Title: THE SPREAD of CHINESE CIVILIZATION: KOREA, JAPAN
1THE SPREAD of CHINESE CIVILIZATIONKOREA, JAPAN
VIETNAMChapter 13
2Map Exercise13.1
- Japan in the Imperial Warlord Periods
- ( page 291)
- The Japanese home islands resemble very closely
the physical geography of ancient Greece (except
that Japan is wetter). How might physical
geography affect movement and political
developments within Japan?
3Map Exercise13.2
- The Korean Peninsula (page 302)
- 1. Which part of Korea would be most heavily
influenced by Chinese culture? - 2. Which part would be least affected?
4Map Exercise13.3
- South China Vietnam (page 305)
- 1. Why is travel and communication within the
area so difficult? - 2. What routes would permit the easiest
geographic movement in the area? - 3. Why would Chinese influence on Vietnam be
greater than Hindu or Buddhist from the Khmer and
Mekong River area?
5Japan, Korea Vietnam blended Chinese influences
with their indigenous cultures
Buddhism key force in transmitting Chinese
civilization
JAPAN
7th 9th centuries - borrowing peaked
Taika reforms 646 - revamp along Chinese
lines - failed
Buddhism meshed with traditional beliefs
6Buddhists grow powerful
emperor flees to Heian (Kyoto) abandons Taika
reforms power back to aristocratic families
aristocrats dominate government - determined
rank by birth
7Imperial Court
poetry
strict behavioral codes aesthetic
enjoyment avoidance of common life
women as cultured as men
The Tale of Genji
8Decline of Imperial power
emperor lose control to Fujiwara family
aristocratic families Buddhist monasteries
powerful
Rise of provincial aristocracy
bushi
11th 12th centuries warrior class
9warriors supported by peasants - family and
honor rather than defeat - seppuku
feudalism - serfs belong to land - rigid class
barriers - peasants turn to Buddhism
10provincial families dominate court
Gempei Wars Minamoto Taira
Minamoto establish military government (bakufu)
still have emperor court but power in Minamoto
11Chinese influence falls with declining imperial
power
Breakdown of Bakufu warlords
family feuds
1467-1477 civil war - rise of Daimyos
1400s Ashikaga Shogunate
1215th 16th centuries
armed peasants continuous warfare
Daimyos try to keep all normal
commercial class guilds
women of warrior class lose all status
primogeniture
13Zen maintains art among elites
painting, architecture, gardens, tea ceremony
daimyo era basis for unification of Japan
regional commercial artisan classes become a
national class
legal administrative reforms supply
infrastructure
14KOREA
more profoundly influenced over longer period
descended from peoples of Siberia Manchuria
Choson first kingdom - conquered by Han -
Korean resistance leads to Koguryo kingdom
fall of HanSinification - Buddhism - writing
15Tang defeats 2 kingdoms (with help from 3rd
Silla)
Silla becomes vassal state pay tribute
Chinese influence - copy Tang ways - capital
modeled on Tang cities - Confucian exams
elite favor Buddhism - used cultural creativity
in temples
16Chinese influence among upper classes only
aristocrats control
Silla Koryo weakened by revolts foreign
invasions
Mongols invade 1231
Yi dynasty 1392-1910 - aristocratic dominance
links to China
17VIETNAM
Red River Valley - rice growing - south
distinct culture - want benefits of Chinese
culture but not lose their own
Southeast Asian culture
Viets intermarried w/ Khmer Tais
strong village economy nuclear families
women had influence
18Han secure tribute - then colonize
Chinese culture schools, script, Confucian
classics, exams
ag techniques make most productive in area -
higher population
Chinese political govt organization gives
advantage over Indianized areas
19Resistance
Trung sisters lead revolt 39 CE
peasants not take to Chinese culture
independence - 939
distance from China political weakness in China
20Chinese still influence
Vietnamese local officials
11th 18th centuries defeat kingdoms to south
to Mekong delta
capital Hanoi - north
16th century rival capital - Hue
200 years of war
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