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Han China

Han China. Status of Peasants and Merchants. Status of Peasants. Consisted of most of Han China’s population Occupied the lower stratum in the social structure Poor economic conditions Survived on sparse food and coarse clothing

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Han China

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  1. Han China

  2. Status of Peasants and Merchants

  3. Status of Peasants • Consisted of most of Han China’s population • Occupied the lower stratum in the social structure • Poor economic conditions • Survived on sparse food and coarse clothing • Had to sell land at low prices or secure loans at high interest during emergencies • Often reduced to poverty • Became tenants of wealthy landowners • Exploited through high rents that were usually more than 50% of their harvest • Looked down upon, yet their work was considered productive and fundamental to society

  4. Status of Merchants • Were banished to the frontier during the Qin Dynasty • Merchants’ status in Han China was a contradiction • As internal and external trade flourished, wealthy merchants commanded respect and influence • The state, deeply suspicious of the merchants’ wealth, sought to control and repress them • Two categories of Han merchants: • Small-scale urban shopkeepers who sold goods at shops in urban markets • Were enrolled on an official register and had to pay heavy commercial taxes • Had a very low social status and were often subject to additional restrictions • Not allowed to own land

  5. Status of Merchants • The larger-scale itinerant traders who traveled between cities and to foreign countries • Did not have to register and often participated in large-scale trade with powerful families and officials • Owned large tracts of land • Had to compete economically with the emperor’s government-managed shops, which sold goods collected from the merchants as property taxes • Various edicts issued by the Han emperors prohibited them from many activities • Wearing silks and brocades • Riding in chariots • Carrying weapons • Owning land as property • Serving as officials • Forced to pay heavier poll and property taxes than others

  6. Status of Merchants • Accumulated so much economic power that they could easily transgress regulations • Powerful merchants owned a large amount of land and associated with the nobility and high officials • Were part of a privileged group comparable in wealth to the ruling class • Some obtained political power and social position through the purchase of positions or bribery

  7. Status of Merchants • As a result, authorities closely regulated urban market activities • Urban trading took place in government-controlled, walled markets • Officials decided which traders to let into the market and watched them from an observation tower located in the middle of the marketplace • Traders who sold the same goods had to be in the same location • Goods had to have price tags • Contracts had to be drawn for large purchases • Viewed as “parasites who produced nothing and earned their profits deceptively” by philosophers of all schools in the Warring States period

  8. Gender Status

  9. Gender Status • Boys were valued more than girls • However, they were typically both loved equally by parents • Women were expected to be loyal to their male superiors (all men, fathers, brothers, husbands, and adult sons) • In reality, some Han women were given more leeway with their husbands, and sons still listened to their mothers after their fathers passed away • Women’s work was deemed less important to the family’s prosperity and status • Women took care of household chores • Rear children • Weave clothes for the family • Cook and clean • Spinning and weaving • Singing and dancing

  10. Gender Status • Peasant women worked in the fields and helped produce their family’s income and food • Some women took up sorcery as a profession to further support their family • More fortunate women became renowned medical physicians who provided services to the families of high officials and nobility • Female merchants dressed in silk clothes that rivaled even female nobles’ attire • Women were exempt from corvée labor (forced, unpaid labor)

  11. Gender Status • Women were viewed as the moral foundation of society • Chastity was thought to be the root virtue for women from Han Dynasty onward • Respect and compliance were also important virtues for women • Marriages were usually arranged by parents and other family members • In elite households, marriages served to reinforce business and political alliances between families • Romantic or passionate love was not the ideal • Husbands and wives often behaved quite formally in other's presence

  12. Patriarchal Family

  13. Patriarchal Family • Oldest male (usually the father) was the head of the family • Families wanted a son • Female babies were murdered or let to die • Men were of higher importance because they could do better, more efficient work • Women usually received very little to no education • Women could not choose their own marriages • Women must have had consent on selling and purchasing household related things, including land • Women must have listened to their male superiors, no matter what they were told, or they could possibly be beaten or killed • Continued from previous societies, still present today

  14. Mandate of Heaven

  15. Mandate of Heaven • Traditional Chinese philosophical concept concerning the legitimacy of rulers, which dictates that a just ruler has divine approval • According to the political vision of Confucianism, only the virtuous are fit to receive the Mandate of Heaven • Around 1027 B.C., the Zhou overthrew the last Shang king and established their own dynasty • To justify their conquest, the Zhou leaders declared that the final Shang king had been such a poor ruler that the gods had taken away the Shang’s rule and given it to the Zhou • This justification developed over time into a broader view that royal authority came from heaven

  16. Mandate of Heaven • Mandate of Heaven • A divine commission given to a nobleman worthy enough to serve as the Son of Heaven • The Son of Heaven rules China (the entire civilized world as far as the Chinese were concerned) as the emperor • He serves to unite Heaven and Earth by fulfilling the will of Heaven in this world through benevolent leadership and the performance of the proper rituals and sacrifices • His success was based on the opinion of the gods • If the gods became unhappy with an emperor’s rule, they would send signs to the Chinese people • The emperor would lose the Heavenly Mandate and was usually overthrown

  17. Mandate of Heaven • Emperor Han of Wudiwas the first emperor of the Han Dynasty to reign under the Mandate of Heaven • Reigned for 54 years • Expanded the borders of China into Vietnam in the south and Korea in the north • Westward expansion influenced what became the Han Empire • 220 B.C.E. - Han Dynasty lost its Heavenly Mandate • Began nearly 400 years of political chaos

  18. Confucianism and the Examination System

  19. Confucianism • Considered a philosophy and even, arguably, a religion   • Based mainly on the teachings and beliefs of Chinese sage Confucius • Teaching and ideas of Confucius that are known today are actually just the recollections of his students and disciples • Qin Dynasty suppressed Confucianism by burning Confucius’ books • Emperor Wu of Han organized China as a Confucian state • Used Confucianism mixed with Legalism • All other ideologies were banned • Everyone was forced to learn the teachings of Confucianism • As a result, the Han Dynasty established and improved the system of ruling the land by morals and ethics

  20. Examination System • An attempt to recruit men on the basis of merit rather than on the basis of family or political connection • Was an outgrowth of Confucianism • Before Confucianism, people were given positions based on whether or not they were competent enough to do the job • Emperor Wu of Han started an early form of the imperial examinations • Local officials would select candidates to take part in an examination of the Confucian classics • New officials were selected through these examinations • Connections and recommendations remained much more influential than the exams in terms of promoting people during the Han Dynasty • Imperial exams later became main system through which new officials were chosen

  21. Development/Fall of Han Dynasty

  22. Development/Fall of Han Dynasty • The Han Restore Unity to China • Two powerful leaders: Xiang Yu (aristocratic general) and Liu Bang (Xiang Yu’s general) • Fought battle and Liu Bang won • Liu Bang became 1st emperor of the Han Dynasty • Han Dynasty- ruled China for more than 400 years; divided into 2 periods • Former (Western) Han: ruled for about 2 centuries • Later (Eastern) Han: ruled for almost another 2 centuries • One of the greatest periods in entire history of China - Chinese people still call themselves the “People of Han” • Han Dynasty was named after the principality, which was itself named after Hanzhong - modern southern Shaanxi

  23. Development/Fall of Han Dynasty • Liu Bang established centralized government (central authority controls the running of a state), and he lowered taxes and softened harsh punishments • Local provinces = commanderies • Liu Bang died in 195 B.C. – son became emperor (in name) • Real emperor = Empress Lu (Liu’s wife) • Died in 180 B.C. and people who remained loyal to Liu Bang’s family executed Lu’s family • Emperors chose favorite among wives as empress and one of her sons as successor • Wudi- “Martial Emperor” – reigned from 141 to 87 B.C. and he expanded the empire through war • Xiongnu (first enemies) – nomads known for deadly archery • Empire tried bribing them to get them to leave, but they just accepted the bribes and grew stronger • Wudi sent more than 100,000 soldiers to fight and they made allies of their enemies • Colonized Manchuria and Korea; at the end of his reign, empire expanded to nearly the bounds of present-day China

  24. Development/Fall of Han Dynasty • A Highly Structured Society • Emperor = link between heaven and earth; • people believed if he did his job well the empire would have peace and prosperity, and if he didn’t do his job well there would be earthquakes, floods and famines • Han bureaucracy – imperial army paid for with taxes • Peasants owed govt. a month worth of labor or military service every year – paid for roads, canals, irrigation ditches, and Great Wall • Civil service: govt. jobs that civilians obtained by taking examinations • Confucianism: teachings of Confucius, who lived 400 years before – practice -“reverence, generosity, truthfulness, diligence, and kindness”

  25. Development/Fall of Han Dynasty • Han Technology, Commerce, and Culture • Paper was invented in 105 A.D. – cheaper than silk  spread education and helped advance govt. (more convenient for record keeping) • Collar harness for horses  horses could pull much heavier loads • Plow with two blades, improved iron tools, wheelbarrow, and used water mills to grind grains • Agriculture became most important and most honored occupation (so many people to feed) • Monopoly: when a group has exclusive control over the production and distribution of certain goods • Monopolies on mining of salt, forging of iron, minting of coins, and brewing of alcohol • SILK was a valuable item of trade – had massive silk mills to make luxurious cloth and Chinese culture expanded among silk roads because of worldwide demand for silk

  26. Development/Fall of Han Dynasty • The Han Unifies Chinese Culture • Assimilation: process of making conquered people part of the Chinese culture • Sent Chinese farmers to settle newly colonized areas, people intermarried, and local schools taught people Confucianism • Recording China’s history • SimaQian – Grand Historian for compiling a history of China from ancient dynasties to Wudi in the book Records of the Grand Historian • Ban Biao – wrote History of Han Dynasty with help from son Ban Gu and daughter Ban Zhao • Ban Zhao also wrote Lessons for Women, teaching women to be humble and obedient but also industrious • Confucian teachings said that women had to devote themselves to their families – duties in home and work on fields of family farm • Upper-class women sometimes became empresses and some gained education and lead lives apart from families

  27. Development/Fall of Han Dynasty • The Fall of the Han and Their Return • Economic imbalance caused by customs that allowed the rich to gain more wealth at the expense of the poor • Generations of farmers inherited small plots – made it hard to raise enough food to sell/feed family  debt to landowners with high interest rates • Landowners took possession of land that farmers couldn’t pay off • Landowners didn’t pay taxes, so land left for govt. tax decreased • Less money coming in  govt. pressed harder to collect money from small farmers • Resulted in gap between rich and poor • B.C. 32 – 9 A.D. – one inexperienced emperor replaced another; deceiving plots, revolts, and unrest  CHAOS

  28. Development/Fall of the Han Dynasty • Wang Mang – took imperial title in 9 A.D. and overthrew Han (ending Former Han) • Minted new money, set up public granaries to feed the poor, & took large landholdings from rich  angered powerful landholders & caused inflation • 11 A.D. – great flood – left 1,000s dead & millions homeless • Peasants & wealthy revolted & killed Wang Mang in 23 A.D. – new member of old imperial family took power and began Later Han • In the first decades, Later Han was prosperous, but soon fell in 220 into 3 rival kingdoms

  29. Development of the Silk Road

  30. Development of the Silk Road • Acted as a land bridge between the east and west • At the time of the Han Dynasty, trade along the Silk Road enlarged contact between China, South Asia and the Mediterranean world • Han Empire expanded westward as far as the TarimBasin, making possible relatively secure caravan traffic across Central Asia • As Han armies pushed into the TaklaMakan Desert, roads became more secure and the traffic exploded • This was the real beginning of the Silk Road • These roads developed greatly because they were easier access to other parts of the world that did not involve climbing through mountains

  31. Development of the Silk Road • Bandits soon learned of the precious goods travelling up the Gansu Corridor and skirting the TaklaMakan, and took advantage of the terrain to plunder these caravans • Caravans of goods needed their own defense forces • Was an added cost for the merchants making the trip • Han Dynasty set up the local government at Wuleiin order to protect the states in this area • Not far from Kuga on the northern border of the TaklaMakan • About 50 states at the time • Developed into center of Hui He kingdom

  32. Development of the Silk Road • Most significant commodity carried along this route was not silk, but religion • Buddhism came to China from India this way, along the northern branch of the route • This restored China to the state it had been in during the Han Dynasty, with full control of the western regions, but also including the territories, Tibet and Mongolia • Led to the exchange of knowledge, culture, religion, and technology between the East and West (cultural diffusion) • Buddhism, Islam, Christianity, Manichaeism, and Zoroastrianism were among the faiths that spread along the route • Algebra, astronomy, Arabic numerals, medical techniques, architectural styles, and a host of primarily Chinese techniques and inventions, e.g., printing and papermaking, spread from East to West • Various construction techniques, seafaring methods, medicinal plants and poisons, cotton cultivation, and horse-related items such as saddles and stirrups spread from West to East

  33. Development of the Silk Road • Policing the route, which took caravans to the farthest extent of the Han Empire, became a big problem • After the Western Han Dynasty, successive dynasties brought more states under Chinese control • Experienced influences from the Indian sub-continent • Included Buddhist art work, examples of which have been found in several early second century tombs in present-day Sichuan province • The Astana tombs have turned up examples of silk cloth from China, as well as objects from as far afield as Persia and India • Where the nobles of Gaochang had been buried

  34. Diffusion of Chinese Culture to SE Asia, Japan and Korea Sinicization - a process whereby non-Han Chinese societies come under the influence of dominant Han Chinese state and society

  35. Diffusion of Chinese Culture to SE Asia, Japan and Korea • During the Taika, Nara, and Heian periods, Japanese borrowing from China peaked, although Shinto views on the natural and supernatural world remained central • From the seventh to the ninth centuries • The Taika reforms of 646 revamped the administration along Chinese lines. • Intellectuals and aristocrats absorbed Chinese influences. • The common people looked to Buddhist monks for spiritual and secular assistance and meshed Buddhist beliefs with traditional religion • The Taika reforms failed due to resistance from aristocratic families and Buddhist monks • The aristocracy returned to Japanese traditions; the peasantry reworked Buddhism into a Japanese creed; and the emperor lost power to aristocrats and provincial lords

  36. Diffusion of Chinese Culture to SE Asia, Japan and Korea • Despite following Chinese patterns, the Japanese determined aristocratic rank by birth, thus blocking social mobility • The aristocrats dominated the central government and restored their position as landholders • The emperor gave up plans for creating a peasant conscript army and ordered local leaders to form rural militias • Court culture flourished at Heian • The basis of life was the pursuit of aesthetic enjoyment and the avoidance of common, distasteful elements of life • Poetry was a valued art form, and the Japanese simplified the script taken from the Chinese to facilitate expression • An outpouring of distinctively Japanese poetic and literary works followed

  37. Diffusion of Chinese Culture to SE Asia, Japan and Korea • Koreans descended from hunting and gathering peoples of Siberia and Manchuria • By the fourth century B.C.E., they were acquiring sedentary farming and metalworking techniques from China • In 109 B.C.E., the earliest Korean kingdom, Choson, was conquered by the Han, and parts of the peninsula were colonized by Chinese • Korean resistance to the Chinese led to the founding in the north of an independent state by the Koguryopeople • It soon battled the southern states of Silla and Paekche • Sericulture spread to Korea through the Silk Road • After the fall of the Han, an extensive adoption of Chinese culture—Sinification—occurred • Buddhism was a key element in the transfer • Chinese writing was adopted, but the Koguryo ruler failed to form a Chinese-style state

  38. Diffusion of Chinese Culture to SE Asia, Japan and Korea • Tang Alliances and the Conquest of Korea • Continuing political disunity in Korea allowed the Tang, through alliance with Silla, to defeat Paekche and Koguryo • The Chinese received tribute from Sillaand left to govern Korea • Sinification: The Tributary Link • Under the Silla and Koryo (918-1392) dynasties, Chinese influences peaked and Korean culture achieved its first full flowering • The Silla copied Tang ways, and through frequent missions, brought Chinese learning, art, and manufactured items to Korea • The Chinese were content with receiving tribute and allowed Koreans to run their own affairs

  39. Diffusion of Chinese Culture to SE Asia, Japan and Korea • The Sinification of Korean Elite Culture • The Silla constructed their capital, Kumsong, on the model of Tang cities • The aristocracy built residences around the imperial palace • Some of them studied in Chinese schools and sat for Confucian exams introduced by the rulers • Most government positions were determined by birth and family connections. • The elite favored Buddhism, in Chinese forms, over Confucianism • Koreans refined techniques of porcelain manufacture, first learned from the Chinese, to produce masterworks

  40. Bibliography • Knapp, Keith N. "Merchants and Trade in Qin and Han China." ABC-CLIO EBOOK COLLECTION. ABC-CLIO, n.d. Web. 30 Oct. 2012. • Liang, Cai. "Social Structures of Han China." ABC-CLIO EBOOK COLLECTION. ABC-CLIO, n.d. Web. 30 Oct. 2012. • Smits, Gregory. "Chapter Eleven: Women & Men in Society." N.p.: n.p., n.d.N.pag. Making Japanese. Web. 31 Oct. 2012. <http://www.personal.psu.edu/faculty/ g/j/gjs4/textbooks/PM-China/ch11.htm>. • Dennerline, Jerry. "Confucianism." New Dictionary of the History of Ideas. Ed. Maryanne Cline Horowitz. Vol. 2. Detroit: Charles Scribner's Sons, 2005. 433-440. Gale Student Resources In Context. Web. 31 Oct. 2012. • Elman, Benjamin A. "Examination Systems, China." New Dictionary of the History of Ideas. Ed. Maryanne Cline Horowitz. Vol. 2. Detroit: Charles Scribner's Sons, 2005. 758-761. Gale Student Resources In Context. Web. 31 Oct. 2012. • "Confucianism." Encyclopedia of Modern China. Ed. David Pong. Vol. 1. Detroit: Charles Scribner's Sons, 2009. 347-351. Gale World History In Context. Web. 31 Oct. 2012. • Ching, Julia. "Confucius." Encyclopedia of Religion. Ed. Lindsay Jones. 2nd ed. Vol. 3. Detroit: Macmillan Reference USA, 2005. 1933-1937. Gale World History In Context. Web. 31 Oct. 2012.

  41. Bibliography • "Han Dynasty." NewWorldEncyclopedia.com. New World Encyclopedia, 3 Apr. 2008. Web. 31 Oct. 2012. <http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Han_Dynasty>. • "The Spread of Chinese Civilization: Japan, Korea, and Vietnam." Wps.ablongman.com. Pearson, n.d. Web. 01 Nov. 2012. <http://wps.ablongman.com/long_stearns_wcap_4/18/4648/1190119.cw/i ndex.html>.

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