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The Resurgence of Empire in East Asia

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The Song Dynasty Song contradiction Early political stability: 960-1127 Effective monarchs Civil Bureaucracy Founded by Zhao Guangyin Drunken generals story Song ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Resurgence of Empire in East Asia


1
The Resurgence of Empire in East Asia
  • Sui-Tang-Song China

2
Chinese Regionalism
  • 220-589 (Post Han-Sui)
  • A time of political division, economic turmoil,
    and social conflict.
  • Regional Kingdoms

3
Era of Division 220-589 C.E.
  • Nomadic Invasions
  • Endless wars amongst rival kingdoms
  • Re-emergence of rule by aristocrats
  • Decline of Bureaucracy
  • Decline of Confucianism
  • Rise of Buddhism
  • Economic decline
  • Great Wall divided
  • Technological stagnation
  • it was bad.

4
Chinas turbulent 4th century
  • Conquest and rule my non-Chinese peoples
    (Barbarians) shocked the Chinese.
  • Huns and Xiongnu eroded the frontier defenses.

5
Confucianism in the Regional Era
  • Confucianism stressed ideas and practices that
    promoted social etiquette, family values, and
    political stability.
  • These ideas were criticized for their failure and
    their value during the regional era.
  • Regional monarchs began to re-embrace the value
    system, while scholars often condemned its
    shortcomings.

6
Re-emergence of Empire Sui Dynasty
  • Founded by Yang Jian
  • Valued Chin style leadership with tight political
    control.
  • General who consolidated his position and usurped
    power.
  • Used propaganda!
  • Conquered southern China in a Naval War

7
Yang Jian
  • Devoted to building a powerful government
  • Consolidated rule in China
  • Excellent judge of talented people
  • Empire builder
  • Extraordinary temper
  • Paranoia
  • Built an elaborate bureaucracy
  • thrifty
  • Devout Buddhist, supported Confucianism as a
    political ideology

8
Return to Chin ways
  • Harsh, codified laws
  • Standardized everything
  • Written test for office holders
  • Beginnings of civil service exam
  • Refusal to serve in areas of birth
  • eyes and ears of the ruler
  • Elaborate building projects such as the capital
    Changan

9
Changan during the Sui
10
Emperor Yangdi and the Grand Canal
  • political intrigue
  • Great achievement the Grand Canal
  • Purpose

11
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12
The Tang Dynasty
  • Founded by Li Yuan
  • Chinas Greatest Dynasty? Golden Age?
  • Qin-Han, Sui-Tang

13
Tang Taizong
  • Ambitious, Ruthless, arguably Chinas greatest
    emperor.
  • Believed in a Confucian, Chin, yet benevolent
    state.
  • Stable, peaceful, prosperous

14
Reasons for Tang Success?
  • 1. Well articulated roads and communication
    networks. (Canals)
  • 2. Equal field distribution system of land
    sharing
  • 3. Reliance on a very highly skilled bureaucracy
    governed by a civil service exam.

15
Civil Service Exam
16
Tang Conquest
  • Brought Manchuria, the Silla Kingdom of Korea,
    Vietnam, and as far west as the Aral Sea (Russia)
    under their control.

17
Tang Decline
  • Incapable emperors
  • Dynastic wars (Du Fu)
  • An Lushan Rebellion
  • Talas River Battle of 751
  • Loss of Silk Roads
  • Transfer of Power to Islam
  • Buddhist Crisis of the mid 9th Century.

18
Transition
  • The Late Tang period saw individual armies loyal
    to their warlords dominating Chinese life.
  • Period between the Tang and Song Age saw a return
    to regionalism. With non-Chinese peoples ruling
    North China.
  • 907-960 China was dominated by Political
    Fragmentation and Rivalry.

19
The Song Dynasty
  • Song contradiction
  • Early political stability 960-1127
  • Effective monarchs
  • Civil Bureaucracy
  • Founded by Zhao Guangyin
  • Drunken generals story

20
Song Shortcomings and Decline
  • Military weakness
  • Economic costs of Bureaucracy
  • Taxation issues
  • Peasant woes
  • Rise of nomads-The Khitan, Jurchen, and the
    Mongols

21
Song split
22
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23
Song Demise
  • 1215 lost control to Jin Dynasty
  • Reverted to control Southern China
  • 1279 Southern Song crushed by Mongols.

24
Tang/Song Culture
  • Neo-Confucianism
  • Wang Anshi political and economic innovations
  • Metaphysical (being) school of Zu Xi
  • Good v. Evil Confucian study and Buddhist
    meditation can treat evil.
  • His work will be studied and admired for a
    millenium.

25
Tang/Song Economics
  • Champa Rice
  • Porcelain
  • Metallurgy
  • Paper production
  • Flying Cash
  • Urbanization

26
Japanese Characteristics
  • Geography?
  • Comparison with Greece?
  • Warrior Aristorcarcy
  • Rigid society
  • 5 of the population was slave
  • Hundreds of early political units
  • Clan based society governed by warrior chieftans
  • Early socieity Yamato Clan
  • Religious beliefs Shinto-the Way of the Gods

27
Japan
  • Early Buddhism
  • Deficits of Shinto faith
  • Diffusion of things Chinese
  • Seventeen Article Constitution-Buddhist and
    Confucian document
  • Taika Reforms-attempt to recreate a Confucian
    style system in Japan (Exam, Bureaucracy)

28
Nara Japan (710-794 C.E.)
  • The earliest inhabitants of Japan were nomadic
    peoples from northeast Asia
  • Ruled by several dozen states by the middle of
    the first millennium C.E.
  • Inspired by the Tang example, one clan claimed
    imperial authority over others
  • Built a new capital (Nara) in 710 C.E., modeled
    on Chang'an
  • Adopted Confucianism and Buddhism, but maintained
    their Shinto rites

29
Heian Japan
  • Heian Japan (794-1185 C.E.)
  • Moved to new capital, Heian (modern Kyoto), in
    794
  • Japanese emperors as ceremonial figureheads and
    symbols of authority
  • Effective power in the hands of the Fujiwara
    family
  • Emperor did not rule, which explains the
    longevity of the imperial house
  • Chinese learning dominated Japanese education and
    political thought
  • Buddhism exploded during this time, despite a
    strong reaction against it.

30
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31
Heian Decline
  • Feuds amongst the great families
  • Local ambitions and political division
  • War between the Taira and Minamoto clans
  • Rise of Samurai class
  • Rise of Yorimotoa Minamoto as Shogun (Kamakura
    Shogunate)

32
Japanese Cultural Achievements
  • Began to make their mark in literature.
  • Murasaki Shikibu-a female courtess during the
    Heian Age wrote the Tale of Genji.
  • A story of court life and personality of Japanese
    during the age.
  • First novel in human history

33
Decline of Heian Japan
  • The equal-field system began to fail
  • Aristocratic clans accumulated most land
  • Taira and Minamoto, the two most powerful clans,
    engaged in wars
  • Clan leader of Minamoto claimed title shogun,
    military governor ruled in Kamakura
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