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Tradition and Change in East Asia

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Chapter 27 Tradition and Change in East Asia 1368 - 1795 Effect of Europeans Unlike Africa and the Americas, E. Asian societies controlled their own destinies until 1800. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Tradition and Change in East Asia


1
Chapter 27
  • Tradition and Change in East Asia
  • 1368 - 1795

2
Effect of Europeans
  • Unlike Africa and the Americas, E. Asian
    societies controlled their own destinies until
    1800.
  • China remains leading economic powerhouse
  • In 17th and 18th centuries Tokugawa shogunate
    unifies Japan and lays groundwork for economic
    growth

3
East Asia Benefits from long distance trade
  • Silver
  • American plant crops

4
Quest for Political Stability China
  • Ming Dynasty 1368-1644
  • Qing Dynasty 1644-1911
  • Revive Confucian traditions with bureaucracy
    staffed by successful takers of civil service exam

5
Early 1400s under Yongle
  • Voyages of Zheng He
  • Yongles successors halt expensive voyages -
    Mongol threat, perhaps bureaucrats jealous
  • 1500s build Great Wall
  • Corrupt government toward end of Ming Era,
    eunuchs with too much power makes enemies of
    bureaucrats and leads to peasant revolts

6
Qing Dynasty
  • Ruled by Manchus (pastoral nomads)
  • Forbid Chinese learning Manchurian and make men
    wear Manchu queue as sign of submission

7
2 Great leaders Kangxi 1662-1722 Qianlong
1736-1795
  • Kangxi - Confucian scholar applies Confucian
    teaching through policies such as flood control
    irrigation thus helping welfare of the people and
    promoting agriculture
  • Also conquers Taiwan and parts of Mongolia

8
Qianlong
  • Makes Vietnam, Burma Nepal vassal states
  • His encyclopedia compendium of knowledge
  • Toward the end he gives too much responsibility
    to his favorite eunuchs and hunting and the harem
    become too important

9
Son of Heaven and Scholar Bureaucrats
  • Tightly centralized state
  • Scholar bureaucrats appointed by emperor govern
  • Exams based on Confucian learning key to upward
    mobility - open to all males. It does help if
    you are from gentry

10
Family Clan life hierarchal, Patriarchic
authoritarian
  • Veneration of ancestors
  • Filial piety
  • Chastity of widows
  • Infanticide of females
  • Foot binding

11
Prosperity
  • Increased farm yields - American food
  • Population boom
  • Global trade brings prosperity - China imports
    are few and silver influx is great

12
Limit activities of foreign merchants
  • Portugese on Macau British Guangzhou (see
    Qianlongs response to George III on p.736)
  • Discourage large scale commercial ventures of
    Chinese merchants such as Dutch VOC or EEIC

13
Economic Expansion without Innovation
  • Tang Song flood of innovation encouraged by
    government, now government more worried about
    stability. Primary concern is to preserve
    stability of large agrarian society not to
    promote rapid economic development thought trade

14
Social structure
  • Emperor
  • Gentry scholar bureaucrats/gentry - distinctive
    clothing, immune to corporal punishment, labor
    service taxes
  • Peasants
  • Artisans
  • Workers
  • Merchants social parasites - little legal
    protections BUT bribery and profit sharing with
    gentry in warehousing, money lending and pawn
    broking

15
New Old Culture
  • Neo Confucianism as articulate by 12th century
    scholar Zhu Xi
  • Urban popular culture made possible by printing -
    novels
  • Catholic Missionaries - Jesuit Matteo Ricci -
    make only small number of conversions due to
    exclusive nature of Christianity

16
Unification of Japan
  • Tokugawa Dynasty late 16th - early 17th century
  • Also use neo Confucianism and tightly restrict
    foreign influence

17
16th Century civil war - sengoku
  • 1600 - 1867 (Meijii Restoration) Tokugawa
    Shogunate rules
  • Also use term bakufu (tent government)
  • Have to control Daimyo (have vast territories)
    use policy of alternate attendance

18
Edicts against Europeans 1630s
  • Fear European alliances with daimyo and
    possibility of being conquered like the
    Philippines
  • Controls trade with Asian nations (still goes on)
    and limits Dutch to Nagasaki

19
Economic and Social Change
  • Agriculture increases - new crop strains, new
    water control, use of fertilizer increase in
    production of silk, indigo,sake and cotton
  • Brings rapid demographic growth BUT 1700 - 1850
    Demographic Transition. Limits in land
    available. Contraception, late marriage,
    thinning out the rice shoots

20
Push Daimyo and Samurai to become bureaucrats
  • Some slide into debt to rice brokers - definitely
    lose status.

21
As China merchants increasingly wealthy and
prominent
  • Rice dealers, pawnbrokers and sake merchants
    control more wealth than the ruling elites -
    some purchase elite status.

22
Culture
  • Like Ming Qing, Neo Confucianism is promoted
  • 18th century native learning - scorns
    Confucianism Buddhism as alien insist on
    importance of folk tradition and Shinto religion.
    Xenophobic
  • Urban culture centers floating worlds -prose
    and theater - Kabuki and raku

23
Anti Christian Campaign 1587 - 1639
  • Rulers fear religion can create cultural bridge
    with Daimyo.
  • Buddhist and Confucian scholars resent due to
    claim it is the only true doctrine

24
Dutch and other learning
  • Astronomy, medical and scientific literature
    translated into Japanese
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