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Chinese Civilization

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Title: Chinese Civilization


1
Chinese Civilization
  • Institutions, World Views, and Significance, 2205
    B. C. E. - 1644

2
Generalizations About Chinese Civilization
  • Powerful Central Authorityemperor
  • Veneration of Ancestors
  • Beginning w/ Han Dynasty, Confucianism is
    official governing philosophy
  • Chinese citizens mix Confucian beliefs with
    Taoism
  • Perennial problemsfood production, invasion, and
    internal strife

3
Cradle of Chinese Civilization
  • Huang Ho (Yellow River) is cradle of
    civilizationalso termed River of Sorrowsits
    floods destroy even as they give livelihood.
  • Millet cultivation stone tools emergent
    urbanization.
  • Three cultural heroes Fu Hsiinvented writing
    Shen Nungfarming and commerce Yellow
    Emperorgovernment and Taoism

4
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5
Huang Ho River
6
Sage Kings 2350-2205
  • Yao (decorum), Shun (order), and Yo (battling
    floods)
  • May not have been historical but were seen as
    especially virtuous
  • Perceived pattern in Chinese historywise rule
    and order followed by period of moral laxity,
    decline, decadence, and disorder
  • Chinese history would emphasize public
    virtueobedience to a wise emperor

7
Xia Dynasty2205-1766
  • Monarchy as form of government
  • Incorporation of surrounding states
  • Expansion from North to South

8
Shang Dynasty1766-1050
  • First historical dynasty.
  • Development of Writing
  • Bronze age civilization along Huang Ho
  • Reading of oracle bones
  • Emergence of Tien conceptheavenwhere God and
    ancestors dwelled.

9
Shang Oracle Bones
10
Chou Dynasty1050-221 B. C. E.
  • Development of Tien Ming or Mandate of Heaven
  • Myth of Legitimacyhow to justify overthrowing of
    Shang
  • Central authority weakened in Spring and Autumn
    periods771-401 b. c. e.and collapse of order in
    Period of Warring States401-256 B. C. E.
  • Ironic contribution of Chou dynasty was providing
    incentive to develop classical philosophy in
    China.

11
Classical Chinese Philosphy
  • Confucianism
  • Taoism
  • Legalism

12
Confucianism
  • Kung Fu-tzu (Confucius) 551 B. C. E.-479 B. C.
    E.
  • Public order comes from jen or humane behavior
    between people.
  • Superiors should govern well
  • Inferiors should obey
  • Shureciprocity and chungdoing ones best
  • Rectification of Names

13
Sayings from the Analects 1
  • Fan-ch'ih asked about jen. The Master said, "It
    is to love all men." He asked about knowledge.
    "It is to know all men." Fan ch'ih did not
    immediately understand these answers. The Master
    said, "Employ the upright and put aside all the
    crooked in this way, the crooked can be made to
    be upright."
  • Tzu-kung asked, saying, "Is there one world which
    may serve as a rule of practice for all one's
    life?" The Master said, "Is not reciprocity such
    a word? What you do not want done to yourself, do
    not do to others."

14
Sayings from the Analects 2
  • The Master said, "With coarse rice to eat, with
    water to drink, and my bended arm for a pillow I
    still have joy in the midst of these things.
    Riches and honors acquired by inhumanity are to
    me as a floating cloud."
  • The Master said, "The determined scholar and the
    man of virtue will not seek to live at the
    expense of humanity. They will even sacrifice
    their lives to preserve their humanity."
  • The Master said, "The superior man in everything
    considers righteousness to be essential. He
    performs it according to the rules of propriety
    (li ). He brings it forth in humility. He
    completes it with sincerity. This is indeed a
    superior man."
  • The Master said, "The object of the superior man
    is truth, not food. . . . The superior man is
    anxious lest he should not get truth he is not
    anxious lest poverty should come upon him."

15
Social Order and Confucius
  • Rule of reciprocity promoted both order and
    disorderpresumably an evil ruler or an
    ineffective husband could be disobeyed.
  • See Ban Zhao, Lessons for a Woman
  • She accepts some subservience and humility but
    also believes in the balance of Yin/Yangnot the
    dominance of Yang

16
Taoism
  • Based on ideas of Lao Tzu
  • Taothe way of heavenunity
  • Balance of yang (malenesscold, heaven) and yin
    (femaleness, warm, earth)
  • Government should guide people, not rule them.

17
Legalism
  • Founded by Hsun Tzu (298-238 B. C. E.)
  • People are evil and must be controlled through
    harsh laws.
  • Reward good deeds, punish bad deeds severely.
  • Utilitarianismmeant that government would
    encourage agriculture over other pursuits
  • Rule of Lawlaw is supremeand law is standard in
    entire realm (two ideas that persist in Chinese
    state)

18
Qin Dynasty (221-206 B. C. E.)
  • Officially legalist
  • Standardized form of govt.
  • Ended period of warring states
  • Began Great Wall of China
  • Extended Chinas boundaries to the south

19
Great Wall of china
20
Han Dynasty ( 202 B. C. E. -220 C. E.
  • Officially Confucian
  • Scholar bureaucrats educated in Confucian
    classics govern china on a day to day basis.
  • Han Wu Ti (r. 141-86) extended China from Korea
    to Vietnam
  • Wang Mang (9-23) overthrew corrupt Han but was
    soon ousted by peasants who were then ousted by
    the nobles.
  • Conquests of later Han opened up the Silk Roads
    to Mediterranean

21
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22
Tang Dynasty (618-907)
  • Followed Three Kingdoms Period (220-589) and Sui
    Dynasty (589-618)
  • Chinese government recentralized under emperor
    and three key ministers (but local landlords
    retained a great deal of power).
  • Empress Wu (684-705) relied on Confucian
    bureaucrats and used military to extend
    boundaries of China.
  • Her own Buddhist beliefs added Buddhist tradition
    to China.
  • Great cosmopolitan cultural flowering facilitated
    with contracts from Asia and even Europe

23
Sung (960-1279)
  • Emperors power restored
  • Confucian bureaucrats pre-eminent
  • Wang An-shih (1068-85)new lawsmaximum prices on
    grain tax equity non-nobles could take
    Confucian exams. (Greatest example of Confucian
    Scholar Bureaucrat)
  • Neo-Confucianism

24
Yuan Dynasty (1280-1386)
  • Established by descendants of Genghis Khan.
  • Mongols ruled through Chinese Scholar Bureaucrats
  • Paper currency
  • Trade w/ EuropeMarco Polo (1275-1292)
  • Pax Sinatica

25
Kublai Khan (1215-1294)
26
Ming (1369-1644)
  • Chinese cultural superiority
  • Great porcelain ware
  • Later Ming rulers were decadent and China began
    to lose its cultural superiority.
  • Confucianism becomes rigid and less a guide to
    practical and effective governing.

27
Ming Vase
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