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Southeast Asia and Korea Around the orbit of China Chapter 12:5 Southeast Asia • Labeling the map – Label each of the empires we discuss on your map as we go through the notes. • Geography and Trade • Influence of India and China – Hinduism and Buddhism • Khmer Empire • Saliendra and Srivijaya Dynasties – Importance of the Straits of Malacca • Vietnam • Korea – The Koryu Dynasty Places discussed in class • • • • • • • Khmer Empire Koryu Dynasty India China Mongolia Philippines Saliendra and Srivijaya Dynasties • • • • • Thailand/Siam Burma/Myanmar Vietnam Malaysia Sumatra and Java Women in SE Asia • More Freedom – expected to manage family businesses, run household, and participate in trade – Additionally, heavily involved in rice cultivation, handicraft production, and marketing as well as bearing children – Daughters valued higher than in other parts of Asia! • Bilateral Kinship – Male or female lineage – Marriage: Monogamous; money and property transferred to wife’s family (reverse in European and other Asian cultures!) – Bride Price versus Dowry • Who is paying for the privilege of marriage? Women in SE Asia, continued • Dutch observations: Women in SE Asia were “constant when married, but very loose when single,” and it was “thought to be an obstacle and an impediment to marriage for a girl to be a virgin.” • Chinese: “In Cambodia it is the women who take charge of trade” • Chinese: “It is the [Siamese] custom that all affairs are managed by wives… all trading transactions great and small.” • British: “The women of Siam are the only merchants in buying goods, and some of them trade very considerably.” • British: “Women in the Birman country… manage the more important mercantile concerns of their husbands.” • Chinese: “In [Vietnam] every man is a soldier. The commercial operations are performed by women.” Mainland – the Khmer • Monsoon trades – Indian influence: Hinduism, Buddhism, and Sanskrit to SE Asia – Theravada vs Mahayana • Theravada – “Elders” – more conservative; textual and personal • Mahayana – E and SE Asian practice; universal salvation Khmer Empire • Present-day Cambodia – Funan expansion 800-1200 CE (peak influence) laid the groundwork for the Khmer Empire. • Rice Crops – Could feed large populations – Three-to-four cultivations a year due to Khmer irrigation and agricultural policy – the purpose of government! • Angkor Wat – one square mile of city-temple – Built for Vishnu, “The Preserver” – Also served as an observatory – Has been a Buddhist temple (Wat) since the 15th Century Hinduism • During the Gupta Empire, Hinduism became more monotheistic. • Emphasis of Brahma – representing unity of all things – Brahma: The Creator – Vishnu: The Preserver/Savior/Protector – Shiva: The Destroyer – Other gods remain, but take a lesser role Angkor Wat One Square Mile Mount Meru, celestial mountain Celestial Mountains Island Traders • Present-day Indonesia, Thailand and Malaysia – Malay-speaking peoples, but all trade came through the area and they were very diverse (cultural diffusion…) • Wealth gained by taxing trade • Saliendra – Java (SE of Sumatra) – Buddhist Borobudur temple complex built c 800 CE • Nine Terraced levels • Srivijaya conquest 7th-13th century – Capital Palembang, on Sumatra – Center of Buddhist learning Borobodur: 9th Century Mahayana Buddhist Shrine and Pilgrimage site Three Levels: Desire, Forms, Formlessness Vietnam • Least influenced by India, but constant dealing with China • 100 BCE-900 CE Chinese domination (Han conquest, T’ang retreat) • Independent kingdom in 939 CE – Buddhism prominent – Women more freedom and influence than Chinese • Ly Dynasty (1009-1225 CE) – Capital at Hanoi – Mongol attempts to conquer Vietnam all failed (1257, 1285, and 1287) Korea • Peninsula bordered by mountains and sea • Han conquest: 108 BCE – Centralized government, writing, Confucianism and Buddhism prominently acquired by Koreans – Forced withdrawal of Chinese with factionalizing peninsula • Silla conquest of competitors mid-600s CE – Phonetic writing based on Chinese characters Koryu Dynasty (935-1392 CE) • Est. by Wang Kon, rebel officer – Confucian civil service exams, universities, – Society divided between aristocrats and all others, led to rebellions in 1100s – 1231 Mongol invasion • Tribute of 20,000 horses, clothing for 1 million soldiers, slaves – Mongol empire collapsed 1350s, Koryu overthrown 1392 CE • Artwork – Celadon Pottery – Block printing of entire Buddhist Canon (Tripitaka Koreana) • First time all Buddhist Scriptures written down in one set! • Duplicates in the 13th century, since originals were destroyed by Mongols Block Printing