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Asia
Chapter 19
China
The Ming Dynasty (1368 - 1644)
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Chinese were the most skilled sailors in the world.
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Build large sturdy ships called Junks
Some were more than 400 feet long.
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Ming emperor financed a fleet that sailed across Indian Ocean
Fleet reached the Arabian Peninsula
Chinese had ability to become a great seafaring power.
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Ming emperors had little interest in
Sea power or foreign trade
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Stopped financing expeditions
Confucianism
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Official philosophy adopted by Ming government
Righteousness in heart = Beauty in Character
Beauty in Character = Harmony in Home
Harmony in Home = Order in Nation
Order in Nation = Peace in World
Four Classes under Confucianism
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Scholar-Gentry
Highly literate class helped staff royal bureaucracy
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Farmers
Produce food and paid taxes that supported empire
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Artisans
Made beautiful useful objects
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Merchants
Bottom of social order
Sold objects that peasants and artisans produced
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In the minds of the emperor, foreign trade did not bring enough benefits to China to make it
worthwhile.
The Qing Dynasty (1644 - 1911)
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In Manchuria, ( a region northeast of China), a chieftain named Nurhachi unified many tribes into a
single people, called Manchu.
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The Qing emperors were not Chinese but adopted Chinese culture and traditional techniques.
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Kangxi: became Emperor in 1661, a scholar and patron of the arts who supported intellectuals
• Expanded boarders beyond China
• New territories included Korea, Tibet, Taiwan,
Central Asia, and Mongolia.
Japan
Warring States Period (1467-1568)
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Old political structure fell apart – created power vacuum
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Powerful samurai seized control of old feudal estates
Offered the people protection in return for their loyalty
Daimyo meant “great name.”
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Under this system, security came from this group of powerful warlords.
The emperor at Kyoto became a figurehead
Oda Nobunaga
Toyotomi Hideyoshi
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Took control of Kyoto in 1568
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Nobunaga’s best general
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Used firearms, used military forces to
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Continued his fallen leader’s mission.
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By 1590 he controlled most of the country.
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He invaded Korea in 1592
defeat enemies and maintain power
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Failed to unify Japan
Died in 1582 (seppuku) after a
Fought Koreans and their Ming Chinese allies
general betrayed him
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When he died in 1598, his troops withdrew
from Korea
Tokugawa Shogunate
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One of Hideyoshi’s daimyo allies
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Completed the unification of Japan
Became the Shogun (sole ruler)
Moved capital to Edo – which became Tokyo
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Local daimyo still governed – created the “alternating attendance policy”
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Emperor as figurehead
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Founded a dynasty that lasted until 1867
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Heavy taxes on peasants
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Increasing population
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Merchant population gained importance
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Art and culture shifted due to urbanization
Factors in Asia’s
Development
Rice and Population
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Advances in rice cultivation:
Quicker developing varieties (multiple crop yields)
Drought resistant varieties
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More people survived, more children born
Two Rivers
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Yellow River (The Huang He) - Northern China
Name from the yellowish silt left behind when it overflows
This silt is actually fertile soil called loess which is blown by the winds from deserts
to the west and north
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Yangtze River (The Chang Jiang) - Central China
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Between the two are China’s most fertile plains
Isolationism
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China and Japan both:
Sought to limit outside influence
Retain power
Retain cultural traditions
Did not feel the need to seek out new trade partners
Isolationism
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Ming Dynasty:
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Only the government was to conduct foreign trade – minimize outside influence
Only through three coastal ports, (Canton, Macao, and Ningbo)
Smugglers were active all over the coast
Limited industrialization – favored agricultural economy
Qing Dynasty
Continued to restrict trade and make demands of potential trade partners
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Japan
Unable to limit initial interactions – power not as centralized
Eventually created a “closed country policy”
One semi-open port
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All sought to limit outside influence
Hinduism
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Collection of beliefs
Buddhism
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Born a prince, sheltered
Became Buddha ‘the enlightened one’
Polytheistic
Family practices
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Reincarnation
Caste system
Siddhartha Gautama
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Focus in internal, not on gods
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Reincarnation
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Karma
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Four Noble Truths and Eightfold Path
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Upanishads
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Reach a form of understanding –
liberation for cycle
Reach Nirvana – release from
selfishness and pain