Transcript Section 1
HOLT
World History
Section 1:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
The Ming and Qing Dynasties
Ming Foreign Policy
Attitudes toward trade – wanted to be selfsufficient; refused to rely on foreign trade
The northern frontier – strengthened Great Wall
of China; chose frontier defense over trade and
sea travel
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HOLT, RINEHART
AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 1:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
The Ming and Qing Dynasties
Founding the Qing Dynasty
Nurhachi unified tribes into Manchu
Adopted Chinese culture
Kept Manchu people separate and distinct
from Chinese
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HOLT, RINEHART
AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 1:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
The Ming and Qing Dynasties
Economy, Culture, and Society
Economy – trade and manufacturing
specialization grew
Popular culture and society – novels and plays in
everyday language; family was center of society
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HOLT, RINEHART
AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 1:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
The Ming and Qing Dynasties
Decline of the Qing Dynasty
Population growth
Government inefficiency and increases in taxes
White Lotus Rebellion
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HOLT, RINEHART
AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 2:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
China and Europeans
The Portuguese
Trade ties with China
Jesuit missionaries helped emperors revise
calendar, gained great power with imperial court
Qing rulers became suspicious, fearful of Jesuits’
intentions
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HOLT, RINEHART
AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 2:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
China and Europeans
The British
Free trade ideas – Great Britain abolished British East
India Company’s monopoly on trade with China
The opium trade – Chinese demand for cotton didn’t
match British demand for tea; British India exported
opium to China, which caused trade imbalance
The Opium War – Chinese tried to forcibly stop opium
trade; Hong Kong went to British rule
More concessions – unequal treaties with France and
United States, foreign embassies in Beijing
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HOLT, RINEHART
AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 2:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
China and Europeans
Rebellions
Taiping Rebellion – caused terrible destruction
Christian and Muslim teachings motivated
more revolts
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HOLT, RINEHART
AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 3:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
The Tokugawa Shoguns in Japan
Founding the Tokugawa Shogunate
Oda Nobunaga – conquests and alliances
Toyotomi Hideyoshi – sword hunts kept peasants
from becoming warriors
Tokugawa Ieyasa – crushed rivals
Tokugawa rule – combination of feudalism and
central monarchy
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HOLT, RINEHART
AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 3:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
The Tokugawa Shoguns in Japan
Foreign Contact
The Portuguese in Japan – Christian missionaries,
Jesuits
Closing the country – saw Christianity and Western
technology as threats to Tokugawa rule and to
Japanese traditions and values
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HOLT, RINEHART
AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 3:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
The Tokugawa Shoguns in Japan
Life in Takugawa Japan
Social classes – Confucian ideal; class was
determined by birth
Change and culture – internal trade expanded,
artisans and merchants prospered, new forms of
art, literature, theater
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HOLT, RINEHART
AND
WINSTON
HOLT
World History
Section 3:
THE HUMAN JOURNEY
The Tokugawa Shoguns in Japan
The End of Japan’s Isolation
Matthew Perry
Treaty of Kanagawa – similar treaties with Great
Britain, Netherlands, Russia
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AND
WINSTON