reunification and renaissance in china

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Reunification and Renaissance in China

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Reunification and Renaissance in China. Era of Division 220-589 CE. ·       New series of nomadic invasions and regional wars for imperial power ·       Bureaucratic apparatus disappeared ·       Buddhism eclipsed Confucian teachings - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Reunification and Renaissance in China

Reunification and Renaissance in China

Page 2: Reunification and Renaissance in China

Era of Division 220-589 CE

      New series of nomadic invasions and regional wars for imperial power

      Bureaucratic apparatus disappeared

      Buddhism eclipsed Confucian teachings

      Great Wall divided between kingdoms usually poorly defended

      Trade and city life declined, technology stagnated

Page 3: Reunification and Renaissance in China
Page 4: Reunification and Renaissance in China

Rise of the Sui 580s initial rise of the Sui dynasty Wendi- marriage between his daughter and

ruler of northern Zhou- then seized the throne of his son-in-law and took won support of nomadic military commanders

Extended the empire across northern China and in 589 conquered the Chen kingdom

Won widespread support by lowering taxes, establishing granaries

Page 5: Reunification and Renaissance in China

Sui Excesses and Collapse

      Wendi’s son Yangdi (who murdered his father to reach the throne) extended conquests and drove back invaders

      Legal and educational reforms promoted the scholar-gentry but at the expense of great aristocratic families and military commanders

      Yangdi’s extravagant lifestyle and use of subjects as labor

      611-614- Korea campaign- failed      Soon widespread revolts across empire      618- Yangdi assassinated by one of his own ministers

Page 6: Reunification and Renaissance in China

The emergence of the Tang and the

Restoration of the Empire

     Li Yuan, Duke of Tang- one of Yangdi’s loyal officials      623 Li Yuan emerged victorious after five-year

struggle after Yangdi’s death      Conquered deep into central Asia- this meant that

nomadic invaders had to submit to Tang rule      Created frontier armies (from Turkic peoples- sent

sons to live in the cities)      Extended further into parts of Vietnam and Korea-

they built an empire bigger than the boundaries of modern-day China

Page 7: Reunification and Renaissance in China

Rebuilding the Bureaucracy

      Increase in power of scholar-gentry- decrease in power of aristocratic families so from the Tang-era onward political power in China shared by imperial families and the bureaucrats of the civil service system

      Changan- new capital      Bureaucracy reached county levels

Page 8: Reunification and Renaissance in China

The Growing Importance of the

Examination System       Patronized academies to train state officials and

educate them in Confucian classics, which were thought to teach moral and organizational principles- Ministry of Rites administered the examinations

      Jinshi- those who passed exams on the philosophical and legal classics and Chinese literature

      Birth and family position still very important- upper levels of power still dominated by aristocracy- fathers to sons

Page 9: Reunification and Renaissance in China

State Religion in the Tang-Song Era

      Increasing state patronage for Confucian learning threatened old aristocratic families and Buddhist monastic orders

      Buddhism proliferated in China after the fall of the Han. Masses adopted pure land strain of Mahayana Buddhism which provided refuge from turmoil and war, while elite attracted to Zen Buddhism with its stress on meditation and natural beauty- goal to escape cycle of rebirth

      Early Tang rulers patronized Buddhism while promoting Confucian classics studies

      Empress Wu (Tang ruler from 690-705 CE) supported Buddhist establishment heavily- even tried to elevate it to a state religion

Page 10: Reunification and Renaissance in China

Anti-Buddhist Backlash

      Daoist monks tried to counter Buddhism by stressing their own magical and predictive powers

      Confucian scholar-administrators- campaign against Buddhist monastic lands because they weren’t taxed- this was most damaging

      By mid-8th century state fears of Buddhist wealth and power led to measures to limit the flow of land and resources to the monastic orders. Emperor Wuzong (r. 841-847) open persecution of Buddhists

      Confucianism emerged again as the central ideology of Chinese civilization for most of the period from the 9th- 20th century

      Buddhism had opposite experience in mainland southeast Asia, Tibet, and parts of Central Asia

Page 11: Reunification and Renaissance in China

Tang Decline and the Rise of the Song

  After Empress Wu, Empress Wei tried to control the country and placed her child on the throne but her attempt was thwarted by a prince who became emperor Xuanzong (r. 713 – 756) marked the peak of the Tang power and the high point of Chinese civilization under the dynasty

      Xuanzong started out strong but then became disinterested and the empire waned- he became infatuated with Yang Guifei (a young woman from the harem of an imperial prince) after the death of his second wife- their romance famous for further weakening the empire. She became a royal concubine and moved her greedy relatives into power. Economic distress coupled with anger over the state affairs led to An Lushan leading a revolt in 755 with the intention of establishing a new Tang dynasty

Page 12: Reunification and Renaissance in China

      Revolt crushed but at a high cost - Tang had allied themselves with nomadic peoples in the north, delegated resources and political power to regional commanders who remained loyal to the dynasty. Nomads took advantage of the situation. Regional powers began acting independently. Succession of revolts in the 9th century.

907 last emperor of Tang dynasty forced to resign

Page 13: Reunification and Renaissance in China

The Founding of the Song Dynasty

      960- military commander Zhao Kuangyin emerged to reunite China under single dynasty (educated man) He was renamed emperor Taizu and founded Song dynasty

Routed out all rivals except one- northern Liao dynasty which had been founded in 907 by the nomadic Khitan peoples from Manchuria- plagued the dynasty- in 1004 Song forced to pay tribute to keep it from raiding the Song domains

Page 14: Reunification and Renaissance in China
Page 15: Reunification and Renaissance in China

Song Politics: Settling for Partial Restoration

      Song never matched Tang in political or military strength. Military subordinate to civilian administrators. Military commanders rotated to keep them from building up a base

Strong promotion of Confucian scholar-gentry. Routinized civil service exams. Bureaucracy bloated with well-paid officials with nothing to do

Page 16: Reunification and Renaissance in China

The Revival of Confucian Thought

      Revival of Confucian thought dominated intellectual life. Study of classical texts. New schools of philosophy

      Zhu Xi- prominent thinker who stressed the importance of applying philosophical principles to everyday life and action (neo-Confucians)- cultivating personal morality the highest goal- hostility to outside influence- eventually stifled innovation and critical thinking of the elite. Emphasis on rank, obligation, deference. Importance of upholding the patriarch in Chinese household.

Page 17: Reunification and Renaissance in China

Roots of Decline: Attempts at Reform

      Mid-11th century Tangut tribes (originally from Tibet) had established a kingdom Xi Xia. Song had to pay tribute and this drained resources from the empire.

      Cost of army to ward off invaders burdensome (but size of army much greater than counterparts in Japan and western Europe). Emphasis on scholar-gentry meant no good military commanders

      1070s and 1080s Wang Anshi (a chief minister of the Song Shenzong emperor) tried to ward off impending collapse by introducing reforms but his reforms depended on support from the Shenzong emperor but he died in 1085 and Anshi lost support

Page 18: Reunification and Renaissance in China

Reaction and Disaster: The Flight to the

South       Economic conditions worsened and peasant unrest

increased

      1115 nomadic contender the Jurchens overthrew the Liao dynasty of the Khitans and established the Jin kingdom. Soon the Jin annexed most of the Yellow River basin and forced the Song to flee south

      Song capital transferred to Hangzhou- Southern Song dynasty (1127-1279). Politically nothing much but culturally one of the most glorious in history.

Page 19: Reunification and Renaissance in China

Golden Age of Prosperity      Grand Canal-constructed by Yangdi and

nearly 1200 miles long- ran North to South and linked north China plain to Yangtze river basin. This made south become major food-producing area of the empire

      Commerical expansion- Tang control of Central Asia reopened the silk roads; China mainly exporting manufactured goods and imported luxury goods, such as aromatic woods and spices. Chinese junks the best ships in the world at the time (along with the Arab dhows). Banks, money, guilds

Page 20: Reunification and Renaissance in China

City and Rural Growth      The World's Most Splendid Cities -

Changan- nearly 2 million inhabitants and the largest in the world. Roughly 10 percent of pop. living in urban cities. Hangzhou- size, beauty, sophistication

      Expanding Agrarian Production and Life in the Country- state-regulated irrigation systems and settlement of unsettled areas; improved methods increased yield of peasant production; policies aimed at breaking the great estates of the old aristocracy

Page 21: Reunification and Renaissance in China

Family Life      family organization largely

resembled old family organization; male-dominated hierarchy promoted by Confucianism; women subordinate but some elite women had access to power and divorce was allowed as were "complementary husbands"

Page 22: Reunification and Renaissance in China

Gender Relations Neo-Confucian Assertion of Male

Dominance - overall condition of women worsened, neo-Confucian thinkers stressed female role as homemaker and mother and bearer of sons, advocated confining women; in contrast, men were out and about; footbinding- late Song era- lower class slower to adopt practice because needed mobile women as workers

Page 23: Reunification and Renaissance in China

Invention and Creativity

- technological advances- grand canal, dikes, dams, bridges, explosive powder; domestically- chairs, tea drinking across empire, coal; others- compass for navigation, moveable type by Bi Sheng, high level of literacy, abacus

Page 24: Reunification and Renaissance in China

Scholarly Achievement      Scholarly Refinement and Artistic

Accomplishment - generalists not specialists; Tang best remembered for its Confucian teachers and scholar-administrators; Heavy focus in literature on common life; Li Bo most famous poet of Tang era; Song era- intense interest in nature in art