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AP World History Chapter 12

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AP World History Chapter 12 The Era of the Tang and Song Dynasties * Sui Dynasty Wendi Nobleman Victory over Chen united traditional Chinese Core. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: AP World History Chapter 12


1
AP World HistoryChapter 12
  • The Era of the Tang and Song Dynasties

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Sui Dynasty
  • Wendi
  • Nobleman
  • Victory over Chen united traditional Chinese
    Core.
  • Built grain bins for storing grain.
  • Lowered taxes and built massive canals.
  • Leads nomadic leaders to control northern China
  • 589, defeat of Chen kingdom
  • Yangdi Emperor (killed his dad and gets killed by
    his minister)
  • Established milder legal code
  • Upgraded Confucian education and restored
    examination system.
  • Extravagant living and building led to social
    upheaval. (plus making worn out soldiers go get
    Korea)
  • Sets up new capital at Loyang

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Tang Dynasty
  • Dynastic system saved by Li Yuan (Duke of Tang)
  • Son, Tang Taizong, is given throne next
  • Extended boarder to Afghanistan.
  • Continued the re-building of the Great Wall.
  • Moved capital to Changan
  • Re-building of the bureaucracy.
  • Aristocracy weakened
  • Confucian ideology revised
  • Scholar-gentry elite reestablished
  • Bureaucracy
  • Bureau of Censors
  • Examination system bigger than ever before
  • Ministry of Rites
  • jinshi

6
Confucianism and Buddhism
  • Confucianism and Buddhism potential rivals
  • Buddhism had been central
  • Mahayana (Pure Land) Buddhism popular in era of
    turmoil
  • Chan (Zen) Buddhism common among elite
  • Early Tang support Buddhism
  • Empress Wu (690-705)
  • Endows monasteries
  • Tried to make Buddhism the state religion
  • 50,000 monasteries by c. 850

7
The Anti-Buddhist Backlash
  • Confucians in administration
  • Support taxation of Buddhist monasteries
  • Persecution under Emperor Wuzong (841-847)
  • Monasteries destroyed
  • Lands redistributed
  • Confucian emerges the central ideology

8
Tang Decline
  • 755 CE, Revolts
  • Ineffective leaders (Empress Wei) (Xuanzong
    hearts Yang Guifei)
  • Frontier boarders raided
  • Corrupt government officials
  • 907 CE, last Tang emperor resigns

9
Song Dynasty
  • Song founded in 960 C.E (Zhao Kuangyin aka Honest
    Abe who collected books rather than booty)
  • Zhao is renamed Taizu
  • Song unable to defeat northern nomads.
  • Song paid tribute to Liao
  • Founded by Khitan people/Manchuria

10
Song Politics
  • Settling for Partial Restoration
  • Scholar-gentry patronized
  • Given power over military
  • The Revival of Confucian Thought
  • Libraries established
  • Old texts recovered
  • Neo-confucians
  • Stress on personal morality
  • Zhu Xi (apply philosophy to every day life)
  • Importance of philosophy in everyday life
  • Hostility to foreign ideas
  • Gender, class, age distinctions reinforced

11
Roots of Decline Attempts at Reform
  • Khitan independence encourages others
  • Tangut, Tibet
  • Xi Xia kingdom
  • Song pay tribute
  • Wang Anshi (aka FDR
  • Confucian scholar, chief minister
  • Reforms
  • Legalist enthusiasm
  • Cheap loans/govt assistance
  • Taxed the scholars
  • Expanded military and agriculture
  • Tried to change education system
  • When his emperor dies, he is out

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Southern Song Dynasty
  • Jurchens defeat Liao in the North
  • 1115, found Jin kingdom
  • Invade China
  • Southern Song Dynasty
  • New capital at Hangzhou
  • Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279)

15
Tang and Song Prosperity The Basis of a Golden
Age
  • Canal system
  • Built to accommodate population shift
  • Yangdi's Grand Canal (links China across the
    Noodle LIne
  • Links North to South
  • Silk routes reopened
  • Greater contact with Buddhist, Islamic regions
  • Sea trade
  • Developed by late Tang, Song
  • Junks (with gun powder rockets!)
  • Commerce expands
  • Credit
  • Deposit shops (banks)
  • Flying money
  • Urban growth
  • Changan
  • Tang capital/2 million
  • Hangzhou
  • Song capital
  • Marco Polos favorite

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Tang and Song Prosperity The Basis of a Golden
Age
  • Expanding Agrarian Production and Life in the
    Country
  • New areas cultivated
  • Canals help transport produce
  • Aristocratic estates
  • Divided among peasants
  • Scholar-gentry replace aristocracy
  • Family and Society in the Tang-Song Era
  • Great continuity
  • Marriage brokers
  • Elite women have broader opportunities
  • Empresses Wu, Wei
  • Divorce widely available

17
The Neo-Confucian Assertion of Male Dominance
  • Neo-Confucians reduce role of women
  • Confinement
  • Men allowed great freedom
  • Men favored in inheritance, divorce
  • Women not educated
  • Foot binding

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Glorious Age Conclusion
  • Invention and Artistic Creativity
  • Influence over neighbors
  • Economy stimulated by advances in farming,
    finance
  • bridges
  • Explosives and projectiles (Used by Song for
    armaments)
  • Chairs used in household
  • Tea as a common drink
  • Compasses, abacus
  • Bi Sheng
  • Printing with moveable type
  • Scholarly Refinement and Artistic Accomplishment
  • Scholar-gentry key
  • Change from Buddhist artists
  • Secular scenes more common
  • Li Bo
  • Poet
  • Nature a common theme in poetry, art
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