Transcript CHAPTER 10
Chapter 10
From the Tang to the Mongols:
The Flowering of Traditional China
China after the Han (220-581)
Division and civil war
Nomads from the Gobi Desert
Decline of Confucian principles
Buddhism
The Sui (581-618)
Yang Jian (Yang Chien)
Daoism and Buddhism
Sui Yangdi (Sui Yang Ti)
Collapse of the Sui
Grand Canal
Connects Yellow and Yangtze Rivers
Chang’an under the Sui and the Tang
1. Chang'an was not only the capital of the Tang Empire, it was also the eastern terminus of the trade routes from central Asia and the western point
of deposit for the Grand Canal. With a population drawn from all over Asia, the city and it suburbs had a population of 1,960,186. Surrounding the
city were walls that formed a rectangle of slightly over five by six miles. The city was laid out in broad thoroughfares running east-west and northsouth. These formed 110 blocks, each of which was an administrative unit. From the southern gate ran a 500 foot wide thoroughfare to the
governmental headquarters at the Imperial City where the Imperial Palace was located. The road divided the city administratively into eastern and
western sections, each with its own marketplace operated by the government. (John K. Fairbank, Edwin O. Reischauer, and Albert M. Craig, East
Asia Tradition and Transformation, pp. 105-106)
Question:
1. How does Chang'an compare as a capital city to that of Rome and Athens?
Chang’an under the Sui and the Tang
Grand canal at Wuxi
China under the Tang
1. After several centuries of internal division, China was united under the Sui dynasty (581-618). The capital was re-established at Chang'an and
expansion began anew. Most significant during this period was the connecting older canals and constructing new ones. First, Chang'an was tied by
canal to the union of the Wei and Yellow Rivers one hundred miles away. This was followed by extending the canal to link the Yellow and Yangtze
Rivers. The Grand Canal, when completed in 610, extended over 1400 miles. The new canal facilitated the movement of grain and commodities
from the rice-rich southern provinces to the densely populated north. The canal also served as a means for communication, movement of troops, and
inspection of the empire.
2. The Sui collapsed in part due to three failed campaigns to subdue the Korean kingdom of Koguryo. When the Sui emperor was murdered in 618,
General Li Yaun founded the new dynasty of the Tang (618-907). Soon they began expansion, securing the heartland by subduing the nomadic
tribes beyond the Great Wall. The northwest was pacified and renamed Xinjiang ("new region") while the Tibetan kingdom was brought under Tang
control. Tribute also came from rulers beyond the frontier. The southern provinces below the Yangtze were fully assimilated into the Tang Empire.
3. The Sui had divided their country into a uniform system of districts grouped in prefectures. The Tang altered the system by grouping the
prefectures into provinces.
4. In the middle of the eighth century, Tang foreign policy collapsed as Chinese armies were defeated in central Asia and the southwest. As the
emperor's power disintegrated, generals began to rebel. By 907 the Tang had dissolved and China entered the Era of the Five Dynasties featuring
barracks emperors until 960 with the initiation of the Sung dynasty.
Question:
1. How did the Tang reshape China?
China under the Tang
The Tang (618-907)
Li Yuan
Tang Taizong (T’ang T’ai-tsung)
Expansion
Cultural growth
Buddhism
Xuanzong (Husan Tsung), 712-756
Yang Guifei (Yang Kuei-fei)
Uighers
The Song (960-1279)
Song Taizu (Sung T’ai-tsu)
Collapse
Mongols, 1279
Statues of traitors to Song dynasty in Hangzhou
Political Structures: Triumph of Confucianism
Civil service examinations
Grand council
Department of State Affairs
Army
Bureaucracy
Confucianism
Song examination system
Three levels
Xiu cai, received talents
Zhu ren, elevated men
Zhin shi, presented scholar
Relatives
Local government
District governed by a magistrate
Village governed by council of elders
Economy and Society
Tang reduced power of the nobility
Zhun tian, equal field
Land manipulation and opening new lands
Commercial Revolution
Urban economy and “Flying money”
Steel
Gunpowder
Long distance trade and the Silk Road
Importation of Buddhism
Social classes
Daily life
Forms of entertainment
Transportation
New Foods
Peasants
village
family
male superiority
Women
Wu Zhao, (625?-706?)
Asia under the Mongols
1. The Mongols were a nomadic people originating in the southern grasslands of China. They primarily raised horses and herded sheep. Their
organization was in clans and related clans to tribes. The unification of the tribes came under Temujin (1206-1227) in the late twelfth and early
thirteenth centuries. Through the tribe of his wife, Temuchin, Temujin allied with the Ch'in ruling north China. In 1206 a meeting of the tribes in the
Gobi Desert elected Temujin their great khan ("ruler"). Genghis Khan was the unquestioned leader. The army, never more than 130,000, was
recruited from the Uigher Turks, the Manchus, and other nomadic people divided into myriads of 10,000 with subdivisions of 1,000, 100, and 10.
They were superior horsemen possessing a powerful compound bow, needed supplies, and remounts. Tactics utilizing cavalry and siege warfare
were less effective in tropical terrain and hilly regions than in the arid Mongol heartland.
2. The empire of Genghis Khan was concentrated on the steppes. He brought under control the lands north of the Great Wall, the western Muslim
states on the steppes, and eastern Russia. Genghis (assassinated in 1227) divided the empire among his four sons and eventually the khanates
became independent: in central Asia was the Khanate of Chaghadai; in Russia the Khanate of Kipchak (Golden Horde); in Persia the Khanate of
Persia (Il-Khans); and in Mongolia to southern China the Khanate of the Great Kahn.
3. The capital of the Khanate of the Great Khan was moved from Karakorum to Khanbaligh (modern Beijing) in 1264 (Beijing was captured in
1227). The summer palace was at Shang-tu.
4. Chosen in 1260 as the great khan was Khubilai (1260-1294) grandson of Ghengis. He adopted the Chinese dynastic name of Yuan. Only about
400,000 Mongols lived in China during the Yaun period.
5. The Mongols conquered Tibet, Korea, Sung China, Vietnam, Cambodia, Burma, Persia, Mesopotamia, and Syria. In 1260, they were stopped in
Palestine by the Egyptians.The Japanese also halted their expansion in 1274 and 1281. Undeterred, Khubilai Khan in 1281 sent an army of nearly
150,000 to Japan but again failed to subdue it. Critical to the failure was a massive typhoon that destroyed the entire Mongol fleet. In 1293 the
Khan's forces failed against Java.
6. Marco Polo accompanied his father and uncle to Asia in 1271. From 1275 to 1292, he served at the court of Khubilai Khan. The Polos were
allowed to leave China in 1292, accompanying the bride for the Khan of Persia. They sailed from Hangzhow to India and then to Hormuz where
they continued over land to Tabriz and on to Constantinople and Venice, arriving in 1295.
Questions:
1. How was the military structure of the Mongols conducive to military success? What were the tactics?
2. What weaknesses existed in the khanate system?
Asia under the Mongols
The Mongol Empire
Genghis Khan, Universal Ruler
Fire lance
Karakorum
Separate khnates
Khubliai Khan (1260-1294)
Khanbaliq (Beijing)
Yaun dynasty
Expansion
Government
Prosperity
Weaknesses
Zhu Yuanzhang (Chu Yuan-chang)
Temple of Heaven in Beijing
Chinese tourists climbing over Ming tomb figures
The Ming (Bright) Dynasty (1369-1644)
Ming Hongwu (1369-1402)
Districts, scholar gentry
Li-jia (Li-chia)
Yongle (1402-1424)
Seven naval expeditions
Admiral Zhenghe (Cheng Ho)
Models of traditional Chinese single-mast sailing vessels
Rise and Decline of Buddhism and Daoism
Common people and the ruling class
New sects in Buddhism
Chan
Pure Land
White Lotus
Equating dharma (law) with Dao (the Way)
Corruption
Temples and monasteries destroyed
Denial of Confucian teachings
Competition from Manechaeanism and Islam
Neo Confucianism
Revival following decline of Buddhism and Daoism
Alteration
Unite Buddhism and Daoism with Confucianism
Zhu Xi (Chu His)
Social ethics
Wang Yangming
Chinese Culture
Literature
paper and moveable type
ink rubbings and woodblock
Poetry, drama and prose fiction
Art
Buddhism and Daoist painting and sculpture
ceramics