Strong Rulers Unite China
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Transcript Strong Rulers Unite China
Strong Rulers Unite China
Do Now
U2D18
Do Now: Complete the “Philosophy and
Religion in China” chart and questions
HW: Study for your Unit 2 Exam on
Monday. (Review Sheet will be posted
on the course website today)
A Basic definition
Feudalism: loosely organized
system of government in which
local lords governed their own
lands but owed military service
and other support to a greater
king (Think kings with lords
controlling land in the countryside)
Qin Dynasty
221-206BCE
The story of the Qin Dynasty in China is one of
harsh rule and ruthless social policy
Setting the scene
In China, in 221 BCE, a man named Zheng conquered the
Zhou Dynasty
“…cracking his long whip, he drove the universe before
him, swallowing up the eastern and western Zhou and
overthrowing the feudal lords…”
Shi Huangdi
Zheng becomes Shi Huangdi
In 221 BCE, Zheng proclaims himself Shi Huangdi, “First
Emperor”
Methods were brutal, but he ushered in China’s classical
age
Historians call this classical because it set patterns in
government, philosophy, religion, science, and the arts
that served as the framework for later cultures in China
Shi Huangdi and Chinese Unity
Determined to end divisions that splintered the Zhou
Dynasty
After conquering warring states, he employed Legalist
advisors to create harsh rule in China
Emperor Shi Huangdi abolished feudalism
Replaced feudalism with 36 Military Districts and appointed
local officials to report back to him
Sent spies to monitor the local officials
Required all noble families to live in the capital of Xianyang
Peasants received nobles land, but had to pay high taxes on
the land
Question!
What is the benefit of having all the
noble families move to the capital city
with Shi Huangdi?
Unity continues
Shi Huangdi…
Standardized weights and measures
Created a standard currency with Qin coins
Created uniform Chinese writing
Workers repaired roads and canals for trade
Required cart axles to be the same width so
that wheels could run in the same ruts on
Chinese roads
Scales and
standard
currency
Crackdown on dissent
Shi Huangdi moved harshly against critics
Jailed, tortured, killed many who opposed his rule
Hardest hit were feudal lords and Confucian scholars who
hated his law
Approved book burning of all philosophy books and all
works of literature
Only books about medicine and agriculture were spared
Shi Huangdi’s most famous achievement
The Great Wall of China
In the past, feudal states had built walls for protection
Shi Huangdi ordered the feudal lord walls destroyed
New walls were to be built and connected
Hundreds of thousands of laborers worked on the wall
Estimated 500,000 people died building the wall
Wall is over 25 feet in many parts
Shi Huangdi wanted a wall that would unite China and move
it from the “warring states” period
Collapse of the Qin Dynasty
Shi Huangdi thought his empire would last forever
Died in 210 BCE
Anger over heavy taxes and harsh policies caused revolts
to explode all over China
An illiterate peasant leader, LIU BANG, defeated rival
armies and created the HAN DYNASTY
Like others, Liu Bang claimed to have the MANDATE OF
HEAVEN