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Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover
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Page 1: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

Postclassical China581-1279 AD…leading up to the

Mongol takeover

Page 2: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

Quick review of Chinese concepts

Confucianism Buddhism Mandate of Heaven Dynastic Cycle Filial piety Ancestor worship

How do all these cultural terms “fit together”?

Page 3: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

I’ve fallen and I can’t get up!

Review with me why Han fell:– Weak rulers– Too big!– Power of government declined– Nobles took more land– Peasant unrest– Nomadic raiders from the North (Xiongnu)– Capital of Lyoyang sacked (can anyone say,

“Rome”?)

Page 4: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

How long between dynasties?

Han dynasty falls apart in 221 CE…

…Sui dynasty doesn’t come to power until 581…

Are there governments during this time?

Page 5: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

ANARCHY IN CHINA Three Kingdoms 220-280

– Shu Han 221 – 263– Wei 220 - 265

Most powerful, eventually conquered Shu Built an army of Chinese infantry and nomadic cavalry as mounted bowmen These assimilated nomads later overthrew Wei and founded own dynasties

– Wu 222 – 280 Jin Dynasty 265-420

– Western Jin 265 – 316 and Eastern Jin 317 – 420 Only time during interregnum when China was united Intermixture of nomads and Chinese accelerated

– Sixteen Kingdoms 304 – 420 Southern and Northern Dynasties 420-589

– Southern Dynasties Liu Song 420 – 479 Southern Qi 479 – 502 Liang 502 - 557 Chen 557 ~589

– Northern Dynasties Later [Northern] Wei 386 – 534 Eastern Wei 534 -550 Western Wei 535 – 556 Northern Qi 550 – 577 Northern Zhou 557 ~581

Period Resembled Western European history after the collapse of the Romans– Disunity and civil war between nomads and Chinese warlords

Rival states, dynasties, each controlling a part of the old Han state Aristocrats, provincial nobles held land and real influence Many of the northern dynasties were nomadic, both Turkish and Mongol Confucianism in decline, Buddhism in ascendancy due to its relationship with the nomads Confucian trained bureaucrats still held much influence

– Common Chinese subject to taxes, warfare, drafting into army, frequent invasions, bandits

Page 6: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.
Page 7: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

SWAY-eet!! 581-618

Followed by 400 years of nothingness…..civil war and fear spread

Finally, in 581, the Sui (SWAY) Dynasty formed– Grand Canal (used forced labor)– Cruel…emperor Sui was murdered– Confucianism regained popularity

Page 8: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.
Page 9: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

Fall of the Sui High taxes Rebellions Military defeats

Page 10: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.
Page 11: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

Oh so Tang!618-907

(sounds like Tong)…like what you use to scoop salad

Formed by a rebel leader Stabilize the economy!- give land to

peasants Reintroduced civil service exam

Page 12: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

Tang Expansion Westward! Where conquest isn’t practical: tribute

Page 13: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

TANG CHINA

Page 14: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.
Page 15: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

Fall of the Tang But very wasteful of empire funds Revolts led to collapse in 907

Page 16: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

TANG ART

Page 18: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

Sing me a Song!960-1279

(sounds like “Soong”) Great advances were made in the areas of

technology and material production:– gunpowder as a weapon– steel– Chinese had the best ships in the world– the famous blue and white porcelain was created– Woodblock printing

Page 19: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.
Page 20: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

Fall of the Song Problems with Northern neighbors…

Mongolian barbeque anyone? By the late 1200s, the Mongols had

taken over China and then some

Page 21: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.
Page 22: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

THE SONG ARTISTIC WORLD

Page 23: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.
Page 24: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.
Page 25: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

Common themes in postclassical China

Page 26: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

Life after the fall of the Han

Still based on Confucius Still a monarchy (Mandate of Heaven) Still a large and strong economy Still farmers (mostly) NOT like Europe’s economy (no feudalism…

the govt. fought against large landowners…but like feudalism in that few people ever left their village)

Where would you have rather lived? Feudal Europe, or in China? Why?

Page 27: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

A MARKET ECONOMY Merchants in Charge

– Only period in China where merchants socially superior to aristocrats

– Merchants attempted to intermarry with aristocrats, become landowners

– Merchants attempted to have sons admitted as Confucian bureaucratsMost large cities had large merchant communities

Financial instruments– Banking and credit institution– “Flying money " were letters of credit– Paper money backed by state, treasury

A cosmopolitan society– Foreign merchants in large cities of China– Mostly Arab (Muslim), Indian, S.E. Asian– Chinese merchants journeyed throughout region

Economic surge in China – An economic revolution in China– Made China the wealthiest nation in the world at time– Promoted economic growth in the eastern hemisphere

Page 28: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

TECHNOLOGY & INDUSTRY Porcelain

– High quality porcelain since the Tang, known as chinaware – Technology diffused to other societies, especially to Abbasid Arabia – Exported vast quantities to southeast Asia, India, Persia, and Africa

Metallurgy – Improvement: used coke instead of coal in furnaces to make iron, steel – Iron production increased tenfold between the early 9th and 12th century

Gunpowder – Discovered by Daoist alchemists during the Tang – Bamboo "fire lances," a kind of flame thrower, and primitive bombs – Gunpowder chemistry diffused throughout Eurasia

Printing – Became common during the Tang – From block-printing to movable type – Books became widespread

Naval technology– "South-pointing needle" - the magnetic compass– Double hulled junks with rudder, water-tight compartments

Page 29: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

Marco? Polo!! Marco Polo, an Italian merchant, visited

Hangzhou in the 1200s, and was really impressed-called it “paradise”

How did Marco Polo lead to more trade in Europe?

Anyone for a game of chess?

Page 30: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

I am amazing.Look at all the

Places I’ve been!

Marco Polo and his travels

Page 31: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

Confucianism Confucianism did not recognize the military

as being part of the four official classes of occupations– So: the military consisted of either the poor,

uneducated peasants, mercenaries or allies. It emphasized self-cultivation as a path not

only to self-fulfillment but to the formation of a virtuous and harmonious society and state.

How is this different than religion in Europe after the fall of Rome?

Page 32: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

Buddhism Came from India originally Buddhism was widespread among

both commoners and the elite Criticized as a “foreign religion”

Page 33: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

Summary of government structure

Monarch Provinces Districts Villages Confucian ideals held it all together

Page 34: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.
Page 35: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

Foot Binding Began by the 12th century It was done to women by women, with tools made

by women Seen as a sign of beauty and also as a status

symbol, also used to impress men Girls began foot binding when

boys went to school, socialization Separated men and women

Like Yin and Yang Confined women to the home

Page 36: Postclassical China 581-1279 AD…leading up to the Mongol takeover.

Other signs of patriarchy Female infanticide Selling girls to rich families