Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Ancient China Was made up of over 200 small kingdoms First united by Emperor Ch ‘in Covers an area of 3,691,500 sq. miles. 3rd largest country in the world. Worlds largest pop. over 3 billion people. Confucius Was a philosopher in Ancient China (his real name was Kong Qui) born around 551 B.C. Taught that “what you do not wish for yourself, do not do to others.” Said that 5 relationships were key to a stable society. Ruler/Subject, Father/Son, Husband/Wife, Older Brother/Younger Brother, and Friend/Friend. Stressed virtue which is shown by how people act, not what they say. His teachings became known as Confucianism. Confucianism applied to all areas of Chinese life until the 1930’s. Started 1st tests (meritocracy) rather than aristocracy. Family Life! Dads were the boss! They told everything to do, even who you would marry (they could also sell you into slavery…yikes!). After Dad, the oldest son was the boss. You didn’t call your brother/sister by name but by title “oldest brother”, “#2 brother”, and “younger brother”, etc. Focused on RESPECT. Family life (cont.) Most Chinese lived in 3 room houses. One main room in the middle, with the parents bedroom on the left and all the children sharing the bedroom on the right. Ideally grandparents, parents, and kids would all live in the same house. The wealthy built elaborate houses with courtyards. Important Rivers Yellow River-located in Northern China. Is the most important river in China. Floods frequently due to silt which also explains how it received its name. Also called the “River of Sorrow.” Yangtze River-located in Southern China. It is the 3rd longest river in the world (over 3,900 miles long). Contains the worlds largest dam (3 Gorges Dam). The Grand Canal Built between 604-610 by the Sui Dynasty (although it connected several older canals begun by previous Dynasties) Connected several of China’s most important cities (Beijing & Hangzhou). As well as the Yangtze & Yellow Rivers. Boosted the economy (since goods could travel more easily). Helped to unify China The Grand Canal (cont.) It’s over 1100 miles long (1114 to be exact). Like The Great Wall is was built by conscripted peasants. (over ½ of them died during construction) Can you name another famous canal? The Great Wall Build by China’s 1st Emperor Qin Shi Huangdi Combined several older walls. Was completed in 11 years, 221-210 b.c. Built to keep out the “Northern Barbarians.” Stretched 2,600 miles. The Great Wall (cont.) Built by over 1 million people, mostly peasants and people that couldn’t pay their taxes (conscripted workers). Made the emperor very unpopular. Modern “Great Wall” was built by the Ming Dynasty between 1368-1644 a.d. and improved upon the original wall. Stretched 3,997 miles. Made the Ming’s very unpopular. Chinese Inventions • Paper (it was used for clothes at first, then for writing…seriously). • Printing with carved wooden blocks (called moveable type printing). • Gunpowder…then Fireworks! (watch out Great Wall) • Porcelain (that’s why it’s called China) Silk Discovered by Queen Si Ling-Chi perhaps around 6000 b.c. Made from the cocoons of Silkworms (poor silkworms). Silk was reserved for only the Emperor but gradually its use spread to the elite. Silk (continued) The beautiful & delicate thread soon began to be demanded all around the Ancient World (think Egypt, the Middle East, and even Europe). It was a Chinese secret. If you tried to sneak Silkworms out of China you could be executed…gulp. Silkworms only ate Mulberry leaves so it was very hard to smuggle out silkworms. Which leads us to the Silk Road! The Silk Road was neither made out of silk or a road…discuss. The Silk Road (cont.) was really a series of trade routes that traded almost everything: precious stones, spices, textiles, and even dogs. Used continuously for almost 2,000 years. Spread culture & religion. & We can’t forget Festivals! Chinese New Year (follows the lunar calendar which is based on the moon). Usually falls in January or February. The Chinese shoot fireworks to scare away misfortune. The Chinese Zodiac goes in a 12 year cycle. It contains the rooster, dog, pig, rat, ox, tiger, hare, dragon, snake, horse, sheep and monkey. On Chinese New Year families get together and have a large meal. Children receive little red envelopes with $ inside (oh-yeah). You clean your house and decorate it with pieces of red paper (before New Years, otherwise you may sweep out your good luck).