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Post-Han Chinese Dynasties

Post-Han Chinese Dynasties. Unit Two: 600-1450. Chinese Dynasties Sui (“sway”) Tang Song. Post-Han China. Period of the Six Dynasties (220-589CE) Bureaucracy collapsed Buddhism gained strength, replacing Confucianism Non-Chinese nomads rule much Chinese territory. Established by Wendi.

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Post-Han Chinese Dynasties

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  1. Post-Han Chinese Dynasties Unit Two: 600-1450

  2. Chinese DynastiesSui (“sway”)TangSong

  3. Post-Han China • Period of the Six Dynasties (220-589CE) • Bureaucracy collapsed • Buddhism gained strength, replacing Confucianism • Non-Chinese nomads rule much Chinese territory

  4. Established by Wendi Followed by Yangdi • Reunification under the Sui and Tang • Sui Empire reunified China • Established a government based on Confucianism but heavily influenced by Buddhism • Sui’s rapid decline and fall may have been due to its having spent large amounts of resources on a number of ambitious construction, canal, irrigation, and military projects • The Tang Empire: 618 CE • Tang state carried out a program of territorial expansion, avoided over-centralization • Tang emphasized Confucian tradition Sui Dynasty (589-618CE)

  5. Tang Dynasty (618-907CE) • Li Yuan • Tang armies extend to Afghanistan, parts of Tibet, Red River Valley in present-day Vietnam, and Manchuria dominating nomads on borders

  6. Xuanzang returning to Chang'an • Buddhism and the Tang Empire • Tang emperors legitimized their rule with Buddhist ideas • -Monasteries were important allies of early • Tang emperors • Mahayana Buddhism • -More flexible, adaptable • Buddhism spread through Central and East Asia • -Followed trade routes • -Chang’an central to trade routes • -Chang’an = cosmopolitan city Xuanzang returning to Chang'an Buddhism in Tang

  7. Chang’an

  8. Tang Dynasty (618-907CE) • Rebuilt Bureaucracy • Confucian (restored) • Political authority shared • Examination System—Ministry of Rites • Training • Some commoners • Granted them special social status

  9. Exam Cells

  10. Tang Dynasty (618-907CE)—Decline

  11. Tang Dynasty Gossip… • Empress Wu • Empress Wei • Females in general

  12. East Asia After Fall of Han After the fall of the Tang, a number of new states emerged in the former Tang territory: the Liao, the Jin, and the Chinese Song. As the Liao and Jin cut the Chinese off from Central Asia, the Song developed seafaring and strengthened contacts with Korea, Japan, and Southeast Asia.

  13. East Asia in 1000 East Asia in 1000

  14. Industrial Revolution • Many mathematic and navigation advancements during the Song dynasty: • 1. Song inventors improved the previously invented compass, making it suitable for seafaring. • 2. Shipbuilding, the Song introduced the sternpost rudder and watertight bulkheads • Ship innovations were later adopted in the Persian Gulf. • 3. Standing, professionally trained, regularly paid military. • Iron and coal = important strategic resources for military. • large amounts of high-grade iron and steel for weapons, armor, and defensive works • GUNPOWDER!

  15. Cities during the Song • Example: • Hangzhou • Crowded but well-managed • Scholars, monks, shopkeepers • Restaurants, parks

  16. Song Dynasty (969-1279CE) • Decline • Nomads on the borders • Neo-Confucianism weakens the military • Poor leadership—Wang Anshi’s reforms of the 11th Century • Mongols – eventually invade Song China

  17. Legacies – Tang and Song • Grand Canal • Commercial Expansion (Silk Road, Urban Centers) • Agricultural Production • Family (male-dominated households • Technology (compass, junk, printing) • Art (poetry!) • Bureaucracy was re-established

  18. Flaming Arrows

  19. Women vs. Men:Confucianism and Neo-Confucianism • Roles of women and men (Neo-Confucians) • Advocated confining women • Men—permitted far more sexual freedom • Women: less educated, “homemakers” • Laws favored men

  20. Foot-binding • Counterpart to veiling in Islam? • Small feet preferred • At the age of 5-6, a girl’s toes were turned under and bound with silk. It was wound more tightly as she grew. Greatly impaired a woman’s ability to walk. Easier to confine.

  21. Question • As part of the Tang ___________ system, participating countries sent embassies to the Tang capital to acknowledge the Chinese emperor’s supremacy. • examination • exchange • tributary • colonization

  22. Answer • As part of the Tang ___________ system, participating countries sent embassies to the Tang capital to acknowledge the Chinese emperor’s supremacy. • examination • exchange • tributary (correct) • colonization Hint: See page 314.

  23. Question • The most dramatic change in the status of Chinese women during the Song dynasty was manifested by • footbinding. • admittance of women into the military. • veiling. • the introduction of education for women.

  24. Answer The most dramatic change in the status of Chinese women during the Song dynasty was manifested by • footbinding. (correct) • admittance of women into the military. • veiling. • the introduction of education for women. Hint: See page 327.

  25. Question • The hostility of Tang elites to ___________ resulted in an incalculable cultural loss to China. • Confucianism • educated women • Buddhism • Islam

  26. Answer • The hostility of Tang elites to ___________ resulted in an incalculable cultural loss to China. • Confucianism • educated women • Buddhism (correct) • Islam Hint: See page 319.

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