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River Dynasties in China

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Title: River Dynasties in China


1
River Dynasties in China
  • Chapter 2 Section 4
  • p. 46 51

2
Terms to Know
  • Loess
  • Oracle Bones
  • Mandate of Heaven
  • Dynastic Cycle
  • Feudalism

3
The Geography of China
  • Natural barriers isolate China
  • Taklimikan Desert
  • Plateau of Tibet
  • Himalaya Mountains
  • Gobi Desert
  • Mongolian Plateau
  • Pacific Ocean

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5
Chinas Heartland
  • Much of China is isolated by mountains and
    deserts
  • Most of the population live in the eastern half
    of the country, near rivers
  • 90 of the arable land lies between the Huang He
    and Yangtze Rivers

6
Environmental Challenges
  • Huang He Yellow River carried huge deposits
    of wind-blown silt called loess
  • The river floods and is nicknamed Chinas
    Sorrow
  • An 1887 flood killed nearly a million people.
  • Isolation has forced China to develop and supply
    goods on its own rather than getting them through
    trade.

7
Civilization Emerges in Shang Times
  • Fossil remains show evidence of humans in China
    1.7 million years ago.
  • Peking Man a Homo erectus skeleton found
    near Beijing shows settlement over 500,000 years
    ago

8
The First Dynasties
  • First dynasty was the Xia, founded by an engineer
    and mathematician named Yu
  • Legend states that Yu planned flood control and
    irrigation projects that made farm surpluses
    possible
  • The Xia dynasty left no written records

9
Shang Dynasty
  • Chinas first historical dynasty
  • Written records from oracle bones
  • 1532 to 1027 B.C.

10
Early Cities
  • Shang capital was Anyang
  • Anyang was a walled city built mostly of wood
  • Chariots were used by the Shang in warfare

11
Social Classes
  • Shang society divided between nobles and peasants
  • Noble families controlled the land
  • Peasants worked the land using digging sticks
  • Bronze was used to make weapons, but not farm
    tools. It was thought too valuable

12
The Origins of Chinese Culture
  • Chinese culture tends to stress the importance of
    the group over that of the individual
  • Peoples lives are governed by their duties to
    their families and to their king or emperor

13
Family and Society
  • Elder male family members made the important
    decisions concerning property
  • Women were treated as inferior
  • Women were married between 13 and 16 and could
    raise their status only through bearing male
    children

14
Religious Beliefs
  • Ancestor worship
  • Belief that the spirits of family ancestors could
    influence daily life
  • Family members paid respect to the fathers
    ancestors by making sacrifices in their honor

15
Oracle Bones
  • Animal bones and tortoise shells were used to
    consult the gods
  • Questions were written on bones which were heated
    till they cracked
  • The cracks were then interpreted as messages from
    the gods

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19
Development of Writing
  • Earliest evidence of Chinese writing comes from
    oracle bones
  • Characters stand for ideas not sounds
  • One can read Chinese without being able to speak
    it
  • Speakers who speak different dialects of Chinese
    can read the same written language

20
Pictographic Language
  • An English speaker and French speaker can both
    understand
  • 224
  • But the English speaker may not know what Deux et
    deux font quatre means

21
Advantages and Disadvantages of Chinese Written
Language
  • People from all parts of China can read it even
    if they speak very different dialects
  • You need to know more than 10,000 characters to
    be barely literate
  • Literacy tended to keep social classes separate

22
Shang Technology and Artistry
  • Bronze working was their main focus
  • Mostly used as religious articles
  • Shang dynasty developed silk making technology

23
Shang Bronze
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25
Zhou Bring New Ideas
  • Overthrew the Shang around 1027 B.C.
  • Justified their takeover with the Mandate of
    Heaven
  • Belief that the gods had ordained them to rule
  • Disasters, floods, wars and other calamities were
    seen as evidence of the loss of the mandate

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31
Anyang Fu Hao tomb, c. 1200 BC
Anyang Fu Hao tomb, c. 1200 BC
32
Anyang Fu Hao bronze yue (ax)
33
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35
Sanxindui Bronzes
  • Statues instead of people were sacrificed.

36
Dynastic Cycle
  • The pattern of rise, decline and replacement of
    dynasties

37
Control Through Feudalism
  • A system in which nobles, or lords are granted
    the use of lands belonging to the king in
    exchange for a pledge of military service and
    loyalty

38
Improvements in Technology and Trade
  • Zhou rulers built roads and canals
  • They stimulated trade and agriculture
  • Coined money was invented
  • Civil servants worked for the government
  • They developed iron-making technology
  • Improved tools and weapons

39
A Period of Warring States
  • The later years of Zhou rule
    (771 256 B.C.) are known as the period of
    warring states
  • Law and order declined as warlords took power in
    various regions of the country
  • A new dynasty would come to restore order

40
An Empire Unifies China
  • Chapter 4 Section 4
  • p. 97-101

41
Terms to Know
  • Confucius
  • Filial Piety
  • Bureaucracy
  • Daoism
  • Legalism
  • I Ching
  • Yin and Yang
  • Qin dynasty
  • Shi Huangdi
  • Autocracy

42
Philosophy and the Social Order
  • Traditional Chinese values were put aside during
    the Warring States period.
  • Chinese scholars offered solutions to Chinas
    problems.

43
Confucius Urges Harmony
  • Born 551 B.C.
  • Lived during the warring states period
  • Taught history, music, and moral character

44
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46
Confucius
  • Good government could be restored by five basic
    relationships
  • 1. Ruler and Subject
  • 2. Father and Son
  • 3. Husband and Wife
  • 4. Older and Younger Siblings
  • 5. Friend and Friend

47
Confucius
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49
Analects Quotations of Confucius
  • Hold faithfulness and sincerity as first
    principles.
  • Have no friends not equal to yourself.
  • When you have faults, do not fear to abandon
    them.

50
  • When we see persons of worth, we should think of
    equaling them when we see persons of a contrary
    character, we should turn inwards and examine
    ourselves.

51
  • Before you embark on a journey of revenge, dig
    two graves.

52
  • Forget injuries, never forget kindnesses.

53
Filial Piety
  • Respect for parents and elders

54
In serving his parents, a filial son renders
utmost respect at home he supports them with
joy he gives them tender care in sickness he
grieves at their death he sacrifices to them
with solemnity - Confucius
55
Confucian Ideas About Government
  • Believed education could transform a humbly born
    person into a gentleman
  • Created a bureaucracy, a trained civil service.
    (people who are paid to work for the government)

56
Confuciuss Four Virtues of a Gentleman
  • Courtesy
  • Precision
  • Generosity
  • Fairness

57
Daoists Seek Harmony
  • Founded by Laozi (Lao-tzu)
  • Wrote Dao De Ching (The Way of Virtue)
  • Only the natural order is important
  • A universal force known as the Way guides all
    things
  • Look to nature to explain everything that happens
    in the world

58
Laozi
59
Legalists Urge Harsh Rule
  • Believed that a highly efficient and powerful
    government was the key to maintaining order
  • Founded by Hanfeizi and Li Si.
  • Rulers should reward those who do their duties
    well.
  • Rulers should harshly punish any disobedience

60
Anyone caught outside his own village without a
travel permit should have his nose or ears
chopped off -Li Si
61
I Ching
  • A book of oracles
  • People threw a set of coins and then interpreted
    the result of the coin toss by reading the
    appropriate chapter.

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64
Yin and Yang
  • Represent the natural rhythms of life
  • Yang Heaven, Male, Active
  • Yin Earth, Female, Passive
  • Yin is represented by the the tiger and the color
    orange
  • Yang is represented by the dragon and the color
    blue

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66
The Qin DynastyA New Emperor Takes Control
  • Replaced the Zhou dynasty
  • A 13 year old Qin ruler replaced the Zhou dynasty
  • After 20 years, he took the name Shi Huangdi,
    which means First Emperor

67
Qin Shi Huangdi
  • Stopped internal fighting in China
  • Defeated invaders
  • Doubled Chinas size
  • Unified China under one empire

68
Shi Huangdi
  • Wanted to strengthen the trunk and weaken the
    branches
  • All noble families had to live in the capital
    city
  • Divided China into 36 administrative districts,
    he controlled them all

69
Shi Huangdi
  • Had Confucian scholars buried alive
  • Burned useless books
  • Established an autocracy a government in which
    the ruler has unlimited power

70
A Program of Centralization
  • Built 4000 miles of highways
  • Forced peasants to work against their will
  • Set uniform standards for Chinese writing, law,
    currency, and weights and measures
  • Built irrigation projects
  • Increased farm production

71
Shi Huangdi
  • Made social advances, but high taxes and a
    repressive government resulted
  • He unified China at the expense of human freedom

72
Qin Shi Huangdi
73



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76
Great Wall of China
  • Shi Huangdi closed the gaps in previous attempts
    at building a Great Wall of China
  • Laborers were forced to work on the wall or die

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80
The Fall of Qin
  • Shi Huangdis son was less able to rule
  • Peasants revolted against his rule and took over
  • One of their leaders was from the land of Han.
    His troops marched into the capital and
    established the Han dynasty in 202 B.C.

81
Han Emperors in China
  • Chapter 7 Section 3
  • P. 181-187

82
The Founding of the Han Dynasty
  • Began after the death of Qin Shi Huangdi
  • Civil war between forces of Xiang Yu and Liu
    Bang
  • After a victory in 202 B.C. Liu Bang declared
    himself first emperor of the Han dynasty

83
Liu Bang
84
Han Dynasty
  • Ruled for 400 years
  • Divided into 2 parts
  • Former Han two centuries till 9 A.D.
  • Later Han another two centuries
  • (a brief period between when Han were out of
    power)

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86
Liu Bang forms aCentralized Government
  • Destroys rivals power wins popular support
  • Established a top-down rule
  • Autocratic authority
  • Lowered taxes
  • Tempered harsh punishments

87
Centralized Government
  • When a central authority controls the running of
    a state.

88
Empress Lu
  • Keeps Control of the Throne
  • Names one infant after another as emperor and
    acted as regent for each.

89
Wudi
  • Expanded Chinese Empire Appointed qualified
    people to government jobs
  • Conquered lands.
  • Made allies of enemies.
  • Tests for civil service workers.

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91
Civil Service
  • Government jobs that civilians obtained by taking
    examinations.
  • The Chinese civil service established a top-down
    chain of command with the emperor at the top.

92
Wang Mang
  • Restored order and brought the country under
    control.
  • Minted new money
  • Established public granaries
  • Redistribution of land to the poor

93
Wang Mang
94
Invention of Paper
  • Availability of books increased
  • Education spreads
  • Expands government as records could be stored and
    read

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97
Collared Harness
  • Horses can now carry heavier loads.

98
Twin-blade plow
  • More efficient, it increased the amount of seed
    one person could plant.

99
Silk production techniques kept secret
  • Creates a world-wide demand for silk.
  • Expands Chinese commerce to Rome.

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101
Territorial Expansion
  • Government wants to unify the empire. It
    promotes
  • Intermarriage between Chinese and other
    nationalities.
  • Schools for conquered people.
  • Appoints locals to government posts.

102
Gap Between Rich and Poor Increases
  • Political instability increases
  • Economic weaknesses and imbalance topples the
    empire

103
Centralized Government
  • Han emperors established autocratic authority.

104
Civil Service
  • Civilians pass tests to work in government jobs.

105
Monopoly
  • The Chinese government established a monopoly
    control of the silk market.
  • A monopoly exists when there is only one supplier
    of a good or service. The supplier is free to
    set the price for the good or service.

106
Assimilation
  • Han rulers tried to assimilate conquered peoples.
  • Assimilation is the process by which conquered
    people are made more Chinese.
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