china: tang & song

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China: Tang & Song China: Tang & Song Reunification & Renaissance Chapter 12, pg.256-276 220 CE: Han dynasty ends 220-589: era of division 589-618: Sui dynasty 618-907: Tang dynasty 960-1279: Song dynasty 1279-1368: Yuan Mongol dynasty

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China: Tang & Song. Reunification & Renaissance Chapter 12, pg.256-276 220 CE: Han dynasty ends 220-589: era of division 589-618: Sui dynasty 618-907: Tang dynasty 960-1279: Song dynasty 1279-1368: Yuan Mongol dynasty. Rebuilding the Imperial Edifice. 589 : Wendi - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: China: Tang & Song

China: Tang & SongChina: Tang & Song

Reunification & Renaissance

Chapter 12, pg.256-276

220 CE: Han dynasty ends220-589: era of division589-618: Sui dynasty618-907: Tang dynasty960-1279: Song dynasty1279-1368: Yuan Mongol dynasty

Page 2: China: Tang & Song

Rebuilding the Imperial Edifice

589: WendiSui dynasty came to power

Wins widespread support throughRole of nomads

Lowering taxes

Establishing granaries

Page 3: China: Tang & Song

Sui Excesses & Collapse

YangdiMilder legal code

Restoration of Confucian exam system

Promotion of scholar-gentry

Excess, waste, & wars led to collapseYangdi assassinated in 618

Page 4: China: Tang & Song

Emergence of the Tang

623: Li Yuanlays the foundation for the Tang

Extends borders of the empire

Attempts to assimilate nomads of the Central Asian frontier

Page 5: China: Tang & Song

Rebuilding the Bureaucracy

Bureaucracy key to Chinese unityRevived scholar-gentry

Bureaucracy staffed by scholar-gentry Offset power of the nobility

Page 6: China: Tang & Song

The Examination System

Emphasized Confucian thought

Exam system expanded

Meritocracy exists, but birth/family connections still most important

Page 7: China: Tang & Song

State & Religion

Buddhism spread rapidly during era of division (b/t fall of Han & rise of Sui)

Mahayana/Pure Land = mass appeal

Chan/Zen = elite appeal

Buddhism = cultural, political forceMaintained support during early Tang

Empress Wu

Page 8: China: Tang & Song

Anti-Buddhist Backlash

Confucian revival threatened Buddhism

Daoism & Confucianism counter Buddhism’s popularity

Persecution under Wuzong

Confucianism re-emerges as central ideology

Buddhism remains influential minority

Page 9: China: Tang & Song

Tang Decline, Rise of Song

713-756: Xuangong’s rule = climax of Tang civilization

Yang Guifei

800s: Tang collapse by:Nomadic groups

Powerful provincial governors

Worsening economic conditions

Page 10: China: Tang & Song

Founding of the Song

960: Zhao Kuangyin establishes Song dynasty

Nomadic Khitans/Liao dynasty remain influential in north

Tribute paid to Khitans for peace

Sinification

Page 11: China: Tang & Song

Song Politics

Song = less powerful than TangWeakened military

Strengthened scholar-gentry

→Bureaucracy becomes bureaucratic: large, ineffective government

Page 12: China: Tang & Song

Confucian Revival

Neo-Confucianism:Virtue could be cultivated

Tradition over new, foreign ideas

Particularly stressed lessons of five relationships

Patriarchal

Page 13: China: Tang & Song

Decline & Reform

Decline:Held hostage by threat of nomadic groups

Reform:Legalist & interventionist ideas aimed at correcting dynastic weaknesses

Page 14: China: Tang & Song

Reaction & Disaster

Neo-Confucianism prevailed in endReversed reforms

Manchurian nomads (Jurchens/Jin) invaded

Song leadership fled southTermed “Southern Song dynasty”

Page 15: China: Tang & Song

Golden Age: Prosperity

Population shifted to southGrand Canal

Page 16: China: Tang & Song

Commercial Expansion

Territorial expansion & manufacturing → renewal of silk roads

Trade aided by:JunksGovernment regulationFlying money

Urbanization intensified economic growth

Page 17: China: Tang & Song

Expansion of Agriculture

Expanded agriculture into new lands

Innovations increased productivity

Redistributed land to peasants

Page 18: China: Tang & Song

Family & Society

Confucian social ideas adopted at all levelsHierarchy became more rigid & elaborate

Reinforced by lawMarriage practices

Early postclassical saw improvement for urban-elite women

Page 19: China: Tang & Song

Male Dominance

Despite exceptions, women’s conditions overwhelming declined

Especially in late postclassical Due to power of Neo-Confucianism

FootbindingCompare upper class to lower class?

Page 20: China: Tang & Song

Question:In what ways was footbinding symbolic of women’s position in postclassical China?

Page 21: China: Tang & Song

Invention, Scholarship, & Art

Extremely technologically advancedEngineering

Gunpowder

Compasses

Moveable printing

Confucian scholarship & being well-rounded valued

Tang = poetry, literature

Song = landscape painting

Page 22: China: Tang & Song

Global Connections

No major changes, instead, a consolidation of Chinese civilization

Extended influence over East Asia

Most advanced economy in world with major technological innovations

Important global impacts

Page 23: China: Tang & Song

Sui Tang

SongSouthern Song

Page 24: China: Tang & Song

Question:

How did Chinese society change & stay the same during the postclassical period?Compare & contrast the Tang & Song dynasties.In what ways did each successive dynasty try to address the weakness of the previous? What were the results of these efforts?