Download Lecture 03: China in Antiquity Thoughts for Today I am not one who

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Protectorate General to Pacify the West wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Lecture 03:
China in Antiquity
Thoughts for Today
I am not one who was born in the possession of knowledge; I am one who is fond
of antiquity, and earnest in seeking it there.
Study the past if you would define the future.
I hear and I forget. I see and I remember. I do and I understand.
Confucius, The Confucian Analects
Chinese philosopher & reformer (551 BC - 479 BC)
Dawn of Chinese Civilization
Land and People
Early civilization along the Yellow and Yangtze rivers**
12% arable land
Importance of geography: isolation and invasion
Shang Dynasty
Chinese civilization began 4,000 yrs ago
First dynasty: Xia (Hsia)
th
Second dynasty: Shang - 16
century B.C.
Political Organization and
Social Structures
Agricultural society
Central bureaucracy in the capital
Aristocrats governed territories
War with large armies that used chariots (mid 2nd M, B.C.)**
King was intermediary between heaven and earth
Clear sense of afterlife—veneration of ancestors, human sacrifice
Clans with a common name
Class differentiation: aristocrats, merchants, artisans, peasants, and slaves
Mastery of bronze casting
Sophisticated writing system
Page 1 of 4
Zhou (Chou) Dynasty (1045-221 B.C.)
Two Capitals—Xian and Luoyang
Political Structures
King ran central government with large
bureaucracy of ministries
Principalities governed by appointed officials
Mandate of Heaven
Rites of Zhou
•King is a representative of Heaven
Cardinal principle:
•King had to ‘earn the mandate of Heaven”
Rule with compassion and efficiency or
be overthrown and replaced
Economy and Society
Agricultural Advances
•Water control projects, iron plows, natural fertilizer, collar harness
•Leaving land fallow, cultivation of wet rice
•Population growth
Trade and Manufacturing
•Population boom (20 M) fed growth of commerce and manufacturing
th
•Silk production and trade—Silk Road from 5 C B.C.
•Economic wealth replaced noble birth for power and influence
•Move toward money economy
Hundred Schools of Ancient Philosophy
Early Beliefs
Shang Di – Shang god presided over forces of nature
Yang (sun) and Yin (moon)
Book of Changes, Yi Jing (I Ching)
Confucianism
Confucius (Kung Fuci)--551-479 B.C.
•Political and social philosopher
•Analects - universe had a moral code
•Dao (The Way), rule by merit
•Concept of duty, idea of humanity
Mencius (370-290 B.C.)
•Human beings are by nature good.
•Ruler’s duty is to govern with compassion
Page 2 of 4
Legalism
Rejected Confucian view
Human beings are by nature evil and would follow the correct path only if coerced
by harsh laws and stiff punishments.
No moral core of the universe
Only firm action by the state can bring social order
Only a strong ruler can create a stable, orderly society
Daoism
Lao Tzu (Lao Zi)
Dao De Jing (The Way of the Tao)
Proper forms of behavior
The true way to interpret the will of Heaven is not action but inaction (wu wei)
Let nature takes its course
Appealed to those uncomfortable with work ethic
Popular Beliefs
Spiritualistic and animistic beliefs
Daoism: rituals and forms of behavior as a means of achieving heavenly salvation
or immortality on earth
Proper ritual to prevent haunting by deceased
China During the Period of the Warring States
The Rise of the Chinese Empire: The Qin Dynasty
Qin Dynasty (221-206 B.C.)
Qin Shi Huangdi (Ch’in Shih Huang Ti), 246 B.C.
Absolute rule by Legalism (Li Su) with harsh penal code
Book burning to control dissent
Highly centralized state with officials in capital (civil, military, censorate)
Restriction of commercial activities and created monopolies
Aggressive foreign affairs


Beyond the Frontier: Nomadic Peoples and Great Wall of China
Warriors on horseback;
Factional rivalry in the court
Fall of the Qin


Restriction of commercial activities and created monopolies
Aggressive foreign affairs

Daily Life in Ancient China
Chinese Thoughts on Women
“For disorder does not come from heaven,
But is brought about by women.
Among those who cannot be trained or taught
Are women and eunuchs.”
Page 3 of 4
Chinese Culture
Language and Literature
Writing
•Ideographic and pictographic
•Calligraphy, aesthetics and art
•Standardized writing system
Chinese Literature
Music
Metalwork and sculpture
Bronze Casting
molds allowed for clear line and rich surface decoration
•Gave way to iron casting
First Emperor’s Tomb - terra-cotta army

•Clay
Page 4 of 4