1 / 20

Early China-Chapter 2

Early China-Chapter 2. Mrs. Dell. Geography and Resources. China is isolated: Himalayan, Pamir, and Tian mnts Takla Maka and Gobi desert The Pacific Ocean. Climate in E. Asia ranges from dry to sub-arctic and sub-tropic Climate determines the kinds of crops that could be grown

lauren
Télécharger la présentation

Early China-Chapter 2

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. Early China-Chapter 2 Mrs. Dell

  2. Geography and Resources • China is isolated: Himalayan, Pamir, and Tianmnts • TaklaMaka and Gobi desert • The Pacific Ocean

  3. Climate in E. Asia ranges from dry to sub-arctic and sub-tropic • Climate determines the kinds of crops that could be grown • E. river valleys and N. China plains contained: timber, stone, deposits of metal, and productive land

  4. Huang He= Yellow River • Nicknamed “Yellow river” because of the loess • Flooding of the Yellow river led to the construction of dikes & channels

  5. Yellow River

  6. Impact of Geography • Long distances and physical barriers isolated China, blocking cultural diffusion • Protects China from invasion • Isolation contributed to the Chinese belief that China was the “center of the earth,” and the only civilization

  7. Xia Dynasty • The Xia dynasty had a well-organized structure with social classes and a centralized government • Chinese stories place Xia in control of the Yellow River valley • The Xia state gradually gave way to the Shang dynasty • Most historians start Chinese history with the Shang Dynasty because it coincides with the earliest written records

  8. Shang Dynasty (1750-1027BCE) • Originated in Yellow River Valley • King and his core ruled the main area directly – members of royal family& high-ranking nobility governed outlying provinces • King would travel to ensure the subordinates’ loyalty • Capital of the Kingdom changed numerous times

  9. Shang Cities • Centers of political and religious control • Surrounded by big walls (stone in short supply-built w/ wood & dried mud) • Centers contained palaces, storehouses, admin building, royal tombs, shrines, etc… • Common people lived in agricultural villages • Shang kings took a large portion of their peasants’ harvests for the army and their friends. The military was large and powerful

  10. Society and Technology • Pictograms and phonetic symbols used to form complex writing system • Only small, educated elite mastered the writing • Bronze is used as a sign of nobility • Bronze= copper + tin • Also had valued commodities for trade: jade, ivory, mother of pearl….

  11. Zhou Period (1027-221 BCE) • We don’t know much about how the Xia and Shang kept order, but we know a lot about the Zhou dynasty. Longest dynasty- 800years • The Zhou allied with the Shang and then took over, ruling from 1122 BCE-256 BCE.

  12. Politics & the Mandate of Heaven • Heavenly powers gave the right to govern- called the “mandate of heaven”- to a specially chosen person, the “Son of Heaven.” This person was the link between heaven and earth. • His job was to maintain order and harmony and keep high standards of honor and justice. • If he did his job, his rule would be peaceful. If he displeased heaven, his rule would become violent and chaotic. Heaven would then transfer the mandate to a different ruler. • Chinese dynasties used this theory to claim power well into the 20th century (1900’s.)

  13. Chinese Dynastic Cycle

  14. Zhou Politics • The Zhou dynasty was huge and could not rule effectively with a centralized government. • So, the king relied on local government, who then paid tribute in the form of respect, goods, and money. They also provided soldiers. • Regional leaders had strong weapons and armor and their own armies, so they could rebel successfully.

  15. Zhou Politics cont… • In 771, invaders came during the rule of an ineffective king who got no support from regional leaders. This permanently damaged the dynasty and there was continual civil war until the last Zhou king gave up his throne to the first Qin dynasty king.

  16. Zhou Society • Nobles and rulers used lots of expensive bronze and owned land. Many lived in cities and were educated. Their behavior was closely controlled by the rules of etiquette • The peasants, farmers who did not own land, were the largest social class in China • Slaves did manual labor and were often sacrificed during religious rituals.

  17. Writing • Fortunetellers used oracle bones. These animal bones were heated, and the resulting cracks studied. The diviner wrote the prediction on the bone. The early language used was pictographs, like Egypt and Mesopotamia. • The most famous writer from the Zhou dynasty is Confucius; we’ll study him during our unit on religion.

  18. Zhou Contributions • Promoted linguistic unity= Mandarin Chinese • Oral epics and stories • Large-scale public works projects • First people to make steel by removing carbon during the iron-smelting process

More Related