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BELL WORK

BELL WORK. HOMEWORK: Design a DO NOT TRESPASS sign for one of the physical features of China. Need a title, a picture, and 3 reasons to NOT live there. TODAY’S TITLE: # Geography of China

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BELL WORK

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  1. BELL WORK HOMEWORK: Design a DO NOT TRESPASS sign for one of the physical features of China. Need a title, a picture, and 3 reasons to NOT live there. TODAY’S TITLE: # Geography of China WAR: Answer the following question: “What kind of realistic geographic features would make you NOT want to live in a certain place and why?”

  2. EARLY CHINA CHAPTER 7

  3. Overview of china’s geography • Modern China is the world’s 3rd largest country at 3.7 million square miles • It has the highest population of 1.2 billion people • We will divide China into 2 main areas: Outer China and Inner China to better understand the geography

  4. Outer China • Includes the western and northern parts • An area of great extremes • Contains the following: Tibet-Qinghai Plateau, the Northwestern Deserts, and the Northeastern Plain

  5. Inner China • Includes the southeastern part of China • Contains rolling hills, river valleys, and plains • Includes the North China Plain and the Chang Jiang Basins

  6. The Tibet-Qinghai Plateau • Called the “Roof of the World” • Rocky land with high mountains (the Himalayas are part of it) • The climate is very cold because the elevation is so high • It is also very dry here • Some vegetation like scrubs and grasses • Two major rivers begin in the area: Huang He River and Chang Jiang River ( aka the Yellow and Yangtze Rivers)

  7. Tibet-Qinghai Plateau

  8. Northwestern Deserts:Taklimakan Desert • One of the most dangerous deserts in the world • Filled with large sand dunes • Sandstorms are common • Very dry and hot GOBI DESERT • One of the world’s largest deserts • Has few sand dunes • Very stony and little vegetation

  9. Taklimakan Gobi

  10. Northeastern Plain • Located east of present-day Mongolia • Low hills and plains • Mostly filled with prairie grass • 2 major rivers flow through here: the Liao and Sungari Rivers • Has short, warm summers and dry, cold winters • In the south, a coastal plain links this area to the rest of China and invaders used this route to invade China

  11. Northeastern Plain

  12. The North China Plain • A flat region of grassland • Temperatures range from very hot to very cold • Called the “Land of the Yellow Earth” because it’s covered with yellow silt, which blows in from the Gobi Desert • This where the Huang He River gets its nickname (Yellow River). It is also the world’s muddiest river! Ick! • The silt fertilizes the land making it very fertile • But the river floods A LOT!

  13. North China Plain

  14. Middle and Lower Chang Jiang Basins • Low, wet coastal plains located along the Chang Jiang River • The river has hundreds of tributaries (small streams) • Flows through 3 plains and then a rich, fertile delta • Floods less often than Huang He • Climate is warm and wet • At one time, there may have been rainforests here • Limited space for farming, but good for rice!

  15. Middle and lower Chang Jiang Basins

  16. Rate the Physical features! • Let’s now rate these places on the following: Most likely to produce a dependable food supply, Most likely to contribute to Outstanding Trade, and Most likely to be the site of China’s earliest settlement. • Where do YOU think the first Chinese civilization arose?

  17. Early Settlement of Ancient China • Settled mostly on the North China Plain because it had plenty of water, fertile soil, and a moderate climate. • Tibetan Plateau and Northeastern Plain were too cold and dry • Northwestern Deserts were too dry • The Chang Jiang Basins were wet and fertile, but heavy rains made farming difficult. • Out of all of China’s land, only 1/10 is farmable. The rest is covered by mountains and deserts.

  18. Bell Work HOMEWORK: TODAY’S TITLE WAR:

  19. Section 1: How did Civilization in China Begin? • Farming began along the Huang He and Chang Jiang rivers • Grew rice, millet, and wheat • Also fished and hunted • Had domesticated pigs and sheep • Small villages grew into walled towns that spread in both northern and southeastern China • Burial sites indicate that early Chinese believed in an afterlife similar to Egyptian beliefs • Graves contained jewelry and other objects made from jade, a hard gemstone

  20. What was the Xia Dynasty? • Kings ruled early China • 2200 BC: Yu the Great founded the Xia Dynasty • Yu dug channels to control widespread flooding and created major waterways of northern China • Not much else is known about this dynasty • Many stories are told about how the kings tried to help people solve problems by working together

  21. What was The Shang Dynasty? • Established in the 1500s BC • Shang family emerged as most powerful and ruled northern China • King was the center of political and religious life • Nobles served him as advisors • Organized Society: kings and their families warlords and aristocrats traders, artisans  farmers slaves

  22. What were some Shang Achievements? • Created China’s first writing system, which used more than 2000 symbols. This is what Chinese writing is based on today! • 1st Shang writing was found on cattle bones and turtle shells • Used these bones as oracles, or predictions of the future • Made beautiful containers made of bronze for cooking and religious ceremonies • Made jade axes, knives, and ornaments from jade • Developed war chariots, bows, and bonze body armor • Developed a calendar based on the cycles of the moon Pre-AP: hint, hint! You could use these as project artifact ideas!! 

  23. Bell Work

  24. Section 2: The Zhou Dynasty and New Ideas • The Zhou overthrew the Shang in the 1100s BC • This dynasty lasted longer than any other in Chinese history • Claimed to have a mandate of heaven, which means that heaven gives power to the king • Expanded territory

  25. What was the Zhou Political system like? • Granted land to people in return for loyalty, military support, other services. • Lords, or people of high rank, received land in return for payment of taxes and providing soliders • Peasants, or small farmers, would receive small plots of land and had to farm other land for the lords too • These lords helped keep control of distant areas and ensure loyalty

  26. What caused the Fall of the Zhou Dynasty? • Local rulers became too powerful, stopped obeying the kings even in times of invasion • 481 BC: Fighting breaks out between the lords and continues for next 200 years. This is called the “Period of the Warring States”. • Fighting was brutal and cruel

  27. What were internal problems during the Zhou Dynasty? • Bonds of loyalty within families began to weaken, especially in upper classes • Sons would fight each other over inheritance of land • Government lacked power to stop the fighting • Chinese society fell into disorder

  28. Who was Confucius? • Wanted to improve China during the decline of the Zhou • Felt China was overrun by rude and dishonest people • Said people had to return to their ethics, or moral values, and should know their role in society

  29. What were the basic ideas of Confucianism? • Fathers should display high values to inspire families • Children need to respect their parents and ancestors (filial piety) • All family members should be loyal to each other • Moral leadership brings order, not laws • A king should lead by example • Lower classes would learn by following superiors’ examples • Confucius’ ideas were compiled into a book called Analects • Confucianism has influenced philosophy and religion!

  30. What is Daoism? • Wanted people to live in harmony with the Dao, the guiding force of reality • Unlike Confucianism, they believed government should stay out of people’s lives • Should not interfere with nature (“be like water”) • The universe is a balance of opposites • Worshipped nature • Give up desires and concerns • People should not gain wealth or power • Most important Daoist teacher: Laozi

  31. What is Legalism? • Founded by Han FeiZi • Taught that humans were naturally evil and needed to be controlled • No religious connection unlike Confucianism and Daoism • Believed there needed to be harsh laws and punishments to force people to do their duty • Relatives could be punished for another family member’s crimes • Wanted strong and efficient leaders to keep order, not nobles • Focused on expanded territory and always being ready for war

  32. Bell Work HOMEWORK: TODAY’S TITLE:

  33. Section 3: Why was the Qin Emperor’s government strong? • Shi Huangdi became ruler of China in 221 BC and established the Qin dynasty • Based his rule on the ideas of Legalism • Made the central government stronger • Unified China and conquered territory • Created one currency for use of money • Built roads and canals • Began the building of the Great Wall to keep out the Xiongnu (nomads from the Gobi Desert)

  34. What were some examples of Shi Huangdi’s cruelty? • Burned any books that did not support Legalism • Buried 460 scholars alive who disapproved of the book burning • After a city was conquered, he tore down its walls and took all the weapons • Took land away from nobles and made them move • Forced commoners to work on government projects where they faced danger and death

  35. What was China Like under the Qin? • Shi Huangdi claimed all power • Divided China into districts each with its own governor • Districts were subdivided into counties with an appointed official • This helped to enforce his tax system and a strict chain of command

  36. What were some Qin policies? • Shi Huangdi set up a uniform law system (all rules and punishments are the same throughout the empire) • Standardized the written language (had to write with the same exact system) • Standardized money system • Standardized weight and measure systems • Trade became much easier with all this consistency • Any disobedience against these systems would result in harsh punishments

  37. What were some Qin Achievements? • Built a network of roads that connected the capital to every part of the empire • Helped the army move quickly and easily to put down revolts • Built canals to connect the rivers, which made it easier to ship goods • Improved irrigation system to aid farming • Built the Great Wall to keep out northern invaders (Pieces of the wall were actually started in the 600s BC, but Qin connected smaller pieces to each other to form one long wall)

  38. Pictures of the Great Wall

  39. How did the Qin Dynasty fall? • Shi Huangdi kept China unified • After his death, the government began to fall apart • Rebel groups formed all over the country and each claimed to have a mandate from heaven to replace the emperor • One group attacked the capital and overthrew the new emperor • With no central government, China fell into another period of civil war

  40. Section 4: What is the Han Dynasty’s Government like Under Liu Bang? • Founded in 202 BC by a peasant leader named Liu Bang • Earned the loyalty and trust of soldiers and peasants • Lowered taxes for farmers • Made punishments less severe • Gave land to supporters • Relied on educated officials to advise him

  41. What was the Han Dynasty’s Government Like Under Wudi? • 140 BC: Emperor Wudi takes the throne • Created a stronger central government • Took land from lords • Raised taxes • Took control of grain supply • Confucianism became the official government philosophy • Founded a Confucian university • Government officials had to pass an exam and have a recommendation to earn their job (rich families were mostly in control because of this policy)

  42. How was Society organized during the Han Dynasty? • Based on the Confucian system and was more rigid • 4 classes: - Emperor, his court, and scholars with government positions - Peasants (largest class) - Artisans - Merchants Why did merchants fall in the lower class? • Soldiers were not part of the system, but being in the army could bring them an opportunity to rise up in class

  43. Lives of the Rich • Classes only divided people by rank, not wealth! • Emperor lived in a palace and his officials had large houses and estates • Filled homes with expensive decorations and loved to entertain • Even their tombs were filled with luxury items

  44. Lives of the Poor • Consisted of 90% of the population • Worked long hours on farming or building projects • Had to pay heavy taxes, which may have forced them to give up their land to wealthy landowners • Wore simple clothing and ate simple diets • Lived in small villages and wood-framed houses

  45. Revival of Family • Strong Confucian influence • Children MUST respect their parents…IT WAS THE LAW! • Fathers had absolute power • Women and children had to be obedient to the father • Filial piety helped keep order because obedience had been instilled in people since birth • Children were encourage to serve parents and had to honor dead relatives with ceremonies • Boys were valued more highly than girls because they would continue the family line and took care of the parents later • Older women could become the head of family if needed

  46. What were some Han Achievements? • Figure painting • Wrote poetry (the fuand shistyles) and histories • Sundial • Seismograph • Waterwheels to grind grain • Iron drill bits to mine more salt • Steel • Paper • Medicine and disease prevention improved • Acupuncture • Rudders for ships and new kinds of sails allowed the Chinese to trade with far off places like Southeast Asia, the Indian Ocean, India, and the Mediterranean Sea.

  47. Section 5: How did Farming and Manufacturing improve the Han Dynasty? • Became master ironworkers • Made iron swords and armor that made the army more powerful • Made iron plows and the wheelbarrow to increase farming productivity • Silk- the method for making it was very hush-hush and was expensive!

  48. How did Trade improve? • People outside of China valued Chinese goods such as silk and pottery • Gaining more territory in Central Asia helped trade because it presented more opportunities to trade items such as silk • In return, the Chinese received better horses • The creation of the Silk Road also improved trade

  49. The Silk Road • Most silk trade went overland by the Silk Road- network of trade routes that stretched 4000 miles to the Mediterranean • The Road began to be used b/w 200 and 100 BC • China began to trade with the West and the Roman Empire • Silk, spices, tea, and porcelain were carried over in return for gold, silver, precious stones, and horses • Travel was difficult because of the heavy loads, geography, possibility of theft, and weather

  50. Map of the Silk Road

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