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Ming and Qing Dynasties
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Ming and Qing Dynasties

Jan 08, 2016

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Ming and Qing Dynasties. Mandate of Heaven. The right to rule is granted by Heaven. There is only one Heaven therefore there can be only one ruler. The right to rule is based on the virtue of the ruler. The right to rule is not limited to one dynasty. Last 3 Dynasties (Beijing). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Ming and Qing Dynasties

Ming and Qing Dynasties

Page 2: Ming and Qing Dynasties

Mandate of Heaven

The right to rule is granted by Heaven. There is only one Heaven therefore there can be only one ruler.

The right to rule is based on the virtue of the ruler. The right to rule is not limited to one dynasty.

Page 3: Ming and Qing Dynasties

Last 3 Dynasties (Beijing)

• Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368)– Mongolian– north of China proper

• Ming Dynasty (1368-1644)– Han Chinese

• Qing Dynasty (1644-1911)– Manchu– northeast of China proper

Page 4: Ming and Qing Dynasties

Confucian culture

• modern concept of political nation state

• Chinese defined by Confucian culture

• Civil service exam (605-1905)– social mobility– reward diligence, discipline, and willpower, but

not talent or innovation

• law of avoidance

• “sum of social relationships”

Page 5: Ming and Qing Dynasties

Social hierarchy and mobility

• scholar-officials, farmers, artisans, and merchants

• scholar-official-landlord– learning, political power, and economic wealth

• local elite (gentry) and lineage

• lack of work ethic– literati’s long gown– foot-binding for women

Page 6: Ming and Qing Dynasties

Ming Dynasty (1368 - 1644)

Page 7: Ming and Qing Dynasties

China’s Tributary System• Traditional system for managing foreign

relations

• The ``Central Kingdom” worldview

• Ming dynasty had the most extensive tributary system– tributes from East Asia, South Asia, Southeast

Asia, and even West Asia and Africa

Page 8: Ming and Qing Dynasties

Zheng He’s fleet (1405 - 1433)

• Over 300 ships & 20,000 men

• trade and commerce

• Southeast Asia, South Asia, West Asia, and East Africa

Page 9: Ming and Qing Dynasties

Zheng He’s expeditions

Page 10: Ming and Qing Dynasties

European Ships Seek Out China

• High Grade Blue and White Porcelain (“China”

• Silk• Cotton • Tea• Literature and Art

flourished

Page 11: Ming and Qing Dynasties

Ming Collapse

• “Little Ice Age”- Agricultural distress and famine

• Ming did not want to advance the economy

• Corruption rampant

Page 12: Ming and Qing Dynasties

Qing Dynasty (1644 - 1912)• Ming dynasty fell in 1644 amid peasant

uprisings, Japanese invasion, and Manchu invasion

• Manchu and Han Chinese

Page 13: Ming and Qing Dynasties

Ming and Qing Emperors

Kangxi: child Emperor in 1662, died in 1722. His rule was highlighted by expansion and great stability

Page 14: Ming and Qing Dynasties
Page 15: Ming and Qing Dynasties

Tea and Diplomacy

• Controlled trade: Europeans could only trade at Canton

• English had not found a product to sell to China (fearful after loss of American colonies) a good market to sell into! (Lots of people!)

• Silver paid for tea an other goods- why?

Page 16: Ming and Qing Dynasties

Situation:

• Macartney Mission: GB’s desire to trade with the Qing

• China and Macartney unfamiliar with customs

• On Emperor Qianlong’s 80th birthday Macartney refuse to kowtow, but bowed on one knee, was he would to George III

• Qianlong welcomed him, but refuse to alter the Canton trading arrangement (frustration with the Qing)

Page 17: Ming and Qing Dynasties

Emperor & Macartney (1793)

Page 18: Ming and Qing Dynasties

Population and Social Stress

• Under the Qing, China’s population grows 3x its size in 1500 (350million in the late 1700s, 2x population of all of Europe)

• Problems of population growth?

• 2x the size of the Ming, but the same number of officials