Download Tang, Song and Ming Dynasties

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
no text concepts found
Transcript
Tang, Song and Ming
Dynasties
World History - Libertyville HS
Post Han China
• Han Dynasty ended in
220 AD
• Jin Period (265-618 AD)
– Political fragmentation
– Three main forces
fighting for dominance
• Northern kingdom
• Southern kingdom
• Nomads
• Sui Dynasty unified
China for 40 years but
lost to Tang Dynasty
T’ang Dynasty (618-907 AD)
• Economic, cultural
flowering of China
• Buddhism established as
state religion
• Int’l trade routes
maintained (traders in
China)
• Two main trade routes
– Silk Road (Persians, Indians,
Muslims – 639 AD)
– Ocean Trade throughout E.
Asian coastal areas incl.
Korea, Japan (70+ countries!)
T’ang Culture & Government
• At height, T’ang China /
allies / client states
controlled from Caspian
Sea to SE Asia
• Ideal T’ang Man
– Scholar, Poet, Painter,
Statesman
– Ideal person today?
• Perfection of civil service
– Hard tests based on Conf.
– Career bureaucrats were
commoners, not nobility
(no ambition for Imperial
throne)
T’ang Government & Culture
• Rice cultivation greatly
expanded (pop to 100
million)
• Roads, canals, irrigation
built
• Poetry, literature & arts
flourished
– Painting with strong
Taoist influence
• New Social Order
Emperor
& Royal
Family
Gentry
(Civil
Servants)
Urban middle
class
(merchants)
Urban lower class
(laborers, soldiers,
servants)
Peasants (worked farms of
rich)
T’ang Dynasty
• Inventions of T’ang
– Block printing (carve
into block, stamp on
paper)
– Gunpowder (fireworks)
– Mechanical clocks
(wind, w/ gears)
– Porcelain (hard white
ceramic)
Oldest dated block print
from China, 868 AD
Fall of the T’ang
• Lost fights against
Persian & Indian
Muslims
• After 816 AD, rebellions
weakened state
• High taxes sped the
disintegration of the
state
• Ten Kingdoms Period
(907-960 AD)
– Political fragmentation
– 10 kingdoms, 5
dynasties rule
Song Dynasty (960-1279)
• General finally took
over, est. Song
Dynasty
• Empire smaller than
T’ang, but stable
• Early 1100s – invasion
by Jurchens from N
– Loss northern half of
China
– Jurchens est. own
Empire, the Jin
– Jin invaded by Genghis
Khan
Song Dynasty Accomplishments
Chinese flamethrower;
2 pistons shot out
Stream of flaming oil /
Gas combo
• Ten cities of one
million + inhabitants
• 1020s – paper money,
making trade easier
• 1040 – invented
magnetic compass
(navigation)
• Algebra advancements
• Refined gunpowder
– Cannon
– Primitive flamethrower
Song Dynasty “Industrial
Revolution”
Chinese blast furnace;
Waterwheel driving furnace
• By 1078, Song Dynasty
producing 125,000
tons of iron, per year!
• Equal to 1.5 kg per
person
• Compare to Europe, at
same time: 0.5 kg /
per person
• Iron used to mass
produce tools, esp.
plows, hammers, etc
Fall of Song Dynasty
• Long, bitter struggle
against Mongols
eventually ended with
defeat of Song
• Defeated by 1279
• Estimated 50 million
Chinese killed during
war – about 50% of
population
Ming Dynasty (1368-1644)
•
Nobility Resurgence
–
–
•
Exploration: Zheng-He
–
–
–
•
Population of China back
to 120 million by 1600
Regained past prestige,
power
Eunuch in service of
emperor
Seven voyages in
Treasure Ships
Purpose: expand trade,
contact new peoples
Isolation and stagnation
–
–
New emperor cut off
further exploration, trade
Closed borders, threw out
foreigners cut off contact
with rest of world
Dimensions:350-400 feet
long, 150 feet wide;
weighed 14,000+ tons
displacement
Fleets had 62 ships, 27000
crew, incl. soldiers,
merchants, etc
Treasure Ship – compared to size
of Columbus’ Santa Maria
Fall of Ming Dynasty
• Ming Dynasty
conquered by
Manchu
• Manchu were
nomads from the
North
• Manchu est. dynasty
that lasted until
1912