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ANCIENT AND CLASSICAL CHINA

ANCIENT AND CLASSICAL CHINA. The Sage Kings Gave the Chinese “civilization” King Yao A virtuous ruler bringing harmony to society King Shun Regulating the four seasons, Invented weights, measures, and units of time King Yu Rescued China from raging floods of the Yellow River Legendary?

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ANCIENT AND CLASSICAL CHINA

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  1. ANCIENT AND CLASSICAL CHINA

  2. The Sage Kings • Gave the Chinese “civilization” • King Yao • A virtuous ruler bringing harmony to society • King Shun • Regulating the four seasons, • Invented weights, measures, and units of time • King Yu • Rescued China from raging floods of the Yellow River • Legendary? • Legends reflect values of society • Many may prove true! • The Xia Dynasty • Considered historical by Chinese • Possibility that the Sage Kings were from the Xia Dynasty ANCIENT LEGENDS: THE 3 WISE SAGE KINGS

  3. Beginnings • Over two hundred thousand years ago • Domesticated rice • Around 7000 B.C.E. • In the valley of the Yangzi River • Millet cultivation • In the valley of the Yellow River • Also around 8000 BCE • Wheat and barley • Became staple foods of north China by 2000 B.C.E. • Two Hearths? • Genetic and archaeological evidence says yes • Northern hearth (Yellow R) ethnically Chinese • Southern hearth (Yangzi R) ethnically Polynesian APPEARANCE OF HUMANS IN EAST ASIA

  4. Agricultural villages • Appeared in the valleys of the two rivers • Society was patriarchal • Fathers dominated families • Elder males ruled village • Males performed religious sacrifices • Political Institutions • Towns and small states • Appeared in north China during 2nd millennium B.C.E. • Three dynastic states in the valley of Yellow River: • Xia • Shang • Zhou EMERGENCE OF CHINESE SOCIETY 2ND MILLENNIUM BCE

  5. The Yellow River • Water source at high plateau of Tibet • Loess soil carried by the river's water, hence "yellow" • River was "China's Sorrow" as it flooded uncontrollably • Loess: rich soil, soft, easy to work • Neolithic societies after 5000 B.C.E. • Yangshao society, 5000-3000 B.C.E. • Excavations at Banpovillage: fine pottery, bone tools • Longshan culture: 3000 – 2000 BCE EARLY AGRARIAN SOCIETY

  6. ANCIENT CHINA

  7. Archaeological Evidence • Discovery of Xia is still in preliminary stage • Archaeologists have found some tombs • Chinese scholars believe it existed • Supposed History • Established about 2200 B.C.E. • Legendary King Yu • The dynasty founder • A hero of flood control • Erlitou: possibly the capital city of the Xia XIA DYNASTY

  8. Xia china

  9. Arose in the North China • Along Yellow River • Between Ordos Bulge and Mouth of Yellow River • Evidence • Many records, material remains discovered • Bronze metallurgy, monopolized by elite • Vast network of walled towns • Agricultural surpluses supported large troops • Shang Society • Shang-kings were warriors • Constant struggle with nobles for power • The Shang capital moved six times • Small Shang elite ruled large common population • Lavish tombs of Shang kings • Contained chariots, weapons, bronze goods • Sacrificial human victims, dogs, horses THE SHANG DYNASTY: 1766-1122 B.C.E.

  10. Shang china

  11. The right to rule granted by heaven • Zhou justified their overthrow of Shang • Ruler called "the son of heaven" • Only given to virtuous, strong rulers • To lose mandate = someone else should rule • Replacement of dynasties = Dynastic Cycle • Signs one had lost mandate • Corruption, heavy taxes • Lazy officials and rulers • Revolts, invasions, civil wars, crime • Natural disasters • Society develops bad morals, habits MANDATE OF HEAVEN

  12. The mandate of heaven and the dynasty cycle

  13. The rise of the Zhou • The last Shang king was a bad ruler • The Zhou forces toppled the Shang • Political organization • Adopted decentralized administration • Used princes and relatives to rule regions • Consequences • Weak central government with ceremonial functions • Rise of regional powers; often called feudalism • Constant rivalry between warring families, nobles THE ZHOU DYNASTY: 1122-256 B.C.E.

  14. The zhou map

  15. Iron metallurgy • Iron technology spread; 1st millennium B.C.E. • Iron weapons were cheaper to produce than bronze • Helped regional aristocrats to resist the central power • Feudal state of Qin mastered iron technology, weapons • Nomadic invasion sacked capital • Prior period called Western Zhou • Capital moved to Loyang beginning Eastern Zhou • Warring StatesPeriod (403-221 B.C.E.) • Territorial princes became more independent • States warred one with another • Rise of Sun Tzu as military strategist • Rise of Qin state • Qin began conquering rivals • Created vast army, no one able to stop Qin kings • Last Zhou king abdicated his position in 256 B.C.E. THE FALL OF THE ZHOU

  16. Central to Chinese culture: kinship • Veneration of ancestors • Belief in ancestors' presence, continuing influence • Burial of material goods with the dead • Offering sacrifices at the graves • Eldest males presided over rites honoring ancestors • Only males could perform religious duties • Filial Piety • Young must respect elders without question • Elders always right, make decisions • Patriarchal society • During Neolithic times, Chinese society = matrilineal • Rise of states, war due to men's contribution s • After Shang, not even queens merited temples FAMILY

  17. The ruling elites • Royal family and allied noble families at the top • Their lavish consumption of bronze products, silk • Hereditary aristocrats with extensive landholding • Most of the land owned by the king, nobles • Peasants, the majority of population • Called the “mean” people • Landless peasants provided labor • Lived in small subterranean houses • Wood, bone, stone tools common • Iron spread in 6th century B.C.E. • Women’s World • Wine making, weaving, silkworm raising • Managing household, raising children • Elite women vs. poor women THE SOCIAL ORDER Imperial Family Nobles Peasants

  18. Specialized labor • Free artisans • Artists, musicians • Craftsmen in great demand • Served the needs of ruling elites • Merchants, trade were important • Jade from Central Asia, tin from SE Asia • A few pieces of pottery from India • Merchants ranked socially lower • Slaves • Mostly war prisoners • Performed hard work • Became sacrificial victims • Suspicious towards Foreigners OTHERS Slaves Artisans Merchants

  19. CONFUCIAN SOCIAL HIERARCHY Confucian Scholar Official

  20. Customary beliefs and practice • As old as civilization in China • Never encouraged/discouraged by state • Syncretic in nature • Will absorb many different traditions • Blends all major ideas, philosophies • Exists in harmony with official philosophies, faiths • Believes gods, spirits (shen) influence family, world • Power over world affairs • Deceased members of community, family • Deified figures of history, literature • Spiritual embodiment of nature, geography • Maintenance of family shrines, community temples • Prayers, supplications • Food offerings • Shamanism and divination are practiced CHINESE POPULAR RELIGION

  21. Household Rituals • Always performed by males • Expression of Confucian filial piety • Domestic altar • Names of deceased, icons • Worship of the stove god • Oversees family’s moral conduct • Reports on family to heaven • Public Rituals • Preserve social harmony, local identity • Local earth god protects area from spirits • City god important; has temple at center of city • Physical, public processions, offerings • Supreme Deity and Influence of Daoism • Shangdi (Ruler on High) • Cannot be addressed directly • Shang kings called up other spirits to address Shangdi • Later called Tian or Heaven • Rulers called Son of Heaven • Empire is his favorite government • Mandate of Heaven is an off-shoot of this idea HOUSEHOLD & PUBLIC RITUALS

  22. No organized religion, priestly class • Impersonal heavenly power - tian • Males performed few duties • Fathers took care of family duties • Rulers took care of the public duties • Oracle bones • Rulers, people question tian for direction • Primary instruments of fortune-tellers • Discovery of the "dragon bones" in 1890s • Bones recorded day-to-day concerns • Early Chinese writing • Earliest form was the pictograph • From pictograph to ideograph • Absence of alphabetic or phonetic component • More than two thousand characters • Modern Chinese writing is direct descendant SECULAR CULTURAL TRADITION

  23. Zhou literature • The Book of Change, a manual of diviners • The Book of History, the history of the Zhou • The Book of Rites • The rules of etiquette and rituals for aristocrats • The Book of Songs • The most notable of the classic works • Verses on themes both light and serious • Reflected social conditions of the early Zhou • Destruction of early literature • Most Zhou writings have perished • 1st emperor destroyed most writings THOUGHT, LITERATURE

  24. Steppelands • Pastoralists domesticated animals • Lived on grassy lands • Seasonal migrations to pasture lands • Became nomads, ancestors of Turks, Mongols • Nomadic society • Little farming, but relied on herding animals • Two classes – a royal clan and then all commoners • Patriarchal society but women had influence • Interactions • Constant warfare between nomads over best grazing area • Relied on grains and manufactured goods of the Chinese • Exchange of products between nomads, farmers • Nomads often invaded rich agricultural society • Nomads did not imitate Chinese ways PASTORALISTS

  25. The Yangzi valley • The longest river of China • Two crops of rice per year • Dependable and beneficial to farmers • Indigenous peoples of South China • Ancestors of the Malayo-Polynesians • Many assimilated into Chinese society • Some pushed into hills, mountains • Many migrated to Taiwan, Vietnam, Thailand • State of Chu (Conquered by Qin) • Emerged in the central Yangzi region • Challenged the Zhou for supremacy • Adopted Chinese ways EXPANSION OF china

  26. Confucius (551-479 B.C.E.) • A strong-willed man, from an aristocratic family • Traveled ten years searching for an official post • Educator with numerous disciples • Sayings compiled in the Analects by disciples • Confucian ideas • Fundamentally moral and ethical in character • Restore political and social order; stress ritual • Formation of junzi - "superior individuals" • Edited Zhou classics for his disciples to study • The key Confucian concepts • Ren - a sense of humanity • Li - a sense of propriety • Xiao - filial piety • Cultivating of junzi for bringing order to China • 5 Relationships and filial piety as basis of society CONFUCIUS’ SEARCH FOR ORDER

  27. Mencius (372-289 B.C.E.) • Principal spokesman for the Confucian school • Believed in the goodness of human nature • Government by benevolence, humanity • Xunzi (298-238 B.C.E.) • Served as a governmental administrator • Cast doubt on the goodness of human nature • Harsh social discipline to order to society • Stress moral education, good public behavior LATER CONFUCIANS

  28. Legalism • The doctrine of statecraft • Promoted a practical and ruthlessly efficient approach • No concern with ethics and morality • No concern with the principles governing nature • Doctrine used by Qin dynasty • Shang Yang (ca. 390-338 B.C.E.) • A chief minister of the Qin state • His policies summarized in The Book of Lord Shang • Was executed by his political enemies • Han Feizi (ca. 280-233 B.C.E.) • Student of Xunzi, became the most articulate Legalist • A synthesizer of Legalist ideas • Forced to suicide by his political enemies LEGALISM

  29. The state's strength • Agriculture • Military force • Discouraged commerce, education, and the arts • How to treat people • Harnessing self-interest of people for needs of state • Called “carrot and stick” approach in west • Called for harsh penalties even for minor infractions • Advocated collective responsibility before law • Not popular among the Chinese, • Chinese used legalism if state threatened • Legalism still doctrine common to China LEGALISM IN PRACTICE

  30. Founder Mo Zi • Lived 470 – 391 BC • A commoner, worked with mean people • Served in military, ideas based on it • Beliefs • Partiality, competition causes problems • Advocates doctrine of universal love • Advocates cooperation • Stress discipline, order, authority • Loyalty to all elders, not family • Emphasized practical; hate waste, war • Favor math, science over arts, ritual MOHISM

  31. Prominent critics of Confucianism • Preferred philosophical reflection and introspection • Understand natural principles, live in harmony with them • Laozi and Zhuangzi • Laozi, founder of Daoism; wrote the Daodejing • Zhuangzi, Daoist philosopher, wrote Zhuangzi • Philosophical Daoism • Dao - The way of nature, the way of the cosmos • Opposites in balance, complementary • An eternal principle governing all workings of the world • Passive, yielding, does nothing , accomplishes everything • Tailor behavior to passive, yielding nature • Ambition, activism brought the world to chaos • Popular Daoism • A folk or religious form of Daoism; not philosophical • Emerged at end of Han Dynasty • Seek to master forces of natural, spiritual world • Many deities including immortals, which people venerated • Symbolized prosperity, happiness • Many saints were patrons of certain occupations • Gods associated with natural cycles, agriculture • Daoist priests were shamans, performed exorcisms DAOISM

  32. The doctrine of wuwei • Disengagement from worldly affairs • Called for simple, unpretentious life • Live in harmony with nature • Advocated small state, self-sufficient community • Political implications • Served as a counterbalance to Confucian activism • Individuals often both Confucians and Daoists • Flourishes when society at peace, prosperous DAOIST WUWEI

  33. The Qin State and Dynasty • Partially sinified pastoralists, perhaps even Turkish • Located in west China and adopted Legalist policies • Encouraged agriculture, resulted in strong economy • Organized a powerful army equipped with iron weapons • Conquered other states and unified China in 221 B.C.E. • Qin Shi Huang di • King of Qin proclaimed himself First Emperor, 221 B.C.E. • Established centralized imperial rule • Held sons of nobles as hostages • Demolished nobles castles • Project of connecting and extending the Great Wall • 700,000 people worked on project; 100,000 killed UNIFICATION OF CHINA

  34. Suppressing the resistance • Bitterly opposed, was opposed by Confucian scholars • Buried 460 scholars alive because of their criticism against the Qin • Burned all books except some with utilitarian value • Policies of centralization • Standardization of laws, currencies, weights, measures • Standardized scripts: tried to create uniform language • Creates a uniform writing system but not language • Tomb of the First Emperor • The tomb was an underground palace • Excavation of the tomb since 1974 • Terracotta soldiers and army to protect tomb • The collapse of the Qin dynasty • Massive public works generated ill will among people • Waves of rebels overwhelmed the Qin court in 207 B.C.E. • A short-lived dynasty, left deep marks in Chinese history QIN STATECRAFT

  35. Liu Bang • A general, persistent man, a methodical planner • Restored order, established dynasty, 206 B.C.E. • Han was long-lived dynasty • Early Han policies • Sought middle way between Zhou and Qin • Royal relatives were not reliable • Returned to centralized rule • Martial Emperor (141-87 B.C.E.) • Han Wudi ruled for 54 years • Pursued centralization and expansion THE EARLY HAN DYNASTY

  36. Han centralization • Adopted Legalist policies • Built an enormous bureaucracy to rule the empire • Continued to build roads and canals • Levied taxes on agriculture, trade, and craft industries • Imperial monopolies on production of iron and salt • Established Confucian educational system for training bureaucrats • Confucianism as the basis of the curriculum in imperial university • Thirty thousand students enrolled in the university in Later Han • Han imperial expansion • Invaded and colonized northern Vietnam and Korea • Extended China into central Asia • Han organized vast armies to invade Xiongnu territory • Han enjoyed uncontested hegemony in east and central Asia HAN STATECRAFT

  37. MAPPING HAN CHINA

  38. Patriarchal, patrilocal households averaged five inhabitants • Large, multigenerational compound families also developed • Women's subordination (Ban Zhao Admonitions for Women) • Cultivators were the majority of the population • Differences apparent between noble, lower class women • Scholar bureaucrats: Confucian trained bureaucrats • Officials selected through competitive testing • Used to run the government in Early Han • Scholar Gentry • Confucian bureaucrats intermarried with landed elite • New class comes to dominate local, national offices • Strongest in late Han • Merchants held in low social esteem HAN SOCIAL STRUCTURE

  39. Iron metallurgy • Farming tools, utensils • Weapons • Silk textiles • Sericulture spread all over China during the Han • High quality Chinese silk became a prized commodity • Traded as far as India, Persia, Mesopotamia, and Rome • State monopolies on liquor, salt and iron • Paper production • Invented probably before 100 C.E. • Began to replace silk and bamboo as writing materials • Population growth • Increased from 20 to 60 million (220 BCE to 9 CE) • Despite light taxation, state revenue was large • Silk Road established: horses for silk COMMERCE, INDUSTRY

  40. Expeditions consumed the empire's surplus • Raised taxes and confiscated land of some wealthy individuals • Taxes, land confiscations discouraged investment • Much of defense consumed on defending against nomads • Social tensions, stratification between the poor and rich • Problems of land distribution • Early Han supported land redistribution • Economic difficulties forced some small landowners to sell property • Some sold themselves or their families into slavery • Lands accumulated in the hands of a few • No land reform, because Han needed cooperation of large landowners • The reign of Wang Mang • A powerful Han minister dethroned the baby emperor • Claimed imperial title himself, • 9 C.E. Land reforms - the "socialist emperor“ • Overthrown by revolts 23 C.E HAN TROUBLES

  41. The Later Han Dynasty (25-220 C.E.) • Overthrown of Wang Mang restores Han • New Han much weakened • Rule often through large families, gentry • Rise of Eunuchs in government as new source of power • The Yellow Turban Uprising (Daoist Revolt) • Rulers restored order but did not address problem of landholding • Yellow Turban uprising inflicted serious damage on the Han • Collapse of the Han • Court factions paralyzed central government • Han empire dissolved • China was divided into regional kingdoms • Period of 3 Kingdoms • Local aristocrats divided empire • Later fragmented further • During period nomads invaded, Buddhism entered LOSS OF THE MANDATE

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