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The Reunification and Revival of Post-Classical China

The Reunification and Revival of Post-Classical China. Chapter Twelve AP World History Ms. Tully. Quick Review of Chinese History. Xia, Shang, Zhou Dynasties Era of Warring States Qin Dynasty Han Dynasty Three Kingdoms Period (Northern Qi; Northern Zhou; Chen). Sui Dynasty (589-618 ).

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The Reunification and Revival of Post-Classical China

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  1. The Reunification and Revival of Post-Classical China Chapter Twelve AP World History Ms. Tully

  2. Quick Review of Chinese History • Xia, Shang, Zhou Dynasties • Era of Warring States • Qin Dynasty • Han Dynasty • Three Kingdoms Period (Northern Qi; Northern Zhou; Chen)

  3. Sui Dynasty (589-618) • Return to strong dynastic control in China • Wendi, Northern Zhou Emperor • Widespread popularity • Buddhist; expands Buddhism

  4. Sui Collapse • Yangdi, Son of Wendi • Milder legal code, supports Confucian education • Scholar-gentry reestablished • Expensive building projects & excessive luxury • 611-614: Attack Korea  failure • 618: Assassinated by own ministers

  5. Grand Canal • Canal system built by Sui & Tang • Build to accommodate population shift and transportation of goods and revenue • Millet in North, Rice in South • 1100 miles long • 1 million forced laborers

  6. Tang Dynasty (618-907) • Li Yuan, Duke of Tang  Emperor Gauzo of Tang • Used armies to unite China  Assimilation of Turkic nomads • Expands empire into Tibet, Vietnam, Manchuria, Korea • Great Wall repaired and strengthened

  7. Tang Dynastyat greatest extent

  8. Rebuilding the Bureaucracy • Bureaucracy collapsed with Han dynasty • Goal #1: Revive scholar-gentry (bureaucrats) • Goal #2: Rework Confucian ideology • Levels of political control needed from Imperial palace to small district • Executive department w/ 6 ministries • Bureau of Censors • New capital Chang’an

  9. The Growing Importance of the Examination System • Examination system expanded  # of educated scholars rises • Ministry of Rites established to administer exams • Jinshi: those who passed the most difficult/highest exams • Special social privileges emerge • Entrance into bureaucracy still exclusive

  10. State and Religion in the Tang • Buddhism had grown in popularity during Six Dynasties Era • Mahayana Buddhism • Chan (Zen) Buddhism • Early tang supported Buddhism; Empress Wu (690-705)

  11. Anti-Buddhist Backlash • Buddhist success leads to criticism by Confucians • Tang lost revenue and labor power • 841-847: Persecution under Emperor Wuzong • Confucianism emerges as the central ideology; Buddhism is weakened

  12. Tang Decline • 8th C: Signs of decline • Emperor Xuanzong (713-756) • Yang Guifei royal concubine of Xuanzong • 755: An Lishan Rebellion • 907: last Tang emperor resigns

  13. Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period907-960 • Five Dynasties in Northern China succeeded one another rapidly • Later Liang • Later Tang • Later Jin • Later Han • Later Zhou (General Zhao Kuangyinconquers other kingdoms and unifies China) Ten Kingdoms in Southern China existed concurrently and controlled their own territory • Wu • Wuyue • Min • Chu • Southern Han • Former Shu • Later Shu • Jingan • Southern Tang • Northern Han

  14. Song Dynasty (960-1279) • Northern Song: 960-1127 • Southern Song: 1127-1279 • 960: General Zhao Kuangyin (Emperor Taizu) founds Song Dynasty • Could not defeat northern Liao dynasty in Manchuria • Not as politically or militarily as powerful as Tang dynasty • Continued growth of bureaucracy

  15. Neo-Confucians • Revivers of pure Confucian thought and teachings • Importance of philosophy in everyday life; stress personal morality • Hostility to foreign ideas • Emphasis on tradition: gender, class, age distinctions reinforced • Became dominant interpretation of Confucianism

  16. Attempts at Reform & Southern Song Dynasty • Increase in tribute to nomadic tribes • Large military an increasing burden • Wang Anshi (1070s – 1080s)  introduces reforms • Agricultural expansion; landlords/scholars-gentry taxed • Bureaucratic reforms  analytical thinking over memorization • 1085: Emperor Shenzong dies; reforms reversed by neo-Confucians and new emperor • 1115: Jin Kingdom founded north of Song Empire • Song flee to south  new capital at Hangzhou

  17. A New Phase of Commercial Expansion • Canal systems + Silk Roads = commercial expansion booming! • Commerce expands in cities and trading towns • Urban growth; Chang’an capital w/ 2 million ppl

  18. Silk Roads & Indian Ocean Trade • Tribal societies drawn to riches of Silk Road  raided traders • Chinese rulers protect trade and travelers on Silk Roads  urban development • Increase in ocean trade  Chinese Junks • Established market network along Indian ocean coast  rival Arabs for control

  19. Expanding Agrarian Production • Economy stimulated by advances in farming • Tang and Song rulers try to promote agricultural production and peasants • Canals help transport produce quickly • Breakup of aristocratic estates  divided up among peasantry

  20. Family in the Tang-Song Era • Male-dominated and respect for elders supported by Neo-Confucians • Elite women have broader opportunities • Arranged marriages • Divorce widely available if both husband and wife consent • Neo-Confucian greatly reduce role of women in late Song period  confinement, repression

  21. Foot-Binding • Symbol of subordination • Begin binding feet at 2-5 y/o • Ideal length: 3 inches • Considered highly attractive and erotic by men • Dies out by early 20th C

  22. Cultural Achievements • Renaissance of Chinese poetry & painting  nature theme • Scholars are now cultural producers • Paper techniques refined  development of moveable type in 1041 • Gunpowder & fireworks (9th C) • Abacus, wheelbarrow

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