Comparing/Contrasting Rome to Han China
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Transcript Comparing/Contrasting Rome to Han China
Comparing/Contrasting
Imperial Rome to Han
China
Similarities & Differences
Using your SPECTS
The Basics:
Han = 206 BCE – 220
CE
Roman Empire 27 BCE –
476 CE
Both lasted approx 400
years
Both had populations of
50 million
Similar size territory
Geography
Rome had a large “inland” sea (Mediterranean) for ease of
trade and travel. Well constructed roads made land travel
and communication possible.
China was a land based empire. River travel, canals, roads
had to be built and maintained for transportation and
communication.
Territorial size of both was approx. 2.5 million at their peak
Territorial size of Rome was ultimately restricted by deserts
(N. Africa/Middle East) and European mountains (Alps)
Han’s territorial size was limited by the Tibetan Plateau,
western deserts (Gobi, Taklimakan), mountains (Himalayas,
Tian Shan)
Origins
Han built off precedents
of many previous
dynasties Shang, Xhou,
Qin
Rome built an empire
“more from scratch”;
some based on Greeks
Imperialism
Both were imperialistic but Rome far more so
Militarism
Both were threatened by nomadic invaders. Conquered
territories under imperial control.
Rome paid it’s soldiers with conquered land and captured
wealth. Resulted in greater incentive to use military.
Constantly sought to expand. Local leaders often remained
in control under Roman supervision.
Economic
Both economies were based on agriculture
Land was highly valued
Governments imposed taxes for revenue
Both standardized weights and measures, monopolized key resources
i.e. salt, iron
China relied on peasants to do labor
Rome relied on slave labor (captives from war) up to 1/3 of pop.
Wealth more concentrated in small landowning population. Forced
peasants to live in urban areas. Need for slave labor on latifundia.
Technology
Road building important to both. Roman roads were marvels of
engineering. Facilitated trade, travel, military travel
Roman aqueducts, for irrigation, water delivery
Roman construction/architecture = monumental, grandeur
Chinese construction/architecture = practical, defensive,
transportation
Political
China
Confucianism,
Mandate of Heaven,
Civil Service Exam
(some social
mobility), emphasize
homogeneous culture
Ritual ancestor
veneration,
ceremonial,
educated
gentleman class
(Junzi), Ren, Li,
Xiao
Rome
Less centralized, built by overlaying
Roman law over local rulers and laws
Rome prided itself on establishing
peace and rule of law through
expansion
Venerated emperors “cult of worship”
Culture
China
Focused on homogeneous culture building
largely through Confucianism, promoting
ethnically Han language, sending out
bureaucratic officials to enforce
Rome
Looser, more diverse, cosmopolitan
More local autonomy, local leadership, greater
diversity of language
Roman citizenship granted common rights
Culture
Patriarchal
Eldest male/father most respected,
authoritative
China: family was model of gov’t
organization i.e. emperor was “father” –
Confucian ideology
Rome – emperor is not viewed as father
figure; he is a god
Paterfamilias
Religion
Outside religion moves into each region
China = Buddhism in later Han
Rome = Christianity
In both places the new religion is not officially
welcomed. Through syncretism both gain mass
conversions and official acceptance
Both are salvation religions i.e. seek to eternal life,
heaven, nirvana etc…
Decline of Empires
Rome and China
Threatened by outside invasions of nomadic
(aka barbarian) forces related to the Huns
Both are weakened from overexpansion =
borders are too long/too expensive to
defend
Weakness signals to citizens decay
China “right to rebel”
Rome - loss of support for Roman empire
Differences in Decline
Rome = civilization and institutions
collapse
Loss of Latin language = rise of
vernacular
Loss of Roman numerals and measures
Loss of basis for legal culture
China
Although government falls, language,
culture, institutions will remain or be
revived