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Ancient China

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Title: Ancient China


1
Ancient China
  • Chapter 4 Section 4

2
The Qin Dynasty
  • Zhou dynasty began to decline around 400 BC,
    power shifted to local nobles
  • Several small states battled for land, power by
    300s
  • State of Qin rose to power
  • Located on Chinas western frontier
  • Conquered other states in military campaigns
  • Last rival state fell, 221 BC
  • Qin unified Chinese empire

3
  • Harsh Qin Rule
  • First ruler of new empire took title Shi Huangdi,
    first emperor
  • Unified China with help of two advisors, Hanfeizi
    and Li Si
  • Founded school of Legalism
  • Taught that powerful, efficient government key to
    maintaining order
  • Rejection of Confucianism
  • Legalists rejected philosophy developed during
    Zhou dynasty
  • Confucianists thought rulers should be virtuous,
    lead by example
  • Legalists said rulers should be strong, govern
    through force
  • Supported strict laws, stressed harsh punishment
    for even minor crimes

4
Confucianism
The father of Confucianism
  • Confucius
  • Was born around 551 B.C.
  • In what is now the Shantung
  • Province

5
Confucianism
  • With his death began his glorification
  • His teachings have touched almost every Chinese
    student for the past two thousand years.
  • Confucius believed that tradition was the key to
    peace, in this very unstable time.
  • He believed that tradition would show them the
    way back to a happy China.

6
Confucianism
  • Confucius believed that with out human
    relationships, there would be no self.
  • There are Five Constant relationships
  • in life
  • Parent and Child
  • Husband and Wife
  • Elder Sibling and Junior Sibling
  • Elder Friend and Junior Friend
  • Ruler and Subject

7
Confucianism
  • People have to warrant the respect and power that
    comes with their positions in life. Power and
    respect are not a given, they must be earned.
  • He believed that if everyone followed the five
    ideals, even just one person the effect would be
    wide spread. Through that persons family,
    community, nation, and the world.

8
Confucianism
  • Confucius shifted Chinas focus from heaven to
    earth. Though he did not remove heaven from the
    picture.
  • He saw that his country could not serve its
    people, so how was it going to serve its
    ancestors.
  • He believed that somewhere in the universe there
    is a power that is on the side of right.

9
Confucianism
  • China configured the Confucianism religion, so
    that it would serve everyone.
  • China still holds a great importance for the Five
    Constant Relationships.
  • With each passing year people listen more and
    more to there elders.

10
Taoism
The father of Taoism
  • Lao Tzu
  • Was born around 640 B.C.
  • No one is really sure about
  • any dates or places.

11
Taoism
  • Lao Tzu was not pleased with his people, so he
    left and went on a journey.
  • Lao Tzu was asked to leave
  • a record of his beliefs with
  • his civilization.
  • It took him three days to
  • complete 5000 characters
  • titled the Tao Te Ching.

12
Taoism
  • The Tao Te Ching is in effect the Taoist bible.
  • It centers around the concept of Tao. Or the
    path

13
Taoism
  • There are three meanings of Tao
  • Tao- The way to ultimate reality. This Tao is
    way to vast for a person to comprehend or fathom.
  • Tao- The way of the universe. The norm, the
    rhythm, and the driving power in all of nature.
    Deals more with the spiritual side then the
    Physical side of things.

14
Taoism
  • There are three meanings of Tao
  • Tao- The way of human life. It refers to the way
    that we mesh with the Tao of the universe.

15
Taoism
  • Philosophical Taoism
  • Is a reflective look at life
  • Relatively unorganized
  • Teaches what you should understand
  • You work on improving yourself
  • Seeks power through knowledge
  • Sought to conserve te and not to expend is on
    friction and conflict.
  • Associated Lao Tzu, Chuang Tzu, and Tao Te Ching

16
Taoism
  • The Taoist believe in opposites, and that things
    in nature have a way of working themselves out.

The Taoist believe that people should be
spontaneous and life their lives by someone
elses thoughts.
Lao Tzu connects the human to what transcends it.
17
  • Strong, Centralized Government
  • Shi Huangdi weakened rival nobles by taking land
  • Forced nobles to move to capital so he could
    watch them
  • Seized all private arms to prevent rebellions
  • Divided China into 36 districts, appointed
    loyalists to govern them
  • Maintaining Order
  • Shi Huangdi ruthlessly suppressed all criticism
    of his rule
  • Ordered burning of books which conflicted with
    Legalist thinking
  • Only books on practical subjects like
    agriculture, medicine spared
  • Confucian scholars who discussed banned books,
    criticized Qin government tortured, killed

18
The Qin Dynasty
  • Qin Reforms
  • Harsh Qin rule unified, strengthened China
  • Standardized laws, writings, monetary systems,
    weights and measures
  • Also standardized width of cart axles, so all
    carts could travel Chinas roads
  • Massive Building Projects
  • Improved irrigation system and increased farm
    production
  • Expanded network of roads and canals to link
    capital to other parts of empire
  • Improved transportation, increased trade, levied
    heavy taxes
  • Qin Growth and Defense
  • Worked to protect empire from outside threats
  • Qin army pushed nomadic warriors farther north,
    subdued areas to south
  • Joined separate defensive walls, came to be known
    as Great Wall of China

19
Fall of the Qin
  • Dynastys policies fueled anger, resentment
  • Qin dynasty crumbled after Shi Huangdi died, 210
    BC
  • Peasants fed up with forced labor, high taxes,
    rebelled
  • Nobles eager to regain land, power, raised armies
    against new emperor
  • Peasant rebel leader Liu Bang defeated Qin
    forces, founded Han dynasty
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