development of chinese civilization a bend in the river/china

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DEVELOPMENT OF CHINESE CIVILIZATION A Bend in the River/China

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Page 1: DEVELOPMENT OF CHINESE CIVILIZATION A Bend in the River/China

DEVELOPMENT OF CHINESECIVILIZATION

A Bend in the River/China

Page 2: DEVELOPMENT OF CHINESE CIVILIZATION A Bend in the River/China

Early Chinese Civilizations

A. Shang Era (spanned most of 2nd Millennium BCE)

B. Peking Man (hominid of about 400,000 BCE)C. Neolithic Times (C. 8500-3500 BCE)

cultivating people gravitated to the lands that make up the Ordos bulge, Located on Huanghe River; region of fertile soil; site of Yangshao and Longshan cultures.

D. The region had build up rich loess, a fine grained yellow-brown soil. It was an extremely fertile soil built up over thousands of years over 300 feet in depth

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Early Chinese Civilizations

E. The Huanghe (Yellow River) got its name from the color of the soil that washed into the river

F. Ordos bulge: area of rich soil, abundant water( yellow river and tributaries), have important implications

1. Southern portions & portions eastward along Northern China plain were suitable for intensive grain cultivation and dense settlement.

G. 4000 BCE communities supported by agriculture were spread across the loess zone. And developed into 2 cultural complex societies, basis of the Shang Dynasty and Chinese civilization (p.109)

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Two Key Chinese Civilizations

A. Yangshao culture (c. 2500-2000 BCE) and Longshan culture (c. 2000-1500) were based on different mixes of hunting and agriculture.

1. Yangshao period – hunting and fishing predominated

2. Longshan period – cultivation of grain - millet in particular was the central preoccupation, Farming enabled them to make it possible to support - ????

3. Established irrigation systems to expand agrarian base.

Page 5: DEVELOPMENT OF CHINESE CIVILIZATION A Bend in the River/China

Two Key Chinese Civilizations

B. The melting snows of the Tibetan plateau and Kunhun mountains turned the river into a raging torrent capable of massive floods, flood control remained a great problem since ancient times.

C. This concern of controlling floods may have given rise to China's first rules and prompted a high level of community and inter-village cooperation.

D. First semi-mythical figure was SHUN, who had proved incapable of controlling a succession of great floods.

1. His son YU, devised an effective system of flood control, revered for a millennia as one of the great monarchs of China’s mythical golden age.

2. Confucius considered Up person ot be emulated

Page 6: DEVELOPMENT OF CHINESE CIVILIZATION A Bend in the River/China

Warrior Kings of Xia & Shang Era

I. YU first king China’s first kingdom XiaA. Little evidence of the existence, archaeological ?

Mythical?B. Before 1500 BCE, small numerous kingdoms existed

south of the Ordos Bulge & east along the Northern China plane

II. Ordos Bulge areas, distinctive Culture formeda. Distinctive ethnic and linguistic groupsb. Cooking vessels and cuisinec. Animal bones from divinationd. Domestication of silkworm (fabric/clothing)e. Ancestor worship (patrilineal)

Page 7: DEVELOPMENT OF CHINESE CIVILIZATION A Bend in the River/China

Warrior Kings of Xia & Shang Era

III. 1500, Shang DynastyA. Conquered mort of the other tribes and est. a kingdom to lay

foundation of Chinese civilizationB. Archaeological evidence of Anyang, Zhengzhou

1. Warlike nomads. Fought on horseback/chariots2. Non-Shang subject peoples were food soldiers3. Shang battles were much like Greeks and Egyptians

C. Shang Monarch – intermediary between the supreme being, Shangdi, and ordinary mortals

D. Shang rulers directed affairs of state and had ritual responsibilities for the fertility of their kingdom and well being of their subjects.

1. They had special springtime rituals, in times of drought/famine obliged to perform ritual dances

2. The Dance (or surrogate) would be later burned alive to placate the spirits.

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Warrior Kings of Xia & Shang Era

IV. Shang SocietyA. Bureaucracy est. by Monarchs in Anyang/other areas.B. Peasants/ artisans were governed by vassal retainers;

subordinate leaders who served the king and great lords, bound by personal ties.

C. Officials were recruited from the former ruling families and the aristocratic classes of the many subordinate states, who depended on the produce and labor of commoners.

D. In return for grants of control over peasants, warrior aristocrats collected tribute (usually in the form of Agricultural produce), that went to support the monarch and his court.

Page 9: DEVELOPMENT OF CHINESE CIVILIZATION A Bend in the River/China

Warrior Kings of Xia & Shang Era

IV. Shang SocietyE. Rulers lived with families, servants and noble retainers within

walled towns in large compounds that included extended families. Patriarchal

F. Women: lived with husband’s family, unswerving obedience within household and family.

G. Patriarchs of family were Husbands, hierarchy would devolve from elder to younger brother

H. Extended family is considered only among elites. Peasant families appeared similar to NUCLEAR family, but male dominated

I. Peasants were virtually the servants of nobles, who cultivated land in village as cooperative venture using wooden tools

J. Slaves were present, most likely they were artisans, some were free and quite prosperous, engaged in skilled crafts such as weaving, silk, textile, and casting bronze. Dwellings located outside the walls of towns and could be large and elaborate.

Page 10: DEVELOPMENT OF CHINESE CIVILIZATION A Bend in the River/China

Warrior Kings of Xia & Shang Era

V. Shang CultureA. Elites similar to other cultures. Nobility and elites

were preoccupied with rituals, oracles, and sacrifices1. Records do indicate water festivals

B. War captives & servants were buried with deceased Shang rulers and major officials, (pharaohs of Egypt)

C. Shang elite put great stock into the predictions of Shamans, or priests, who served as Oracles.

D. Shang artistic expression went into producing ritual objects used by oracles, warriors, families negotiating marriage alliances.

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Warrior Kings of Xia & Shang Era

V. Shang CultureE. Rituals of Shaman led to the rise of Writing

1. Writing begins as a interpretive act regarding shells or bones that were seared with a red hot poker.

2. Shell of bone would crack and cracks were interpreted by priest

3. Practice evolved into pained designs, later standardized

4. Number of Characters would increase, by end of Shang period 3000 characters, modern era would master some 8000 characters.

F. Writing became the key to Chinese identity & Growth of civilization in China.

Page 12: DEVELOPMENT OF CHINESE CIVILIZATION A Bend in the River/China

The Decline of Shang & the Era of Zhou

I. By 12century BCE Shang on its way out, Turkic speaking nomadic people est. a new Dynasty, the Zhou

II. Primary Power in North China by end of 12th century,

a. Zhou had a distinct class of scholars and bureaucrats, extending as far south as the Yangtze River Valley

III. More powerful than Shang, WuIV. Duck of Zhou – brother of Wu, Xian, Loyang

Page 13: DEVELOPMENT OF CHINESE CIVILIZATION A Bend in the River/China

The Decline of Shang & the Era of Zhou

V. Zhou SocietyA. More feudalistic than the ShangB. Rule through a hierarchy of Vassals, mostly

relatives, or long standing allies of Zhou householdC. Feudalism stressed through allegiance oath, regular

fief granting, transformed Shang order into feudalism

D. Fiefs granted to loyal warriorsE. Limited control of Fiefdoms by ZhouF. Vassals must be conscious of duties or pay pricesG. Decline/ loss of control.

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Changes in Social order

A. Mandate of Heaven: elaborate ideology1. Rational for Zhou monarchs2. Wu uses for justification of rule3. Established idea that supreme political authority

was granted by heaven4. Seeds of absolutist/authoritarian monarchs. 5. Rulers could lose the mandate

B. Second Development1. Alternative to military retainers who governed most

of the empire2. Professional Bureaucrats, best educated corps of

individuals during Zhou (770-400 BCE)

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Changes in Social order

B. Second Development3. Bureaucrats had literacy and willingness to serve as

scribes, clerks, advisors, and overseers 4. Paid wages either by the village/royal court5. Still managed small plots for food, due to small pay6. Specialized in keeping records, running particular

departments, organizing palace rituals and ceremonies. Evidence suggests that by 8th century they would amass powerful influence as advisors to rulers/nobles

Page 16: DEVELOPMENT OF CHINESE CIVILIZATION A Bend in the River/China

Zhou: New Patterns of Life

I. Division of Zhou conquers and subjugatedA. Division between Turkic and Loess soil regionB. Division evident in the twin capitals of Xain and

Loyang, Servants lived in one side of the walled city, others lived elsewhere

C. Zhou Vassals lived in walled towns. A. Towns were laid out on rectangular grid with two

main roads and a central square. Servants, artisans, slaves lived in or near the town

B. Most of the population were serfs, who made up most of the empires population

Page 17: DEVELOPMENT OF CHINESE CIVILIZATION A Bend in the River/China

Zhou: New Patterns of Life

I. Division of Zhou conquers and subjugatedC. Introduction of better farming, and extension of irrigation

system contributed to higher levels of productivityD. Peasants burdened by the demands of the lords

II. Migrations and Expansion of Chinese CoreA. Areas controlled by vassals & peoples who occupied them

identified as ChineseB. Population growth due to innovations in agricultureC. Periodic nomadic raids from north and some conquests

pushed Chinese peasants south.D. During this period, hundreds of thousands of Chinese

people moved down the HuangHe into Shandong peninsula. And later to the Great Yangtze river.

Page 18: DEVELOPMENT OF CHINESE CIVILIZATION A Bend in the River/China

End of Zhou

I. End of Zhou era, the basin of the Huanghe was securely Chinese, despite nomadic threats

II. By 8th century BCE Zhou power was in decline, control over vassals diminished, and domains grew enough to take advantage of internal division

III. By 771 BCE Allied group of Northern Nobles attached Xian. The Zhou leader killed.

A. In the battles that followed most of the Western portions of the Zhou kingdom were lost to leaders of the Vassal alliance or nomadic invaders

Page 19: DEVELOPMENT OF CHINESE CIVILIZATION A Bend in the River/China

End of Zhou

IV. Retainers managed to rescue a young prince of the Zhou and escort him to Loyang. This is a shift to the Eastern capital and the end of the Western Zhou era

V. A less powerful Zhou Dynast would last for 5 centuries in the East, with ever shrinking territories.

VI. Rival kingdoms emerged in the fiefdoms, accompanied by growing chaos

A. Bureaucratic reaction, that would produce some of China’s greatest thinkers and alter the course of Chinese civilization

Page 20: DEVELOPMENT OF CHINESE CIVILIZATION A Bend in the River/China

The Philosophical Schools

I. Philosophical EmergenceA. The next three centuries, began thinking deeply about

the nature of humanity and problems of society

II. ConfucianismA. Kong Fuzi “Master King” , the sage 551-478 BCE,

known as Confucius after the 17th century latinizationB. One of Many teachers in a series who tried to explain the

universe, as well as China’s place and appropriate behavior for human beings.

C. The Book of Songs, the Book of Poetry, the Book of Documents, and the Analetics.

D. Confucius was a lower aristocrat of the state of LU, and under Duke of Zhou made into a model for students

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The Philosophical Schools

II. ConfucianismE. Confucius’ goal was to improve society, but not to

look for the assistance of Gods.F. Insisted in the Analects that it was important to

know “know the essential duties of man living in a society of men.”

G. He became a teacher after a disappointed search for a ruler to use his ideas

H. Nobility he contended, was not transmitted by birth but by acquiring wisdom and virtue

I. Ideal man Junzi: Gentleman, without hereditary connections.

1. Should be virtuous, righteous, humane, wise, and brave

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The Philosophical Schools

J. Junzi: (Continued)1. Social interactions needed to be governed by Li, propriety.2. Li performed with a sincere heart rendered an individual

human3. Li governed all relationships (between parents, siblings, wife,

friend)4. Final Piety, the respect of a child for his or her parents above

all.5. Improvement of Society was responsibility of the ruler, and

quality of government depended upon the ruler’s moral character

K. The Dao of learning1. The Way: learning to be great consists shining with the

illustrious power of moral personality, in make a new people, in abiding in the highest goodness.

Page 23: DEVELOPMENT OF CHINESE CIVILIZATION A Bend in the River/China

The Philosophical Schools

K. The Dao of learning2. Confucius’ definition of the Dao as “moral personality” and

the highest goodness was in contrast to the old premoral Dao, in which Gods and Spirits, through offering ritual, regulated human life for good or ill.

3. View of society was Hierarchical. All relationships are hierarchical except friend (equal)

4. All relationships founded on REN (benevolence, humanity, or human-relatedness, (virtue applied to all without any Hierarchical dimensions

5. Redefinition of Dao produced an ethical program for this world, by this world.

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Qin & Han Empires

I. MenciusA. Scholar responsible for the emergence of

Confucianism as accepted in China. B. Added new dimensions to Confucian though in

terms of conceptions of human nature & the right to govern

C. Believed good kings had ruled in the past and urged rulers of his day to practice benevolence as well, by reducing taxes and making punishments less severe.

1. Kings could obtain people’s support

D. Called for a system called “well field” system: called for 8 families to farm fields shaped like the Chinese character for well (tic tac toe design) 1 field in middle farmed by all 8

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Qin & Han Empires

I. MenciusE. If government was not wise and benevolent,

government would be corrupt, people hungry, natural disasters etc.

F. Confucian principle of “rectification of names” a person who was not a ruler, should be removed, lost mandate of heaven

G. Concept used by Zhou to justify revolt against Shang

H. Secularized the mandate when he declared “heaven hears as the people hear; Heaven sees as the people see. Thus the welfare for the people was the ultimate standard of judging the virtue of government

Page 26: DEVELOPMENT OF CHINESE CIVILIZATION A Bend in the River/China

Qin & Han Empires

II. Emergence of LegalismA. Xunzi – took ideas of their teachers, Wise leadership proper

rituals, and strict laws would make humans capable of living good lives.

B. Lord Shang minister of the State of Qin, described his work as legalism

1. Eliminated aristocracy2. Determined subordinates’ military ranks by the # of heads cut off

in battle3. Organized territory to counties4. Attached farmers to those counties offering them houses, land, and

freedom from serfdom, 5. Made people responsible for crimes committed by members of

their mutual responsibility groups6. Codified laws, applying them harshly without consideration for

rank

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Qin & Han Empires

C. Another Student Han Feizi followed Lord Shang’s traditions

1. Advocated harsh application of laws, unmodified by family concerns

2. Suggests that rulers did not have to be moral leaders who treated their subjects with kindness

3. Parents treat their children differently, ruler cannot be expected to rule subjects with whom he had little familial bond

4. Equal application of the law was the only answer. 5. LI Si, student of Xunzi, contemporary of Han Feizi, Put

legal political theory into practice in Qin Empire as its leading minister

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Qin & Han Empires

IV. LiSiA. LI Si, student of Xunzi, contemporary of Han Feizi, Put legal

political theory into practice in Qin Empire as its leading minister

B. Legalist argued for elaborate system of laws fixed penalties for each offense,

C. The ruler, however was above the lawD. Judges to use their own consciences in estimating the gravity

of a crime.E. Define the crime correctly; punishment was provided

automatically by the code of law. F. These legal doctrines clashed with Confucian prioritization, in

the name of human kindness of the family, with the notion that REN was a motivation for the people to support their ruler

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Qin & Han Empires

V. DaoismA. The 3rd school of thought to emerge from Zhou EraB. 3rd century BCE, Zhuangzi (369-289 BCE) embraced

relativism and spiritual freedom and adamantly apoliticalC. Did not welcome rulers’ intervention to improve people’s

livelihoods. D. For Confucians the Dao (the way) was ethical path for

rulers’ humanity in a human centered world.E. Daoists, the Dao (the way) was of nature wit which

humans should seek harmony rather than dominance.F. 2 Daoist texts survive. The Daodejing, or Laozi,

attributed to Lao Dai, 6th century contemporary of Confucius. (most likely completed 3 centuries later)

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Qin and Han Empires

F. Other Text the Zhuangzi, goes much farther in rejecting politics and engagement with society

G. Daoism was a revolt against society against the intellect’s limitations. Intuition, not reason, was the source of true knowledge,

H. Zhuangzi questioned the reality of the world of sensesVI. Han Dynasty

1. Daoism would take on a religious coloration, then they used their beliefs in political movements in the quest for immorality through alchemy and sexual practices.

2. Daoism would frequently complement Confucian rationalism in the search for the true way, in centuries to come, Chinese often attempted to follow Confucian precepts in their social relations, while at the same time maintaining Daoist beliefs.

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Summary

What similar characteristics did the Xia and Shang Dynasties have to those of Egypt and Mesopotamia?

What roles did Confucianism, Daoism, and the Legal schools play in the development of Chinese Empires?

Were the Social structures of the Shang and Zhou Dynasties organized differently, what was society like?