Classical civs political development 2013 version

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Classical Civilizations – Political Developments

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Transcript of Classical civs political development 2013 version

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Classical Civilizations – Political Developments

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The Dynasties and Empires

China QinHan

Persian Empire

India MauryanGupta

Greece/Alexander City-States of

Greece Alexander’s

Conquests

Roman Empire Republic & Empire

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Greek City-States

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Alexander’s Empire

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Persian Empire

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Han China

India

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Some Similarities…

Centralized MonarchiesExceptions?

Bureaucracy (administrators, tax collectors, judges, governors, etc.)Most extensive?

TaxationReligion reinforced political

authorityExamples?

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Other similarities . . .

Military conquest and

expansion of territory.

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Central government sponsored public works projects

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Relatively unified law code used throughout the empires.

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Persia

Centralized Authority of an Absolute monarch… Emperor connected to the god Ahura Mazda &

extensive bureaucracy Ruled over 35 million people-respected diverse

cultural traditions of subject people Royal Road

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Political Developments-Qin & Han

Strongest central authority

*Standardization Economic control -

iron, salt, and silk trade

Expansion of bureaucracy

Education and examination system created a scholar gentry class of government workers.

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Mandate of Heaven Dynastic Cycle continued

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Indian Political Developments

Central authority with “independent” locals

Caste structured society

Local trade unrestricted

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Greece

Independent CITY-STATES Variety of governments including-

Monarchy & Democracy Little diversity in culture and religion Citizenship and SLAVERY

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Alexander the Great expanded Greek Civilization for a short time.

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Political Developments in the Roman Empire

1st a Republic, then an Empire w/ a monarch

Citizenship & Slavery

Strongest Law code

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Political Developments in the Roman Empire Local rulers

maintained regional rule with Roman oversight

Diversity in religious beliefs and languages

Local trade relatively unrestricted – except for the trade of grains

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The Collapse of Empire-Rome and Han China-The DifferencesRome No large scale,

centralized authority ever rules over W. Europe for any significant time…ever!

Han China After several hundred

years, a new dynasty emerges with a return to a single emperor, a bureaucracy selected by education and exams, and Confucian beliefs