Post Classical China
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Transcript Post Classical China
Post Classical China
Song Dynasty
Post Classical China
Sui, Tang, Song
In Rome—political fragmentation
China regained unity under Sui Dynasty (589-618)
Great Canal system –”an engineering feat without parallel in
the world of its time”
Linked China north and south economically and enabled
prosperity
Tang and Song
Tang 618-907
Song 960-1279
Renewed unity
“Gold Age” of Chinese Achievement
Neoconfucianism—Confucianism incorporating insights of
Buddhism and Daoism
Politically— created 6 ministries (finance, personnel, rites,
army, justice, public works)
China’s “Mona Lisa”:
Beijing Qingming scroll
What does this scroll tell you about China
during the Song Dynasty?
Golden Age
Exam System—reinstated and further entrenched
Ability to print books
Placing numbers on exams not names—also, people were
searched when taking the exam- prevent cheating
Basing system on merit- a challenge to aristocracy (usually
found a way around it anyway)
Great inventions
Paper
Printing
Gunpowder
Compass
Song Economic Revolution
Made China “by far the richest, most skilled, and most populous
country on earth”
Endured GREAT population Growth
From 60 million during Tang to 120 million by 1200.
Why would this be—must have to do with food production.
Remarkable achievements in agricultural production, particularly the
adoption of a fast ripening and drought resistant strain of rice from
Vietnam
MOST IMPORTANT: producing for the market, rather than for local
consumption became a very widespread phenomenon.
Paper money contributed to Chinese commercialization
Urbanization
China became the most urbanized country in the world
Marco Polo would describe Hangzhou (city): “beyond dispute
the finest and noblest city in the world”
Supplying cities with food—thanks to network of canals,
rivers, lakes.
Cheap transportation: “world’s most populous trading area”
Iron Production
Industrial production soared
Supplied metal for coins, armor, arrowheads, tools,
construction, bells in Buddhist monasteries
Women in Song Dynasty
LESS THAN GOLDEN AGE
Turning point in history of Chinese patriarchy
During Tang Steppe nomads had introduced a life that
favored females (women rode horses, participated in social
life)—however by Song Dynasty a restored Confucianism
Tightened patriarchal restrictions on women
Restored earlier Han images of female submission and
passivity
Sima Guang on Women
“The boy leads the girl, the girl follows the boy’ the duty of
husbands to be resolute and wives to be docile begins with
this”
Women were distraction to men’s pursuit of a contemplative
life
Foot binding
Began to spread during Tang
Elite families at first
New images of female beauty and eroticism that emphasized small
size, delicacy, and reticence
In other ways there was progress for women– property rights
expanded
Women were educated more– for the sake of educating their sons.
Thus tightened and gave women opportunities
China’s Many Interactions
How did China view its nomadic neighbors—visa versa
China is NOT self contained
China’s most enduring interaction with foreigners lay to the north—nomadic
pastoral peoples of the steppes
They traded, were raided
Nomads also saw China as a threat
The Great Wall was built in their face
Prevented trading at some times
Sometimes the Chinese sent military campaigns directed at nomads
The Chinese needed nomad’s horses
Skins, furs, hides were also valuable to Chinese
Pastoral Nomads also controlled parts of the Silk Road
The Tribute System
Way of Chinese managing relationships with surrounding
people
“A set of practices that required non Chinese authorities to
acknowledge Chinese superiority and their own subordinate
place in a Chinese centered world order.”
Kowtow—series of ritual bowings and prostrations and
present their tribute to emperor
What did they get in exchange: access to trade
Tribute with Xiongnu
In reality– the Xiongnu were just as powerful
Xiongnu had the power to devastate China
Chinese promised Xiongnu grain, wine, silk as “gifts”
In reality, tribute in reverse or “protection money”
In return- Xiongnu would refuse military incursions into China
The Chinese were not always able to dictate the terms of the
tribute system
Unlike the people of Southern China who absorbed Chinese culture,
northern nomads maintained own culture
Tribute: Korea, Vietnam, Japan
Newly emerging states of Korea, Vietnam, and Japan.
Unlike northern nomads, these cultures were sedentary and
agricultural
Unlike people in SOUTHERN China, these people were
influenced by China but NEVER became Chinese
KOREA
Korea and China
Resisted Chinese political control
Participated in China’s tribute system
Leaders embraced connection with China
Wanted to become a “miniature China”
To Korea from China:
Luxury goods
Ceremonial clothing
Silk
Teas
Confucian and Buddhist texts
Artwork
Korean students went to China—studied Confucianism, natural sciences, the arts
Confucian schools were set up in Korea
HOW DO YOU THINK CHINESE CULTURE IMPACTED WOMEN IN KOREA?
KOREA
KOREA remained Korean
688—Political independence
Chinese influence was mostly towards the elite
Buddhism though was a great impact
Vietnam
Like Korea, the elite culture of Vietnam borrowed heavily
from China
Adopted Confucianism, Daoism, Buddhism, administrative
techniques, exam system, artistic and literary styles
Vietnam achieved political independence
Participated in tribute system
Differences with Vietnam
The Vietnamese heartland was incorporated into China for
over 1000 years.
Chinese regarded Vietnamese as Southern Barbarians
Chinese saw them as another rice producing area
Elite were educated in Chinese culture
Some rebellions to go against Chinese rule/influence
Took to the 10th century for Vietnam to rebel as a separate
state
Vietnam as a separate state
Emperors like China
Claimed the Mandate of Heaven
Chinese court rituals
More so than Korean—Chinese based exam system in
Vietnam
Merit based scholar gentry class
Vietnamese remained committed to Chinese culture
Vietnam
Beyond the elite there remained much that was uniquely
Vietnamese
i.e. cockfighting
Greater role of women in social and economic life
Female Buddha
Language
Japan
Unlike Korea and Vietnam, the Japanese islands were
physical separated from China by 100 miles of Ocean
Thus Japan’s vey extensive borrowing from Chinese
civilization was voluntary –not under threat
Began to develop a centralized bureaucratic state like
China
Japan—not the same bureaucratic system
Japan would become decentralized
Would become feudalistic
Shinto was never replaced by Buddhism
Marriages were made and broken often
DEVELOPED MORE DISTINCT due to geographic
location
Separate from China physically