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The Resurgence of

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Title: The Resurgence of


1
The Resurgence of Empire in the East
2
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3
The Sui Dynasty (589-618)
  • Regional kingdoms succeed collapse of Han dynasty
    (220-589 Decentralized/Dark Age)
  • Buddhist Emperor Wendi Sui
  • Wendi Sui consolidates control of China,
    initiates Sui Dynasty
  • Wendi won popular support by lowering taxes and
    establishing a cheap food supply.
  • Brought back scholar-gentry and imperial exam

4
Suis Fall
  • Yangdi, Wendis son, succeeded his father to the
    Throne.
  • Attempted to conquer Korea (failed)
  • Defeated by central Asian Nomads (Turkic)
  • Massive building projects
  • Military labor -Grand Canal!!!
  • Conscripted labor -Great Wall reconstruction
  • (6 million workers!)

5
The Grand Canal
  • Intended to promote trade between north and south
    China
  • Most Chinese rivers flow west-east
  • Linked network of earlier canals
  • 1240 miles
  • Roads on either bank
  • Succeeded only by railroad traffic in 20th
    century
  • Longest canal or artificial river in the world
    today!

6
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7
The Tang Dynasty (618-907 CE)
  • Wide discontent over conscripted labor in Sui
    dynasty
  • Military failures in Korea prompt rebellion
  • Emperor assassinated in 618
  • Tang Dynasty initiated

8
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  • The Sui and Tang dynasties, 589-907 CE

9
Tang Taizong
  • Second emperor of Tang dynasty (r. 627-649 CE)
  • Murdered two brothers, thrust father aside to
    take throne
  • Strong ruler
  • Built capital at Changan
  • Law and order
  • Taxes, prices low
  • More effective implementation of earlier Sui
    policies

10
Major Achievements of Tang Dynasty
  • Transportation and communications
  • Extensive postal, courier services
  • Became the golden age of literature in China
  • Emperor Xuanzongs splendor in Changan
  • Welcoming of foreign faiths (not conversion)
  • Equal-field System
  • 20 of land hereditary ownership
  • 80 redistributed according to formula
  • Family size, land fertility
  • Worked well until 8th century
  • Corruption, loss of land to Buddhist monasteries,
    aristocratic land accumulation

11
Bureaucracy of Merit
  • Imperial civil service examinations
  • Confucian educational curriculum
  • Some bribery, nepotism
  • But most advance through merit
  • Built loyalty to the dynasty
  • System remains strong until early 20th century

12
Tang Military Expansion and Foreign Relations
  • Manchuria, Korea, Vietnam, Tibet
  • One of the largest expansions of China in its
    history
  • Paid Central Asian Nomads to defend boarder
    (repair G.Wall)
  • Established tributary relationships
  • Gifts
  • China as Middle Kingdom
  • The kowtow ritual

13
Tang Decline
  • Governmental neglect Emperor obsessed with
    music, favorite concubine
  • Anti-Buddhist Backlash (by Conf. Daoists)
  • Loss of tax revenues and inability to feed people
    in times of famine (Govt weakness)
  • Nomadic Turkish Uighur (WEE-goor) mercenaries
    invited to suppress rebellion, sacked Changan
    and Luoyang as payment
  • Nomadic raids and invasions continued
  • Tang decline continues, rebellions in 9th
    century, last emperor abdicates 907

14
The Song Dynasty, 960-1279 C.E.
15
Song Dynasty (960-1279 CE)Never matched Tang
military or political strength
  • Emphasis on administration, industry, education,
    the arts
  • Military not emphasized
  • Direction of first emperor, Song Taizu (r.
    960-976 CE)
  • Former military leader
  • Made emperor by troops
  • Instituted policy of imperial favor for civil
    servants, expanded meritocracy

16
Song Strengths
  • Population increase approached 100 mil.
  • Rice production doubled due to opening new lands
    to cultivation in the south (Grand Canal)
  • Improved tool use and fertilizers new rice
    strains from Vietnam
  • Tax relief for farmers and credit to open new
    farms
  • Early song Emperors appoint bureaucrats based on
    merit
  • Excel at Manufacturing (gunpowder, bombs,
    moveable type print, water-power mills, iron,
    steel) more per capita manufacturing than anyone
    else!

17
Song Weaknesses
  • Lack of military might (Fight with other means)
  • Size of bureaucracy heavy drain on economy
  • Two peasant rebellions in 12th c.
  • Internal inertia prevents reform of bureaucracy
  • Civil service leadership of military
  • Lacked military training
  • Unable to contain nomadic attacks
  • Jurchen (a Tungusic people (Siberian) who
    inhabited the region of Manchuria) conquer,
    founding the Jin Empire, forcing Song dynasty to
    Hangzhou, southern China (Southern Song)

18
The Song Dynasty, 960-1279 C.E.
19
Agricultural Economies of the Tang and Song
Dynasties
  • Developed Vietnamese fast-ripening rice, 2 crops
    per year
  • Technology iron plows, use of draft animals
    (North - Oxen, South Water Buffaloes)
  • Soil fertilization, improved irrigation
  • Water wheels, canals
  • Terrace farming

20
Population Growth
  • Result of increased agricultural production
  • Effective food distribution system
  • Transportation networks built under Tang and Song
    dynasties

21
Strict Social Hierarchy
Gentry Wealthy landowners, focused on Confucian
ideals, focus on civil service
22
Urbanization
  • Changan (currently Xi'an) worlds most populous
    city 2 million residents
  • Southern Song capital Hangzhou over 1 million

23
Patriarchal Social Structures
  • Increased emphasis on ancestor worship
  • Elaborate grave rituals
  • Extended family gatherings in honor of deceased
    ancestors
  • Footbinding gains popularity
  • Increased control by male family members

24
Footbinding
25
Foot-Binding
  • The Quest for Beauty and Status

26
The History of Foot-Binding
  • The practice was popular by the
  • 12th century
  • There are two stories as to how this tradition
    began
  • Foot-Binding was made illegal soon after the
    Chinese Revolution in 1911

27
The Foot-Binding Ritual
  • Began between the ages of
  • 3 and 11
  • Was performed by the girls
  • mother or another female relative
  • Foot-binding usually took place in the fall and
    winter so the girl would feel less pain

28
The Foot-Binding Steps
  • 1. The girls toenails would be cut
  • 2. Her feet would be soaked in hot water
  • 3. Except for the big toe, all of her toes would
    be broken and folded under the foot
  • 4. Her feet would be wrapped tightly in silk or
    cotton bandages
  • 5. Every few days, the bandages would be taken
    off, the feet cleaned, and the feet wrapped even
    more tightly

29
Wrapping Bound Feet
30
Bound Feet
31
Bound Feet
32
Why Were Feet Bound?
  • Wealth
  • Status
  • Beauty
  • Marriage

33
Beauty
  • A three-inch-long foot,
  • called a golden lotus,
  • was considered beautiful
  • Feet this size would be able to fit into the
    delicate and beautiful shoes made for bound feet

34
Marriage, Status, and Wealth
  • Having bound feet made it difficult to walk, and
    so a man who had a wife with bound feet looked as
    if he had so much money and status that his wife
    did not need to work

35
Technology and Industry
  • Porcelain (Chinaware)
  • Increase of iron production due to use of coke,
    not coal, in furnaces
  • Agricultural tools, weaponry
  • Gunpowder invented
  • Earlier printing techniques refined
  • Moveable type by mid-11th century
  • Yet complex Chinese ideographs make wood block
    technique easier
  • Naval technology
  • compass

36
Emergence of a Market Economy
  • Letters of credit developed to deal with copper
    coin shortages
  • Promissory notes, checks also used
  • Development of independently produced paper money
  • Not as stable, riots when not honored
  • Government claims monopoly on money production in
    11th century

37
China and the Hemispheric Economy
  • Increasingly cosmopolitan nature of Chinese
    cities
  • Chinese silk opens up trade routes, but increases
    local demands for imported luxury goods

38
Cultural Change in Tang and Song China
  • Declining confidence in Confucianism after
    collapse of Han dynasty
  • Increasing popularity of Buddhism
  • Christianity, Manichaeism, Zoroastrianism, Islam
    also appear
  • Clientele primarily foreign merchant class

39
Dunhuang
  • Mahayana Buddhism especially popular at Dunhuang
    in western China (Gansu province), 600-1000 CE
  • Cave temples
  • Buddhist temples, libraries
  • Economic success as converts donate land holdings
  • Increase popularity through donations of
    agricultural produce to the poor

40
Conflicts with Chinese Culture
  • Buddhism
  • Text-based (Buddhist teachings)
  • Emphasis on Metaphysics
  • Ascetic ideal
  • Celibacy
  • Isolation
  • Confucianism
  • Text-based (Confucian teachings)
  • Daoism not text-based
  • Emphasis on ethics, politics
  • Family-centered
  • Procreation
  • Filial piety

41
Neo-Confucianism
  • Song dynasty refrains from persecuting Buddhists,
    but favors Confucians
  • Neo-Confucians influenced by Buddhist thought
  • Syncretic blend of both faiths

42
Chan (Zen) Buddhism
  • Buddhists adapt ideology to Chinese climate
  • Dharma translated as dao
  • Nirvana translated as wuwei
  • Accommodated family lifestyle
  • one son in monastery for ten generations of
    salvation
  • Limited emphasis on textual study, meditation
    instead

43
Persecution of Buddhists
  • Daoist/Confucian persecution supported in late
    Tang dynasty
  • 840s begins systematic closure of Buddhist
    temples, expulsions
  • Zoroastrians, Christians, Manicheans as well
  • Economic motive seizure of large monastic
    landholdings
  • Limits growth but does not eradicate faiths
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