Pacific Rim Highlights
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Transcript Pacific Rim Highlights
Unit IV, Section 1
Objectives
Understand the development of early civilizations along
the Indus and Huang He River Valleys.
Analyze the influence of the Asian markets on global trade.
Discuss the development of Aboriginal and later Australian
cultures; focusing on influences of Western nations.
Understand the regions challenges economically,
politically, and socially.
Geographic Features
Himalayas
“Abode of the snow” in Sanskrit
Range of Mt. Everest
1,500 miles long, 400 to 93 miles wide
Ganges River
1,569 miles in length
Begins in the W. Himalayas and empties into the Bay of
Bengal
5th most polluted river in the World
Used for irrigation, transportation, and a Hindu holy
site
History
Indus Culture
Based around the Indus River
3300-1900 BCE
Afghanistan, Pakistan, & Northern India
Harappan Culture
Collective name for the civilization
Major urban centers of Harappa and Mohenjo Daro
“Modern” urban planning
No evidence of large-scale building projects
No evidence of leadership/armies
Society of traders & artisans
Declined due to loss of trade, drought, & invasion
…Continued
Mughals
Islamic, Personate Empire, 1526-1857
Founded by Babur
Saw expansion with European trade companies
Emperor Akbar
Development of a new nobility and a stable economy
1712, the empire begins to weaken
1719, four emperors would sit on the throne
Political factions begin to break the empire apart
1784, Maratha warriors seize control
1857, Emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar deposed by the Brits
The Taj Mahal
1632-1653
White marble mausoleum
Agra, India
Built by Shah Jahan
Memorialized his 3rd wife,
Mumtaz Mahal
Finest example of Mughal
architecture
Combines Islamic, Persian,
Ottoman, & Indian styles
Visited annually by nearly 2
million tourists
History Continued
Europeans
First establishments of trade in 18th century
Annexation of India by 1820’s by the British
Supplier of raw materials
Indian Revolution of 1857
Back-lash of European policy
Unification of Hindu & Muslim groups
Greater call for independence after WWI
Eventual independence came in 1947
Creation of (E & W) Pakistan & India
Gandhi
1869-1948
Born into a middle caste family
Trained as a lawyer in London
First fought for civil rights in South Africa
Returned to India in 1915
Began pushing for changes and independence
Sought a non-violent form of protest
Salt March protests
Sought peace between religious factions after
independence
Nathrum Godse, assassinated Gandhi Jan. 30, 1948
Religion
Birthplace of Hindu, Buddhist, Jainist, & Sikh faiths
Hinduism
80% of Indians
Polytheistic faith
33 deities
Karma, reincarnation, & caste society
Jainism
Proscription of non-violence toward living things
Sikhism
Monotheistic faith
Control over the “five thieves”
Lust, rage, greed, attachment, & ego
Hinduism
Potentially the oldest of the Major
religions
Began along the Indus River
Deities
One supreme god that all others emanate
from
The Triumvirate
Brahma- the Creator
Vishnu- the Preserver
Shiva- the Destroyer
Reincarnation through Karma
Actions now effect next life
…Continued
Worship
Individual worship
Study of scriptures, charts, and saying of Mantras
Daily & festive worship
Pilgrimages
Holy writings are Vedas
Temples & shrines used for worship
Ideas of,
Dharma: Power that upholds the universe and society
Varna: Established class system
Buddhism
Gautama, 5th Century BC
Sheltered prince
Shocked by worldly suffering
Age, disease, decay, and denial
Journey to Enlightenment
No true stance on a supreme being
Purpose of life is to end suffering
Ideas of meditation, reincarnation, & reaching Nirvana
Two Main Types
Theravada: Southern Buddhism, orthodox Buddhism
Mahayana: Northern Buddhism, spiritual beings as guides
Continued
Four Noble Truths
Life has suffering
There is a cause to suffering
There is an end to suffering
Suffering’s end is found in the Eight Fold Path
The Eight Fold Path
Know truth, Free your mind from evil, Say nothing to
harm others, Work for the good of others
Respect life, resist evil, Meditate, & Control your
thoughts
Bollywood
Based out of Mumbai (Bombay), India
First films produced in 1913
1940’s thru the 1960’s saw the Golden Age
Big budgets
Musical numbers, dances, exotic locations
Themes
Feuds, star-crossed lovers, sacrifice, & corruption
1000 films produced annually
Around 800 films produced in the US
“Slumdog Millionaire”
The Regional Economics
2nd in Global agricultural output
Manufacturing growing/improving due to outside
competition
1991 reforms
$41 Billion in gold and gem production
Cultural influence of gold
Expanding gold reserves
Hub for outsourcing jobs
Major importer of
Crude oil
Foreign luxury goods
Growing middle class
Huang He River
Yellow River, 3395 miles long
Birthplace of Chinese civilization
Violent & unpredictable flooding
“China’s Sorrow”
1332-33 floods, 7 million dead
Used for irrigation & aquaculture
Soft-shelled turtles
16 hydroelectric power dams
1/3 unsuitable for use
Three Gorges Dam
Located on the Yangtze River
World’s second largest power station
83.7 terawatts (1 TW = 1 Trillion Watts)
Fully opened July 4, 2012
Hopes to
Off-set greenhouse gas emissions
Control flooding
Allow for improved shipping
Highly controversial
1.3 million displaced, flooding of cultural sites, etc.
Historical Highlights
Dynasties
A line of ruling family members over a period of years
“Mandate of Heaven”
Shang Dynasty
1600-1046 BCE
“First” true dynasty of China
Earliest evidence of writing
Oracle bones
Human sacrifice
The Great Wall
Unification of wall systems in 271 BCE, Qin Dynasty
Meant to protect northern states from nomadic
invaders
Series of towers/forts built along the fortifications
Built by force (slaves, peasants, criminals)
5500 miles long
Cannot be seen from space
Longest fortification ever built
Some parts will disappear within 20 years
…Continued
Yuan Dynasty
1271-1368
Khans
Leadership fell to Mongolian tribal rulers
Kublai Khan
Grandson of Genghis
“The Great Khan”
Expanded the Chinese Empire
Met Marco Polo
Temur Khan
Grandson of Kublai
Ousted by the Ming Dynasty
…Continued
Ming Dynasty
1368-1644
Last ethnically Han dynasty
Supported million man army & navy
Junk ships set out on “global” expeditions
Achievements
Modernized the Great Wall
Ousted the court eunuchs
World renowned artistry
Furthered relations with Europeans
“Little Ice Age”
Lost the Mandate of Heaven
Fell to the Manchu
The Forbidden City
1406 to 1420
980 buildings covering 7.8 million sq. ft.
9,900 rooms
Decorated with precious marbles, metals,
woods, and glazed yellow tiles
Yellow, color of Chinese royalty
Seat of the Imperial house until 1912
The number of statues in a room denote
its importance
10 is the maximum
…Continued
Qing Dynasty
1644-1912
Nurhaci first Qing emperor
Pensive relationship with Europeans
Opium Wars
The Boxer Rebellion (Empress Dowager
Cixi)
Emperor Puyi (6 years old)
abdicated in 1912
Died in 1967
Europeans in China
Silk Trade
Valuable commodity since ancient times
Silk worms early on domesticated
Silk making techniques forbidden to leave China
Opium Wars, 1839-1842 & 1856-1860
British aggression over opening Chinese trade
High European demand for Chinese goods
Boxer Rebellion
1898-1900
Opposed foreign imperialism
55 day siege of foreign personal in Beijing
August of 1900 siege ended
20,000 foreign troops defeat the imperial army
Culture & Religion
Confucianism
Developed by Confucius (551-479 BCE)
Humanist stance
Five relationships
Ruler & ruled, father & son, husband & wife, elder brother & younger
brother, & friend & friend
Daoism (Taoism)
Living in balance (yin yang)
Three stances
Compassion, moderation, & humility
Buddhism
Arrived in China around 206 BCE
Brought by Indian missionaries through the silk road
Chinese influence help spread Buddhism across South East
Asia
Communist Movement
Sun Yat-sen 1866-1925
Played major role in ousting the Qing
First president of the Republic of China
3 principles; Nationalism, democracy, & the people’s
livelihood
Mao Zedong 1893-1976
Founder of Communist China, 1949
Lead China toward a fully Communist state
Cultural Revolution 1966-1976
Purge of the country
Commune
Communal living and sharing of resources
Millions dead as a result
Dismantled after the death of Mao
Modern Issues
One-Child Policy, 1979
Population control
Sanctioned through
fines
Flexibility for exceptions
Gender gap
Slacking control in
recent years
Pollution
Global economic growth
Command System
Human rights
Freedom of speech,
protest, etc.
Hong Kong
420 square mile island chain
200 islands
Ranked 5th in the World for life expectancy (81 years
old)
Seized by the British after the Opium Wars
China regained control 1997
“Special Administrative Region”
Limited democracy
Free Market Economy
Link between Command China & the West
Islands of Japan
6,852 islands in the Japanese
archipelago
Four Main Islands
Hokkaido
Shikoku
Kyushu
Honshu
“Main Island”
810 miles long, 31 to 142 miles wide
Seismically active region
2011 earthquake/tsunami
Mt. Fuji, 12,388 ft
History of the Nation
Japan first inhabited around
30,000 BCE
Early Japanese society worked
toward copying China
Development of an imperial house
Emperor
Buddhist influences
Cultural norms
Technological advancements
Nara period saw the rise of a
strong Japan
8th
…Continued
Feudal Japan
Contemporary of Middle Age
Europe
Saw the rise of a strong warrior class
The Samurai & the Shogun
Shoguns were
Military governors, 1192-1867
Held great influence over land and the
imperial court
Rewarded for their service with
Land, agricultural surplus, &
peasant labor
…Continued
Samurai
Highly trained & educated warrior class
(both male & female)
Far more advanced than contemporary
European warriors
Armor built for mobility
Weapons developed were slender but lethal
Katana sword
Popular but feared segments of society
Seppuku
Taking ones own life when bushido was broken
“The Samurai Way
Edo Period
1603-1868
Controlled by the Tokugawa
Shogunate
Est. by Tokugawa Ieyasu
Achievements
Division of the country into 300
Daimyos
Economic growth and stability
Strict social norms
Furthering of the arts
Isolationist toward foreign policy
Modern Japanese History
Meiji Restoration
1868-1912
Opening up of Japan to the outside world
Modernization efforts
WWII
Territorial aggression & expansion in the
1930’s
China, Oceania, & Southeast Asia
Surprise attacks at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii
First atomic bombs dropped by US airmen
Hiroshima & Nagasaki
Japanese Culture
Shinto
“Way of the gods”
Worship of Kami (spirits or gods) shrines
No true set rules/standards
80% of the pop. practice, 10% are true Shintoists
Kabuki
Theatre style
Dance, singing, heavy make-up, & dramatic
staging
Developed during the Edo Period
Three styles
Historical, domestic, & dance pieces
…Continued
Geisha
Traditional Japanese entertainers
Trained in hosting, conversation, music, dance, &
games
Highly ordered ranking and training system
Provided confidence for women in a male
dominated culture
Sumo
Full-contact wrestling sport
Shinto in background
Highly ordered and excessively trained
Japan, level of professionalism
Japan Today
Democratic-monarchy
Emperor Akihito & Empress Michiko
3rd largest nation economy in the World
After the US & China
Major exporter of technology & motor
vehicles
Close ally for the US in the region
Concerns
Urban planning- limited land
Radiation from the Fukushima plant
Physical Features
Great Dividing Range
Eastern highlands
3rd largest land based range in the World
2,175 miles long
Great Barrier Reef
World’s largest reef
1,400 miles, 344,400 square miles
Largest naturally built structure, coral polyps
Under threat from pollution, damage, and UV bleaching
Lost at least half of its coral cover since 1985
…Continued
The “Outback”
The bush country of Australia’s interior
Arid and dry
Famous for Ayers Rock (Uluru)
…Continued
The “Outback”
The bush country of Australia’s interior
Arid and dry
Famous for Ayers Rock (Uluru)
Native Wildlife
Geographic separation has allowed for development of unique
species
Largest collection of marsupials in the World
Kangaroos, koala bears, wallabies, wombats, etc.
Dingo, salt water crocodiles, & emu
Feral populations of
Horses, camels, and water buffalo
Aboriginal Culture
Arrived in Australia around 50,000 years ago
One of the oldest people groups on Earth
Characteristics
Blue eyes
Blonde, red, or brown hair
Hunter-gather cultures
History of oral traditions and rock art
Pushed to extremes by European settlers
Conflict, kidnappings, & force relocations
Slow gains in citizenship/land rights in modern times
Cottage industries
Economic activity carried out at home
Source of income
European Discovery & Influence
First sighted by the Dutch in 1606
Capt. Cook
Mapped the Eastern Coast, 1770
Claimed it for Britain
Est. New South Wales
Developed as a penal colony after
the loss of the American colonies in
1783
In the 19th century pushed to
assimilate aborigines
Taking native children to be raised
…Continued
Europeans pushed into the interior
Land opportunities
Gold
Ranching
Stations
Central location for cattle and sheep farming
Beef, mutton, & wool ventures
Self-sufficient
Limited contact, advanced through technological
improvements
Telegraph, radio, telephone, aircraft
Still important part of Australia’s agricultural network
…Continued
1907, Dominion of Australia est.
1931, Statute of Westminster ended
most constitutional links with the
UK
1970, Immigration encouraged
Saw the end of the White Australia
Act
Massive influx from Asia
1986, Australia Act, ends all British
control over remain segments of
government
Modern Australia
States
New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania,
Victoria, & Western Australia
Territories
Northern Territory & the Australian Capital Territory
Issues
Push for closer relations with Pacific Rim neighbors
Bringing together a multi-cultural country
Healing and compromise with aboriginal peoples
Public government apologies
Species decline and climate change
Maintaining a stable economy
Ranked 12th for economic output
5th for per capita output
North Korea
Once controlled by China, & Japan, and split after
WWII
North Korea under communist control since 1950’s
Government diversion of funds to military ventures
1million man army, nuclear arms programs
Food scarcity during the 1990’s and early 2000’s
North Korean economy was shrinking during the 90’s
2003 saw the relaxation on private ownership and
markets
Experimenting with a free market
Vietnam War
1945-1954, Anti-Colonial war against France
Supported by the US
Gained independence in 1956
Division between Communist (N) and anti-Communist (S)
1958, Viet Cong begin guerrilla offensive
1963, S. Vietnam begins loosing ground
Mekong Delta
US ups military involvement
1968, Viet Cong launch the Tet Offensive
1973, US would withdraw from Vietnam
1975, Vietnam reunited with a North Vietnamese victory
Helicopter evacuation of Saigon (Operation Frequent Wind)
1 to 2 million dead