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Governmental Systems in China Period Governmental Hand of Cards Prompt, notes 2 64 65, 66 3 62 63, 64 4 64 65, 66 5 62 63, 64 6 62 63, 64 • Imagine you must have someone hold $100.00 for you for one year. Who would you want to hold the money; a family member (relative), a close friend who is wealthy or an excellent student. Why would you make this choice? Bureaucratic Government • Bureaucracy is specialization of functions and a hierarchy of authority. • Emperor was the top of the hierarchy. • To manage the vast territory effectively, emperors appointed official inspectors, tax collectors, and other administrators to travel through the country to carry out imperial rule. Nepotistic • power is bestowed on the basis of family relationships • An example is the early portion of the Zhou Dynasty (1054-221 B.C.) • Chinese emperors extended their control over the country through the use of a nepotistic government. • Zhou emperors put their relatives in charge of the provinces largely to ensure a loyal bureaucracy. Aristocracy • power is vested (given to )in a small privileged class. • 771 B.C. the armies of powerful aristocrats invaded the Zhou capital and drove out the rulers. • Officially, the Zhou still ruled China, but the ones with real power were the aristocrats who controlled the strongest provinces. Meritocracy • The talented are chosen to rule through a civil-service examination • Sui and early Tang rulers used examinations to identify qualified candidates for public office. • In the beginning only aristocrats could afford to study for these exams. Later, however, Tang and Song leaders recruited civil servants from other classes. • In imperial China the emperor did not appoint just one sector of society to act as government officials. • While Chinese emperors had absolute power, in most cases they shared power with wealthy, land owning families, who administered the government in China’s far-reaching provinces. • When China adopted the system of meritocracy, land owning aristocrats lost some of their power. • By the end of the Song Dynasty nearly half of the civil servants came from non-aristocratic families. Rule By Foreigners • In 1276 the Mongols captured China’s capital city. Kublai Khan then took the title of emperor and ruled China calling his dynasty “Yuan.” • This dynasty lasted nearly 100 years. • Chinese society was divided into four classes 1) Mongols 2) foreigners from outside China who were friends 3) Northern Chinese 4) Southern Chinese. • Civil service exams were stopped, Mongols were given important jobs, trusted foreigners also held government jobs. Chinese scholars held only minor jobs or were teachers. • However because of a lack of qualified administrators, in 1315 the Civil Service Exam was restored. Governmental Hand of Cards • On the assigned page of your notebook draw a hand holding 5 playing cards; one card for each form of government. • On each card draw one symbol representing each one of the five forms of government. An example of a symbol could be; for scholarship a diploma.