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HIST2321 IDST2372

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Who can marry and live in the house of a neighbor, While under the sod we bury our boys... conduct commercial transactions and business affairs with equity. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: HIST2321 IDST2372


1
The Resurgence of Empire In East Asia (12)
  •  The Restoration of Centralized Imperial Rule in
    China  

The Sui and Tang Dynasties, 589-907 C.E.
2
Centralized Imperial Rule in China
  • The Sui Dynasty
  • Consolidation of the Dynasty
  • Massive Building projects The Grand Canal
  • Intended to promote trade between north south
    China
  • Most Chinese rivers flow west-east
  • Linked network of earlier canals
  • 2000k (1240 miles)
  • Roads on either bank
  • Succeeded only by railroad traffic in 20th
    century

3
The Resurgence of Empire in East Asia
  • Centralized Imperial Rule in China
  • The Tang Dynasty
  • Tang Taizong 2nd Emperor of Tang dynasty
    (r. 627-649 CE)
  • Murders 2 brothers, thrusts father aside, takes
    throne
  • Strong ruler
  • Builds capital at Changan
  • Law order
  • Taxes, prices low
  • More effective implementation of earlier Sui
    policies

Tang Dynasty founder
4
The Resurgence of Empire in East Asia (15)
  • Centralized Imperial Rule in China Tang
    Taizong

Two of six reliefs commissioned by Emperor
T'ai-tsung, founder of the T'ang Dynasty, for his
mausoleum.
5
The Resurgence of Empire in East Asia (15)
  • Centralized Imperial Rule in China Tang
    Taizong

Two of six reliefs commissioned by Emperor
T'ai-tsung, founder of the T'ang Dynasty, for his
mausoleum Xian, China University of
Pennsylvania
6
The Major Achievements of the Tang
  • Transportation communications
  • Extensive postal, courier services
  • Equal-field System
  • 20 of land hereditary ownership
  • 80 redistributed according to formula
  • Family size, land fertility
  • Worked well until 8th century
  • Corruption, loss of land
  • to Buddhist monasteries

Statuette of Confucian Scholar
7
The Major Achievements of the Tang
  • Imperial civil service examinations
  • Confucian educational curriculum
  • Some bribery, nepotism
  • But most advance through merit
  • Built loyalty to the dynasty
  • System remains strong until early 20th
    century
  • Tang Foreign Relations
  • Manchuria, Korea, Vietnam, Tibet
  • One of the largest expansions of China in
    its history
  • Established tributary relationships
  • Gifts
  • China as Middle Kingdom
  • The kowtow ritual

Tang Horse
8
The Resurgence of Empire in East Asia
  • The Poet Du Fu on Tang Dynasty Wars
  • We have learned that to have a son is bad luck
  • It is very much better to have a daughter
  • Who can marry and live in the house of a
    neighbor,
  • While under the sod we bury our
    boys - Du Fu (712-770 C.E.)

9
Tang Decline
  • Governmental neglect Emperor obsessed with
    music, favorite concubine
  • An Lushan, 775 rebellion, former military
    commander
  • Captures Changan, but rebellion crushed by 763
  • Nomadic Uighur mercenaries invited to suppress
    rebellion, sacked Changan and Luoyang
  • Tang decline continues, rebellions in 9th
    century, last emperor abdicates 907

10
Tang Decline
Tang Dynasty's territory before An Lushan
Rebellion, 755
11
The Restoration of Centralized Imperial Rule in
China
  • The Song Dynasty
  • Song Taizu (r. 960-976 CE)
  • Former military leader
  • Made emperor by troops
  • Instituted policy of imperial favor for civil
    servants
  • expanded meritocracy

The Song Dynasty, 960-1279 C.E.
12
The Song Dynasty
  • Dynastic Weakness
  • Size of bureaucracy heavy drain on economy
  • Two peasant rebellions in 12th c.
  • Internal inertia prevents reform of bureaucracy
  • Civil service leadership of military
  • Lacked military training
  • Unable to contain nomadic attacks
  • Jurchen conquer, force Song dynasty to Hangzhou,
    southern China (Southern Song)

The Song Dynasty, Bodhisattva
13
The Economic Development of Tang Song
  • Agricultural Development
  • Fast-Ripening Vietnamese Rice, 2 crops per year
  • Technology iron plows, use of draft animals
  • Soil fertilization, improved irrigation
  • Water wheels, canals
  • Terrace farming

Buddhist wall painting
14
Population Growth
  • Result of increased agricultural production
  • Effective food distribution system
  • Transportation networks built under Tang and Song
    dynasties

15
Tang Song Social Change
  • Urbanization
  • Changan worlds most populous city 2 million
    residents
  • Southern Song capital Hangzhou over 1 million
  • Patriarchal Social Structures
  • Increased emphasis on ancestor worship
  • Elaborate grave rituals
  • Extended family gatherings in honor of deceased
    ancestors
  • Foot-binding gains popularity
  • Increased control by male family members
  • Display wealth social standing

16
Technology Industry
  • Porcelain (Chinaware)
  • Increase of iron production due to use of coke,
    not coal, in furnaces
  • Agricultural tools, weaponry
  • Gunpowder invented
  • Earlier printing techniques refined
  • Moveable type by mid-11th century
  • Yet complex Chinese ideographs make wood
    block technique easier
  • Naval technology

Chinese Procelain Shanghai Museum
17
Emergence of a Market Hemispheric Economy
  • Letters of credit deal with copper coin shortages
  • Promissory notes, checks also used
  • Development of independently produced paper money
  • Not as stable, riots when not honored
  • Government claims monopoly on money production in
    11th century
  • Increasingly cosmopolitan nature of Chinese
    cities
  • Chinese silk opens up trade routes
    increases local demands for imported luxury
    goods

18
The Resurgence of Empire in East Asia
  • Sources From The Past
  • The Arab Merchant Suleiman on Business
    Practices in Tang China
  • The Chinese conduct commercial transactions and
    business affairs with equity. When someone lends
    money to another person, he writes up a note
    documenting the loan - The Voyages of
    Suleiman

19
Cultural Change in Tang Song China
  • Declining confidence in Confucianism after
    collapse of Han dynasty
  • Increasing popularity of Buddhism
  • Christianity, Manichaeism, Zoroastrianism, Islam
    also appear
  • Clientele primarily foreign merchant class

20
The Resurgence of Empire in East Asia
  • Cultural Change in Tang Song
  • The Establishment of Buddhism
  • Foreign Relations in China
  • Dunhuang
  • Buddhism in China
  • Buddhism and Daoism
  • Chan Buddhism
  • Hostility to Buddhism
  • Persecution

Dunhuang Cave Entrance
21
The Establishment of Buddhism
  • Dunhuang, cave established 600 to 1000 ce
  • Mahayana Buddhism especially popular in western
    China (Gansu province), 600-1000 CE
  • Buddhist temples, libraries
  • Economic success as converts donate land holdings
  • Increase popularity through donations of
    agricultural produce to the poor
  • Chan (Zen) Buddhism
  • Buddhists adapt ideology to Chinese climate
  • Dharma translated as dao
  • Nirvana translated as wuwei
  • Accommodated family lifestyle
  • one son in monastery for ten generations of
    salvation
  • Limited emphasis on textual study, meditation
    instead
  • Late Tang Daoist/Confucian persecution of
    Buddhism
  • 840s begins systematic closure of Buddhist
    temples, expulsions, yet survival

22
Conflicts within Chinese Culture
  • Confucianism
  • Text-based (Confucian teachings)
  • Daoism not text-based
  • Emphasis on ethics, politics
  • Family-centered
  • Procreation
  • Filial piety
  • Buddhism
  • Text-based (Buddhist teachings)
  • Emphasis on Metaphysics
  • Ascetic ideal
  • Celibacy
  • isolation

23
The Resurgence of Empire in East Asia
  • Cultural Change in Tang Song China
  • Neo-Confucianism
  • Confucians Buddhism
  • Neo-Confucian Influence
  • Adapted Buddhist themes
  • Officially recognized creed until 20th c
  • Shaped Korea, Vietnam, Japan

Guanyin Bodhisattva, Song Dynasty 1200 CE
24
The Resurgence of Empire in East Asia
  • Chinese Influence in East Asia
  • Korea Vietnam
  • The Silla Dynasty Tang armies withdraw, Korea
    recognizes Tang as emperor
  • Technically a vassal statue, but highly
    independent
  • Chinese influence on Korean culture pervasive
  • China Vietnam
  • Vietnamese adaptation to Chinese culture,
    technology
  • Resentment at political domination
  • Assert independence with Tang dynasty 10th c.
    collapse

25
China and Early Japan
  • Chinese armies never invade Japan
  • Chinese culture pervasive
  • Imitation of Tang administration
  • Establishment of new capital at Nara, hence
    Nara Japan (710-794 CE)
  • Adoption of Confucian, Buddhist teachings
  • retention of Shinto religion
  • Heian Japan (794-1185 CE)

Chinese concubine, Yang Kwei-fei , most popular
Chinese poem in Heian Japan
26
Japan
  • Influence of Chinese kanji characters
  • Classic curriculum dominated by Chinese
  • Institution of the Shogun
  • Taira Minamoto clan 12th century Civil war
  • Minamoto leader named
  • shogun, 1185 CE
  • Rules from Kamakura,
  • allows imperial throne
  • to continue in Nara (Kyoto)

Minamoto
27
Japan
  • Medieval Japan
  • Kamakura (1185-1333 CE) Muromachi (1336-1573
    CE) periods
  • Decentralized power in
  • hands of warlords
  • Military authority in hands
  • of samurai
  • Professional warriors

Temple in Nara Japan
Samurai Cuirass Armor Helmut
28
The Resurgence of Empire in East Asia
  • Early Japan
  • Nara Japan
  • Heian Japan
  • Japanese Literature
  • The Tale of Genji
  • Decline of Heian Japan

Scene from Tale of Genjii
29
The Resurgence of Empire in East Asia
Todai Buddhist Temple Japan, 745-752 CE
30
Key Words Terms (12)
  • An Lu-shan Revolt
  • Champa rice
  • Examinations system
  • footbinding
  • mechanical celestial clock
  • magnetic compass
  • Astrolabe
  • movable type
  • Gunpowder
  • Samurai
  • Bushido
  • Murasaki Shikibu
  • Grand Canal
  • Yangzi River
  • Tang Taizong
  • Xuanznag
  • Uigurs
  • Grand Canal
  • polo
  • nomadism
  • Empress Wu
  • Li Po
  • Equal-field system
  • Uighurs
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