Zhong Guo - whittjones
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Transcript Zhong Guo - whittjones
Zhong Guo
EQ –
Why did the Chinese call themselves the
“Middle Kingdom?”
Preview –
In a brief paragraph, examine the
“Dynastic Cycle” and the “Mandate of
Heaven” as they relate to the Chinese
Dynasties.
Zhong Guo = Middle Kingdom
Gobi
Desert
desert
CHINA IS
GEOGRAPHICALLY
ISOLATED
Himalayan
Mountains
Thick
Jungles
Pacific
Ocean
Huang He = Yellow River
River of Sorrows
Deposits yellow silt called loess
Location of China’s earliest civilization
New Dynasty
gains Mandate
of Heaven
New Dynasty
Rebellion is
justified
Old Dynasty
loses Mandate
of Heaven
Period of peace
& prosperity
Period of decline
& struggles
Shang Dynasty
(1600-1027 BC)
First recorded dynasty in China
Period of constant warfare
Expert bronze casters (ceremonial vases)
Wove silk into fabric
Developed a system of writing where
symbols = ideas
(no direct connection w/ spoken language)
Oracle Bones
The Shang consulted
the gods by writing
questions on bones or
shells and then
interpreted the
fragments after they
were cracked.
Shang Bronze
Zhou Dynasty
(1027-c.256 BC)
Developed “Mandate of Heaven” theory
Established feudalism
(ruler exchanged land for loyalty)
Produced cast iron, built roads/canals,
developed a uniform currency
App. 500 years of disunity and struggles
Spring & Autumn Period (770 - 476 BC)
Warring States Period (476 – 221 BC)
Legalism, Confucianism, Daoism emerge
Sun Tzu’s Art of War
The best victory is when the opponent surrenders of
its own accord before there are any actual
hostilities...It is best to win without fighting.
- “Planning a Siege”
Victorious warriors win first and then go to war, while
defeated warriors go to war first and then seek to win.
- “Strategic Assessments”
Qin Dynasty
(221-207 BC)
Est. by Shi Huangdi – “First Emperor”
Forced the nobility to move into the capital.
Autocratic (absolute) govt. based on Legalism
Divided empire into 36 military districts
Unified existing walls creating 1st “Great Wall”
Promoted unity by…
standard weights/measurements; uniform written
language; good transportation; very harsh rule
Shi Huangdi’s Tomb
Scale model of his
kingdom
Flowing river of
liquid mercury
Accurate star map
made of diamonds
Life size army of
terra cotta warriors
Terra Cotta Army
Han Dynasty
(206 BC – AD 220)
Pinnacle of Chinese power & prosperity
Est. by a peasant named Liu Bang
Wudi – “martial emperor” – expanded
the empire through warfare
Strong central govt. where people got
jobs based on their education
Encouraged assimilation (conquered
peoples become a part of Chinese culture)
Han Achievements
App. eastern equivalent to Roman Empire
Invented paper, collar harness,
wheelbarrow, water-mills
Traded with the west over the Silk Road
Govt. ran businesses- salt, iron, coinage, silk
Confucian civil service exams
Anyone could take them – but very difficult
Used for govt. appointments until AD 1912
China Vocabulary
Oracle Bones – earliest examples of
Chinese writing – how Shang contacted
their gods
Mandate of Heaven – divine authority to
rule China
Dynastic Cycle – theory detailing the rise
and fall of Chinese dynasties
Assimilation – one group is made a part
of another group’s culture
Silk Road – overland trade route from
China to the Mediterranean
Processing
Choose one of the following
Imagine you are a poor farmer and one day
you stumble across Shi Huangdi’s tomb.
Write a journal entry for that day. What did
you see? What were your thoughts?
Imagine you are a merchant on the Silk Road.
Write a journal entry depicting several days of
your journey. What have you encountered?
Are you going to or from China? What types
of goods do you currently have in your
possession?