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Medieval China, Korea, & Japan

Medieval China, Korea, & Japan. China’s Tang Dynasty. 618-907 AD Reunified China after period of anarchy Instituted land reform: broke up large farms held by wealthy nobles and redistributed the land to poor peasants to broaden the tax base

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Medieval China, Korea, & Japan

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  1. Medieval China, Korea, & Japan

  2. China’s Tang Dynasty • 618-907 AD • Reunified China after period of anarchy • Instituted land reform: broke up large farms held by wealthy nobles and redistributed the land to poor peasants to broaden the tax base • Built the 1100 mile long Great Canal which connected the Huang He and Yangtze Rivers • Dynasty failed due to rebellions over high taxes and government corruption

  3. China’s Song Dynasty • 960-1279 AD • Replaced wheat with rice as the major crop of Chinese farmers • farmers could harvest two crops of rice a year vs. only one of wheat • Introduced the world’s first paper money • Almost constantly at war with Mongols from the north • Revived Confucian ideals regarding good government

  4. Chinese Social Structure • Gentry: wealthy land-owning class, often served as government officials • Peasants: farmers (also owned land, just less than the gentry) • Peasants could move up into the gentry class through education or by growing wealth • Merchants: lower in status than peasants because their wealth came from others whereas peasants earned a living from their own hard work

  5. Chinese Women • Wives and mothers traditionally held great authority in the family, but this authority gradually diminished over time • By the end of the Song dynasty, women’s place in society was considerably weaker

  6. Foot binding • Young girls’ feet were wrapped tightly to restrict growth; as a result, grown women had extremely limited mobility because their feet were much smaller than they would have been naturally • Foot binding reinforced the subordinate role of women in Chinese society by forcing women to stay at home

  7. Chinese Arts • Clean and simple landscape painting • Porcelain dishware popularly known as “china” • Began building multistoried “pagoda” style Buddhist temples • Poetry

  8. The Mongols • Nomadic tribes united by GhengisKhan in early 1200s • Conquered nearly all of central Asia, then turned attention to conquering China • Although conquest was often violent, Mongols usually allowed the survivors to live in the same way they had before being conquered • respected scholars, artists • allowed many religions: Buddhism, Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Zoroastrianism

  9. The Silk Roads • 1200s-1300s: The “PaxMongolica” or Mongol Peace • Trade along the Silk Roads flourished under Mongol protection • Gunpowder introduced to Europe, new crops introduced into Asia

  10. The Silk Roads

  11. Kublai Khan • Ghengis Khan’s grandson • Conquered China in 1279, ending the Song Dynasty • Built a new capital for his Mongol Empire in China • Islam and Christianity introduced to China during his reign • Had many notable visitors from the West

  12. IbnBattuta or Marco Polo? • IbnBattuta: a well-traveled African Muslim scholar who recorded his travels to China in his personal journals • Marco Polo: an Italian merchant who lived in China for 17 years before returning home and writing a sensationalized book which increased Europe’s fascination with Asia • Polo’s writings are exaggerated adventure while Battuta’s are considered valuable for their details about Chinese society

  13. IbnBattuta or Marco Polo?

  14. China’s Ming Dynasty • In 1368, a Chinese peasant forged an army which pushed the Mongols out of China and set up the Ming Dynasty • Returned China to a traditional Confucian style of government • Revived Chinese art and literature • Built a huge naval fleet which was sent out between 1405-1433 under the admiral Zheng He

  15. Zheng He • Led the Chinese fleet on seven expeditions of exploration and trade • Known to have explored as far as the eastern coast of Africa, some evidence suggests he may have made it as far as the Eastern coast of North America! • After Zheng He’s death, the Ming emperors disbanded the fleet and stopped exploration

  16. Zheng He’s Voyages

  17. Korea • Geography • On a peninsula next to China • Very mountainous • Long coastline with many harbors • Positioned between China and Japan and has often been controlled by one or the other

  18. Korea’s Shilla Dynasty • 300-600 AD: Korea divided into three warring kingdoms • 668-918 AD: Korea united under the Shilla Dynasty • Korea existed as a tributary state to China • adopted Confucian principles about government • adopted Buddhism as a religion

  19. Korea’s Koryo Dynasty • 918-1392 AD • Invented the printing press for bookmaking • Booming ceramics industry (known as celadon), but secret of its manufacture were lost when Mongols invaded in the 1200s. • Korea existed as a Mongol state 1200s-1350s

  20. Korea’s Choson Dynasty • 1392-1910 AD • 1443 AD: replaced Chinese writing with “hangul” a specifically Korean alphabet; this change led to many more Koreans learning to read and write • 1590s: Japan invaded but was repelled after 6 years

  21. Japan • Geography • All islands, 4 main islands; both protects and isolates Japan • Very mountainous, hard to farm • Long history of natural disasters: location on the “Ring of Fire” means volcanoes, earthquakes, and tsunamis common

  22. Early Japan • Originally clan-based • By 500 AD, Yamato Dynasty had been established, and the Japanese emperor today is still from the Yamato Dynasty • Emperor did not control all of the clans, so wars between clans were common • Emperor, until the end of WWII, was worshipped as a god and was isolated from the people

  23. Japan’s Heian Period • Very formal imperial court developed, with strict procedural and behavioral rules • Court culture was basis for The Tale of Genji, the world’s first known prose novel (written by a lady at court, MurasakiShikubu)

  24. Japanese Feudalism • Emperor at top, but clan chiefs held all of the real political power • Each clan had its own army led by a “shogun”(general) • Some Buddhist monasteries even had THEIR own armies!)

  25. Japanese Feudalism • The shogun distributed imperial lands to warrior lords called daimyo (land owners), who in turn granted lands to lesser warrior lords called samurai (literally “those who serve,” essentially knights)

  26. Japanese Feudalism • The samurai lived by a code of conduct (bushido = “the way of the warrior”) which emphasized honor, bravery, and loyalty (much like chivalry in Europe during the same period) • Violation of bushido required a samurai to commit “seppuku”, or ritual suicide. • Some women even became samurai in the early days, but eventually they were shut out

  27. Japanese Feudalism • Peasants, artisans, and merchants were at the bottom, but could occasionally move up in status to become samurai • Feudal society survived in Japan until 1868 AD

  28. Japan & The Mongols • Clans usually competed against each other, but the Japanese came together to repel Mongol invasions in 1274 and 1281. • On both occasions, the Japanese were helped greatly when the Mongol fleet was destroyed by powerful typhoons (hurricanes); the Japanese called these “kamikaze” or “divine winds”

  29. Japanese Religion • Early religion was Shinto, or the worship of nature spirits; Shinto would eventually be incorporated into Japanese Buddhism, which arrived around 500 AD • Zen Buddhism – enlightenment through the precise performance of everyday tasks; highly ritualistic, very orderly

  30. Japanese Arts • Theater • “Noh”style plays performed as early as 1300s • 1600s: development of “kabuki” style (lively depictions of family or historical events) • “Bunraku”: puppet dramas with a narrator • Haiku • miniature poems • each is only three lines long • total only 17 syllables each • Painting • colorful with simple lines

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