Chapter 11 Central and East Asia

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Chapter 11 Central and East Asia 400-1200

The Sui and Tang Empires 581-755 Pages 276-281

Sui Empire 581-618 Reunified China Built capital city, Chang’an To facilitate communication and trade they built the Grand Canal 1,100 miles long Linked the Yellow and Yangzi Rivers Overextension (military expansion and public works) led to Sui downfall

Tang Empire 618-755 The Tang Empire was established in 618 The Tang state : program of territorial expansion Avoided over-centralization Combined Turkic influence with Chinese Confucian traditions

Buddhism and the Tang Empire Rulers used the Buddhist idea that they are spiritual agents who bring their subjects into a Buddhist realm Buddhist monasteries were important allies Buddhism spread through Central and East Asia through trade and growth of empires

Mahayana Buddhism Mahayana Beliefs encouraged the adaptation of local deities into a Mahayana pantheon Encouraged the translation of Buddhist texts into local languages.

To Chang’an by Land and Sea Chang’an was the destination of ambassadors under the tributary system (send embassies to pay tribute to emperor) The city of Chang’an itself had over a million residents. Foreigners lived in special compounds Roads and canals brought people, goods and the bubonic plague to the East

Fractured Power in Central Asia and China, to 907 Pages 281-285

The End of the Tang Empire, 879–907 As its territory expanded the Tang Empire was left large and powerful but dependent on military commanders, which led to its fall because of internal rebellions In 907 the Tang state would end and new smaller kingdoms would be established.

The Uigur and Tibetan Empires In the mid-seventh century, a Turkic group, the Uigurs, built an empire in Central Asia The Uigurs were known as merchants and scribes, had strong ties to both Islam and China, and developed their own script The Uigur Empire lasted for about fifty years

Tibet Tibet was a large empire with access to Southeast Asia, China, South and Central Asia Tibet was thus open to Indian, Chinese, Islamic, and even (via Iran) Greek culture

The Emergence of East Asia, to 1200 Pages 285-296 After the fall of the Tang a number of new states emerged and the Song Empire was established

Liao (lee-OW) The Liao lasted from 916-1121 Made Beijing one of its capitals Forced the Song to give them annual payments of cash and silk in return for peace Song helped the Jurchens (established Jin Empire) of northeast Asia to defeat the Liao

Song Industries In 1088 the engineer Su Song constructed a huge, chain-driven mechanical clock: It told the time, day of the month, and indicated the movements of the moon and certain stars and planets Song used gunpowder, iron and steel for weapons, improved the compass and had a standing army

Economy and Society in Song China The civil service examination system, introduced in the Tang, reached its mature form in the Song The examination broke the domination of the hereditary aristocracy by allowing men to be chosen for government service on the basis of merit

During the Song period China’s population rose to 100 million Population growth and economic growth fed the rise of large, crowded, but very well-managed cities like Hangzhou (hahng-jo)

Women’s Status during the Song Women’s status declined during the Song period Women were entirely subordinated to men and lost their rights to own and manage property; remarriage was forbidden Footbinding became a mandatory status symbol for elite women

Korea and Japan (read about Vietnam) The Korean hereditary elite absorbed Confucianism and Buddhism from China and passed them along to Japan The several small Korean kingdoms were united first by Silla in 668 Then by Koryo (KAW-ree-oh) in the early 900s

Japan Japan’s mountainous terrain was home to hundreds of small states that were unified, perhaps by horse-riding warriors from Korea, in the fourth or fifth century The unified state established its government at Yamato

In the mid-seventh century, the rulers of Japan implemented a series of political reforms to establish: centralized government legal code national histories The native religion of Shinto survived alongside the imported Buddhist religion.