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Chapter 11 State Power and Expanding Networks of Exchange Panorama Conceptual Questions • How did the rise of the Abbasid Caliphate and other Muslim states between the 8th and 10th centuries contribute to the emergence of new Afroeurasian cultural tradition centered on Islam? • What part did maritime commerce play in the development of states and cities along the chain of seas extending from the Arabian Sea to the Sea of Japan between 750-1000 • How did agrarian people living in the Mediterranean region and West Africa become linked together in a network of commercial and cultural exchange between the 7-10th centuries? • How did invasions and migrations between the 7-9th centuries affect Europe’s struggle for political and economic stability? Islamic Transition of power – Umayyad to Abbasids • The Umayyads were able to unite the Bedouin nomadic peoples into an extremely strong military force. • The Byzantine Empire, Sasanids, and weakened Germanic groups around the Mediterranean couldn’t compete with this force…so why then did it fall just as quickly as it arose? 661-750 • A new group, the Abbasids-related to the Prophet himself-began to take advantage of local rebellions that cost the Umayyads much financially and militarily Umayyad Fall • Rulers also became more concerned with luxury and the good life. Caliph’s had very large harems! • Instead of fighting in the early 8th century these caliph retreated to their palaces to live it up. Muhammad advocated frugal and simple lives. Began to alienated Muslims. • Warriors began settling and marrying locals. They became angry b/c of being governed by a caliph so far away and they were not getting a cut of the booty. Booty comes from the acquisition of new lands and the empire had stopped growing by the end of the Umayyad period. • Umayyads were seen as corrupt and decadent. • Many warriors settled in the oasis town of Merv. In 740 the Umayyads tried to introduce new troops here which sparked a revolt… Fall • The revolt spread! • By 747 Frontier warriors challenged the Umayyads under the banner of the Abbasids. Muhammads uncle, al-Abbas (descendants) • Shi’a join forces with the Abbaids to fight the Umayyads • Mawali soon joined • Battle of the River Zab in 750-(by the Tigris river) and the Abbaids won and captured the Umayyad capital! • Abu al-Abbas invited the members of the Umayyad family to a banquet afterwards where he had all of them slaughtered so that the could not make claims to the position of caliph • Rebel groups overthrow the Umayyads in 750. The most powerful was the Abbasids who took control of the empire • The Abbasids murdered all members of the remaining Umayyad family-Al Abbas AlSaffah!!!!! • One member escaped and set up control in southern Spain. They were known as the Berbers-Cordoba Caliphate • The Berbers were lead by Jabal Tariq. Gibraltar is • The Muslims advanced north within 100 miles of what is today Paris before losing in the Battle of Tours in 732. If they would have won all of Europe would most likely be Muslim. They resettled in southern Spain Umayyads in Spain • In 750 when the Abbasids seized power some of the Umayyad royals escaped to Spain and defeated the Abbasid appointed governor in 756 and started a new Umayyad dynasty with its capital in Cordoba. • They enjoyed much prosperity being so far from Constantinople. Rulers patronized the arts and literature and built splendid palaces and mosques. They ruled over diverse peoples including both Jews and Christians. Eventually rulers claimed that they were the true universal Muslim ruler in contrast to Abbasid kings. • Muslims really pushed out of Spain when it formed into its modern form in 1469 (marriage of Isabella and Ferdinand). They wanted to create more unity and homogeneity so they forced out both Muslims (Moors) and Jews. • Abbasids moved the capital once again to Baghdad. This was a strategic location for trade as well as information. • The government was set up into departments and managed • Diplomats were sent out around Europe, Africa, and Asia • They ruled from 750-1258 • They kept power by consulting many religious leaders, but failed to keep complete control. Independent Muslim states with local leaders rose up • Example: Fatimid Dynasty (after Muhammad’s daughter) began in North Africa and spread. They were part of the Shiites (claiming heritage from Fatimid and her husband Ali) • Their capital was Cairo after they took over Egypt • Shiism unified the group • They declined due to losses to the Normans and Crusaders in the 11th century. • The Abbasids conquered Egypt in 1171 Fatimids • Starting in 771 parts of Africa went independent from the Abbasid dynasty • And in Egypt an independent caliphate, the Fatimid, developed and ruled too 969-1171. They were Shiites and represented Ismailism. They believed that a descendant of the Prophet through Ali should be Islam’s universal leader. • Samanids of Khurasan (819-999) also represented another independent Islamic dynasty and they brought Islam more to the East and encouraged Muslim missionary efforts to China along the Silk Roads Abbasids • They needed to collect much wealth for their large imperial armies, bureaucracy, and grant palaces so that requires a very complex government. • They were more similar to Sasanids and Byzantine imperial governments: hierarchy of provinces and districts, specialized ministries, secretaries and accountants, vizier, caliph similar to Persian rulers “Shadow of God on Earth”, and barid system, literate or education Persians employed into the government • Ulama or legal scholars emerged as the guardians of shari’a law. While the caliphs tied their image to their spiritual worthiness in spite of their absolutism. Problem is that the ulama wasn’t a fan of the caliph as legitimate successors and the idea of egalitarianism vs. absolute monarchy was a problem. The caliph often behaved poorly as well such as the thousands of concubines he kept. Problems with Abbasids • As early as the 3rd caliph, al-Mahdi, problems were apparent within the Abbasid rule • He was decadent and had many wives and concubines. • He did not fix the issue of succession. Instead he allowed his wives to fight over the potential succession of their son. Place intrigue occurred. After he died his eldest son took the throne only to be assassinated within the year! Harun al-Rashid 786-809 Hauren al-Rashid became the caliph • After the assassination of his older brother, Harun became caliph. As a young man Harun was in charge of many military campaigns and named governor of a few provinces. • He was the son of a slave woman • He also enjoyed excess living like his father • His court was written about in The thousand and One Nights • He and Charlemagne, the most powerful Christian emperor in Europe, exchanged gifts • Harun became caliph at only 22 and relied on his mother and other advisors (viziers). Eventually killed them because the family became too powerful • The dependence on royal advisors became a problem for later caliphs. Over time the advisors controlled the court and caliphs lost power • Local uprising and rebellions and independent states start to be formed under Harun’s reign • Harun led expeditions against Byzantine and forced them to agree to paying money to Baghdad www.princeton.edu/~humcomp/map3gif Abbasid Decline • Harun al-Rashid’s death prompted a civil war between his two sons. They literally fought for the throne. • Al-Ma’mun won (813-833) • His sons later were convinced that in order to get the throne after the death of their father they would have to amass larger personal armies. • On son had 4000 slave body guards. Eventually after becoming caliph he had a mercenary force of 70,000 men. • 846 slave mercenaries killed the reigning caliph and placed one of his sons on the throne. From this point on during the Abbasid reign the leaders of the slave mercenary armies were the real power behind the throne Slaves • Due to needs for farming and draining salt, the Abbasids began to rely more and more on slave labor. This was similar to the Roman model of slave labor, the owners worked the slaves in gangs under horrible conditions. • Zanj Revolt- Ali ibn Muhammad –from Zanj or Eastern Africa led a huge slave rebellion (869-883). Some landowners of southern Iraq had bought thousands of slaves from the land of Zanj to drain the salt marshes east of Basra. Alī ibn Muḥammad, a Persian claiming descent from Alī and Fāṭimah (Muḥammad’s daughter) gained the support of several slave-work crews—which could number from 500 to 5,000 men—by pointing out the injustice of their social position and promising them freedom and wealth. • 830’s the caliphs also had slave armies to strengthen themselvesthese special soldiers are called mamluks and had no ties to local families or factions so loyal to the caliph. Often earned their freedom later in life. Decline • In order to try and control the mercenaries forces the treasury had to be drained • Caliphs also started to move the capital to escape the turmoil of Baghdad • This lead the peasants to pay for the new palaces and imperial centers as well as the army • Heavy taxes were placed on peasants. Tax collectors pillaged through villages. This led to some villages being abandoned. Also many public projects such as irrigation systems fell into disrepair. Some peasants moved to new areas to avoid the Abbasid tax collectors. • Some joined gangs or became vagabonds wondering through the empire • Shi’a also supported and created some peasant uprising against the Abbasids. They wanted them out of power for official abuses! • • • • • • • • • • • • • Women Women became increasingly subjugated during the rule of the Abbasids because of the development of the harem Wives and concubines(slaves) of the caliphs were restricted to forbidden quarters within the palace The slave concubines could win their freedom by producing strong offspring (sons) The wealth of the Abbasids led to the demand for thousands of slaves. Many performed domestic service roles. There are stories of caliphs who had 11,000 eunuchs and even 4000 concubines! Captured non-Muslims were typical slaves Sold in large slave markets which every large town had Slaves were valued for their beauty and intelligence Caliphs and important men spent more time with their concubines than their wives because they were many times better educated. Had more freedoms than the wives and could go out into public without wearing a veil or robes required of married women Lower class women were typically married at puberty (legally age 9) and were raised to run the household and serve their husband. They typically did not have outlets beyond their homes for work like farming and weaving Upper class women like the wives and concubines of caliphs plotted to advance the interests of their sons! Lots of infighting and intrigue! Women overall lost much of their freedoms during this time period! Decline of Abbasids • • • • • • • • • • • Territories began breaking off and becoming independent so caliphs attempted to curtail this problem But they could not and now other families were plotting to replace the Abbaids In 945 the armies of one of the regional dynasties, the Buyids of Persia attacked and captured Baghdad. The caliphs were now puppets controlled by powerful families like the Buyids of Persia. Buyids were Shi’a Buyid leaders took on the title sultan (victorious) Sultans became the title for then on out is the Muslim West The Buyids couldn’t stop the disintegration of the empire and by 1055 they were overthrown by the Seljuk Turks from Asia Turkic military leaders ruled the remaining Abbasid Empire in the name of caliphs. The Seljuks were Sunnis and began removing all Shi’a influence and power from the government. They also defeated the Byzantines which gave rise to Turks moving to settle Asia Minor (Anatolia or Turkey today). They won the battle of Manzikert in 1071 gaining lands in the Anatolia from the Byzantine empire...this eventually led to the start of the Crusades (1096-1291). This further weakened the empire. 1258 Mongols took advantage of this instability to sack Bagdad and kill the last caliph thus ending the Abbasid Empire!!! Crusades • Knights from western Europe sent by the Catholic Church to retake the Holy lands and save Christians who were being tortured and killed by Muslim conquerors according to Christian Byzantium • "Because he has laid down his life for us: and we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren," [1 John 3:16]. • The Crusades did help western Europe that was divided by fighting between and within countries. The Crusades were something to unify Christians. Crusades • First crusades 1096-1099 were the most successful b/c of the element of surprise and the Muslim political divisions • By 1099 Jerusalem was taken with many Muslim and Jews killed in the process • Continued the Crusades for 2 more centuries, they differed in success • Muslims were united under Salah-un-Din (Saladin). Muslims reconquered lost territory Crusades • First crusades 1096-1099 were the most successful b/c of the element of surprise and the Muslim political divisions • By 1099 Jerusalem was taken with many Muslim and Jews killed in the process • Continued the Crusades for 2 more centuries, they differed in success • Muslims were united under Salah-un-Din (Saladin). Muslims reconquered lost territory Crusade Dates of Crusade Crusades Timeline of Events First Crusade 1096 - 1099 The People's Crusade - Freeing the Holy Lands. 1st Crusade led by Count Raymond IV of Toulouse and proclaimed by many wandering preachers, notably Peter the Hermit Second Crusade 1144 -1155 Crusaders prepared to attack Damascus. 2nd crusade led by Holy Roman Emperor Conrad III and by King Louis VII of France Third Crusade 1187 -1192 3rd Crusade led by Richard the Lionheart of England, Philip II of France, and Holy Roman Emperor Frederick I. Richard I made a truce with Saladin Fourth Crusade 1202 -1204 4th Crusade led by Fulk of Neuil French/Flemish advanced on Constantinople The Children's Crusade 1212 The Children's Crusade led by a French peasant boy, Stephen of Cloyes Fifth Crusade 1217 - 1221 The 5th Crusade led by King Andrew II of Hungary, Duke Leopold VI of Austria, John of Brienne Sixth Crusade 1228 - 1229 The 6th Crusade led by Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II Seventh Crusade 1248 - 1254 The 7th Crusade led by Louis IX of France Eighth Crusade 1270- 1291 The 8th Crusade led by Louis IX Impact of Crusades • There had already been contact between the Muslims and Europeans via trade as well as the Berber Kingdom • However the greater contacts due the Crusades led to Europeans rediscovering ancient and Muslim knowledge • Greek and Roman literature, math, philosophy, technology and Muslim achievements • Also played a role in greater cultural like chess, dates, coffee, and yogurt Muslim Achievement • Despite a decline in the Abbasids power and wealth there were many very wealthy merchants. Trade flourished. • Artists, architects, and engineers built beautiful mosques and palaces. They made tapestries • Science: corrections to Greeks in algebra and geometry, trigonometry (sine, cosine, tangent), objective experiments, material substances into three categories: animal, vegetable, and mineral by al-Razi, astronomical tables and maps, hospitals and doctors, paper making, ceramics, silk-weaving, and maps of the world Persia • Persians started to play a greater role in the Abbasid court which led to Persian replacing Arabic as the written language of the Abbasid court • Arabic language of law, religion, and science • Persian used for literature and calligraphy • Rubaiyat . http://www.caroun.com/Calligraphy/IranianAncientCalligraphers.html Religious Trends • Contradictory trends: social strife and political divisions vs. expanded trade and intellectual creativity • Mysticism vs. growing orthodox religious scholar (ulama) • Crusades supported growing hostilities of nonIslamic ideas and thinking • Orthodox didn’t support the idea of Greek questioning being applied to religion. The Qur’an was final. • Sufist movement during Abbasid period: wondering mystics who sought a personal relationship with God. There were many manifestations including Sunni and Shi’a were against the abstract an impersonal relationship with Allah taught by the ulamas. Invasions • • • • Invasions from the East! Mongols started raiding in 1220’s By 1258 Baghdad was sacked by the Mongols The 37th and last Abbasid caliph was killed by the Mongols • The Mongols were stopped by the Mamluks or Turkic slaves in Egypt in 1260 in the Battle of Ain Jalut. • In 1401 Baghdad again was captured by the forces of Tamerlane. He was known for his cruelty and for building pyramids of the skulls those he killed when conquering a city. • Baghdad never recovered and became a regional city and was no longer a world city Islam: Bridge between Worlds • In spite of successional problems within the Muslim community, the position of the Islamic Empire as a global civilization was created during the Abbasid dynasty • Islam enriched the lives of peoples from around the world by sharing their knowledge • They had wonderful achievements in arts, science, and literature • They were the place to exchange ideas • They also had some problems in that they were divided many times and they also had a rift between the Sufis and orthodox Muslims • They were also not open to outside influence • This eventually led to European Christians exploiting the weaknesses of the Muslim world. Byzantine Empire • Refer to chapter 10 notes!!! • Generally speaking the Byzantine Empire lost a lot of lands to the Islamic caliphates • However the Arab empires were not able to take Constantinople despite multiple attempts • While the rise of new rulers (Macedonian dynasty) with the particular leader, Basil II, managed to expand the empire. (9761025) The spread of Islam • Islam spread via conquest • And by the 9th century missionary activity developed • Trade-Muslim merchants and Sufi mystics also spread the message. Sufis spread the message of Islam and were thought to be mystical/ magical. They tolerated the beliefs of earlier animist, Hindus, and Buddhists mixed with Islam • But conversion not as formal of a process as other religions Society • In spite of egalitarian goals there was a natural social hierarchy that formed: governing, estate-owning, merchants, farmers and laborers, and slaves. • Patriarchy • Slavery • *Conflict naturally also developed between science and religion Trade • Commercial activity expanded: innovations like dhows made navigation easier, monsoon seasonal understanding made travel easier, Southern India develops more expanding economic activity (pepper and cotton), commercial towns along the Zeng coast or East Africa developed or grew creating further opportunities (ivory, gold, animal skins, and slaves). • As Muslim merchants expanded commercial activity they created outposts and diasporas and helped to further spread Islam. Muslim merchants even had an outpost in Canton, China! • Shrivijaya-700-controlled straights of Malacca-patronized Buddhism (Mahayana). It fell in the 13th century and opened up Indonesia to the spread of Islam and Muslim merchants. • Tang Dynasty Empire incorporated Tibet, Vietnam, Manchuria, and a vassal kingdom (Silla) in Korea by 668 • Tang established a larger empire than that of the Han and even larger than present day China! Government: • Continued to revive the scholarly gentry and Confucian bureaucrats • Under the Tang the scholar-gentry offset the powers of the aristocracy • From the Tang era onward, the political power in China was shared by a succession of imperial families and the bureaucrats of the civil service system • The scholar-gentry class staffed most of the posts the secretariats and executive departments that oversaw a huge bureaucracy • Imperial palace to subprefecture (or county level) • One secretariat drafted royal decrees and the other looked at regional reports • The executive department was split into 6 ministers: including war, justice, and public works. Bureau of Censor that kept track of all officials at all levels to ensure they were doing their jobs. Tang decline and Song Rise • Weakening imperial power under controversy of Empress Wu 690-705 and Empress Wei (who poisoned her husband, the son of Empress Wu and put her small child on the throne). Another prince led a revolt in the palace against her and won. He became emperor Xuanzong • High point in Tang dynasty under his rule for a time! • He was a great leader in the beginning but then he stopped focusing on ruling and began to be obsessed with courtly life and pleasure. He greatly enjoyed playing music and it was said he had 1000 concubines! Xuanzong became infatuated with a beautiful young women, Yang Guifei, after the death of his second wife. She was in the harem of one of the imperial princes. Xuanzong began giving her flute lessons and her status grew. She used her new position to get her greedy relatives access to the upper level of government. She was arrogant and excessive. Xuanzong neglected the state affairs which resulted in disaster. In 755 a revolt broke out which the Tang crushed. However the Tang troops mutinied and killed several Yang family members and forced the emperor to kill Yang Guifei. He did, but never quite recovered. Later rulers Tang rulers were weak. • Nomadic peoples living on the borders gained powers and took over portions of northern China. The local governors became independent rulers in their own! Rebellion • An Lushan march on Chang’an forced Xuanzong to abandon the throne to his son • Had to pay the Turkic Uighur peoples (chapter 10) to help put down the revolt-cost them huge sums of money-payments of silk. • Government appointed military men to govern the provinces instead of civil servants –many had been loyal to An Lushan and before long were basically ruling a warlords and not sending taxes to the capital. • At one point things got so bad that emperors formed personal military forces (eunuchs) but eventually they starting killing off the emperors and controlling them!!! • Equal field system fell apart and peasants lost their lands to the landed gentry and poverty increased. Emperor Xuanzong Tang to Song • Tang couldn’t control the vast empire. In 751 Arab armies defeated the Chinese on China’s western frontier at the Battle of Talas! • In 907 Chinese rebels sacked and burned the Tang capital at Changan and murdered the last emperor, a child • Rival warlord divided China into several kingdoms • In 960 an able general reunited China and proclaimed himself Song Taizu, the first Song (sung) emperor. The Song dynasty lasted from (960-1279). Song armies didn’t regain western lands lost in 751 nor did they regain northern lands. The northern Liao dynasty founded in 907 by the nomadic Khitan peoples in Manchuria made the Song sign treaties that committed them to paying heavy tribute in silver, silk, and tea to keep from invading. • Song empire was much smaller than Tang Song Map Tang and Song Innovations • • • The Tang and Song eras were a time of major shifts in the population of China, new patterns of trade emerged, renewed urbanization occurred, the novel began, and many technological innovation happened. Canals-like the Grand Canal built by Yangdi of the Sui which connected northern China with the Yangtze River basin more than 500 miles south. This was important because the south surpassed the north in population and crop production. River connections were also west to east instead of north to south. This would help the imperial Tang conquest and expansion of canals promoted trade – – • • • • • • • • • • Middle East-horses, Persian rugs, tapestries for silk, textiles, porcelain, and paper Maritime –(Junks Chinese ships-watertight bulkheads, sternpost rudders, oars, sails, compasses, bamboo fenders, and gunpowder-propelled rockets for self defense! Tang and Song government supervised the hours of the markets and merchants banded together to form guilds to promote their interests and regulate competition Money economy expanded: deposit shops (aka early banks) formed and the first use of paper money began under the Tang –flying money. Merchants deposited money in hometown banks and then got credit vouchers they used while traveling-flying money which they presented for reimbursement in the appropriate office in the city of destination-reduced robbery! By 1000 it was clear private banks couldn’t handle need on its own so the government began to issue paper money. Population growth Encouraged peasants to migrate to uncultivated areas –built military garrisons there State regulated irrigation and embankment systems Champa rice introduced from Vietnam (multiple crops a year!) Wheelbarrow, bridge building, explosive powder-fireworks then grenades and bombs, Song had warships with naphtha flamethrowers, poisonous gases, and rocket launchers. Chairs were new, tea drinking, coal used for fuel, kite Super important: Compasses, abacus, Bi Sheng and moveable type-combined with paper (Ci Lun-Han) made printing possible Footbinding begins Japan • 400-600 CE many things such as Buddhism and rice reached Japan via Korea. • From 600-700s a local dynasty formed called the Yamato. The Yamato court, concentrated in the Asuka region, exercised power over clans in Kyushu and Honshu, bestowing titles, some hereditary, on clan chieftains. The Yamato name became synonymous with all of Japan as the Yamato rulers suppressed the clans and acquired agricultural lands. Based on Chinese models (including the adoption of the Chinese written language), they developed a central administration and an imperial court attended by subordinate clan chieftains but with no permanent capital. By the mid-seventh century, the agricultural lands had grown to a substantial public domain, subject to central policy. The basic administrative unit was the county, and society was organized into occupation groups. Most people were farmers; other were fishers, weavers, potters, artisans, armorers, and ritual specialists. • [Excerpted from Japan: A Country Study. Ronald E. Dolan and Robert L. Worden, eds. Washington, DC: Federal Research Division of the Library of Congress, 1994] • The Soga had intermarried with the imperial family, and by A.D. 587 Soga Umako, the Soga chieftain, was powerful enough to install his nephew as emperor and later to assassinate him and replace him with the Empress Suiko (r. A.D. 593-628). Suiko, the first of eight sovereign empresses, was merely a figurehead for Umako and Prince Regent Shotoku Taishi (A.D. 574-622). Shotoku, recognized as a great intellectual of this period of reform, was a devout Buddhist, well read in Chinese literature. He was influenced by Confucian principles, including the Mandate of Heaven, which suggested that the sovereign ruled at the will of a supreme force. Under Shotoku's direction, Confucian models of rank and etiquette were adopted, and his Seventeen Article Constitution (Kenpo jushichiju) prescribed ways to bring harmony to a society chaotic in Confucian terms. In addition, Shotoku adopted the Chinese calendar, developed a system of highways, built numerous Buddhist temples, had court chronicles compiled, sent students to China to study Buddhism and Confucianism, and established formal diplomatic relations with China. • Numerous official missions of envoys, priests, and students were sent to China in the seventh century. Some remained twenty years or more; many of those who returned became prominent reformers. In a move greatly resented by the Chinese, Shotoku sought equality with the Chinese emperor by sending official correspondence addressed "From the Son of Heaven in the Land of the Rising Sun to the Son of Heaven of the Land of the Setting Sun." Shotoku's bold step set a precedent: Japan never again accepted a subordinate status in its relations with China. Although the missions continued the transformation of Japan through Chinese influences, the Korean influence on Japan declined despite the close connections that had existed during the early Kofun period. • About twenty years after the deaths of Shotoku (in A.D. 622), Soga Umako (in A.D. 626), and Empress Suiko (in A.D. 628), court intrigues over succession and the threat of a Chinese invasion led to a palace coup against the Soga oppression in A.D. 645. The revolt was led by Prince Naka and Nakatomi Kamatari, who seized control of the court from the Soga family and introduced the Taika Reform. (Taika = great change) Imperial Age of Japan • Chinese influence on Japan peaked around 7-8th centuries as Japanese rulers sought to build a Chinese style bureaucracy (Taika 645-710 and Heian 794-857) • Japanese court at Nara flooded by Chinese imports • Shinto remained central to Japanese culture (Religion of early Japanese culture; devotees worshipped numerous gods and spirits associated with the natural worlds; offers of food and prayers made to gods and nature spirits) • In 646 the emperor and his advisors introduced Taika reforms aimed at completely revamping the imperial administration along Chinese lines • Aristocracy struggled to assimilated (hard language to master and Buddhism hard to master too) while commoners were effected by the large Buddhist temples that started appearing and their duty to respect the Confucian gentry • Commoners looked to Buddhism for cures or magic/ a change of luck. They mixed Buddhism with kami or the nature spirits. Adopted Mahayana Buddhism. Shift to Heian (Kyoto) • Taika reforms of 646 to make the Japanese monarch a Chinese style emperor, to create a bureaucracy and peasant conscript army • Aristocratic families and Buddhist monks resisted changes. (Empress Koken and the Buddhist monk who tried to take the throne…women could never rule) • 794 emperor Kammu established a new capital at Heian (Kyoto). Buddhists were forbidden from building monasteries in the city, but built on the outskirts! They started controlling politics!!! • Soon Taika reforms abandoned and the aristocratic families were restored to power. Elaborate system of rank which was very rigid. Aristocracy took positions now in the central government and the emperor gave up on his goal of a large peasant conscript army. Instead, local leaders told to organize militia forces. Ultracivilized: Heian Era • Political power under the Heian weakened, but culture flourished! • Japanese emperor and courtiers lived in luxury and were focused on beautiful sights • Complex palaces, gardens, and ponds/ fountains • Aristocratic classes had strict codes of behavior (polite) • Writing verse/ poetry very important: The Tale of Genji Decline of Imperial Power • While the emperor and his courtier were admiring nature and obsessed with the latest fashion trends the aristocratic families controlling the bureaucracy got smaller. • The Fujiwara family emerged as the leader over imperial affairs! They sacked administration with their family and also married them off into the imperial family. • Buddhist monks and aristocratic families like the Fujiwaras worked together to increase their land holdings and build up large powerful estates around the capital. • Monks and aristocracy failed to recognize the growing power of local lords and the powers of the emperor decreased Rise of the Provincial Warrior Elite controlled labor and • Elite families in the provinces denied the court resources and they began ruling themselves as little kingdoms ruled by a “house” government. The mini-state was protected by a small fortress and ditches. Local lords live in the fortress and were alert to neighboring lords who might want to attack. They also collected taxes from the people, but kept it for themselves! • The Bushi were the warrior leaders who administered law and order. The Bushi built up their own armies due to the emperor’s failure of creating a large conscripted peasant army. • Bushi warrior groups were soon the most powerful forces in the country. Their specialized mounted troops or samurai were loyal to local lords but called upon to protect the emperor and capital. • 11th - 12th bandits roamed freely and monasteries • The warriors emerged into their own warrior class to support these various activities. The peasants supported them with food and labor. • Battles were elaborately negotiated beforehand and each side tried to demonstrate cause. Warriors would yell out their family lineage and exploits, but the other warriors were yelling at the same time so they probably didn’t hear them!! • Warrior code developed-stressed family honor and death over retreat/ defeat. Beaten or disgraced warriors turned to ritual suicide, seppuku or harakiri, to restore their family’s honor. They disemboweled themselves • Japan moving toward a feudal order similar to that of Western Europe during the post classical era • Peasant lost status as warrior class developed. They turned into serfs tied to the land and separated by class. They couldn’t ride horses or even carry a sword because of their social position Japan’s Culture • In spite of much sinification, Japan did form a distinct culture: art and music, government law codes: ritsuryo seido • Made their own script, wabun • Mixed Shinto and Buddhism ideas • But…new contact brought a plague tht killed about ¼ of the population in the 730’s! Korea • Korea isn’t part of China!!! • Korea was settled by different peoples (Siberia and Manchuria) • 109 BCE the Korean kingdom of Chosen was conquered by the Chinese dynasty of the Han. Korea was colonized by Chinese settlers afterwards and they began to influence the culture • Koreans resisted Chinese rule (Koguryo of the north). As Chinese rule weakened Koguryo established an independent state in the north and was at war with its rivals Silla and Paekche • Contacts between northern China and the Korea • Buddhism linked Korea and China • Chinese writing introduced, unified legal code like China, universities, and even tried to introduce Confucian scholars (aristocracy didn’t allow this one to happen though) • Warfare between Koguryo, Silla, and Paekche weaken Korea and the Chinese had their eye on Korea • The Koguryo in the north bore the main assaults of the Chinese • Finally the Chinese decided to play on the divisions within Korea and made an alliance with Silla. They destroyed Koguryo and Paekche! Then the Tang realized Silla’s real power and decided to make a deal with them. They would allow them to be the independent rulers of Korea if they paid China tribute (668) Sinification • Silla monarchs (668-9th century) and the later Koryo dynasty (918-1392) Chinese influence over Korea peaked. • Silla rulers strove to turn their kingdom into a miniature Tang empire! The sent embassies to the Tang court, gathered Chinese text, followed Chinese fashion, participated in the tribute system, and kowtow (bowing ceremony to the emperor) • This guaranteed peace with the Chinese and provided access to Chinese learning and goods • Chinese tribute system became a channel of trade and intercultural exchange between Sinification of Korean Culture • Rebuilt their capital of Kumsong to look like the Tang capital, grid pattern with markets, lakes, parks, and imperial housing • Aristocracy moved to the capital with their families and workers • Silla ruler introduced Confucian examination system, however, most bureaucrats gained their position b/c of family ties rather than the exam • Favored Buddhism over Confucianism and the aristocracy gave to the monasteries and art • Many Korean artwork and design was based on Chinese prototypes. Chinese introduced pottery and porcelain as well as the art of Civilization for the Few • The imperial family and aristocracy were the ones in Korea with the good life and benefited from trade (imported many items like teas, artwork, and scrolls). Everyone one else under them and to serve them. Merchants/ artisans not highly valued b/c so many items were imported • Imperial family, aristocracy, government functionaries, commoners (peasants), nearslaves (low born-miners/ artisans, servants, entertainers) Koryo Collapse, Dynastic Renewal • Because the commoners and low born faired so poorly in Korea and the aristocracy was more concerned with their own pleasures than with making life better for the poor the commoners and nearslaves rose up from time to time. These rebellions were ruthlessly put down by the armies. However this inner conflict weakened the Silla and Koryo regimes of Korea. Combined the internal conflict with invasions like from the Mongols in 1231 this led to the fall of the Silla and Koryo dynasties. • The aristocratic families continued to survive and eventually elevated on of their own to the royal throne, Yi family • The Yi dynasty was established in 1392 and ruled until 1910!!! They restored the dominance of the aristocratic families and links to China Western Africa • 300-1100 was a period of increased rainfall. This allowed increased farming activities and herding activities along the Sahel. This in turn led to an increase in population and economic activities. • Takrur-monarchy in West Africa who rose based on rice growing and trade • Gao-took advantage of trade along the Niger River • Kanem-pastoral warriors developed Africa • Introduction of the camel or dromedary was the main innovation (by way of Arabs) that allowed for the deserts to open up and Trans-Saharan trade to flourish. As a result the Gold-Salt Routes developed. Gold –Salt Roads • Early on Soninke buyers traded with local chiefs independently and then shipped the gold to Sudanic caravan merchants who took the bullion (gold) northward. The need for gold was great as many wanted it for the purpose of minting coins. • Besides gold, slaves were also traded along this route. • Gold and slaves went north while salt, textiles, jewelry, ironware, and horses went south Ghana or Wagadu • The earliest and of the major West African Kingdoms. Probably started forming the 300s! • The king was known as the Ghana and had a sacred status to mediate between humans and supernatural…performed religious rituals to ensure the welfare of his people. They were somewhat centralized government: royal officials and an army (archers) and by 1000 they added cavalry thanks to trade. The Ghana didn’t control the gold mines but rather monopolized trade. Many territories remained under the control of local leaders who sometimes paid tribute to the Ghana. • Royal succession was matrilineal!!!! The king wasn’t succeeded by his son but rather the son of one of his sisters! Islam • • • • • • • • • • 640-700 followers of Muhammad swept across N. Africa 670 Muslims ruled (Tunisia) Ifriqiya [Roman name for Africa] Ifriqiya (eastern n. Africa) and Maghrib (western n. Africa) 711 Muslim rule expanded into Spain –known as al-Andalus. Most of the Iberian peninsula fell to these Muslim Berber conquerors from northern Africa in the 700s. The governors of alAndalus were Umayyads who refused to recognized the Abbasid dynasty. They acted like caliphs and were independent Abbasid authority. (berbers=people of the desert) Islamic advance into western Europe was only stopped in 732 by Charles Martel in Poitiers (battle of Tours) Many N.Africans converted to Islam b/c of message of equality & umma. Also, merchants in Sub-Saharan Africa and eastern coast converted because it served as a cultural foundation for their business relationships with Muslim merchants. Abbasid unified territory of north Africa for a while Almoravids: (11th century) reform movement in Islam grew among Berbers. They launched a jihad or holy war to purify and spread Islam. They moved south to the African kingdoms and also north into Spain, invaded Ghana in 1076. Almohadis: (1130) reformist group-again in Spain and northern Africa. Many attracted to Islam its moral qualities while rulers attracted because the religion reinforced theory of kingship. Islamic tradition of uniting the powers of state with religion. While in Western Africa to the south…kings encouraged Muslim commercial activity and Arabic language but kept local religious ideas. That is until the king of Gao converted in 1000 CE. Although they still respected local traditions. The Great Mosque of Djenne, Mali reflects the syncretism or blending of traditions between African building techniques and the Muslim idea of a Mosque Invaders into Europe! • Much of Europe was a patchwork of small monarchies and dukedoms. The largest empire, Franks, had broken up after the death of Charlemange among his grandsons in the 814 Treaty of Verdun. • Soon invaders flooded into Europe to take advantage of this weakness and this disrupted European economic recovery Muslims • Cordoba Caliphate controlled by the Umayyads in Spain dominated much of the Western Mediterranean. • Soon the Aghlabid dynasty (800-909) in Tunisia built a large navy and took advantages of weakness in the Mediterranean by taking Sicily from the Byzantine Empire! They and other Muslims raided the coasts of Italy and France too. In 846 Rome’s outer communities were sacked by Muslims. • Major problem- Europeans had a difficult time breaking into Mediterranean trade! Magyars • Pastoral nomads of Eastern Europe • They complicated trade matters in that much trade went to Byzantine to avoid Muslim raiding via the Danube River-and this is where the Magyars moved. • Believed they moved from the steppes near the Black Sea due to others aggressive migrations • They raided into Germany, France, and Northern Italy-plundered unprotected areas and sold many into slavery • They were put down by German cavalry Vikings • Scandinavian raiders who profoundly changed Western Europe. Their zenith was from the 8001000’s. They raided due to population pressures and not enough farmlands-thanks Medieval Warming Period). They operate from the Black Sea all the way to Newfoundland in North America! • Various independent campaigns by different groups of Vikings. From Norway groups attacked Britain, Scotland, and Ireland…looting and burning Churches! Gold… • Some areas they looted while others they settled. Vikings • Norwegian Vikings –Scotland, Iceland, Greenland, and North America • Danish Vikings-England and France-river raids • France-in the weakening of the Carolingian dynasty the Vikings attacked. They French eventually gave them a large piece of land…Normandy. • Swedes- Russia to the Black Sea. They established the settlements of Novgorod, Kiev, and other important areas too. “Rus” came to describe the blending of Swedes, Slavs, and Turks. This eventually became Russia. • Generally many Vikings settle and married local Viking Ship Western Europe • Feudalism • Growing defense: castle and fortified houses to protect lands • King wasn’t always the strongest • Feudalism is a political system based on land ownership and personal loyalty Feudalism • Feudum or fief – an estate given to a vassal in return for loyalty and service (military and taxes). • Feudalism is based upon a web of relationships and power based upon land ownership. • Serfs were peasants tied to the land in return for the services they were to be protected. • England-Alfred the Great (871-899) ruled and pushed out Vikings but after his death the Viking king, Canute (Christian) formed an empire that included England, Norway, and Estonia. But things fell apart when he died in 1035. Soon William the Conqueror would take control of England. • Germany-Otto I rose to power…subdued the Magyars and was granted the title Holy Roman Emperor by the Gods/ Goddess • Odin - King of all the Norse gods and goddesses. • Frigg - The main Norse goddesses. Odin's wife and Balder's mother. She is the main Norse goddess. • Thor - Perhaps the most famous of all the Norse gods and goddesses. Odin's son and Sif's husband. Known as the thunder god. The strongest god. • Tyr - He is a war god and is Odin's son. The god of single combat. He has one hand. • Loki - The son of two giants he is a trickster. Norse mythology explains how he leads the giants in their victory against the gods in the final battle of Ragnarok. • Freyja - Daughter of Njord and sister of Freyr. She is the main goddess of the Vanir. Associated with love, beauty, and fertility. Odin Frigg Thor Big Ideas • Southernization – the historical process whereby a number of ideas and products/ technologies of significant important spill out and spread from India and other parts of Asia to other areas of Afroeurasia. • Trade routes/ networks grow • Diffusion of crops-sugar • Improvement and diffusion of navigation technologies and math