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Copyright © 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. Permission Required for Reproduction or Display. 1 Chapter 15 The Resurgence of Empire in East Asia
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Copyright © 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. Permission Required for Reproduction or Display. 1

Chapter 15

The Resurgence of Empire in East Asia

Copyright © 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. Permission Required for Reproduction or Display. 2

The Sui Dynasty (589-618 CE)

n  Regional kingdoms succeed collapse of Han dynasty

n  Yang Jian consolidates control of all of China, initiates Sui Dynasty

n  Massive building projects q  Military labor q  Conscripted labor

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The Grand Canal

n  Intended to promote trade between north and south China q  Most Chinese rivers flow west-east

n  Linked network of earlier canals q  2000k (1240 miles) q  Roads on either bank

n  Succeeded only by railroad traffic in 20th century

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The Tang Dynasty (618-907 CE)

n  Wide discontent over conscripted labor in Sui dynasty

n  Military failures in Korea prompt rebellion n  Emperor assassinated in 618

q  Tang Dynasty initiated

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Tang Taizong

n  Second emperor of Tang dynasty (r. 627-649 CE) n  Murdered two brothers, thrust father aside to take

throne n  Strong ruler

q  Built capital at Chang’an q  Law and order q  Taxes, prices low q  More effective implementation of earlier Sui policies

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Major achievements of Tang Dynasty n  Transportation and communications

q  Extensive postal, courier services n  Equal-field System

q  20% of land hereditary ownership q  80% redistributed according to formula

n  Family size, land fertility q  Worked well until 8th century

n  Corruption, loss of land to Buddhist monasteries

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Bureaucracy of Merit

n  Imperial civil service examinations q  Confucian educational curriculum

n  Some bribery, nepotism n  But most advance through merit

q  Built loyalty to the dynasty q  System remains strong until early 20th century

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Tang Military Expansion and Foreign Relations n  Manchuria, Korea, Vietnam, Tibet n  One of the largest expansions of China in its

history n  Established tributary relationships

q  Gifts n  China as “Middle Kingdom”

q  The kowtow ritual

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. The Sui and Tang dynasties, 589-907 CE

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Tang Decline

n  Governmental neglect: Emperor obsessed with music, favorite concubine

n  775 rebellion under An Lushan, former military commander

n  Captures Chang’an, but rebellion crushed by 763 n  Nomadic Uighur mercenaries invited to suppress

rebellion, sacked Chang’an and Luoyang n  Tang decline continues, rebellions in 9th century, last

emperor abdicates 907

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Song Dynasty (960-1279 CE)

n  Emphasis on administration, industry, education, the arts

n  Military not emphasized n  Direction of first emperor, Song Taizu (r. 960-976

CE) q  Former military leader q  Made emperor by troops q  Instituted policy of imperial favor for civil servants,

expanded meritocracy

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The Song dynasty, 960-1279 C.E. The Song dynasty, 960-1279 CE

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Song Weaknesses

n  Size of bureaucracy heavy drain on economy q  Two peasant rebellions in 12th c. q  Internal inertia prevents reform of bureaucracy

n  Civil service leadership of military q  Lacked military training q  Unable to contain nomadic attacks q  Jurchen conquer, force Song dynasty to Hangzhou,

southern China (Southern Song)

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Agricultural Economies of the Tang and Song Dynasties n  Developed Vietnamese fast-ripening rice, 2

crops per year n  Technology: iron plows, use of draft animals n  Soil fertilization, improved irrigation

q  Water wheels, canals n  Terrace farming

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Population Growth

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

600CE

1000

Millions

n  Result of increased agricultural production

n  Effective food distribution system q  Transportation networks

built under Tang and Song dynasties

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Urbanization

n  Chang’an world’s most populous city: 2 million residents q  Southern Song capital Hangzhou: over 1 million

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Patriarchal Social Structures

n  Increased emphasis on ancestor worship q  Elaborate grave rituals q  Extended family gatherings in honor of deceased

ancestors

n  Footbinding gains popularity q  Increased control by male family members

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Footbinding

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Technology and Industry

n  Porcelain (“Chinaware”) n  Increase of iron production due to use of coke, not

coal, in furnaces q  Agricultural tools, weaponry

n  Gunpowder invented n  Earlier printing techniques refined

q  Moveable type by mid-11th century q  Yet complex Chinese ideographs make wood block

technique easier n  Naval technology-COMPASS

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Emergence of a Market Economy

n  Letters of credit developed to deal with copper coin shortages q  Promissory notes, checks also used

n  Development of independently produced paper money q  Not as stable, riots when not honored

n  Government claims monopoly on money production in 11th century

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China and the Hemispheric Economy

n  Increasingly cosmopolitan nature of Chinese cities

n  Chinese silk opens up trade routes, but increases local demands for imported luxury goods

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Cultural Change in Tang and Song China n  Declining confidence in Confucianism after

collapse of Han dynasty n  Increasing popularity of Buddhism n  Christianity, Manichaeism, Zoroastrianism, Islam

also appear n  Clientele primarily foreign merchant class

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Dunhuang

n  Mahayana Buddhism especially popular in western China (Gansu province), 600-1000 CE

n  Buddhist temples, libraries n  Economic success as converts donate land

holdings n  Increase popularity through donations of

agricultural produce to the poor

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Conflicts with Chinese Culture

n  Buddhism: q  Text-based (Buddhist

teachings) n  Emphasis on

Metaphysics n  Ascetic ideal

q  Celibacy q  isolation

n  Confucianism: q  Text-based (Confucian

teachings) q  Daoism not text-based

n  Emphasis on ethics, politics

n  Family-centered q  Procreation q  Filial piety

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Chan (Zen) Buddhism

n  Buddhists adapt ideology to Chinese climate q  Dharma translated as dao q  Nirvana translated as wuwei

n  Accommodated family lifestyle q  “one son in monastery for ten generations of salvation”

n  Limited emphasis on textual study, meditation instead

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Persecution of Buddhists

n  Daoist/Confucian persecution supported in late Tang dynasty

n  840s begins systematic closure of Buddhist temples, expulsions q  Zoroastrians, Christians, Manicheans as well

n  Economic motive: seizure of large monastic landholdings

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Neo-Confucianism

n  Song dynasty refrains from persecuting Buddhists, but favors Confucians

n  Neo-Confucians influenced by Buddhist thought

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China and Korea

n  Silla Dynasty: Tang armies withdraw, Korea recognizes Tang as emperor

n  Technically a vassal statue, but highly independent

n  Chinese influence on Korean culture pervasive

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China and Vietnam

n  Vietnamese adaptation to Chinese culture, technology

n  But ongoing resentment at political domination n  Assert independence when Tang dynasty falls in

10th century

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China and Early Japan

n  Chinese armies never invade Japan n  Yet Chinese culture pervasive n  Imitation of Tang administration

q  Establishment of new capital at Nara, hence “Nara Japan” (710-794 CE)

n  Adoption of Confucian, Buddhist teachings n  Yet retention of Shinto religion

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Heian Japan (794-1185 CE)

n  Japanese emperor moves court to Heian (Kyoto) n  Yet emperor figurehead, real power in hands of

Fujiwara clan q  Pattern in Japanese history: weak emperor, power

behind the throne q  Helps explain longevity of the institution

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Japanese Literature

n  Influence of Chinese kanji characters q  Classic curriculum dominated by Chinese

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Institution of the Shogun

n  Civil war between Taira and Minamoto clans in 12th century

n  Minamoto leader named shogun, 1185 CE n  Ruled from Kamakura, allowed imperial throne to

continue in Kyoto

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Medieval Japan

n  Kamakura (1185-1333 CE) and Muromachi (1336-1573 CE) periods

n  Decentralized power in hands of warlords n  Military authority in hands of samurai n  Professional warriors


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