Inner and East Asia, 600 – 1200
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Transcript Inner and East Asia, 600 – 1200
Inner and East Asia, 600
– 1200
I. The Early Tang Empire, 618 - 715
A. Tang Origins
Sui Dynasty (581 – 618)
Emperor Li Shimin
Extension of autonomy, Confucian
examinations
Turkic culture/military
B. Buddhism and the Tang Empire
Presence of Buddhism,
responsibility of king
Mahayana Buddhism dominant –
facilitated cultural exchange
Early Tang dependence on
Buddhist monasteries
Capital at Chang’an
Cosmopolitan - diversity, contacts
with Inner Asia
C. To Chang’an by Land and Sea
Roads, Grand Canal
Tributary system
Layout of Chang’an
Compass design, ocean vessels
Plague of Justinian
D. Trade and Cultural Exchange
Cultural impact from Inner
Asia/Islam
Clothing
Stringed instruments, food and
wine
1000 CE exports exceeded imports
– balance of trade
Silks, porcelain
Increased trade along Silk
Road/Indian Ocean – traders use
credit/finance networks
II. Rivals for Power in Inner Asia and China, 600 – 907
A.
The Uighur and Tibetan Empire
Turks migrated from Mongolia westward
8th century – Uighurs controlled Tarim
Basin/Inner Asia
Cosmopolitan – merchants, scribes, art,
religion
Fell quickly
Chinese pilgrims traveled through Tibet
Alphabet, art/architecture, medicine,
math, farming
643 – Tang princess Kongjo married
Tibetan king – brought Mahayana
Buddhism, increased contact between
Tibet and Tang
Tibetan military strengths
Late 600s – Tang and Tibet competing
from control over Inner Asia
Tibet reached into Chinese provinces
800 – Tibetan king wanted to do away
with monasteries but assassinated by
monks – further isolation
B. Upheavals and Repression, 750 –
879
New fears of Buddhism undermining
Confucianism, Han Yu
Emperor Wu Zhao – favored
Buddhism/Daoism, reviled by
Confucian writers
Buddhists severed ties to this world
Edict of 845 – Tang destroyed
thousands of temples, government
gained new sources of revenue
Fall of Buddhism in Tang China
C. The End of the Tang Empire, 879 –
907
Empire dependent on local military
rulers/complex tax system
755 – Rebellion led by General An
Lushan, rise of military governors
Prosperity but political disintegration
and cultural decay
879 – 881 – Huang Chao (gentry)
led greatest uprising Hatred of
foreigners
Warlords – mass migrations to the
south
III. The Emergence of East Asia to 1200
Three new states: origins, beliefs
A. The Liao and Jin Challenge
Liao Empire of Khitan (916 – 1121) – Siberia to Central Asia
Pastoral traditions, importance of Buddhism to emperor
Siege machines, horsemen
1005 – Song tribute to the Liao
Alliance with Jurchens of northeast Asia
Destruction of Liao capital in 1115
“Southern Song” (1127 – 1279) – Song make payments to Jin to
avoid warfare
B. Song Industries
INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION???
Indian/West Asian mathematicians/astronomers –
fractions/calendars
1088 – Su Song and giant celestial clock
Advances in magnetic compass
Junk ships – rudder, watertight bulkheads…copied in Persian
Gulf
HUGE ARMY (1.25 million men) – half the territory of the Tang
Use of steel/iron – sources in the north
Government monopoly by 11th c. – producing as much cast iron
as 18th c. Great Britain
Mass production
1100s - Gunpowder - impact
C. Economy and Society in Song China
Neo – Confucianism, Zhu Xi, ideal human – the sage
Chan Buddhism (Zen in Japan) – mental discipline
Rigorous examinations for bureaucratic offices
Social implications of scoring well/poorly on exams
Printing – woodblock to moveable type
Mass printing of books, exam materials, instructions on
cultivation
Agriculture south of the Yangzi River, plow/rakes, control of
malaria
Migration to the south, displacement of native people
1100 – population in Chinese territories over 100 million
Large cities
Problems in cities – waste management, water supply, etc.
City of Hangzhou
Credit – “flying money”
Government issued paper money - inflation
Cost of military expenditures
Sold rights to collect taxes
New social hierarchy based on new sources of wealth –
MODERN – growth of middle class and private capitalism seen
in 18th c. Europe
Women’s rights/education
Development of footbinding – status symbol
IV. New Kingdoms in East Asia
A.
Expanding Confucian world view
targeted the south
Cultivation of rice needed
structured society
Korea, Japan and Vietnam all
centralized power during the Tang
period – saw Buddhism and
Confucianism as compatible
Korea
Mountains, little agricultural land
Early 500s - kingdom of Silla
(south); power of landowners,
Koguryo kingdom in north, after
688 Silla ruled but needed support
of Tang
After early 900s (fall of Tang)
house of Koryo united peninsula –
alliance with the Song
Koryo kings supported Buddhism
– woodblock printing from 700s
Process of woodblock printing,
advances…
B. Japan
Geography
Mid 600s Yamato followed Tang government
Architecture, Buddhism
No walls, Mandate of Heaven
Unchanging Tenno dynasty, role of prime
minister and Shinto
Kyoto
Fujiwara family – cultural development,
Confucianism
Power of warriors, civil war
Education of women – The Tale of Genji
Kamakura Shogunate – Buddhism, rise of
samurai
C. Vietnam
Red River and Mekong, irrigation systems
“Annam” – Confucian bureaucratic training,
Mahayana Buddhism
936 – Dai Viet – good relations with Song
Rivalry wit Champa (south) – foreign
influences
Champa and voluntary tribute – Champa rice
Confucian hierarchy – differences in
treatment of women