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Shang Dynasty

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Title: Shang Dynasty


1
Shang Dynasty
  • By, Peter Waters Rory OKelly

2
Important Dates
  • The Shang Dynasty was the first true dynasty in
    China ruling for over six centuries starting in
    1766 B.C.
  • In the 14th century B.C. they settled An-yang
    as their capital.
  • In 1122 B.C. the Shang dynasty fell to a massive
    slave rebellion.

3
Shang Philosophy
  • The people of the Shang Dynasty worshiped their
    ancestors and a pantheon of gods.
  • The Shang people occasionally practiced human
    sacrifice.
  • When someone would die their slaves would be
    buried alive with them in a tomb.

4
Accomplishments/ Contributions
  • They created the first 360 day calendar with 12
    months.
  • Music- They developed a clay ocarina, tuned
    chimes of stone, and bells and drums of bronze.
  • Pottery- Some of the pottery found appeared to be
    shaped on a potters wheel leading to the theory
    that they were the first ones to make a potters
    wheel.
  • The Shang people developed a system of writing
    using a combination of pictographs, ideograms,
    and phonograms.

5
Important People
  • Tang- Tang started the Shang Dynasty based on the
    lessons learned from the failure of the last
    dynasty.
  • King Pangeng- the 17th king, he relocated the
    capital to Yin, which lead to a more stable
    government.
  • King Wuding- the nephew of King Pangeng, he made
    great achievements in the economy, that laid the
    foundation for the dynasties that followed

6
Zhou Dynasty
  • By Chris, and Kaylyn

7
The Zhou dynasty over threw the Shang dynasty in
1046, and ruled 1100 256 BC.
  • The longest ruling dynasty not only among the
    chinese ones but among the whole world.
  • The Zhou is divided into the Western Zhou
    (1027-771 BCE), when the capital was near Xian,
    and the Eastern Zhou (770-221 BCE), when the
    capital was moved eastward to Luoyang.
  • During the Zhou time believed that the Zhou ruler
    is the son of heaven who rules with the Mandate
    of Heaven.
  • Lasted longer then any other dynasty.

8
Important philosophy
  • Confucius created a philosophy that replaced
    spiritual and religious thinking.
  • The Chinese shifted from religion to philosophy.
  • 2) humanity 3) the importance state rituals and
    family rituals for preserving universal order.
  • Taoism-philosophy based on simplicity, believed
    that the government should be hands off and let
    the people deal with the problems of nature and
    the people should return to primitive
    agricultural communities.
  • Legalism- believed every aspect of life should be
    ruled by a series of strict and impersonal laws.
    Ruler would have to be wealthy and powerful to
    rule.

9
Important accomplishments/ contributions
  • Zhou society had a society with a class system,
    there were classes suck as aristocrats,
    commoners, and a slave class
  • The start of Confucianism was a major
    contribution they had.
  • They had economic achievements, a feudal system
    government, and they had advanced agricultural
    techniques, causing them to be the main food
    source for the Chinese.
  • Discovered iron deposits in china and developed
    iron technology.
  • One of the first dynasty's to start collecting
    books, contributed to literature.
  • Zhou time was also the time of the hundred
    schools of philosophers and thinkers.

10
Important people
  • Confucius- emphasizes moral cultivation of
    individuals, service to the state, and leadership
    by ethical, educated men.
  • Wuwang- he was one the Zhou kings, he was
    important because established the feudal
    government. He was thought of as a wise king.
  • The founders of the Zhou dynasty were the Kings
    Wen and Wu, and the Prince Regent Duke Dan of
    Zhou.

11
.
The Qin Dynasty221 B.C. 206 B.C
12
Important dates
  • In 221 B.C. King Zheng unified china,
  • In 213 B.C. all the Qin dynasty schools were
    burned down

13
Important People
  • King Zheng- unified china and began building the
    great wall.
  • Emperor Shi Huang was the father of Zheng, he
    created measuring and axel lengths along with a
    standardized currency
  • Emperor Shi Huang

14
Accomplishments
  • The Qin dynasty began building the great wall
  • They also created the terracotta warriors
  • They standardized writing and currency
  • Expanded chinas border past current day Vietnam
    and current day Korea

15
Philosophies
  • They created schools to teach the philosophies of
    there time
  • He tried to get people to think that only his
    government was the best by burning books of other
    philosophies

16
Interesting details
  • Doctors gave the Emperor pills with traces of
    mercury to try to give him imortality.
  • shin Huag was not a popular leader, he put high
    taxes on items which put a burden on the
    population
  • Killed over 400 opponents which where against his
    rule.
  • He only ruled for 37 year before he died and his
    son took over.

17
(No Transcript)
18
The Han Dynasty
  • By Michelle Birsky
  • And Liz Morrissey

19
Important People of the Han Dynasty
  • Liu Bang- Prince of Han who defeated the Qin army
    in the valley of Wei. In doing so he started the
    Han Dynasty in 206 B.C
  • Sima Qian- A member of the Han Dynasty, he became
    Chinas most famous historian
  • Wang Mang- briefly interrupted the rule of the
    Han dynasty in A.D 9-24. He was a reformer
  • Liu Hsiu- Killed Wang Mang in 22 A.D and took
    over as the new emperor.
  • Wu Ti- His reign was one of great military
    expansion. He expanded the borders into Vietnam
    and Korea.

20
Accomplishments
  • Notable for its military power
  • Intellectual, literary, and artistic endeavors
    revived and flourished under Han rule.
  • Adopted Confucian Ideals such as economic
    expansion

21
Philosophy
   Li includes ritual, propriety, etiquette, etc.
   Hsiao love within the family love of parents for their children and of children for their parents
   Yi righteousness
   Xin honesty and trustworthiness
   Jen benevolence, humaneness towards others the highest Confucian virtue
   Chung loyalty to the state, etc.
  • The Han dynasty followed the practice of
    Confucianism.
  • Li includes ritual, propriety, etiquette, etc
  • Hsiao love within the family love of parents
    for their children and of children for their
    parents
  • Yi righteousness
  • Xin honesty and trustworthiness
  • Jen benevolence, humaneness towards others the
    highest Confucian virtue
  • Chung loyalty to the state, etc
  • There are nine sacred books in Confucianism.

22
Important dates of the Han Dynasty
  • 206 BC The Han Dynasty began after defeating the
    Qin
  • 22 AD Wang Mang is killed
  • 25 AD Liu Hsiu became emporer
  • 220 AD The fall of the Han Dynasty

23
TANG DYNASTY
24
Important individuals
  • Li Yüan-first Tang emperor
  • Directed complex military operations
  • Established basic institutions
  • Li Shih-mi one of Chinas greatest emperors
  • Defeated eastern Turkish-expanded China further
    westward
  • "T'ang Dynasty." Encyclopedia Britannica. 2007.
    Encyclopedia Britannica Online. 2  Apr.  2007
     lthttp//search.eb.com/eb/article-9071162gt.

25
Philosophy
  • Confucianism the way of life propagated by
    Confucius in the 6th5th century BC and followed
    by the Chinese people for more than two
    millennia. It has traditionally been the
    substance of learning, the source of values, and
    the social code of the Chinese.
  • "Confucianism." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2007.
    Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 1 Apr. 2007
     lthttp//www.britannica.com/eb/article-9109629gt.

26
Accomplishments
  • The Tang was one of China's greatest dynasties,
    marked by military power, political stability,
    economic prosperity, and advance in art,
    literature, and education.
  • They invented block printing was invented in the
    8th century and movable type in the 11th century
  • The schools of Tang were well organized and
    systematized. They had public schools, private
    schools, and colleges.
  • education, history of." Encyclopedia Britannica.
    2007. Encyclopedia Britannica Online. 3  Apr. 
    2007  lthttp//search.eb.com/eb/article-47525gt.

27
The Song Dynasty Era960-1279 AD
  • By
  • Samuel Holt Archibald, III, Ph.D.
  • And
  • The Man

28
The 2 Period of the Song Dynasty
  • Northern Song (960- 1127)
  • Capital was in Kaifeng
  • Controlled most of inner China
  • Southern Song (1127-1279)
  • Northern China taken over by Jurchen Jin Dynasty
  • Song dynasty retreated south and made capital
    Hangzhou

29
Important People, Yo
  • Taizu- The first emperor of North, from 960-976
  • Qinzong- Last emperor of the North, 1126-1127
  • Gaozong- First emperor of the South, 1127-1162
  • Duan Zong- Last emporer of the South, 1276-1279

30
Important Accomplisments
  • Developed the pagoda
  • Shen Kuo discovered True North
  • They followed the Confucian philosophies
    following the decline of buddhism.

31
THE END
32
Ming Dynasty
  • By Owen Rischmann
  • Teddy Panourgias

33
Dates
  • Ruled from 1368 to 1644
  • Last ethnic Han-led dynasty
  • Took over the Mongol-led Yuan Dynasty

34
Important Accomplishments
  • All of the Great Wall that you can see today was
    either built or repaired by the Ming Dynasty.
  • Helped develop storytellers and novel writers
  • Wood cut and block printing was developed during
    the Ming Dynasty
  • Porcelain production was developed now
  • Experiment in two or three color porcelain
    production was toyed with.
  • Encyclopedias were written then, so were
    dictionaries.
  • Reduced the number of signs for Chinese
    characters to 214

35
Philosophy
  • Emporor favored violence in dealing with people
    who he thought were plotting against him.
  • Improved peasant life
  • Land tax kept low
  • Kept granaries stocked to protect against famine.
  • Government was Totalitarian

36
Important People
  • The leader was known as Hongwu Emperor and was a
    peasant.
  • Zheng He, he did seven naval expeditions mainly
    for diplomatic reasons.

37
The Qing Dynasty
  • By Daniel Egan
  • And
  • Chris Gray

38
Brief History of the Qing
  • Lasted from 1644-1911
  • Began during the Manchus control of China
  • 1884-1885- The sino-french war- A war for Vietnam
    between China and France that showed that China
    desperately needed to modernized, the same affect
    came with the Sino-Japanese war in 1894-95 over
    control of Korea
  • 1839-1842- The opium war- A war in which the
    British fought the Chinese as they regarded
    Chinas hostility as too much towards the opium
    trade this weakened China as it lost land to
    Britain as a result
  • Began its collapse after the Incompetent rule of
    empress Tzu Hsi, who refused to reform a weaken
    China in its time of need
  • Placed her two-year old son on the throne in
    1909, and in 1911 Chinese revolutionists
    overthrew the government and the dynasty
    collapsed
  • Source Qing Dynasty. Timeline of Chinese
    Dynasties, no author given, Museum_at_ Minnesota
    State University, mankato, accessed April 2nd,
    2007, http//www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/prehistory/china
    /later_imperial_china/qing.html
  • Source Qing Dynasty The Encyclopedia of China
    The essential reference to China and its history,
    Dorothy Perkins, New York facts on file, 2000,
    Modern World History online, Facts on File Inc.,
    accessed 4/2/07, http//www.fofweb.com/ActiveLink2
    .asp?SKIPBID6ItemIDWE53

39
Qing Philosophy
  • They practiced hereditary inheritance- Jobs and
    social classes are based upon ones family
  • They didnt believe in common, middle-class
    people marrying lower class people, i.e.
    gatekeepers, actors, etc.
  • Used servants- owners of households could own
    servants they were consider lower class. This
    trend originated from their Manchu roots
  • Originally used Lamaism, a sect of Buddhism from
    Tibet in which the leader of the sect regarded as
    a person of holy standing
  • Followed Confucianism- consisted of virtues such
    as honoring ones parents, obeying laws, and
    paying taxes
  • A mix of Christianity and Confucianism (following
    the philosophies of Confucius) developed in the
    late 1600s and early 1700s, when Jesuit
    missionaries convinced many of the Chinese to
    convert to Christianity and allowed them to keep
    some of their Confucian ways, the ones that they
    saw as being similar to Christian ones, i.e.
    ancestor worship
  • This lasted until the roman catholic pope
    demanded that the converts give up Confucianism,
    leading to a conflict from which emperor Kangxi
    would end Christianity in China
  • Source Qing Society. China. Encyclopedia
    Britannica, 2007, accessed April 2, 2007,
    Encyclopedia Britannica, http//search.eb.com/eb/a
    rticle-71762
  • Source Qing Dynasty The Encyclopedia of China
    The essential reference to China and its history,
    Dorothy Perkins, New York facts on file, 2000,
    Modern World History online, Facts on File Inc.,
    accessed 4/2/07, http//www.fofweb.com/ActiveLink2
    .asp?SKIPBID6ItemIDWE53

40
Accomplishments of the Qing
  • The empire extended China- it expanded the land
    they controlled to include what is know
    Turkistan, Tibet, outer Mongolia and other
    modern-day nations such as vietnam into Chinas
    land mass
  • They increased agricultural production and made
    advancements in commercial development rather
    than industrialization (They began a system in
    which China could profit from and expand trades
    already in use instead of having to constantly
    develop new industries, and also allowed for more
    independent industries in which the state had
    little to no control over business and industry
  • Began a national market for China
  • Developed paper money, brokerage systems, and
    banking systems and facilities
  • They made an emphasis on Education for China,
    i.e. the promote the people and leaders of China
    having good educations
  • A standard Chinese dictionary, the Kangxi
    dictionary was developed by them, which lasted
    for 200 years
  • Source China, Japan, and Korea, the Ming, Qing,
    Tokugawa, and Chosun, Columbia University, East
    Asia Curriculum project Asia for Educators,
    Accessed April 2nd, 2007, http//afe.easia.columbi
    a.edu/webcourse/key_points/kp_8.htm

41
People of the Qing
  • Dorgon- A rebel Manchu leader, he overtook the
    undefended Beijing in 1644 and proclaimed Qing
    the new dynasty in power
  • Li Zicheng- A rebel who organized the Manchu and
    Mongolians to overthrow the Ming and instate a
    new empire after facing economic troubles under
    their rule
  • Shunzhi- The first of the Qing emperors, (he was
    seven when he came to power, his rule was
    associated with conflicts against the remaining
    Mings and the pirate Zheng Chenggong, he took
    advise from Christian advisors, though never
    converted, he took an interest in Buddhism, and
    died of natural causes
  • Kangxi- the successor of Shunzhi, he was on of
    the major driving forces in the adaptation of
    Confucianism, he helped to expand Chinas
    territory to extend to Mongolia, Russia-occupied
    parts of Manchuria, and Tibet. He allowed Jesuits
    to integrate into Qing society, but banned
    Christianity in China after the pope declared
    that Christian converts had to give up their
    Confucian practices he also combined Confucian
    works into the Kangxi Dictionary, which became
    the standard dictionary of the Chinese's Language
    for 200 years
  • Source Qing Dynasty The Encyclopedia of China
    The essential reference to China and its history,
    Dorothy Perkins, New York facts on file, 2000,
    Modern World History online, Facts on File Inc.,
    accessed 4/2/07, http//www.fofweb.com/ActiveLink2
    .asp?SKIPBID6ItemIDWE53

42
People Cont.
  • Qianlong- The sucessor of Kangxi, he promoted
    education under the bases of history, philosophy
    and belles lettres, and classics he also
    expanded Chinas land to include all of
    Turkestan, Vietnam, and Nepal
  • Lin Zexu- He was an official appointed to halt
    opium trades in China, he was successful
    Guanzhou, but his actions did result in the Opium
    war, in which Britain declared war on China for
    being to harsh with dealing with the opium trade
    this resulted in the loss of several areas of
    China to the British, including the island of
    Hong Kong
  • Tzu His- One of the last empresses of the Qing
    dynasty, She believed in the Self-strengthening
    movement, in which China would keep its cultural
    traditions and let the west modernize, allowing
    China to learn from them she staged a coup in
    1898, after hearing of a supposed plot to have
    her imprisoned during a reform movement by
    emperor Guangxu, which was an attempt to
    modernize a weaken China. When she came to power,
    she ended all reforms, but died shortly after
  • Xuantong- The son of Tzu Hsi, she named him her
    sucessor at three years old, in 1911 when he came
    to power, Chinese revolutionaries with plans to
    overthrow the dynasty took power and established
    a republic government for China, resulting in the
    Chinese nationalist partys formation in 1912 and
    end of the Qing, though he was allowed to keep
    his title although powerless
  • Source Qing Dynasty The Encyclopedia of
    China The essential reference to China and its
    history, Dorothy Perkins, New York facts on
    file, 2000, Modern World History online, Facts on
    File Inc., accessed 4/2/07, http//www.fofweb.com/
    ActiveLink2.asp?SKIPBID6ItemIDWE53

43
YUAN DYNASTY
44
(No Transcript)
45
1279-1368 AD DIVIDED INTO 3 SECTIONS (ROUGHL
Y) EARLY (1279-1294) MIDDLE (1307-1323) LATE
(1323-1329)
46
EARLY 1279-1294
  • Reign of Kublai Khan, (Yuan Emperor Shizu) until
    1294

Kublai Khan Yuan Emperor of Shizu
Genghis Khan (Grandfather to Kublai)
47
MIDDLE 1307-1323
  • Period of Decline in the Yuan Dynasty
  • - Social Conflicts
  • - Competition of imperial power
  • The New Deal (Emperor Yingzong)
  • - An attempt to save the Yuan Dynasty with this,
    but it didn?t work out and then he died.

48
LATE 1329-1368
  • Decline begins to accelerate (BAD)
  • Khans were losing power to the Mongols
  • Yuan fell in 1368

So Long Yuan Dynasty!
49
Yuan Philosophy
  • -Yuan slowly took China?s ideas
  • -Buddhism was found in the home of Mongols who
    eventually followed it
  • -The Mongol's rule lead to revolution and rebirth
    or renewal in Chinas eye
  • -Very active in religion, Kublai Khan allowed
    many different religious views

50
EXTRAS
  • CULTURAL ACHIEVEMENTS
  • -DRAMA WAS DEVELOPED
  • -MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, CAME FROM THE WEST
    ENHANCING THE -CHINESE PERFORMING ARTS
  • STUFF THAT ALSO DEVELOPED WAS
  • -TRAVEL LITERATURE
  • -CARTOGRAPHY AND GEOGRAPHY
  • -SCIENTIFIC EDUCATION
  • DURING THIS TIME, EUROPE AND CHINA HAD VERY HEAVY
    IMPACTS ON ONE ANOTHER.

51
Extras Cont
  • NEW CROP SORGHUM
  • 1.a cereal grass, Sorghum bicolor (or S.
    vulgare), having broad, cornlike leaves and a
    tall, pithy stem bearing the grain in a dense
    terminal cluster.
  • 2.the syrup made from sorgo.
  • -An Old World grass (Sorghum bicolor), several
    varieties of which are widely cultivated as grain
    and forage or as a source of syrup.
  • -Syrup made from the juice of this plant
  • THEN THE MONGOLS IMPROVED AND REORGANIZED THEIR
    ROAD AND WATER COMMUNICATIONS, GRANARIES WERE
    BUILT TO QUENCH POTENTIAL FAMINES.

52
Bibliography
  • "Sorghum." Dictionary. 2007. 2 Apr. 2007
    lthttp//dictionary.reference.comgt.
  • The Imperial Era III. 2 Apr. 2007
    lthttp//www- chaos.umd.edugt.
  • "Yuan Dynasty." Chinese History Collection. 2
    Apr. 2007 lthttp//www.usc.edugt.
  • "Yuan Dynasty." 2003. 2 Apr. 2007
    lthttp//www.chinaculture.orggt.
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