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Prelude to the Song 1: Sui 14001375 y.a.

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Some 400 years passed since Han times, years of disunion and no central orthodoxy. ... against them, defeating Kaifeng 975 y.a. and sending Song south to Hangzhou. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Prelude to the Song 1: Sui 14001375 y.a.


1
Prelude to the Song 1 Sui 1400-1375 y.a.
  • Some 400 years passed since Han times, years of
    disunion and no central orthodoxy.
  • The Six Dynasties in the south fared better than
    the north and set their capital at Nanjing
    former Han Chinese had established themselves
    throughout the south, bringing change to that
    region.
  • Sixteen kingdoms rose and fell in the north to
    repeated invasion by nomads. Population declined
    from the 60 million in Han times.
  • In the years of unrest, insecurity and hard
    lives, Buddhism gained a strong foothold it and
    Taoism inspired artists, philosophers and
    writers.
  • Finally, in AD 689 began 300 years of Sui and
    Tang and the reestablishment of the Chinese
    ideal of unity.
  • Both Sui and Tang founders came from the north
    and had married into the northern groups that
    took on Chinese culture. Their integration of
    Chinese language, culture, etc. was remarkable.
  • Sui in its 40 years quickly produced a new legal
    code, brought order to local government, used the
    old equal field system that in theory allotted
    several acres of cultivable land to each adult
    male (a practice that was very ancient),
    continued the older systems of collective
    responsibility among groups of households, the
    territorially administered militia, and the
    military-agricultural commanderies on the
    frontier.
  • Taxes were collected.
  • Central government price-regulating granaries
    bought grain in times of surplus and sold it
    cheaply in times of shortage.
  • Large public works were undertaken such as
    expansion of the Grand Canal to move food and
    commodities.
  • The Sui assault on Korea exhausted state
    resources and failed.

2
Prelude to the Song 2 Tang 1375-1100 y.a.
  • Tang (AD 618-906) founders were more prudent than
    Sui. They inherited Sui accomplishments,
    including a 5 X 6 mi. capital at Changan and a
    secondary capital at Luoyang. Barnes 193 Map as
    background
  • Changan was the most splendid and cosmopolitan
    capital of its time. Fine arts, literature and
    poetry excelled.
  • Tang continued the Sui practice of ruling through
    ministries (personnel administration, finance,
    rites, army, justice and public works)--an
    organization that lasted to the last century.
  • Younger states in East Asia modeled their
    institutions after Tang.
  • There was an early version of a countrywide
    examination system for prospective officials,
    stressing knowledge of the Confucian classics (as
    earlier, personal connections guanxi still
    dominated the process for entering officialdom).
  • Armies succeeded against Korea, Vietnam, and
    along the Silk Road.
  • Buddhism had changed over 500 years but was
    politically passive and not centrally organized
    therefore, Tang periodically increased control
    over it as an institution.
  • As a moral force its learn proper moral
    behavior recalled Confucianism.
  • Monasteries did charitable works (hospitals,
    etc).
  • Monks recruited from high status families created
    a second elite.
  • Buddhism claimed autonomy from government control
    taxes.

3
Prelude to the Song Tang Dynasty
  • Examples of Song artpainting, ceramics

4
Prelude to the Song Tang Dynasty
  • Technology and Science contributions of daoism.

5
Prelude to Southern Song 3 Tang 1375-1100 y.a.
  • Late Tang (last 125-150 years) lost central
    power. Regional military posts had become the
    basis for a new provincial level of
    administration the Emperor had to cede power to
    the military.
  • Local administrators amassed land and wealth.
  • The land allotment system collapsed as did
    official markets and price-setting began to
    failgovernment had to backtrack from central
    control of the economy.
  • The territory taxed was getting
    smaller--provinces exercised more autonomy and
    some opted out of paying taxes altogether.
  • Market communities were emerging outside of
    imperial control.
  • There was further decline of aristocratic/official
    families that since Han dominated
    government--having replaced the hereditary
    aristocracyand had managed to become an quasi
    hereditary.
  • The Tang, originally northern non-Han, found the
    system of officially sponsored lists of great
    scholar families from whom most officials were
    selected obstructed the mobility of talent. Tang
    turned against the old practice early in their
    regime. Thus, over generations,
  • Civil service was now the primary means for
    rising to high social status competition in the
    exam system increased.
  • Official rank was more important than family
    origin--only if its sons survived the imperial
    exams could a family continue in officialdom and
    retain its place in the elite class.
  • More than ever, performance on the exam (merit)
    was rewardedin theory, anyone could succeed who
    could obtain/afford the education.

6
Prelude to Southern Song 4 Tang 1375-1100 y.a.
  • After Tang revived central power, Buddhism
    influenced Confucianism in its support of strong
    government.
  • With inheritance shared among sons, family wealth
    was diluted over generations. Not all sons of
    formerly renown families were successful in
    obtaining posts within the civil service.
    Buddhism recruited from among these formerly
    wealthy, scholarly elite families, gaining the
    family wealth of the recruits as they entered
    poverty.
  • Buddhism as an institution required monks and
    nuns to sever familial and societal ties.
  • These men and women were removed from
    productive society, in the eyes of Tang
    political philosophy.
  • Buddhist monasteries and nunneries amassed wealth
    through land ownership (and not paying taxes).
  • Given all its other problems, Tang sought
    increasingly to exercise its control over the
    institution of Buddhism which it perceived as a
    threat. It was able to do so because Buddhism
    had ot developed a centralized governance or
    strong lay communities.
  • By late Tang the government bestowed tites, sold
    ordination certificates, compiled a Buddhist
    cannon, and oversaw the selection of clerical
    talent through exams that included Confucian
    classics.
  • While the crackdown was successful, Buddhism
    would prove influencial in the development of
    works.

7
Prelude to Southern Song 5 Tang 1100 y.a.
  • An interesting internal contradiction had
    developed by the late Tang
  • The rise of the Tang civil service renewed
    Confucianism, classical scholarship, state
    ritual, etc., on the one hand.
  • The breakdown in moral rule--absence of loyalty
    to the emperor, rising cynicism and outright
    oppression of the common people, and the
    development of warlordism throughout the realm,
    on the other.
  • The military governors surviving from the Tang
    and their successors set up centralized,
    personally led military regimes that became the
    model for government during the breakdown in
    central authority into the early Northern Song.
  • After 50 years of serious unrest, Song
    established its dynasty about 1140 years ago.

8
(Northern) Song China 1040-(975)-720 y.a.
  • Here are some accomplishments of Song that made
    China the most advanced country in the world
    printed books, a civil service examination system
    (now widely accessible because of printing,
    florescence in painting, significant
    technological inventions (compass, gun powder for
    weaponry, etc.).
  • The florescence was made possible by controlling
    the military and establishing a new civil power.
  • Northern Song (AD 960-1126) was founded by a man
    who was commander of the palace guard in one of
    the post-Tang states and acclaimed by his troops
    as new emperorhe and his successor pensioned off
    the generals, replaced military governors with
    civil official, kept the best troops in the
    palace army, built up its bureaucracy from exam
    graduates, and centralized revenues.
  • A creative renaissance ensued.
  • Population rebounded (60 million in Han, maybe
    50-60 million in late Tang, and 100 million in
    early Song, for the first time concentrated along
    the Yangtze.
  • Population growth brought the rise of city life
    the capital at Kaifeng was ½ million within the
    walls and ½ million in the suburbs.
  • Next slide with pop. Maps from Fairbank 90-91

9
(Northern) Song China 1040-(975)-720 y.a.
  • Fairbank population maps 90-91

10
(Northern) Song China 1040-(975)-720 y.a.
  • State and Culture.
  • We shall look at Song from several
    perspectivesfirst, as Chinas golden age in
    terms of culture in the more restricted sense of
    arts, literature, etc. second, under Song,
    government existed to maintain its centrality to
    all aspects of culture in the wider sense,
    particularly over economic matters and cultural
    diversification.
  • Early China created a politicized state organized
    for the purposes of central control both by
    bureaucratic methods (philosophical persuasion)
    and the emperors use of violence.
  • Non-Chinese invaders from Inner Asia became
    integral participants in the Chinese state by
    their military prowess and administrative
    skillthey became Chinese in their culture,
    dress, language, etc. (post Han and post-Song).
  • The propensity for control was reinforced by Song
    Neo-Confucianism that stressed loyalty to
    authority in a hierarchic social order further,
    government esteemed agricultural self-sufficiency
    over foreign trade and contacts which were harder
    to manage.
  • The printed book was the technological key to the
    growth of education under the SongNorthern Song
    was the first to have printed books.
  • In this context, Chinese culture in the
    restricted sense permeated the local level,
    including the important development of gentry
    society, while central authority was harsher and
    less in touch.

11
(Northern) Song China 1040-(975)-720 y.a.
  • Urbanization was widespread. Kaifeng could feed
    this population by barge transport from the Lower
    Yangtze rice basket. Cheap interregional trade
    moved goods on the Yangtze, its tributaries, and
    the vast canal system (30,000 miles of navigable
    water).
  • Industry developed at Kaifeng first to supply
    government coal and iron from the north (trees
    were wiped out locally).
  • North China produced 114,000 tons of pig iron
    annually, twice what England could produce when
    it industrialized around 200 y.a.).
  • Much iron and steel went to the war machine
    (mail, weapons).
  • Proto-artillery (catapult) was used in siege
    warfare, gunpowder in fire-lances, grenades and
    bombardsno city could hold out on its stores as
    in earlier times. Unfortunately for Northern
    Song, Ruzhen barbarians readily adopted the
    technology and used it successfully against them,
    defeating Kaifeng 975 y.a. and sending Song south
    to Hangzhou.
  • Printing using blocks with characters became
    widespread by Northern Song, giving a big push to
    education within Buddhist monasteries and within
    familiesat first seeking to control printing,
    government encouraged establishment of schools by
    giving land and supplying booksthe goal was to
    reach into every prefecture.
  • The examination system endured for 1000 years for
    staffing the bureaucracy--the privilege by which
    higher officials could nominate their sons still
    operated they still dominated officialdom.
  • The examination system played key a second role
    at this point--taking the exam became a
    certification of social statuswhether office
    followed or not! (This is the basis for gentry
    society).

12
(Northern) Song China 1040-(975)-720 y.a
  • Neo-Confucianism 1
  • The call for reform within politics began with
    the Song and the examination system that
    guaranteed that all bureaucrats had the same
    educational background.
  • Even for reformers, the underlying assumption was
    that the imperial autocracy was the origin of all
    political powerthey never sought to consider
    other forms of authority in state and society
    they regarded the common people as passive
    recipients of the benevolent despotism they
    sought to guide they assumed that merchants were
    addicted to greed and military men to violence
    and had to be kept in check.
  • Fan Zhong-yan pushed reforms against favoritism,
    for practicality in subject matter, for land-hold
    for officials so they wouldnt be tempted to take
    bribes and favors, for strengthening the local
    militia, etc.
  • Wang Anshi stressed the models of Chinas ancient
    sages through Confucius and was supported in
    by-passing the exams to put his own people in
    office to attack corruptions and inequalities in
    wealth through more central controls (e.g., knock
    out the private sector)the government would own
    all and dole it out his reform that sought to
    weaken family ties (to strengthen community),
    like others, was soon abandoned (but note the
    parallel to the early PRC).
  • This Chinese conservative approach to keeping the
    imperial Confucian system going by trying to
    remedy its defects and avoid its problems led to
    implementing Neo-Confucianism (in early Southern
    Song)based on Zhu Xis compilation of writings
    into a broad philosophical view of the universe
    and the place of the individual within it by Zhu
    Xi.

13
(Northern) Song China 1040-(975)-720 y.a
  • Neo-Confucianism 2
  • Song Neo-Confucianism believed that the true Way
    for individual moral improvement was set forth by
    Confucius and Mencius (and poorly served by
    so-called Confucians thereafter) they sought to
    repossess the Way of 1500 years earlier.
  • Zhu Xi found a way to import Buddhist
    transcendentalism into Confucianismretaining its
    rationality but making it more humane. This
    Confucian humanism became the philosophy/ethical
    system of the Chinese elites to the 20th C.
  • Zhu Xi encouraged the relative autonomy of the
    scholar to use his own judgment in interpreting
    classics (learning for the sake of learning, for
    self-cultivationnot simply learning for the
    test).
  • The aim is rational, moral learning (more
    important than art and literature) key are the
    Five Relationships (son to father, etc.) to
    maintain social order and avoid polarization
    between individual and society (one seeks
    communion with others rather than cultivating
    individualism).
  • The Community Compact was Zhu Xis mechanism for
    reaching the populace (piloted during Song but
    not institutionalized until Ming in the 1300s AD
    a monthly assembly led by elected heads in which
    hierarchy was important (age grades, rules of
    conduct for each category, etc.)within the
    Compact meeting good deeds were praised, errors
    corrected, rites and customs preserved as a means
    to mediate between the state and family).
    Methods of criticism and self-criticism
    resurface in the PRC, also as a form of applied
    morality.
  • A note on Chinese scholarly methods Zhu Xi was
    part of a long line of Chinese thinkers who were
    compilers more than composerscut and paste the
    classics into a personal work that preserved the
    record of the past did not require attribution
    since all educated people knew and revered the
    knowledge of the classics.

14
(Northern) Song China 1040-(975)-720 y.a
  • Language and Culture
  • Chinese language and cultural context, if you
    recall, made translation of Buddhist concepts
    difficult without changing their meaning and
    practice in China.
  • Translating classical Chinese into modern Chinese
    or into another language poses comparable
    challenges, to the extent that some think the
    structure of Classical Chinese influenced Chinese
    thought more extensively/pervasively.
  • Zhu Xis Neo-Confician writing contains the
    phrase gewu or ke-wu which is translated the
    investigation of things--
  • This sounds to modern scholars as if he is
    advocating observation in the scientific sense
    however, scholars of Classical Chinese recognize
    the meaning in the Song context to be
    acquisition of moral knowledge through the
    careful study of the classics and scrutiny of the
    principles behind history and daily life.
  • Classical Chinese had few ways to generalize or
    express abstractions easilysome think this
    contributed to difficulties in developing
    theoretical aspects of sciencean assertion we
    can only mention in passing.

15
(Northern) Song China 1040-(975)-720 y.a
  • The formation of gentry society in China 1
  • During the Song, a social structure was
    established that lasted in its general outline
    until the 20th C. it is known as the
    scholar-gentry.
  • Upper class families dominated Chinese life they
    were land-holders and had degrees (from the
    exams) recognized by the government.
  • They served a dual functionin the political
    system and in the economic system.
  • Within the scholar-gentry were those million or
    so men with first-level degreesthey were lower
    gentry or not much above commoner status.
  • Few in number were the upper gentry who had
    gone on up through the three rigorous week-long
    examination rounds at the provincial or imperial.
    They had real influence.
  • Gentry society was base on familism and it was
    dominated by men whose aim was to preserve its
    status by training sons to be scholars and
    degree-holders.
  • By all accounts, boys educated to be scholars led
    lonely, dedicated childhoods without much time
    for frivolity or fun.

16
(Northern) Song China 1040-(975)-720 y.a
  • The formation of gentry society in China 2
  • Gentry as individuals served as public
    functionaries in politics and administration
    they also were heavily dependent on/meshed with
    their families.
  • Gentry families mainly lived in walled towns (not
    villages) and were local elites (between commoner
    peasants and officials and merchants who led
    administrative and commercial activities.
  • In agricultural areas, gentry managed the system
    of customary and legal rights to the use of land
    (they also stockpiled goods against bandits and
    dominated the market towns).
  • Gentry were the mechanism through which officials
    collected taxes (and the collecting from the
    peasants and providing them their only protection
    from officialdom).
  • Gentry responded to official requests for help in
    time of war, flood, etc..
  • At times when the state needed money, men could
    purchase literary degrees (without examination)
    and have a back door to gentry status.

17
(Northern) Song China 1040-(975)-720 y.a
  • The formation of gentry society in China 3
  • Gentry were community leaders and expected to be
    committed to the upkeep of community facilities
    like canals, roads, etc. to participate in the
    Community Compact assemblies to support
    Confucian institutions and morals to set the
    tone of public life to organize and lead the
    militia in times of need. They set up charities
    for their clan members and handled trust fund to
    help the community. Theoretically, it could be
    that gentry
  • Through local leadership and management functions
    are the reason why officialdom didnt penetrate
    lower down into Chinsee society, or
  • Emerged to fill the gap between the early
    bureaucratic state and the peasant society that
    had grown beyond governments ability to control.
  • Indeed, the territorial administrative structure
    since Han had not been growing while the Chinese
    population had doubled.
  • The basic level counties or sub-prefectures
    totaled up to 1180 in Han with 60 million,1235 in
    Tang with 80 million, 1230 in Song with 110
    million, and so on to Qing with 1360 counties and
    425 million.
  • The country magistrates responsibilities grew
    proportionatelyindeed, it was probably beyond
    the central governments ability to function
    directly.

18
(Northern) Song China 1040-(975)-720 y.a
  • Imperial superstructure and control in Chinese
    governance
  • Songs imperial government had 18,000 official
    posts Qings 20,000the number of imperial
    offices remained about the same as population
    doubledonly since Song, at the village level the
    gentry were the public functionaries.
  • In 1850 under Qing there were 1.25 million
    scholarly degree holders.
  • Continued superiority of the gentry families over
    the peasant mass was assured by their landowning
    and by the fact that the gentry produced the
    scholar-gentlemen (si) who carried on the
    cultural traditions of calligraphy, painting,
    literature, official life, etc.
  • The strong historic Chinese ethos of order
    (therefore authority) should help understand
    Chinese government today
  • In the past it related to the need to get along
    with family, manage family affairs, act
    appropriately within the complex status rules
    that were based on kinship, age, gender and law,
    and improve personal conduct.
  • Striking overall is the degree of control to
    which everyone in society is subjected, including
    the masterthe ethical opinion of the group
    remains a strong factor.
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