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Tang and Song Dynasties

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Tang and Song Dynasties Reunification and Renaissance in Chinese Civilization FORMS OF CREDIT Deposit shops (early banks) emerged in many parts of the empire PAPER ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Tang and Song Dynasties


1
Tang and Song Dynasties
  • Reunification and Renaissance in Chinese
    Civilization

2
SUI ERA 6TH CENTURY CE
  • Marked return to strong dynastic control in China
  • Wendi seized son-in-laws throne
  • Supported by neighboring nomadic commanders
  • Reunited core areas of China after three and a
    half centuries
  • Won widespread support

3
  • Yangdi seized the throne by murdering his father
  • extended fathers conquests
  • Pushed back northern invaders
  • legal and educational reforms
  • weakness for luxury
  • unpopular wars
  • Assassinated by his own ministers in 618

4
TANG DYNASTY
  • Importance of Li Yuan Founded Golden Age
  • Expanded Chinese territory larger than Han
  • Rebuilt the bureaucracy
  • Revived the scholar-gentry
  • Confucian exams
  • Ideological basis for centralized government

5
Religion in Tang and Song Empires
  • Tang Dynasty and Buddhism
  • Buddhism had royal patronage and widespread
    conversion
  • Emperors began limiting the flow of land and
    resources to monasteries
  • Buddhists were persecuted
  • Focus on Confucianism threatened old aristocratic
    families and Buddhism

6
Decline of the Tang
  • Empress Wei tried to establish a second dynasty
  • Overthrown by a palace revolt led by another
    prince
  • Emperor Xuanzong (713-756) marked the peak of
    Tang dynasty
  • Initially supported political and economic
    reforms
  • His later actions increased economic distress,
    discontent, and military weakness
  • Rebellion against the Tang failed, but weakened
    the dynasty
  • Tang made alliances with northern nomads

7
  • Many provincial governors became independent
    rulers
  • 9th century Succession of revolts led by
    peasants
  • 907 Last Tang emperor was forced to resign

8
Founding of the Song Dynasty
  • 960 Strong military commander emerged to
    reunite China under a single dynasty
  • Emperor Taizu founded the Song, which
    lasted for three centuries
  • Never matches the Tang Dynasty in political or
    military strength
  • In part, this was because the Song changed
    Chinese systems to ensure that they wouldnt fall
    like the Tang had

9
  • Promoted interests of scholar-gentry
  • Civil service exams were fully routinized
  • Bureaucracy soon had too many well-paid officials
    with little to do
  • Revival of Confucian ideas and values
    (Neo-Confucianism)
  • Reinforced class, age, and gender distinctions
  • Hostility towards Buddhism
  • Stifled critical thinking and innovation

10
Song Decline
  • Nomadic groups carved out
    kingdoms on the northern border
  • Peasant taxation increased
  • Armies were large but commanders werent the best
    possible leaders
  • 1070s and 1080s Introduced sweeping reforms in
    an effort to keep the empire from collapsing
  • Neo-Confucianists came to power and reversed the
    previous policies

11
  • Northern nomads began taking more Song land
  • Songs had to flee to the south
  • Empire survived for another century and a half

12
Contributions of the Tang and Song
  • Construction
  • Canal building (Grand Canal)
  • Helped transport goods and collect taxes
  • 1200 miles long, 40 paces wide, with tree lined
    highways on each side

13
  • Commercial Expansion
  • Conquests and canals promoted commercial
    expansion
  • Tang control in Asia helped reopen and protect
    the Silk Roads between China and Persia
  • Increased international contacts
  • China imported luxury products and exported
    manufactured goods
  • Chinese merchants began taking goods to others
    instead of waiting for the goods to come to them
  • Chinese junks

14
  • There were market quarters in every city
  • Increase in forms of credit available
  • Use of paper money
  • Surge in urban growth

15
  • Expanding agrarian production
  • People moved south to fertile river valleys
  • Supported by rulers of both dynasties
  • State created irrigation and embankment systems
  • New seeds and methods increased production
  • Aristocratic lands were divided up amongst free
    farmers

16
Family and Society during the Tang and Song Era
  • Position of women initially improved
  • Tang women could exercise considerable power at
    the highest levels of Chinese society
  • Patriarchal society encouraged by Confucius
    remained
  • Elaborate system of arranged marriages
  • Divorce was allowed by mutual consent
  • Position of women declined under the Song
    (neo-Confucians)

17
  • Foot binding

18
Inventions and the Arts
  • New tools, production techniques, and weapons
    spread to other civilizations and fundamentally
    changed the course of human development
  • Inventions
  • Banks and paper money
  • Dams, dikes, and bridges
  • Explosive powder and weapons
  • Compasses
  • Abacus
  • Printing with moveable type

19
  • Arts
  • Scholar-gentry was responsible for most artistic
    and literary creativity
  • Confucian and Buddhist art and poetry were
    important
  • Tang Short stories and poems
  • Song Landscape paintings
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