Title: HIST2321 IDST2372
1The Resurgence of Empire In East Asia (12)
- The Restoration of Centralized Imperial Rule in
China
The Sui and Tang Dynasties, 589-907 C.E.
2Centralized 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
3The 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
4The 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.
5The 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
6The 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
7The 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
8The 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.)
9Tang 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
10Tang Decline
Tang Dynasty's territory before An Lushan
Rebellion, 755
11The 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.
12The 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
13The 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
14Population Growth
- Result of increased agricultural production
- Effective food distribution system
- Transportation networks built under Tang and Song
dynasties
15Tang 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
16Technology 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
17Emergence 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
18The 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
19Cultural 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
20The 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
21The 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
22Conflicts 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
23The 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
24The 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
25China 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
26Japan
- 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
27Japan
- 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
28The 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
29The Resurgence of Empire in East Asia
Todai Buddhist Temple Japan, 745-752 CE
30Key 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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