Tang and Song China
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Transcript Tang and Song China
Chapter 11
Section 1
Key Terms
Wendi
Tang Taizong
Wu Zhao
Scholar Officials
Porcelain
Pagoda
Woodblock Printing
Moveable type
Gentry
The Sui Dynasty
Wendi first emperor
of Sui Dynasty
Grand canal
connected Huang
He and Chiang Jang
Rivers
1 million people, five
years, 1000 miles
Thousands more
built the Great Wall
The Tang Dynasty
Lasted 300 years
Tang Taizong 626649
Empire expanded
Wu Zhao 690
Only female
emperor
Expanded roads
and canals
Promoted trade and
agricultrue
The Tang Dynasty
Civil service exams
Large bureaucracy
Exams open to all
Only wealthy could
afford education
Talent and education
more important than
noble birth
The Tang Decline
Imposed heavy
taxes
751 Muslim armies
defeated Chinese
Central Asia in
foreign hands
907 rebels burn
Tang capitol
Murder Tang
emperor a child
Song Dynasty
960 Taizu unites
China
Song- first emperor
Song emperors tried
to buy peace
1100’s Manchurians
conquer China
Song capitolHangzhou
South China
economic heartland
Inventions and Innovations
Tang and Song
dynasties population
doubles
Moveable typeprinter could arrange
blocks of individual
characters
Gunpowder- led to
bombs, grenades,
rockets
Literature and Art
Porcelain
Mechanical clock
Paper money
Magnetic compass
for sailing
1000-1200’s
advances in Algebra
Math using negative
numbers
Agriculture
Cultivation of rice
Two crops a year
Officials distribute
the Viet Nam rice
Produce more food
Population grows
Song Dynasty
farmers fed 100
million people
Trade and Foreign Contracts
Tang and Song
foreign trade
flourished
China increased sea
trade
Sailed to India, Persia,
Africa
Culture spread to East
Asia
Buddhism spread to
Viet Nam, Korea,
Japan
A Golden Age of Poetry and Art
Tang period- great
poetry
Li Bo- wrote about
life’s pleasures
Praised Confucian
order
Song dynastyChinese painting
Changes in Chinese Society
Old aristocratic
families disappear
Gentry-upper class
Attained status
through education
Civil service positions
Urban middle class
Merchants
Artisans
Minor officials
Changes in Chinese Society
Bottom of social
order
Soldiers
Laborers
Servants
Countryside was the
largest class the
peasants
Toiled for wealthy
landowners
Status of Women
Subservient to men
Further declined
under Tang and
Song
Women less
important to
prosperity
Peasant women
worked in the fields
Binding feet of
upper class
Status of Women
Lily foot- broken
arch
Crippled for life
Reflected wealth
and prestige of the
husband
Could afford
impractical wife