • Emphasized dependence of women on men, home • Male sense of beauty at women’s expense • Poor, peasant women not subject to footbinding • Women had to work with men to support family • Men could not afford to have women at home, idle

  37. What are some (class appropriate) ways that people go through pain to increase their attractiveness?

  38. Warmup • What was your thesis for your East Asia CCOT yesterday? • CCOT outline due today

  39. TECHNOLOGY & INDUSTRY • Porcelain • Technology diffused to other societies, especially to Abbasid Arabia • Metallurgy • Improvement: used coke instead of coal in furnaces to make iron, steel • Iron production increased tenfold between the early 9th and 12th century • Gunpowder • Discovered by Daoist alchemists during the Tang • Bamboo "fire lances," a kind of flame thrower, and primitive bombs • Gunpowder chemistry diffused throughout Eurasia

  40. Yes, I said bamboo fire lances

  41. TECHNOLOGY & INDUSTRY • Printing • Became common during the Tang • From block-printing to movable type • Books became widespread • Naval technology • "South-pointing needle" - the magnetic compass • Double hulled junks with rudder, water-tight compartments

  42. How is movable type the most important invention?

  43. SONG LIFE

  44. A MARKET ECONOMY • Merchants in Charge • Only period in China where merchants socially superior to aristocrats • Merchants attempted to intermarry with aristocrats, become landowners • Merchants attempted to have sons admitted as Confucian bureaucrats • Financial instruments • “Flying money " were letters of credit • Paper money backed by state, treasury • A cosmopolitan society • Foreign merchants in large cities of China • Mostly Arab (Muslim), Indian, S.E. Asian • Chinese merchants journeyed throughout region • Economic surge in China • An economic revolution in China • Made China the wealthiest nation in the world at time • Promoted economic growth in the eastern hemisphere

  45. On the Mid-Autumn Festival of the year Bingchen I drankHappily till dawn and wrote this in my cups while thinking of Ziyou.Bright moon, when was your birth?Wine cup in hand, I ask the deep blue sky;Not knowing what year it is tonightIn those celestial palaces on high.I long to fly back on the wind,Yet dread those crystal towers, those courts of jade,Freezing to death among those icy heights!Instead I rise to dance with my pale shadow;Better off, after all, in the world of men.Rounding the red pavilion,Stooping to look through gauze windows,She shines on the sleepless.The moon should know no sadness;Why, then, is she always full when dear ones are parted?For men, the grief of parting, joy of reunion,Just as the moon wanes and waxes, is bright or dim;Always some flaw ?And so it has been since of old.My one wish for you, then, is long lifeAnd a share in this loveliness far, far away! -Su Shi, Song Dynasty

  46. Number a sheet of paper 1-10

  47. 1 What is an example of patriarchy in T’ang or Song China?

  48. 2 How were Mahayana Buddhism and Neo-Confucianism similar?

  49. 3 Draw the social hierarchy (in pyramid form) for China during the T’ang Dynasty.

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