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TANG DYNASTY

Arose in China around 618 AD


May be the greatest period in Chinese history

Founder of the dynasty was Taizong


Considered to be greatest emperor to rule China Brilliant general and government reformer

Divided government functions between six ministries: state revenue, public works, defense, justice, personnel, and religious affairs Reorganized local administration Expanded civil service system started by the Hans Founded a university to prepare students for civil service exams

Implemented flexible new law code and restructured judicial system to include courts of appeal Expanded Chinese territory by conquering Tibet thereby opening door for trade with the West

Built new capital city at Changan and engaged in many public works projects

END OF THE TANG DYNASTY


After Taizongs death in 649, a long line of good emperors extended his work But after 760, the Tang Dynasty would produce no more great rulers Chinese power steadily declined as a result Last Tang ruler and his family were killed during a civil war and Changan was burnt to the ground 907 AD

CHANGAN
Planned city 30 miles square Held population of nearly one million people Another two million lived in suburbs Largest city in the world Crowded with markets and temples But was a government center before all else Government buildings and emperors palace complex occupied several square miles on the northern side of the city

Bureaucracy was huge but performed its job honestly and efficiently Why? Board of Censors Spied on bureaucrats to make sure everyone did their job correctly Acted as court of appeals for anyone who felt they had not been treated fairly Educational system Promotion based exclusively on merit Weeded out the weak and mediocre Only the best and brightest made it into the bureaucracy And only the best and brightest of them were promoted

TANG BUREAUCRACY

Tang bureaucrat

RESPONSIBLITY
Power of government was immense Every urban neighborhood had its gates locked at midnight National urban curfew designed to reduce crime Peasants organized into collective guarantee groups Members had to police themselves and make sure their neighbors behaved themselves Or else whole group would be punished Responsibility, not freedom, was keynote of Tang government

SONG DYNASTY
Song Dynasty founded in 960 by Zhao Kuangyin Would last until 1279 Did not accomplish anything noteworthy in the area of politics and military achievements

SONG SCIENTIFIC ACHIEVEMENTS


During Song Dynasty the Chinese invented The compass Revolutionized navigation The printing press Used block printing Not movable type Gunpowder Used primarily for entertainment purposes Fireworks Chinese doctors took the pulse of patients to aid them in their diagnosis and inoculated patients against smallpox

ACUPUNCTURE
Chinese doctors developed acupuncture It is the practice of inserting needles in precise locations of the body to anesthetize patients for surgery Western doctors are still not sure how it works it might block transmission of pain signals to the brain it might also cause body to manufacture its own anesthesia

PROBLEMS
Growing population Over 100 million under the Songs Combined with increased taxes resulted in the impoverishment of peasantry Inflation Provoked by deficit spending by Songs Military budget gobbled up 80% of all revenue every year Forcing government to borrow to pay for other things Used to support one million man standing army

DECLINE IN THE STATUS OF WOMEN I


Growth of concubinage among upper class When married mans mistresses live under same roof as his legal wife And their children have the same rights as his legitimate children

DECLINE IN THE STATUS OF WOMEN II


Footbinding Feet of young girls are tightly wrapped in linen strips Remained bound in this manner for ten years Result is the lily foot Men liked this It showed off the fact that they were so wealthy that their wives did have to work They also saw the walk produced by this mutilation as sexually exciting Women were mutilated to satisfy the egos and desires of men

GENGHIZ KHAN
Mongols were originally a nomadic tribe of feuding clans from the Gobi Desert Who united them was Genghiz Khan (Lord of All Men) Born Temujin in 1167 Son of a minor clan chieftain Father was murdered and Temujin and a few friends forced into the desert on their own But they returned after a few years, killed Temujins father murderers, and took control of clan

MONGOL EMPIRE

Genghis Khan then united all the Mongol tribes of the Gobi Desert under his authority

He then forged them into a mighty horseback army and used them to create an immense empire that stretched from Chine in the east to Eastern Europe in the west

KEY TO GENGHIZ KHANS SUCCESS


Mongols believed the key to his success was that he had supernatural powers More realistically, he had all the qualities common to Mongols and then some extra ones Tremendous physical strength, endurance, and courage He was also a natural politician, a military genius, and had a remarkable talent for organization

His army was strange-looking but very powerful Mongol warriors literally lived backs of their shaggy ponies Could travel for weeks Also used version of compound bow Could kill a man from a distance of of a mile Most common tactic was to encircle an enemy Weaken him with volleys of arrows Then form into columns and charge

MONGOL ARMY

GENGHIZ KHANS CONQUESTS


First attacked Song China in 1206 Defeated Songs million man army and forced them into the south Did not follow but instead turned west and conquered everything up to and including Persia Sent raiding parties into Russia and Middle East But died suddenly in 1227

CREATION OF AN EMPIRE
Mongols returned to Gobi Desert to select new leader And then continued their conquests: Russia, Middle East, and parts of Eastern Europe (Hungary and Poland) In 1279, Genghiz Khans grandson, Kublai Khan, returned to southern China, finished off the Songs, and took over the rest of the country
Kublai Khan

Khanate of the Golden Horde

Khanate of the Great Khan

Chagatai Khanate

Ilkhanate
Largest and most important Khanate was the Khanate of the Great Khan, which included the Gobi Desert, China and Korea First of ten rulers was Kublai Khan. Together, they were known as the Yuan Dynasty

Following example of Genghiz Khan, the Mongols divided their empire into four units, called khanates

KUBLAI KHANS CHINA


We know quite a bit about the China of Kublai Khan thanks to the journal of Marco Polo Italian traveler who lived there for 12 years Mongols kept the Tang administrative system But suspended the civil service exam system and gave top jobs to Mongols, Persians, and Europeans Caused extreme resentment among educated Chinese

Marco Polo

MONGOLS VS CHINESE
Mongol rule was never popular in China and the Mongols were never socially accepted by educated Chinese Did not wear Chinese clothes Ate mutton and drank mares milk instead of Chinese cuisine Generally illiterate and put no value on education Had no last names Hated to bathe Mongols simply refused to assimilate into Chinese society

END OF THE YUAN DYNASTY


Only shrewd leadership and brute force could keep the Mongols in power in China Never lost the knack for brute force but khans after Kublai Khan were lacking in shrewd leadership Mongols therefore fought losing battle to stay in power Also began to increasingly fight among themselves Finally defeated and expelled by revolt led by Zhu Yuanzhang Who then founded Ming Dynasty

Zhu Yuanzhang

THE END
Same pattern appeared in other khanates as well Mongols gradually lost control Started fighting among themselves Were ultimately defeated and expelled Returned to the Gobi Desert and their old nomadic lifestyle Did not leave much of a legacy

JAPAN
Japan was never a Chinese possession but it did have contacts with the mainland for a long time and it did copy Chinese cultural models until around 900 AD Japanese writing system was based on the Chinese system and the island was governed by a succession of dynasties, just like China

AFTER 900 AD
In the capital city of Kyoto, the aristocratic families who lived there and served at the emperors court cultivated a delicate and sensitive lifestyle Emphasized refined poetry, art, and graceful manners

BUSHIDO
Out in the countryside, local strongmen (bushi or samurai) developed a more violent lifestyle known as bushido Since they were warriors, bushido stressed military virtues Such a courage, pride, and loyalty And especially stressed honor

HONOR
Led hard and simple lives, rejected wealth and comfort, and were prepared for death at any time Samurai preferred death to any form of dishonor Preferred execution on the battlefield to the dishonor of living with defeat Even developed special suicide ritual to cleanse ones name of dishonor Called seppuku

SHOGUN
Shogun was expected to perfectly embody bushido values Shoguns were originally military commanders appointed by the emperor from samurai clan leaders But as the power of the emperor weakened after 1200, shoguns became the real rulers of Japan Long civil war erupted as various samurai clan leaders struggled to seize and hold this powerful position 1200-1600 AD

TOKUGAWA IEYASU
Powerful samurai clan leader named Tokugawa Ieyasu seized position of shogun in 1603 Held it for the rest of his life and then passed the position to his son Founded the Tokugawa Dynasty which controlled the position of shogun from 1603 to 1868

TOKUGAWA JAPAN
Tokugawa shoguns generally provided just and efficient government But they became increasingly conservative and hostile to outside influences over time Expelled all foreign merchants and missionaries and cut Japan off from the rest of the world Distinctive Japanese temperament developed during this period of isolation Combined artistic sensitivity and ritualized manners of Kyoto aristocracy with bushido sense of honor and duty

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