1 / 18

Post-Classical China

Post-Classical China. Mr. Millhouse AP World History Hebron High School. Three Kingdoms. End of the Han Dynasty was followed by a long period of disunity and civil war Buddhism began to spread throughout China during this period Introduced in the first century CE

Télécharger la présentation

Post-Classical China

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Post-Classical China Mr. Millhouse AP World History Hebron High School

  2. Three Kingdoms • End of the Han Dynasty was followed by a long period of disunity and civil war • Buddhism began to spread throughout China during this period • Introduced in the first century CE • Did not really begin to spread until after the Han empire collapsed • Tea was discovered in the south during this period • Porcelain was also developed during this time

  3. Sui Dynasty (580-618 CE) • Restored the Chinese imperial structure • Confucian bureaucracy, etc. • Defeated external enemies • Accomplishments of the Sui Dynasty • Grand Canal (right) • Confucianism also began to regain popularity • Weakened by military spending and external invasions

  4. Tang Dynasty (618-907 CE) • Expanded Confucian administrative system • Reformed examination system • Compiled the Tang Code in 624 CE • Liberal attitude towards all religions

  5. Empress Wu (624-705) • Only female empress in Chinese history • Removed the rightful heir to the throne in 690 CE • Recruited outstanding individuals to serve in her court • Buddhism was the favored statereligion • Attempted to make it a state religion • Financed the building of many Buddhist temples

  6. Tang Developments • Rapid increase in rice production • Techniques such as planting out seedlings rapidly increased yield • Champa rice from Vietnam • Terrace Farming • Population doubled • Urbanization • Power moved from north to south • Revived the Silk Roads • Contemporaries of the Umayyad and Abbasid Caliphates

  7. Song Dynasty (960-1279) • Not politically powerful • Conquered by Mongols • Great advances were made in technology and culture • Used gunpowder as a weapon • Foreign trade expanded greatly due to junks • Rise of Neo-Confucianism

  8. Song Pre-Industrial Era • Specialized Production • Government monopolies • Private business • Guilds • Silk, porcelain, iron, etc. • Expanding trade markets • Internal expansion caused by population growth • Grand Canal, paper money, etc. • External expansion caused by naval technology • Compass, junks, etc.

  9. Iron Smelting in Song Dynasty Yuan dynasty waterwheel and blast furnace Song dynasty iron smelting process

  10. Tang-Song Accomplishments • Gunpowder • New porcelain techniques • Translucent porcelain • Invention of the moveable type printing press in 1045 CE • Introduction of paper money, called flying money was introduced • Metal was scarce in China

  11. Footbinding • First evidence of this practice shows up in about 950 CE • Not sure why this practice began • Widely practiced among both the rich and poor of China • Essentially made women subordinate to their husbands

  12. Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) • Yuan Dynasty came to an end in 1368 • Attempt to eliminate Mongol cultural influence • Ming Government • Reestablished Confucian bureaucracy (again) • Moved capital to Beijing • Built the Forbidden City • Expanded into Central Asiaand Manchuria

  13. Forbidden City

  14. Ming Economy • New American crops expanded agriculture • Sweet potato, maize, peanuts • Led to rapid population growth • Went from 100 million in 1500 to 225 million by 1750 • Population growth aided manufacturing by keeping wages low • Limited need for labor saving devices • Launched expeditions into the Indian Ocean • Zheng He voyages • Limited trade with Europeans to Macao & Canton • “the Silver Sink”

  15. Zheng He vs. Columbus

  16. Ming Society • Strengthened traditional Chinese values • Filial piety • Extended family system • Emphasized loyalty to family • Females remained subordinate • Footbinding continued • Female infanticide was not uncommon • Widows were discouraged from remarrying & widow suicide was often encouraged • Confucian-based social hierarchy

  17. Ming Culture • Promoted Neo-Confucianism • Emphasized Chinese tradition • Literature • Monkey, the Water Margin, etc. • Pottery • the Great Wall

More Related