Transcript document

The Roman Empire and the Han
Dynasty
753 B.C.E- 330 C.E.
Rome: Geography
 The city was ideally
located for controlling
Italy and the rest of its
empire.
 Located about 15
minutes east of the
western coast, on a major
road and on the Tiber
river.
 Italy itself was centrally
located to control the
vast Roman empire.
Natural Resources
 natural resources included: navigable rivers, forests,
iron, a mild climate, and enough arable land to
support a large population of farmers.
 cheap labor made it easy for the Romans to exploit and
use these resources to their advantage.
Rome: A Republic of Farmers
 settled as early as 1000 B.C.E.
 According to legend, seven kings ruled Rome from 753
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B.C.E.-507 B.C.E.
507 B.C.E. representatives of the senatorial class
overthrew the king and established a republic.
Power resided with the Senate and two consuls.
Paterfamilias = absolute authority of oldest male
Patron/client relationship created inequality
Women's role: subordinate
Worship of major deities (Jupiter, Mars) ensured gods’
continued favor of Roman state.
Roman Society
Roman Society 2
 Roman Society was divided into citizens and non-
citizens.
 Citizens were divided by Classes:
 Patricians-Original Family Line
 Plebeians-Lower class
 Soon wealthy plebeians would rise in rank and wealth
becomes the equalizer of the classes.
 Slaves were Non-Citizens.
Roman Expansion
 Possible reasons: pride, greed, a need for consuls to prove
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military leadership, fear of being attacked.
By 290 B.C.E., Rome conquers the rest of Italy, wins support by
granting citizenship.
New citizens then provide soldiers for the military.
264-202 B.C.E., Rome defeats Carthage gains control of the
western Mediterranean and Sicily, Sardinia, and Spain.
200-30 B.C.E. Rome defeats the Hellenistic kingdoms to take
control of the eastern Mediterranean.
59-51 B.C.E Gaius Julius Caesar conquers the Celts of Gaul.
Rome
The Fall of the Republic
 As Rome expands, independent farmers forced to serve
in the army lose their farms to wealthy landowners
who utilize slave labor
 This led to a decline in both the number of soldiers
available for Rome’s army, and in food production.
 Displaced Italian peasants flood cities seeking jobs
giving Roman commanders the ability to recruit
private armies, which leads to several civil wars.
 Julius Caesar’s grandnephew Octavian (a.k.a.
Augustus) takes power in 31 B.C.E. He is a dictator, but
instead he calls himself princeps, “first among equals.”
An Urban Empire
 Even though 50-60 million of Rome’s citizens were
rural farmers, the empire was run by a network of
cities and towns.
 In Rome the upper class lived in lavish houses, many
also owned county villas. The poor lived in dark, fireprone wooded tenements.
 Smaller towns mirrored Rome in city planning and
administration. Upper class dominated town councils.
 Rural life in Rome involved hard work with little
entertainment, rural people had little contact with
representatives of the government.
The Rise of Christianity
 Jesus lived in a society that hated Roman rule and
believed a Messiah would arise to liberate them.
 When Jesus sought to reform the Jewish religion,
Jewish authorities turned him over to the Roman
governor for execution.
 After the execution Jesus’ disciples continued to spread
his teachings and their belief that Jesus had been
resurrected.
 In the 40s-70s C.E. Paul of Tarsus began spreading
Jesus’ teachings to non-Jews (gentiles).
The Rise of Christianity 2
 Christianity grew slowly for two centuries, developing
a hierarchy of priests and bishops
 By the late third century Christians were a sizeable
minority.
 The rise of Christianity came at a time when most
Romans were dissatisfied with their traditional
religion.
Technology and Transformation
 The Romans were expert military and civil engineers,
building bridges, ballistic weapons, elevated and
underground aqueducts, the use of arches and domes,
and the invention of concrete.
 Following Augustus’ death, the army was organized
primarily for defense:
 The Rhine-Danube frontier protected by forts
 Walls protected the frontiers of N. Africa and Britain
 Rome fought for centuries with Parthians on eastern
frontier; neither side made gains
Rome’s Third Century Crises
 Symptoms included: frequent change of rulers, raids
from German tribesmen from across Rhine-Danube
frontier, and the rise of regional powers when Rome
seemed unable to guarantee security.
 Rome’s economy was undermined by the high cost of
defense, inflation, a disruption of trade, reversion to a
barter economy, disappearance of municipal
aristocracy in provincial cities, and a population shift
from urban back to rural areas.
 Emperor Diocletian (r. 284-305) saved the Roman state
by instituting a series of reforms that included price
controls and regulations, such as hereditary trades;
side effects included the black market and a growing
resentment against the government.
 Constantine (r. 306-37) converted to Christianity in 337
and patronized the Christian church, making
Christianity the official religion of the empire, and he
moved the capital of the empire from Rome to
Byzantium, which he renamed Constantinople.
Imperial China: Geography
 China is surrounded by
mountains, deserts, hills
and plains of the
Mongolian steppe to the
west. To the east the
Pacific ocean.
 The Yellow and the
Yangzi rivers facilitate
east-west movement, for
trade and movement.
Imperial China: Origins
 The two most important resources that supported
imperial China was agricultural production and labor.
The best region was the Yangzi River Valley.
 The Qin and Han dynasties exploited the labor power
of rural China, with a periodic census.
 The Han Chinese only settled in areas suitable for
agriculture.
Hierarchy, Obedience, and Belief
 The family was the basic unit of society, conceived as an
unbroken chain from the ancestors to current generations.
 Confucius’ teachings formed the base for the structure of
the family, the father being the ruler of the family.
 The upper class believed that women were to cook, take
care of the household chores, respect their parents-in-law,
and obey their husbands.
 The Chinese believed in a number of nature spirits ,
unusual phenomena were bad omens, the landscape was
thought to channel the flow of evil and good power, and
experts in fengshui were employed for buildings and graves.
The First Chinese Empire
 After the Warring States Period (480-221B.C.E) the
state of Qin was able to reunify China.
 Factors in reunification:
 The ruthlessness of the Qin ruler Shi Huangdi and his
prime minister Li Si.
 Qin dynasties position in the Wei valley
 The ability to mobilize manpower.
The First Chinese Empire 2
 The Qin established a strong centralized state on the
Legalist model including:
 the suppression of Confucianism
 the elimination of rival centers of authority
 the abolishment of slavery and primogeniture
 the construction of a rural economy of free
landowning/tax-paying farmers
The First Chinese Empire 3
 They standardized weights and measures, knit the
empire together with roads, and defended it with a
long wall.
 The oppressive nature of the Qin regime led to a
number of popular rebellions that overthrew the
dynasty after the death of Shi Huangdi in 210 B.C.E.
The Long Reign of the Han
(206 B.C.E-220 C.E.)
 Liu Bang, a peasant, established the Han dynasty, and
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based his government on Confucian philosophy and
legalist techniques.
Emperor Wu (r. 140-87 B.C.E.) expanded the empire
during his reign.
During the Western Han period (202 B.C.E.-8C.E.) the
capital was in Chang’an, but during the Eastern Han
period (23-22C.E.) the capital was in Luoyang.
Chang’an was an easily defended walled city.
The elite lived in lavish houses on well planned
boulevards, peasants lived in tightly packed houses on
poorly planned alleys.
The Long Reign of the Han
(206 B.C.E-220 C.E.) 2
 The emperor was supreme in the state and society; he
was considered the Son of Heaven, the link between
heaven and the human world.
 Emperors were the source of law.
 Remember the Mandate of Heaven!
 Emperors lived in seclusion surrounded by a royal
retinue that included wives, family, servants, courtiers,
and officials.
The Long Reign of the Han
(206 B.C.E-220 C.E.) 3
 The central government was run by two chief officials
and included a number of functionally specialized
ministers, local officials collected taxes and drafted
men for military service and corvee labor and settled
local disputes.
 Most people had no contact with the central
government.
 Local officials were a class of moderately wealthy,
educated local landowners, that are referred to by
historians as the “gentry.”
 They adopted Confucianism as their ideology and
pursued careers in civil service.
Technology and Trade
 In metallurgy the Chinese advanced to the iron age by
about 500 B.C.E. rather than make wrought-iron goods
(as the Romans did), they melted the iron down and
used molds to make cast-iron and steel tools and
weapons.
 Other technologies include the crossbow, cavalary, the
watermill, and the horse collar. New transportation
and communication technology included a road
system, courier systems, and canals
Technology and Trade
 The Han period saw a significant increase in the size
and number of urban areas.
 Long distance trade was a significant part of the Han
economy. The most important export was silk, and the
most important trade route was the Silk Road through
Central Asia.
 The Chinese government tried to control this route by
sending armies and colonists to Central Asia.
Decline of the Han Empire
 The major security threat was nomadic tribes on the
northern border.
 Nomadic groups were usually small but during the
Han, the Chinese faced a confederacy of nomads
called the Xiongnu.
 China attempted to deal with this threat by
strengthening its defenses, especially its cavalry, and
by making more compliant nomads into tributaries.
Decline of the Han Empire 2
 The Han Empire was undermined by a number of
factors including:
 the cost of defending northern border
 nobles built up large landholdings at the expense of the
small farmers; these large landholders resisted taxation
and became independent of government control
 third the conscription army system fell apart, and the
government was forced to rely on mercenaries
 Other factors, including factionalism at court, corrupt
officials, peasant uprisings, and nomadic attacks, led
to the fall of the dynasty in 220 C.E.
Imperial Parallels
 Similarities:
 The Han and Roman empires were similar in respect to
their family structure and values, their patterns of land
tenure, taxation, and administration, and in their
empire building and its consequences for the identity of
the conquered areas.
 Both empires faced common problems in terms of
defense, and found their domestic economies
undermined by their military expenditures.
 Both Empires were overrun by new peoples who were
then deeply influenced by the imperial cultures of Rome
and of China.
 Differences:
 In China, the imperial model was revived and the
territory of the Han empire re-unified. The former
Roman empire was never again reconstituted.
 Historians have tried to explain this difference by
pointing to differences between China and the Roman
world in respect to the concept of the individual, the
greater degree of social mobility in Rome than in Han
China, and the different political ideologies and
religions of the two empires.
Conclusion
 The Qin and Han dynasties were able to unify China and build
an empire quickly because the model was established for them
during the Zhou and Warring States periods; Rome had to build
slowly because it had no model to draw upon.
 The Han and Roman empires maintained and administered vast
empires because of their ability to organize large armies and
large bureaucracies.
 Both brought long periods of peace and prosperity but were
undermined by the high cost of defense and high taxes this
imposed on their peoples.
 The Han dynasty built a political system that would be revived
and used by later dynasties, but Rome’s empire would never be
restored.