File - OCHS History and Geography
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Transcript File - OCHS History and Geography
4th civilization on the rise = Yellow River
Valley in China (Huang He River)
Oldest continuous civilization in the world
Three sovereigns
Fu Xi Shen Nong Huang Di-
Yangshao and Longshan cultures develop
during Neolithic Age
Developed along Yellow and Yangtze Rivers
Fertile fields surrounded by harsh deserts and
mountains
Gobi desert, Tibetan Plateau, South China Sea
Isolated China from the rest of the world except in
the North---invaders plague China when it was
not unified
1/3 mountains
Vast deserts – Gobi Desert
These factors isolated
China from other early
civilizations
Prevented cultural
diffusion
Promoted strong sense of
national identity
1st
Dynasty
Ruler was Yu
Irrigated and drainage of river valleys
2nd dynasty
Political organization
Agricultural society
Ruled by aristocracy
Bureaucracy
▪ Territories ruled by chieftains
Defended the realm
▪ Buried with an army
Veneration of Ancestors
Taking care of deceased, provide for afterlife
1st dynasty (line of rulers
who belong to the same
family) from which there are
written records in China
Kings were also high priests
Performed special ceremonies
for good weather, crops, etc.
Had special powers to call upon
their ancestors
Used oracle bones
Villages—clans—families
Joint family traditions in china
▪ Limited number of family names
Social Class
Landowner/Aristocrats/Chieftains(warrior)
Merchants/artisans
peasants
Bronze casting (pg. 71)
Lost wax method
Writing system that would become modern
Chinese writing system
Had a writing system
Characters represented
objects, ideas, or sounds
Had to memorize each
character to understand
script
Few people could read &
write in ancient China
Produced some of the
finest bronze objects ever
made
Wove silk into beautiful
colored cloth for the
upper class
7 capital cities
Palace and temple stood at
the center of each city
Collapsed under attack
Shang Dynasty lacked strong
leaders
1000 BCE = ruler from the
north named Wu marched in
his armies and killed the Shang
king
Set up his own dynasty called
the Zhou Dynasty that ruled
China for 800 years
Transitions
From 1100 BCE until the 200s CE --> 3
great dynasties ruled China
= Zhou (JOH)
= Qin (CHIN)
= Han (HAHN)
Ruled China for more
than 800 years -- more
than any other dynasty
Zhou dynasty conquered
the Shang dynasty
Claimed rule under
Mandate of Heaven
Said Shang lost mandate
by ruling poorly
To control their land, the kings set up an
agricultural system in which nobles owned the
land & peasants worked it
Kings gave their relatives city-states
Each of these lords had total authority over their city
& had their own armies
Eventually, the lords had more power than the king
City-states warred with each other -- locked in a
struggle that ended the Zhou era
Longest dynasty in China’s History
800 years
Capital at Xian (west) and later Luoyang (east)
One Kingdom divided into territories ran by
officials
Extensive bureaucracy
Ministries-rites, education, law, public works
“Mandate of Heaven”
Gave Zhou kings the right to rule
Heaven (impersonal law of nature not deity)
maintains order through the representative King
(not divine)
Social Class
King-Nobles-Merchants/Artisans-Peasants-Slaves
▪ Well field system-Peasants work nobles land as well as their own
Agricultural developments
Large scale irrigation, canal, and spillway projects to
modify the river flow (still used today!!!)
Iron plows, fertilizer, collar harness, leave land fallow,
wet rice cultivation and silk industry begins
POPULATION BOOM!!!
Movement toward money economy
Coins are on strings
Technological advances of
the Zhou Dynasty:
Built roads & expanded
foreign trade
Formed cavalries = groups
of warriors on horseback
New weapon: the crossbow
Iron plows
Irrigation & flood-control
systems
China’s
population grew
quickly during
the Zhou
Dynasty
Early beliefs
Monotheistic transcendent god
Tian-Heaven- ordered law of nature
▪ Yin/yang----good/evil---male/female---sun/moon
Confucianism
Confucius- pragmatic philosopher-skeptical
There is an order to the universe and we must live in
harmony with it
Concerned with human behavior
▪ In accordance with the Dao (Tao)
Do duty to family/community
Humanity- compassion and empathy (do unto others)
Rule by merit- state philosophy later
Legalism
Humans are evil and need to be controlled by a strong,
harsh government
Daoism
Accept, be spontaneous, live in harmony with the doe
King loses power
Territories become powerful and war with
each other
New war technology- iron weapons, foot soldiers,
Cavalry, crossbow
The state of Qin takes over everything
Conquered the
Zhou
“First Emperor”
= Qin Shihuangdi
1st Emperor Qin Shi Huangdi
Political Structures
Based on leagalism
Highly centralized
Bureaucracy divided into 3 ministries
▪ Civil authority
▪ Military authority
▪ Censorate (inspectors of efficiency)
Two levels of administrative provinces and counties
▪ Merit system, recommendations
▪ Penal system to punish wrongdoing
Unified system of weights and measures
Standardized monetary system
Standardized characters of writing system
Ordered construction of roads
Effectively collected taxes and mobilized peasants
for public works
Reduced power of nobles
Divided lands
Directly taxed peasants
Members of each clan required to live in capital of
Xianyang
Merchants viewed as parasites
Private commercial activities restricted and
heavily taxed
Some types of commerce monopolized by
government
Conquered more land southward to
Guangzhou
Constructed canal systems for ease of transport
Xiongnu invasion threat
Nomadic herder people to the north
Great wall of China
Ordered by Qin Shi Huangdi
Eunuchs as attendants to reduce courtier influence
Became advisor class to emperors
Inner and outer court rivalries
Peasant unrest
Censorship- thoughts, speech
Harsh taxes
Forced labor projects
Absolute rule did not work but did influence later
Chinese governments
Factional rivalries led to overthrow of Qin
Ruled China for more than
400 years until 220 AD
Used same forms of
centralized power as the
Qin, but not as harsh
Rivaled Roman Empire in
its power & achievement
Greatest and most Durable Dynasty
Advanced Chinese Civilization
Founder Han Gaozu (peasant origin)
Consolidated power
Promote welfare of subjects
Kept the political structure of the Qin but without harsh
policies
Used Confucian principles in government
Reached its peak during the
reign of King Wudi
Extended the empire
Sent armies against nomadic
invaders
Interested in the West -especially the Roman Empire
State Confucianism
Integration of Legalist and Confucian Principles
Han Government
Retained tripartite division of Bureaucracy
Provinces and and district setup
Merit system though civil service examination
▪ Academy set up to train candidates
▪ From aristocrats and wealthy families
Population increase
Need efficient bureaucracy
Factionalism undermined their efforts
Oriental Despotism
Hydraulic society
Central governments develop after irrigation and
canal systems
Free peasantry
Low taxes
Required military services
forced labor 1 month per year
Land allotment reduced so they became Tenant
farmers
▪ High rent, empowers landed nobles
Expansion of Trade
Domestic and foreign
▪ India & the Mediterranean
▪ The Silk Road
▪ Sea Trade from ports like Guangzhou
Distrust of merchants continues
▪ Could not seek office
▪ Restricted residence choices
State manufacturing
▪ Weapons, shipyards, mines
▪ Silks and glazed pottery
Trade routes to the West developed
Major trade route = Silk Road
Linked East & West
Allowed traders to exchange Chinese silk for
Middle Eastern & European products
New Technology
Textile manufacturing
Water mills
Iron casting (led to steel)
Rudder and aft-rigging ships
▪ Heavy cargo thought the sea
Chinese Peace = 400 year period
of prosperity & stability
China fed its population by storing
grain during times of plenty &
selling it when harvests were poor
Veterinary medicine
Complex irrigation systems
Advancements in fertilizing crops
New canals
Better roadways
Silk
Paper
Gunpowder
Wheelbarrow
Printed books
Suspension bridge
Compass
Iron drill bits
Territorial Expansion
Continued expansion and consolidation
Han Wudi
▪ Added through modern Vietnam
▪ Conquered west to Caspian Sea
Hampered by Xiongnu invaders
▪ Almost too the capital at Xian
Han power declined & dynasty fell apart
after Wudi’s reign ended
Wang Mang, a Reformist takes over
Rulers had been frivolous for decades
Tries to take over nobles land to save peasants
▪ Reinstitute the well field system
Nobles fill power vacuum
▪ They plot his downfall, assassinate him
The Han take back power but the powerful nobles are
too much for weak rulers
▪ Peasant unrest
▪ Great General Tsao Tsao tries and fails to unite
China is in a state of Anarchy for 400 years
Family!!!
Basic economic and social unit, the social order
▪ Neolithic times- clan, veneration of ancestors
▪ Zhou times- family agriculture, needs kids to do work
and loyalty to family becomes more important than to
the community
Filial piety
Submit desires to patriarchal head
Five relationships
▪ Son to father
▪ Wife to husband
▪ Younger brother to older brother
▪ Friend and friend
Stable family system = efficient government
Family loyalty=threat to centralizing monarch
Bao-jia system
governments tried to break up clan system by
creating groups of ten families
To exercise control and surveillance
Houses
Elites- tile worked houses
Poor-mud, wood planks, thatch, or loss (cave dwelling)
Little furniture
Food
Millet and rice
▪ Wheat, barley, soybeans, mustard greens, bamboo shoots
▪ Stir frying in wok
▪ Fruit a luxury
Ale, but drunkenness was frowned upon
Mostly rural
Cities play administrative and economic role
Regional markets
Manufacturing center
Walls with moat
Major cities
Chang’an
Metalwork and Sculpture
Pottery at Longshan and Yangshao
Bronze casting
▪ Lost wax method
Iron working
▪ Blast furnace
▪ Cast iron vessels and agricultural tools
Laquerware and ceramics
▪ Polished lacquered wood
▪ Glazed porcelain pottery and dishes
Tomb of Shi Huangdi
Terra cotta army
▪ Horses, chariots, soldiers, seven thousand bronze weapons, six
thousand figures
▪ High-quality, Life-sized, finely textured, fired and painted
Historical implications
Qin advancement from human sacrifices of Shang
Qin burden of work on the peasants
Pattern for successors
The Qin Dynasty (cont.)
• In 1974, farmers digging a well near Xi’an
unearthed a pit of more than 6000 clay soldiers.
•
Each figure exhibits the represents Qin
Shihuangdi’s real soldiers.
Writing
Ideographic and pictographic characters
▪ Has never been fully lost but phonetics has had an impact
An art form
All languages used the same writing system
Vehicle for Chinese cultural transmission from border to
border
Literature
Written on silk/bamboo
Historical records
▪ Rites of the Zhou
Philosophical treatises
▪ Analects and The way of the Tao
Poetry
▪ The Book of Songs and Song of the South
Confucian Classics
Sima Qian and Ban Gu
Ascetic pleasure, means of achieving political
order, refining the human character
Instruments
Flutes, stringed instruments, bells, chimes, drums,
and gourds
▪ Instrument of choice:
Early music was ceremonial but later it became
entertainment