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River Dynasties in China

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The Geography of China Natural barriers isolated ancient China from all other civilizations. To the east were the Yellow Sea, East China Sea, and the Pacific Ocean. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: River Dynasties in China


1
River Dynasties in China
2
The Geography of China
  • Natural barriers isolated ancient China from all
    other civilizations. To the east were the Yellow
    Sea, East China Sea, and the Pacific Ocean.
    Mountain ranges and deserts comprise 2/3rds of
    the land mass. In west China lay the Taklimakan
    Desert and the Plateau of Tibet. In the south
    are the Himalayas and to the north is the Gobi
    Desert and the Mongolian Plateau.

3
River Systems
  • Two major rivers flow from the west to the
    Pacific Ocean the Huang He (Yellow River) and
    Chang Jiang (Yangtze). The Yellow River deposits
    large amounts of yellow silt called loess when it
    overflows its banks.
  • Environmental Challenges?
  • The Huang Hes floods could be horrible. They
    could take out whole villages, earning the river
    the nickname Chinas Sorrow.
  • Thanks to geographic isolation, trade was next to
    impossible.
  • The natural boundaries did not protect China
    totally. Invasions from the west and north
    occurred from time to time.

4
Chinas Heartland
  • Only about 10 of Chinas land is suitable for
    farming, and this land lies between a small plain
    between the Huang He and the Chang Jiang in
    eastern China. This is known as the North China
    Plain, and has long been regarded as the center
    of Chinas civilization.

5
Civilization Emerges
  • Around 2000 BC, Chinas first cities arose even
    before the Sumarians. These cities were along
    the Huang He river.
  • The first dynasty, the Xia emerged around this
    time. Its leader was a mathematician named Yu.
    His flood control ideas kept the river in check
    and helped civilization to flourish.
  • Around the time that the other civilizations were
    falling, the Shang rose to power in north China.
    They lasted from 1700-1027 BC and left written
    records.

6
Early Cities
  • One of the earliest and most important cities was
    Anyang, which was built mainly of wood in a
    forest clearing.
  • The Shang era cities had extremely high earthen
    walls because they were constantly waging war.

7
Development of Chinese Culture
  • FAMILY central to Chinese society. Respect for
    ones parents and ancestors was vital. The men
    controlled the family, and the women were seen as
    inferior. Between the ages of 13 and 16 her
    marriage was arranged and she moved in with her
    husband.
  • SOCIAL CLASSES Sharply divided between nobility
    and peasants. Warrior nobility ruled the Shang
    and owned the land.

8
Development of Chinese Culture
  • RELIGION The spirits of dead ancestors were
    believed to bring good fortune or even disaster
    to the family depending on that familys actions
    and worship of the ancestors. These sprits were
    looked at like helpful or troublesome neighbors,
    not as gods.
  • Through these spirits, and the rolling of oracle
    bones, the people communicated with their gods,
    such as Shang Di.

9
Development of Chinese Culture
  • DEVELOPMENT OF WRITING One character one
    syllable. However, one can read the language
    without being able to speak it. (Think of 224
    again).
  • People across China could learn one system of
    writing despite the fact that their languages
    differed. This helped unify people across a
    very diverse country.
  • People needed to know at least 1500 characters to
    be considered barely literate 10,000 to be a
    true scholar.

10
Zhou and the Dynastic Cycle
  • Around 1027 BC, a people called the Zhou
    overthrew the Shang and established their own
    empire. A large cultural change didnt happen
    because the Zhou adopted many aspects of Shang
    culture. They did bring new ideas.

11
The Mandate of Heaven
  • The Zhou used this to justify their conquests.
    They declared that the last Shang king had been
    such a poor ruler that the gods took his power
    away from him and gave it to the Zhou. This
    justification developed that the power of royalty
    came from heaven. A just ruler had a Mandate
    from Heaven, but that mandate could be revoked.
  • This mandate became central to Chinese
    civilization. When disasters happened, it was
    seen that the ruler violated the mandate and it
    was time for him to go.
  • Historians call this the dynastic cycle (p. 54)

12
Mandate of Heaven v. Manifest Destiny
  • Mandate of Heaven traditional Chinese
    sovereignty concept of legitimacy used to support
    the rule of the kings of the Zhou Dynasty and
    later the Emperors of China. Heaven would bless
    the authority of a just ruler, but Heaven would
    be displeased with an unwise ruler and give the
    Mandate to someone else. "Mandate of Heaven" was
    also the very first era name of the Qin Dynasty.
  • Manifest Destiny United States was destined to
    expand from the Atlantic seaboard to the Pacific
    Ocean it has also been used to advocate for or
    justify other territorial acquisitions. Advocates
    of Manifest Destiny believed that expansion was
    not only good, but that it was obvious
    ("manifest") and certain ("destiny").

13
Control Through Feudalism
  • To govern its large territory, the Zhou gave
    control of large areas of land to members of the
    royal family and other trusted nobles. They were
    responsible for the land and those who lived on
    it came under their control. The nobles owed
    loyalty to the king.
  • Towns grew into cities, and those hostile to Zhou
    lords eventually became accepting of their rule
    and ways.

14
Zhou Bonuses
  • Improvements in Technology Trade
  • Roads canals for agriculture trade
  • Coined money introduced
  • Blast furnaces for cast iron created weapons
    and agricultural tools.

15
Zhou Problems
  • The Zhou were generally peaceful, but over time
    rule weakened. In 771 BC nomads from the north
    and west sacked the Zhou capital and killed their
    monarch. The surviving members of the royal
    family picked fights with each other and the rule
    weakened further.
  • Amongst the fighting, the traditional values of
    order, harmony, and respect for authority were
    replaced by arrogance, chaos, and defiance.
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