Classical Dynasties of China

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lassical Dynasties of China •Compare and contrast Classical India and China •Describe geography Of Greece 11/21 11/22

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Classical Dynasties of China. 11/21 11/22. Compare and contrast Classical India and China Describe geography Of Greece. Review: What was the first Chinese dynasty to leave written records On what river did the first Chinese civilizations develp - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Classical Dynasties of China

Page 1: Classical Dynasties of China

Classical Dynasties of China

•Compare and contrast Classical India and China

•Describe geographyOf Greece

11/21 11/22

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Review:

1. What was the first Chinese dynasty to leave written records

2. On what river did the first Chinese civilizations develp

3. What were the religious beliefs of the ancient chinese

4. How did dynasties end and new ones begin?

5. What type of decentralized political system developed during the Zhou dynasty?

Shang

Huang He (Yellow)

Ancestor Worship, Shang Di

Mandate of Heaven

Feudalism

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1532 BCE Shang Dynasty

1027 BCE Zhou Dynasty

256 BCE Qin Dynasty

202 BCE Han Dynasty

Dynasties of China

Classical Period

Era of the Warring States - Feudal System

220 CE – End of Han Dynasty

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During the last 500 years of Zhou rule, regional rulers were constantly at war with each other. This period is called the Era of Warring States.

One of these warring regional rulers, Qin, began to unite the regions by eliminating adversaries and defeating outside invaders. He was only thirteen! This began the Qin dynasty for which China is named. Qin became known as Qin Shi Huangdi which means “First Emperor.”

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Qin Shi Huangdi’s government:•Implemented a philosophy of legalism which was very harsh.Shi Huangdi was autocratic.

•Forced nobles to live within the royal compound to prevent a takeover.

•Seized their land and appointed administrators to govern creating an efficient bureaucracy.

•Rejected Confucianism and burned books that conflicted with his philosophy. Ordered the murder of Confucian scholars.

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To end invasions from the north, Qin Shi Huangdi ordered one of the most ambitious building projects in history: The Great Wall of China.

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•The wall was built using forcedlabor. Many peasantsdied of exhaustion and were buried inside the wall.

•Construction of the wallcontinued until the 17th century.

•It is believed to be the onlymanmade structure visible from space.

It is 3,700 miles long.

The Great Wall of China

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Other Qin Dynasty Achievements

•Built highways which expanded trade•Standardized currency, weights and measures.•Built irrigation systems

To pay for his building projects, Qin Shi Huangdi raised taxes.

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When Qin Shi Huangdi died,few people were sad. He hadmany enemies. Hisson ruled for three yearsand then was overthrown by Han rulers.

Qin Shi Huangdi was buried in a compound along with nearly 8,000life-sized terra cottasoldiers and horses.

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The

Han

Dynasty

202 BCE to 220 CE

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The Han Dynasty lasted over 400 years, from 202 BCE to 220 CE. Its legacy:

Politically-

Centralized powerEnded legalism, softened punishmentslowered taxes

Brought peace and stability back to China which means that the Han rulers had…..

THE MANDATE OF HEAVENLiu Bang, first Han emperor who was a peasant

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Conquered and colonized Manchuria, Korea, expanded South into present-day Vietnam

Strengthened and structured bureaucracy Adopted Confucianism replacing legalism

Assimilated newly conquered peoples

Implemented a civil service

Political legacy under Wudi

Emperor Wudi’s Tomb

What is a civil service?

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What was the effect of the civil service exam?

Government jobs based on merit rather than wealth or loyalty to the emperor, the establishment of the first university based on Confucian principles.

A civil service is a systemof hiring government workers.

During the Han Dynasty,government officials were hiredbased on their knowledge ofConfucian principles. Studentswere required to study and pass a rigorous exam.

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Han Achievements

invention of paper Agricultural tools, wheelbarrow

collar harness Watermills

Han China’s economy was primarily agricultural – the population exploded to 60 million people!

Trade and industry were important too but were secondary Han government had monopolies on salt mining, forging Of iron, minting of coins.

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Economy

In the Classical period, China it would become a manufacturer to the world, trading along the Silk Road and Indian Ocean routes.

Silk, Porcelain andPaper were tradedalong the silk roads.

Porcelain

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Silk

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Socially,

Women devoted themselves to their families.

Confucian principles established that the role for women was to obey husbands and the husband’s families. Women were to be pure, obedient and faithful.

Some upper class women were educated and lived independently.

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*Slaves were not widespread and did not produce goods.

Landowning aristocracy including educated bureaucrats --they paid no taxes on their land.

Peasants, laborers and artisans who manufactured goods.

The “Mean” people – those without meaningful skills including performing artists.

Three primary social classes comprised Classical china

*Merchants were looked down upon because they didn’t work hard and were thought to be greedy.

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Although Buddhism had arrived in China along the silk roads through traders and monks, it was not widely spread during this time.

Buddhism’s principles were not well accepted because they conflicted with Confucian ideals of filial piety.

The Han period was a time of prosperity while Buddhism’s monastic lifestyle and rejectionof materialism stifled its spread until the end of the Han dynasty.

Buddhism

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The Decline of the Han Dynasty

The widening gap between rich and poor caused political instability in the later Han period.

• The Yellow Turban Rebellion was a revolt by desperate peasants to redistribute land from the wealthy to the peasant class. • As small landowners died, their land was divided equally among their sons. The lots became too small to produce. Also, large landowners paid no taxes on their lands.

Social unrest led to the assassination of the last Han Ruler and the dynasty disintegrated into 3 rival kingdoms.

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Photo credits

http://homepages.stmartin.edu/fac_staff/rlangill/HIS%20217%20maps/Han%20dynasty%20map.JPG

http://library.thinkquest.org/06aug/01461/XIANGY2.jpg

http://www.china-tour.cn/images/China_Pictures/Xian_Pictures/Maoling_Tomb.jpg

http://arts.cultural-china.com/chinaWH/upload/upfiles/2009-05/20/chinese_peasant_painting06220ea2872c0db461aa.jpg

http://www.historyforkids.org/learn/china/clothing/pictures/tangyinming.jpg

http://history.cultural-china.com/chinaWH/upload/upfiles/2009-09/01/corruption_rebellion_and_the_fall_of_the_han_dynasty12501754f5cc951ae7f0.jpg

http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2007-06/26/content_903674.htm

http://www.chinaculture.org/08olympics/images/attachement/bmp/site1/20080709/001aa018fefe09de910d2f.bmp