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Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River
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Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

Dec 18, 2015

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Page 1: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

Geography and Early China

Chinese civilization began with the Shang

dynasty along the Huang He River

Page 2: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.
Page 3: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

Geography and Early ChinaThe Big Idea

Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He.

Main Ideas

• China’s physical geography made farming possible but travel and communication difficult.

• Civilization began in China along the Huang He and Chang Jiang rivers.

• China’s first dynasties helped Chinese society develop and made many other achievements.

Page 4: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

US – China locational Comparison

Page 5: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.
Page 6: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

Much of China is mountainous.

Page 7: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

China’s landscape is covered with mountains.

Page 8: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

The Yellow Mountains

Page 9: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

Varied Landscape

• China covers an area of almost 4 million square miles.

• The Gobi desert lies in the north.

• Low-lying plains in the east make up one of the world’s largest farming areas.

• Mountain ranges lie in the west, including the Plateau of Tibet and the Qinling Shandi. There was limited contact between people in the east and west.

• The weather and temperature vary from cold and dry to wet and humid, and monsoons can bring up to 250 inches of rain each year.

Physical Geography

Page 10: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

The Gobi Desert spreads over much of northern China.

Page 11: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

The Gobi Desert separates China from its neighbors.

Page 12: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

The Tibetan Plateau is “The Roof

of the World.” It

is here that the Huang He River begins its 3000 mile trip across Northern

China.

Page 13: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

Huang He

•Also called the Yellow River

•Nearly 3,000 miles long across northern China

•Often floods, and has been referred to as “China’s sorrow” because of the destruction

Chang Jiang

•The longest river in Asia; also called the Yangzi River

•Flows across central China from Tibet to the Pacific Ocean

Two Rivers of China

Page 14: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

HUANG HE RIVERHUANG HE RIVER

The Huang He is 3,000 miles The Huang He is 3,000 miles long and spreads enough silt long and spreads enough silt to create one of the world’s to create one of the world’s largest deltas, and miles of largest deltas, and miles of

fertile farmland.fertile farmland.

Page 15: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

The Huang has been a major force in China’s history. Around 4000

B.C. farming communities developed and grew to include many

regions.

Page 16: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

The Yangzi or Chang Jiang River cuts through central China, flowing from Tibet

to the Pacific Ocean.

Page 17: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

The Chang Jiang is the longest river in Asia.

Page 18: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

When the Huang floods the North China Plain, the silt creates fertile farmland. But

strong winds blow across the Huang He Valley, carrying away the loess, and turning

the soil poor.

Page 19: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

China’s farmers fought to control the river’s floods, so that their fields

were not washed away. Farmers built levees, or walls to keep a river within

its banks.

Page 20: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

Like the Sumerians, Chinese farmers built canals to bring water to their fields. But loess clogged the canals and had to be

cleared away.

Page 21: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

Farmers often planted crops on terraced hillsides.

Page 22: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

Huang Valley farmers were very successful.

Page 23: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

Huang farmers grew many kinds of plants.

Page 24: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

When trees were cleared from land for farming, erosion occurred. Erosion is the wearing away of soil by wind or water.

If too much soil washes away,

famine can occur.

Page 25: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

Not all of China was suitable for farming. Growing crops was

difficult on the steppes. A steppe is a dry, treeless plain.

Page 26: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

Farming

Early Settlements

• Frequent flooding made the land fertile around the Chang Jiang and Huang He rivers.

• Along with farming, the Chinese people hunted, fished, and domesticated animals.

• Some small villages along the rivers grew into larger cities.

• Separate cultures developed in the north and the south. Over time people learned to dig wells and use potter’s wheels.

• Findings at burial sites suggest that the ancient Chinese believed in an afterlife and had a complex social order.

Civilization Begins

Page 27: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

3000 B.C. Painted pottery

and other artifacts

have been found at

Yangshao, Longshan and other

places.

Page 28: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

The Xia dynasty might have been founded around 2200 BC, by Yu the Great.

Tales say that Yu dug channels to drain floodwaters and created the major waterways of North China.

Archaeologists have no firm evidence that tales about the Xia dynasty are true.

Xia dynasty

Page 29: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

A dynasty is a line of rulers who belong to the same family. Control is passed from one

generation to the next.

Page 30: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

Established by 1500 BC, the Shang was the first dynasty that there is clear evidence to support.

The Shang reorganized the social order in China: the top ranking was the royals, then nobles, warriors, artisans, farmers, and slaves.

Most citizens lived within the city walls.

Many cultural advances were made, including China’s first writing system, complex tools, metal pots, and ornaments.

Shang dynasty

Page 31: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.
Page 32: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

By 1700 B.C., one kingdom, the

Shang, won control along the Huang He delta. For 600 years,

the Shang Dynasty shaped the lives of the

people along the Huang He.

Page 33: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

Towns were important centers of

production. They supplied food,

clothing, and other products for the king. Towns kept enemies

away from Shang lands. People served as soldiers and went to war when needed.

Page 34: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

After 600 years the capital was moved to Anyang. Writing on

bones discovered by archaeologists, led to the discovery of this city. Ruins show that Shang society included a king, his family, nobles, craftworkers, farmers, and

prisoners of war.

Page 35: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

Archaeologists uncovered

bronze cups, stone carvings

and magnificent chariots found in

royal tombs.

Page 36: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

A writing system developed along

parts of the Huang He. Early signs

looked like pictures. By the time of the

Shang dynasty, characters were

simpler, and could stand for objects or ideas. Many records

were written on bamboo and silk

and did not survive.

Page 37: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.
Page 38: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

More writing has been

discovered on “dragon bones”

found at Anyang. Most of these were

cattle bones or turtle shells. Special priests

would heat the oracle bones until they cracked. The

pattern of the cracks was used to answer questions about the future.

Page 39: Geography and Early China Chinese civilization began with the Shang dynasty along the Huang He River.

The Shang believed their ancestors lived in another

world and controlled human

life. The Shang worshiped many

gods and believed these gods

controlled nature. They believed that

when they died, they would join

their ancestors and the gods.