Title: Chinas First Three Dynasties
1Chinas First Three Dynasties
- The Zhou (Chou)
- The Qin (Chin)
- The Han
2The Zhou
- Characteristics of Unification
- Family authority
- Fealty of peasants to local lords
- Fealty of local lords to the ruler
- Improvements in society
- HorseCavalry
- Crossbow All of these lead to security
- Iron plow and population growth
- Irrigation
- Examples in Art
- Oracle bones contributes to written language
- Ceramics and their purpose in the afterlife
- Bronze ware and its purpose
- Lacquer ware and its purpose
- Jades connection to daily life and the afterlife
3 Handle-shaped ornament, Western Zhou dynasty
(ca. 1046771 B.C.), 10th9th century
B.C.ChinaJade (nephrite) L. 10 15/16 in. (27.8
cm)Gift of Ernest Erickson Foundation Inc., 1985
(1985.214.96) Throughout the Shang and Zhou
dynasties, jade continued to be used in the
creation of ritualistic objects, in particular
tokens of rank and symbolic aids for the
celestial journey thought to be undertaken by the
dead. This pale-green tablet with a concave grip
and a conical hafting hole resembles a common
type of Shang and early Zhou jade handle, but its
large size and fully ornamented surfaces suggest
that it served as a ceremonial scepter. The two
broad faces of the tablet are identically
decorated with a subtlety and complexity of
design that illustrates the changing techniques
for jade working characteristic of the later
Western Zhou dynasty. Plumed birds stand atop a
kneeling anthropomorphic figure, which surmounts
addorsed animal masks that face both up and down
the vertical axis. The upward-facing mask seems
to hold the foot of the kneeling figure in its
jaws another such mask frames the erect bird in
its gaping mouth.
4 Pair of covered ritual wine containers (hu),
the eight panels are filled with an ornamental
pattern consisting of hooked lines enclosing an
"eye" motif, a playful transformation of the
ubiquitous dragon-mask (taotie) motifs of the
earlier vessels.
5The Crossbow
6Song painting of the Chinese cavalry
7The first iron plow and irrigation
8Two-man Silk loom
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10The Art of War and Film
- In the 1987 film Wall Street, the main
antagonist, Gordon Gekko, says "I don't throw
darts at a board. I bet on sure things. Read
Sun-tzu, The Art of War. Every battle is won
before it is ever fought." - The 2000 Wesley Snipes film The Art of War was
named after the book. - Gustav Graves of the James Bond film Die Another
Day quotes The Art of War on more than one
occasion.
11The Qin
- Characteristics of Unification
- The Emperor becomes all powerful First Chinese
emperor - He destroyed intellectual freedom
- eliminated freedom and attacked the scholars
- burned books to get rid of what he felt was
dangerous - anything that was questioning of authority or
used logic - Centralization Emperor Shihuangdi fed all
information to him - Characteristics of society
- Militaristic
- Standardization of weights and measures
- Diminished the local lords power
- Developed huge labor projects
- Canals/Roads/Emperors Tomb/Great Wall
- Universal tax system
- Examples in Art
- The most famous example is the 8000 warrior tomb
- the previous power point emphasized this era
-
12The Han
- Characteristics of Power
- Maintained a fairer centralized system of
control - Returned Confucian and Toaist thought to
preeminence - Exploration by Zhang Qian
- Improvements in society
- Civil Service Exam mandarins
- Iron weapons and tools
- Invented Paper
- Astronomy and the compass
- Social Structure
- Landowners?Peasants?Merchants
- The place of women
- Examples in Art
- Ceramics and their purpose in the afterlife
-
- The figures produced in ceramics were often for
the tombs, which were available to a larger
number of nobility, but the ceramics also
improved in their daily usage in both style and
quality.
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14The Compass
15Exploration by Zhang Qian
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17Zhang Qian
- At this time, while the Roman empire was just
beginning to expand beyond Italy, the Han empire
controlled China. On their northwest border a
strong nomadic tribe, the Xiung-nu (pronounced
SHE-UNG-NU) posed a constant threat. The Xiung-nu
often raided the frontier, taking from the border
towns all the things they couldnt get by trade.
The Han emperors wanted allies who would help
them fight the Xiung-nu. The Han had heard of a
tribe further to the west called the Yueh-chih
(U-AY-CHER) who might be friendly.
18The Han, the Silk Road and the Romans
- The Chinese were also strongly attracted by the
tall and powerful horses in the possession of the
Dayuan (named Heavenly horses), which were of
capital importance in fighting the nomadic
Xiongnu. The Chinese subsequently sent numerous
embassies, around ten every year, to these
countries and as far as Seleucid Syria. Thus
more embassies were dispatched to Anxi Parthia,
Yancai who later joined the Alans , Lijian
Syria under the Seleucids, Tiaozhi Chaldea,
and Tianzhu northwestern India As a rule,
rather more than ten such missions went forward
in the course of a year, and at the least five or
six. (Hou Hanshu, Later Han History). The
Chinese campaigned in Central Asia on several
occasion, and direct encounters between Han
troops and Roman legionnaires (probably captured
or recruited as mercenaries by the Xiong Nu) are
recorded, particularly in the 36 BC battle of
Sogdiana (Joseph Needham, Sidney Shapiro). It has
been suggested that the Chinese crossbow was
transmitted to the Roman world on such occasions.
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21Summary
- The early Chinese were tribal and committed to
the family. Their art was produced for ceremonies
concerning the afterlife and the society at the
time was unstable and violent. The concept of a
force in nature and a duality of what is found in
every living thing surfaces at this time. Success
in society could be measured in how many heads
were taken in battle. - The introduction of Confucian and Taoist thought
offers the individual guidelines to deal with
life, whether it be with societal expectations or
a method of dealing with nature and the cosmos.
This drives cultural thinking until the
unification under the Chin ruler. Success was
measured in ones intellectual capacity to
understand each philosophy - The Chin leadership of Chin Shi Huang centralized
all control and authority through standardization
of all public measures and through the
elimination of any dissent found in the scholars
and intellectuals. - The Zhou leadership returned to a fairer system
for the citizen, with Confucian and Taoist
thought rekindled. Success was based on merit.
This system will remain in place, with some
aspects of favoritism in the royal family and
lapses into corruption evident at different
times. The Mandate of Heaven will ever after
imply that good leadership means the citizenship
is served. - As China opens up to the outside world, the
interchange causes great tension within the
culture. While willing to adapt, the future
portions we study will show that the Chinese
consider themselves the center of the world and
they are offering what they want and taking only
that which they agree they could use.