Transcript Powerpoint
Ancient China
Ancient China: Section 1
Contrasting Climate and Landforms
Southern China- warm and wet as a
result of the Monsoons from the South
China Sea
Northern- cool and dry, dependent on
rivers as a source of water
“The Middle Kingdom”
• Geographic features such
as mountains , deserts and
seas blocked off China from the rest
of the Ancient world.
• They only knew of the nomadic people to the North
and West of them
• China had no knowledge of Egypt, India, Greece, Rome,
etc.
• They were sure they lived in the center of the earth
that they called themselves the “Middle Kingdom”
Rivers, the Birthplace of Civilization
The Huang He river and the Yangtze River would overflow.
This would provided rich, fertile soil ideal for farming near
the rivers. Both deposit yellow silt
Chang Jiang/Yangtze located in central China
Huang He/Yellow River is located to the north
Farming done between the two rivers—area called
North China Plain
China’s Sorrow
• The Huang He river was also called “China’s
Sorrow” because it was very unpredictable
• Destructive floods would come without warning
• At times the floods would cut new paths for the
river
The Bonds of
Family
Traditional Families- A household in ancient
China might contain as many as 5 generations
living together.
Most privileges in a family would belong to the
elders (they would make household decisions)
Women were typically governed by men (their
fathers, husbands or sons)
A Varied Climate
Western China: dry
like Western United
States
Northern China: like
New England (Maine,
New Hampshire,
Connecticut, etc.)
• Wheat and millet
grown in the drier
northern lands
Southeast China: like
southern United States
• Rice grown in the
moist climate
Shang Dynasty
Around 2000 B.C.
farming
settlements along
the Huang He
grew into cities.
The beginning of
Chinese culture
developed.
China is the
oldest, longest
lasting civilization
in the world!
Shang Kings
Dynasty: line of rulers from
the same family
1766 B.C. Shang family
started to rule some cities.
Kings were responsible for
religious activities.
Claimed to rule with gods’
permission
Controlled central portion of
North China Plain
Relatives ruled distant areas
Protected themselves from
nomads, the Zhou, to the
North and west with
chariots.
Shang Families
Respect for family
and ancestors very
important
Family was closely tied
to religion
Believes spirits of
ancestors could bring
good fortune to family
Family paid respect to
father’s ancestors
by making animal
sacrifices
Men were in charge of
the family
Family Names
The Chinese were the first people to
have 2 names.
One name was for the family, one was
for the individual.
In Chinese society the family name
comes first.
Developing Language
Oracle bones—
animal bones or
turtle shells on
which Shang royal
priests used to
interpret
messages from the
gods.
Priests would
make scratch
marks on bones
and shells—early
form of writing
Developing Language Continued…
Pictograph
system of writing
developed
Used simple
drawings/symbols
for words or ideas
To barely be able
to read and write
must know at least
1,500 Characters
in the Chinese
alphabet
Scribe needed to
know 10,000
characters
Ancient China Section 2:
The Life of Confucius
Confucius was the most famous and important
Chinese thinkers.
Born 551 B.C.
Noble but poor family
Loved learning and self-taught himself
Thought to be China’s first professional
teacher
Education was very expensive—Confucius
charged a small fee but would also take
in students who were poor if they truly
wanted to learn.
The Life of Confucius (cont.)
Confucius wandered North China
looking for rulers to follow his
teachings.
Was unsuccessful finding a ruler
Died 479 B.C.—72 years old
Felt his life was a failure.
Teachings of Confucius
Confucius never wrote down his teachings.
Students gathered his sayings and made
up a philosophy, after his death.
A philosophy is a system of beliefs or
values.
This philosophy became known as
Confucianism, one of several important
philosophies of ancient China.
Teachings of Confucius (cont.)
Confucius’s goal—order in society.
If people would behave properly to
one another, order and peace would
return.
People should know their place in
family and in society.
You should respect people above
and below you.
Five Relationships
Confucius created
code of proper
conduct for people.
Each relationship has
its own duties and
own code of conduct.
Relationships fall
under two categories:
•Proper conduct in
the family
•Proper conduct in
society
Father and Child
Elder Brother and
Junior Brother
Husband and Wife
Friend and Friend
Ruler and Subject
Proper Conduct
Society
Authority should be
respected.
Ruler should lead in a
right, moral way and
subjects will obey.
Ruler should treat
subjects with respect.
Family
Confucius believed
respect and good
behavior started at
home.
Filial Piety—respect for
one’s parents and
ancestors
Impact of Confucius
Confucius teachings
became basic training
for members of civil
service groups.
Civil service group of
people who work for the
government.
Before Confucius ideas,
government posts given
to sons of important
people. Afterward jobs
given on merit.
Candidates had to pass
official exams.
(Exams were based on
Confucius teachings.)
Ancient China Section 3:
Chinese Dynasties
What’s a dynasty?
A sequence of powerful leaders within the
same family
Chinese history is measured and described
through the various dynasties.
Chinese Dynasties
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Xia Dynasty About 1994 BCE - 1766 BCE
Shang Dynasty 1766 BCE - 1027 BCE
Zhou Dynasty 1122 BCE -256 BCE
Qin Dynasty 221 BCE - 206 BCE
Early Han Dynasty 206 BCE - 9 AD
Xin Dynasty 9 AD - 24 AD
Later Han Dynasty 25 AD - 220 AD
Three Kingdoms - Period of Disunion 220
AD - 280 AD
Sui Dynasty 589 AD - 618 AD
Tang Dynasty 618 AD - 907 AD
Song Dynasty 969 AD - 1279 AD
Yuan Dyansty 1279 AD - 1368 AD
Ming Dynasty 1368 AD - 1644 AD
Manchu or Qing Dynasty 1644 AD - 1912
The First Dynasty?
Xia or Shang?
According to legend, the Xia Dynasty is
the first Chinese dynasty that existed
from 1994 BCE - 1766 BCE.
However, there is no archeological
evidence to prove the existence of the Xia
dynasty.
Therefore, the Shang Dynasty is the first
known dynasty with historical evidence
Cycle of Chinese Dynasties (dynastic cycle)
1. A new dynasty rises.
-A strong local ruler defeats the
others
-He often adds land to China
-Believed to have mandate (or
approval)
from the heavens
2. The new dynasty rules
5. A period of local violence follows
-New dynasties fight for power
and restore peace and order
-Restores peace
-Chooses local officials
-Makes reforms
4. The dynasty falls
-Dynasty is believed to no longer have
mandate from the heavens
-Rebellions put an end to the weakened
dynasty
3. The dynasty grows weak
-Rules don’t do the hard work of running
the empire
-Tax the people too much
-Can’t deal with disasters such as
famine, earthquakes, invasions
The Shang Dynasty
Arose sometime after 1700BC
Some of the finest bronze work
of Ancient China
First to introduce a Chinese
writing language
Who was Shi Huangdi?
• Ruler of the Qin Dynasty
• Originally, his name was Zheng
• “cracking his long whip, he drove the universe
before him… His might shook the four seas.”
• By 221 Zheng extended his rule to cover most of
modern day China
• Renamed himself Shi Huangdi or “first emperor”
The Qin Unified China
Shi Huangdi
stopped battles
within warring
states. Co
Conquered rival
states
Drove out
nomadic
invaders
China grew the
largest it had
ever been!
The Qin Unified China Cont.
• Huangdi killed or put into prison anyone
who opposed him
Wanted total control of China:
• Took land away from defeated
noble families
• Forced nobles to live at the capital
so he could watch them
• This weakened noble families’
power.
He divided China into districts, and each
district was run by the emperor’s most
trusted officials
Organizing the Government
Shi Huangdi build highways and
irrigation projects.
• Forced peasants to work on projects such
as building roads
• These roads helped his army to rush to the
scene if a rebellion occurred.
• Set high taxes for peasants to pay
Unifying the Culture
• Shi Huangdi ordered one type of
currency (money) to be used throughout
China. This united China.
• Ordered a common system of weights
and measures
• He tried to control the thoughts of
people by outlawing the ideas of
Confucius and other thinkers.
• Killed 460 government critics and
Confucianists
• Ordered the burning of books unless
they were about medicine, technology,
or farming
Great Wall of China
Throughout China’s history, people were constantly worried
about attacks from the north. Different towns built walls
to help protect their borders.
Shi Huangdi set out to connect those walls by building the
Great Wall of China
Great Wall of China Cont’d
Shi Huangdi ordered farmers,
merchants (peasants), and
criminals to form an army of
about 300,000 workers
Many died and the people
resented the emperor.
Great Wall linked many small
walls that were built during the
time of the Warring States.
Earliest walls built of earth,
later stone and brick were
used.
When finished the wall
stretched for 1,400 miles. (The
distance from Washington DC
to Denver, Colorado)
Terra-cotta Army
In 1974, 8,000 life-size statues were discovered
in Northern China.
For over 2000 years these soldiers protected
the tomb of Shi Huangdi
No 2 statues are identical
With his underground army Shi Huangdi
planned on ruling a second empire in the
afterlife
End of the Qin Dynasty
Shi Huandi died in 210 BC
This started four years of chaos and civil war
Marked the end of the Qin dynasty
The Han Dynasty
One of the rebels that
helped overthrow the Qin
dynasty was Liu Bang
Liu Bang became the 1st
emperor of the Han
dynasty by 202B.C.
The stable government of
the Han dynasty lasted
about 400 years
Han Government
Liu Bang kept Qin policies
of central government, but
lowered taxes.
Made punishments less
harsh.
Peasant men owed the
government a month of
labor/work a year on
government projects.
Peasants built roads,
canals, and irrigation
projects.
Han Government Cont…
Bureaucracy: network of
appointed officials that assist
in government
Officials helped Liu Bang
enforce rules.
Bureaucrats put family
members and trusted people
in local government
positions.
Set up a system of tests to
find the most educated and
ethical people for the
imperial bureaucratic state.
•
Tested people on their
knowledge of Confucianism.
Empress Rules
Liu Bang died 195 B.C.
Widow, Empress Lu took
the thrown for their young
son.
Outlived son and continued
to put babies on the
throne so she could rule for
them.
When she died in 180 B.C.
all her family members
were killed.
Wudi- The Warrior Emperor
The Han Dynasty reached its peak under the
rule of Liu Bang’s great grandson Wudi
Wudi (descendent of Liu Bang) ruled the Han
empire from 141-87 B.C.E.
Made improvements to the Great Wall
Extended Chinese territory
Made many military conquests including
southern Chinese provinces, northern
Vietnam, and northern Korea.
Chased nomadic invaders out of northern
China
China was almost as large as modern day
China.
Collapse of Han Dynasty
The Han empire faced rebellions, peasant
revolts, floods, famine, and economic disasters,
but stayed in power until 220 C.E./A.D.
After Wudi’s death the Han dynasty slowly began to
fall apart
Warlords (leaders of armed local bands) took
control
Only Chinese knew how to make silk during the Han
dynasty.
Silk is a luxury fabric around the world.
Achievements of Ancient China
Section 4: The Silk Road
A trade route that went from China to the
Mediterranean Sea
It was a series of routes that covered more than
4,000 miles
The Silk Road Cont’d
Crossing the Silk Road was dangerous, travelers were easily
killed by desert sandstorms
Few travelers made the entire journey, generally goods were
passed trader to trader
Once they reached the Mediterranean goods such as silk
were shipped to Ancient Greece, Rome, India, and Egypt.
Silk Road Cont’d
Silk Road received its name from silk,
made only in China
Trade of Ideas- The silk road was also a
way of spreading ideas.
Buddhism spread from India into China
via the silk road