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The Sui Dynasty (589-618) • Regional kingdoms succeed collapse of Han dynasty (220-589 Decentralized/Dark Age) • Buddhist Emperor – Wendi Sui • Wendi Sui consolidates control of China, initiates Sui Dynasty • Wendi won popular support by lowering taxes and establishing a cheap food supply. • Brought back scholar-gentry and imperial exam Sui’s Fall • Yangdi, Wendi’s son, succeeded his father to the Throne. • Attempted to conquer Korea (failed) • Defeated by central Asian Nomads (Turkic) • Massive building projects: – Military labor – Conscripted labor -Grand Canal!!! -Great Wall reconstruction (6 million workers!) The Grand Canal • Intended to promote trade between north and south China – Most Chinese rivers flow west-east • Linked network of earlier canals – 1240 miles – Roads on either bank • Succeeded only by railroad traffic in 20th century • Longest canal or artificial river in the world today! The Tang Dynasty (618-907 CE) • Wide discontent over conscripted labor in Sui dynasty • Military failures in Korea prompt rebellion • Emperor assassinated in 618 – Tang Dynasty initiated The Sui and Tang dynasties, 589-907 CE . Tang Taizong • Second emperor of Tang dynasty (r. 627-649 CE) • Murdered two brothers, thrust father aside to take throne • Strong ruler – Built capital at Chang’an – Law and order – Taxes, prices low – More effective implementation of earlier Sui policies Major Achievements of Tang Dynasty • Transportation and communications – Extensive postal, courier services • Became the golden age of literature in China • Emperor Xuanzong’s splendor in Chang’an • Welcoming of foreign faiths (not conversion) • Equal-field System – 20% of land hereditary ownership – 80% redistributed according to formula • Family size, land fertility – Worked well until 8th century • Corruption, loss of land to Buddhist monasteries, aristocratic land accumulation Bureaucracy of Merit • Imperial civil service examinations – Confucian educational curriculum • Some bribery, nepotism • But most advance through merit – Built loyalty to the dynasty – System remains strong until early 20th century Tang Military Expansion and Foreign Relations • Manchuria, Korea, Vietnam, Tibet • One of the largest expansions of China in its history • Paid Central Asian Nomads to defend boarder (repair G.Wall) • Established tributary relationships – Gifts • China as “Middle Kingdom” – The kowtow ritual Tang Decline • Governmental neglect: Emperor obsessed with music, favorite concubine • Anti-Buddhist Backlash (by Conf. & Daoists) • Loss of tax revenues and inability to feed people in times of famine (Gov’t weakness) • Nomadic Turkish Uighur (WEE-goor) mercenaries invited to suppress rebellion, sacked Chang’an and Luoyang as payment • Nomadic raids and invasions continued • Tang decline continues, rebellions in 9th century, last emperor abdicates 907 The Song Dynasty, 960-1279 C.E. Song Dynasty (960-1279 CE) [Never matched Tang military or political strength] • Emphasis on administration, industry, education, the arts • Military not emphasized • Direction of first emperor, Song Taizu (r. 960-976 CE) – Former military leader – Made emperor by troops – Instituted policy of imperial favor for civil servants, expanded meritocracy Song Strengths • Population increase approached 100 mil. • Rice production doubled due to opening new lands to cultivation in the south (Grand Canal) • Improved tool use and fertilizers; new rice strains from Vietnam • Tax relief for farmers and credit to open new farms • Early song Emperors appoint bureaucrats based on merit • Excel at Manufacturing (gunpowder, bombs, moveable type print, water-power mills, iron, steel); more per capita manufacturing than anyone else! Song Weaknesses • Lack of military might (“Fight with other means”) • Size of bureaucracy heavy drain on economy – Two peasant rebellions in 12th c. – Internal inertia prevents reform of bureaucracy • Civil service leadership of military – Lacked military training – Unable to contain nomadic attacks – Jurchen (a Tungusic people (Siberian) who inhabited the region of Manchuria) conquer, founding the Jin Empire, forcing Song dynasty to Hangzhou, southern China (Southern Song) The Song Dynasty, 960-1279 C.E. Agricultural Economies of the Tang and Song Dynasties • Developed Vietnamese fast-ripening rice, 2 crops per year • Technology: iron plows, use of draft animals (North - Oxen, South – Water Buffaloes) • Soil fertilization, improved irrigation – Water wheels, canals • Terrace farming Population Growth • Result of increased agricultural production • Effective food distribution system 120 100 80 60 Millions 40 20 0 600 CE 1000 – Transportation networks built under Tang and Song dynasties Strict Social Hierarchy Gentry: Wealthy landowners, focused on Confucian ideals, focus on civil service Peasants: Majority population who were predominantly farmers living in small villages Merchants: Could acquire wealth but always held low social status due to their wealth coming from the work of others. Could own land and educate sons to enter the Gentry Urbanization • Chang’an (currently Xi'an) world’s most populous city: 2 million residents – Southern Song capital Hangzhou: over 1 million Patriarchal Social Structures • Increased emphasis on ancestor worship – Elaborate grave rituals – Extended family gatherings in honor of deceased ancestors • Footbinding gains popularity – Increased control by male family members Footbinding Foot-Binding The Quest for Beauty and Status The History of Foot-Binding • The practice was popular by the 12th century • There are two stories as to how this tradition began • Foot-Binding was made illegal soon after the Chinese Revolution in 1911 The Foot-Binding Ritual • Began between the ages of 3 and 11 • Was performed by the girl’s mother or another female relative • Foot-binding usually took place in the fall and winter so the girl would feel less pain The Foot-Binding Steps • 1. The girl’s toenails would be cut • 2. Her feet would be soaked in hot water • 3. Except for the big toe, all of her toes would be broken and folded under the foot • 4. Her feet would be wrapped tightly in silk or cotton bandages • 5. Every few days, the bandages would be taken off, the feet cleaned, and the feet wrapped even more tightly Wrapping Bound Feet Bound Feet Bound Feet • Wealth • Status • Beauty • Marriage WHY WERE FEET BOUND? Beauty • A three-inch-long foot, called a “golden lotus,” was considered beautiful • Feet this size would be able to fit into the delicate and beautiful shoes made for bound feet Marriage, Status, and Wealth • Having bound feet made it difficult to walk, and so a man who had a wife with bound feet looked as if he had so much money and status that his wife did not need to work A typical junk ship from Technology and Industry the Song Dynasty • Porcelain (“Chinaware”) • Increase of iron production due to use of coke, not coal, in furnaces – Agricultural tools, weaponry • Gunpowder invented • Earlier printing techniques refined – Moveable type by mid-11th century – Yet complex Chinese ideographs make wood block technique easier • Naval technology – compass Emergence of a Market Economy • Letters of credit developed to deal with copper coin shortages – Promissory notes, checks also used • Development of independently produced paper money – Not as stable, riots when not honored • Government claims monopoly on money production in 11th century China and the Hemispheric Economy • Increasingly cosmopolitan nature of Chinese cities • Chinese silk opens up trade routes, but increases local demands for imported luxury goods Cultural Change in Tang and Song China • Declining confidence in Confucianism after collapse of Han dynasty • Increasing popularity of Buddhism • Christianity, Manichaeism, Zoroastrianism, Islam also appear • Clientele primarily foreign merchant class Dunhuang • Mahayana Buddhism especially popular at Dunhuang in western China (Gansu province), 600-1000 CE – Cave temples • Buddhist temples, libraries • Economic success as converts donate land holdings • Increase popularity through donations of agricultural produce to the poor Conflicts with Chinese Culture • Buddhism: – Text-based (Buddhist teachings) • Emphasis on Metaphysics • Ascetic ideal – Celibacy – Isolation • Confucianism: – Text-based (Confucian teachings) – Daoism not textbased • Emphasis on ethics, politics • Family-centered – Procreation – Filial piety Neo-Confucianism • Song dynasty refrains from persecuting Buddhists, but favors Confucians • Neo-Confucians influenced by Buddhist thought – Syncretic blend of both faiths Chan (Zen) Buddhism • Buddhists adapt ideology to Chinese climate – Dharma translated as dao – Nirvana translated as wuwei • Accommodated family lifestyle – “one son in monastery for ten generations of salvation” • Limited emphasis on textual study, meditation instead Persecution of Buddhists • Daoist/Confucian persecution supported in late Tang dynasty • 840s begins systematic closure of Buddhist temples, expulsions – Zoroastrians, Christians, Manicheans as well • Economic motive: seizure of large monastic landholdings • Limits growth but does not eradicate faiths