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Song China

Song China. October 22, 2013. Review. Why did the peoples living in Japan learn how to work with bronze and iron at about the same time? Why was the Japanese attempt to create a centralized bureaucratic government on the Chinese model so short-lived?

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Song China

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  1. Song China • October 22, 2013

  2. Review • Why did the peoples living in Japan learn how to work with bronze and iron at about the same time? • Why was the Japanese attempt to create a centralized bureaucratic government on the Chinese model so short-lived? • Were the reigning emperors the real rulers of Japan after the ninth-century? • Was the culture of Heian Japan much like the culture of China at that time?

  3. Song China: shrinking China • Northern Song 960--1127 The Liao (Khitan) empire occupied what is now northern China, and the Xia controlled what is now northwestern China. Song paid tribute to both the Liao and the Xia • Southern Song 1127-1279 Jurchen (from Manchuria) forced the Song south of the Huai River. • Yet military weakness was accompanied by cultural brilliance and economic strength, and this was the time when gentry (literati) began to dominate Chinese life • Song produced a reformer, Wang Anshi, who tried to bring the economy under state control. However, he was not a “socialist.”(Socialism is a modern philosophy)

  4. Northern Song • See Ebrey, p. 131 • Also go to http://depts.washington.edu/chinaciv/1xarsong.htm

  5. Song, the Khitan, and the Xia • The Khitan (Qidan) win 16 prefectures south of the Great Wall, create the Liao dynasty. • Song has to pay them tribute: silk and silver • The Liao had a dual administration: one for Chinese and one for non-Chinese • The Xia out west also were able to force Song to pay them tribute. Song had to give them silk, cloth, silver, and tea • Korea is forced to shift its allegiance from Song to the Liao. Vietnam continued to be a tributary state of Song, as was Champa. Tibet was outside the Song tributary system.

  6. The rise of the literati • Who are the literati? the land-owning, degree-holding Confucian scholar elite • By Song times, they have largely replaced the aristocracy of earlier dynasties (although imperial relatives remain aristocrats.) • Printing technology erodes the advantage the aristocracy had in obtaining the books needed to study for the civil service examinations. • Finally, we see substantial social mobility in China, but, at the same time, the power of the emperor is enhanced.

  7. Song society • the royal family. • Confucian scholars • peasant • artisans • merchants • This is the official social order, not necessarily the way society actually looked. • Where are the warriors? Where are the priests?

  8. Women in Song China • Unlike the Tang, Song had no female emperor, nor did it have a femme fatale like Tang’s Yang Guifei • It is under the Song that the patriarchal, patrilocal, and patrilineal ideal was firmly established. • Foot-binding appears– “the conspicuous consumption of women” by the upper-class. Also the dowry became more important. • Some argue that there are changes in concepts of both masculinity and femininity during the Song, and that foot-binding was introduced, not to subordinate women, but to make them look more “dainty.” Nevertheless, it crippled women

  9. Southern Song • See Ebrey, p. 139 • Also go to http://depts.washington.edu/chinaciv/1xarsong.htm

  10. Southern Song • Pushed south of the Huai river by the Jurchen from Manchuria, who established a Jin dynasty in the north. The Jurchen at one point captured the Song emperor. Song had to pay the Jin tribute of silk and silver. • Despite its military weakness, the Song prospered. In the Song, we see a commercial revolution in China. • Increased agricultural productivity, combined with cheaper transportation in the south, fuelled an expansion of traffic in commercial goods. The includes maritime commerce. • Song China led the world in iron and steel production. • But China did not have an industrial revolution. Instead, it moved toward a more labor-intensive economy.

  11. The commercial revolution • Agricultural revolution: better manure, better seeds, better irrigation, more specialization • cheap water transportation made commerce more convenient • the use of paper currency also made commerce more convenient, though it created inflation (China had the world’s first paper currency). • no push for labor-saving machinery. Instead, China underwent an “industrious revolution,” in which, in agriculture, small plots of land were farmed more intensively. • Song gave birth to Chinese cuisine because increased commerce made a greater variety of ingredients available.

  12. New-Confucianism • Confucianism acquires metaphysics: the Confucian response to the Buddhist denial of the ultimate value of life in this world. • li and Qi form a moral metaphysics. (The world is created by patterns of appropriate interaction directing matter-energy) • The Four Books became the fundamental texts for Confucians (the Analects, the Mencius, The Doctrine of the Mean, and the Great Learning). • Sincerity was a key value. Selfishness was the source of evil. • Neo-Confucianism is a manifestation of the pattern perspective, also seen in painting, pottery, poetry, and medicine.

  13. Enter the Mongols • In the early 13th century, Chinggis Khan unites several nomadic tribes into a powerful Mongol fighting force, leading them in successful attacks against the Jurchen and the Xia. He conquers much of central Asia. • His grandson, Khubilai Khan, conquers the Song dynasty, creating the Yuan dynasty.

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