Common Core Standards RS 5, 7, 9, WS 1, 4, 8

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Presentation transcript:

Common Core Standards RS 5, 7, 9, WS 1, 4, 8 Aim: Does the Han Dynasty deserve to be called a “Classical” civilization? Period 2: 600 BCE – 600 CE NY State Standards 2 Common Core Standards RS 5, 7, 9, WS 1, 4, 8

Timeline of Chinese History so Far… Shang Dynasty Shang Dynasty 1650 – 1027 BCE Earliest Chinese river valley civilization Near the Yellow River Earliest form of Chinese writing Zhou Dynasty Zhou Dynasty 1027 – 256 BCE Believed Emperors receive the Mandate of Heaven. If they lost it, then a new dynasty would take over (Dynastic Cycle).

I The Warring States 481 - 221 BCE A) Starting in 481 BCE, the seven major kingdoms making up what is now most of China constantly fought one another. This is known in Chinese history as the Period of Warring States. Gradually, the Kingdom of Qin, in the north, took advantage of its superior cavalry (mounted soldiers on horseback), and won 15 major wars from 374-234 BCE. Also, the Qin had the advantage of a favorable location; its territory in modern Shaanxi province is well guarded from the east by mountains and has easy access to the North China plain through the Yellow River passes. No major battle ever took place in the Qin’s heartland.

The Warring States Continued… B) The great literary works of philosophy and religion that became the basis for later Chinese religious and social belief stem from the Warring States Period. Unfortunately, what we know about the philosophies and literature of those times is limited to mainly the schools of Taoism, Confucianism, and Legalism because the first Qin Emperor decreed that all literature other than those about Legalism and a few scientific fields be destroyed. During the same time period, competing philosophies dubbed "One Hundred Schools of Thought“ emerged. This included Yin & Yang, Eclectics, and Militarism. The hundred schools of thought showed the fierce political and class struggles between social classes.

The Warring States Continued… C) The Qin statesman Shang Yang (356-338 BCE) advocated total war and a disregard for the polite policies of battle which Chinese generals had always adhered to. His lessons were implemented by Ying Zheng, King of Qin, who emerged victorious from the Warring States period and proclaimed himself Shi Huangti - `first emperor' - of China in 221 BCE. Shi Huangti used spies and bribery to prevent rebellions of the other 6 Kingdoms. He created an army of 600,000 men, most of them conscripted (drafted) peasants. He appointed his generals based on ability rather than family name. He used his cavalry and armored foot soldiers to outmaneuver the enemy's bulky war chariots. In less than a decade, he had conquered and annexed all six enemy kingdoms.

II Qin Dynasty 221 – 207 BCE The Qin Dynasty was the first centralized Chinese government, ruled by an Emperor. "Qin now possessed All under Heaven." Shi Huangti abolished the old feudal system, which had distributed most lands to powerful lords. Li Si organized China into 36 districts governed by officials appointed by the first emperor. Shi Huangti ordered all the royal families of the vanquished kingdoms to move to his capital city of Xianyang to keep watch over them. Believed in the philosophy of legalism. Began the Great Wall of China and the Grand Canal. There were peasant revolts due to the harsh rule. In 207 BCE, the army led by Liu Bang conquered the troops of the Qin Dynasty at Julu (currently Hebei Province) and in 206 BC he seized Xianyang (the capital city of the Qin Dynasty), thus ending the rule of the Qin. Shi Huangti

The Terra Cotta Army The first Qin Emperor, Qin Shi Huangti, had an “army” of 6000+ life-size statues of soldiers, chariots, horses and weapons buried with him. Amazingly, each statue’s face is different!

Legalism under the Qin Under Legalism, farmers were freed from serfdom (recall that the Zhou consisted of decentralized feudal states), and Shi Huangti reduced the power of the aristocracy. If a person did not behave according to the rules then others were required to report him. If they did not do this, they were quartered or beheaded. Fear and control were the key features of this political system. Those who contributed the most to the state were highly rewarded while those whose lives were considered of no consequence were sent to work as slaves on Shi Huangti's building projects such as the Great Wall of China, the Grand Canal, and the roads. Scholarship was strongly suppressed and literacy denied to the majority of the populace. Shi Huangti believed that uneducated people were easier to control. This policy resulted in the burning of books on a large scale and, in 212 BCE, Huangti had scholars executed on a large scale. Books were banned throughout the empire, as was teaching, except for approved subjects. It was not until the later Han Dynasty that books were recovered from hiding and repaired, and literacy was again available to the people of China.

Great Wall of China 1. The Great Wall of China is a system of defensive walls and towers. It was built in stages between 476 BCE and 1644 CE to protect China from the Huns, Mongols, and other “barbarian” invaders from the north. 2. The Great Wall winds up and down across deserts, grasslands, mountains and plateaus, stretching 5,500 miles from east to west of China. 3. The Great Wall did not succeed in keeping out invaders. However, it has become a symbol of Chinese achievement. 4. While it was begun under the Qin Dynasty, the wall we see today was mostly built during the Ming Dynasty (1368 – 1644 CE). The Great Wall of China is often called the “longest cemetery on Earth”, as over 1,000,000 workers died while building it. Archaeologists have even discovered human remains buried under sections of the wall.

Great Wall Watch Tower

The Grand Canal The Grand Canal, about 1,200 miles (1,764 km) in length, is the longest man-made waterway as well as being the greatest in ancient China, far surpassing the next two of the world: the Suez and Panama Canals. It was begun under the Qin dynasty, but began to be linked together under the Sui.

III Han Dynasty 206 BCE – 220 CE

Han Dynasty Continued… A) After 4 years of war between Liu Bang and Xiang Yu, Liu Bang defeated his rival and established the Han Dynasty making Chang'an (the present Xian) as its capital city in 202 BCE. Chang’an soon would become the eastern end of the Silk Road! B) New Technologies: Pulleys and wheelbarrows were used to move goods. Paper was invented by drying pulverized wood pulp onto a screen (though it was mostly used to wrap fish during the Han Dynasty! Thousands of written documents survived on wood or bamboo rather than paper.) Han physicians developed acupuncture to alleviate pain and to treat various illnesses; needles are inserted into specific points on your body .

Han Dynasty Continued… C) The opening of the Silk Road was probably the major economic achievement of the Han Dynasty. Emperor Wu set out on diplomatic missions to various rulers in Central Asia. This led to the exploration of trade routes that linked Chang’an to the Levant coast on the Mediterranean and opened up new roads for merchants. This increased the trade and economic prosperity of the empire and also led to a constant cultural exchange between several cultures. D) It was also during Wu Di's time that China incorporated the whole of modern China proper, northern Vietnam, Inner Mongolia, southern Manchuria, and most of Korea.

Paper Making and Acupuncture

The Silk Road

Chang’an to Tiashan Corridor, Silk Road

Han Dynasty Continued… F) Chinese calligraphy developed into an art. G) Confucianism was made the official state ideology during the time of Emperor Wu Di, who built an academy devoted to Confucius. In order to work in any level of the government bureaucracy, you had to pass a civil service exam which was based on Confucianism and Chinese history. The civil service exam system was an important vehicle of social mobility in imperial China. A youth from the poorest family could theoretically join the ranks of the educated elite by succeeding in the examination system. This assurance of success in the examinations dependent only on one’s ability rather than one’s social position helped circulate the key ideas of Confucianism -- concerning proper behavior, rituals, relationships, etc. -- through all levels of Chinese society. Even if you did not pass, the exams encouraged literacy and education.

Women in the Han Dynasty “A woman (ought to) have four qualifications: (1) womanly virtue; (2) womanly words; (3) womanly bearing; and (4) womanly work. Now what is called womanly virtue need not be brilliant ability, exceptionally different from others. Womanly words need be neither clever in debate nor keen in conversation. Womanly appearance requires neither a pretty nor a perfect face and form. Womanly work need not be work done more skilfully than that of others… Let a woman modestly yield to others; let her respect others; let her put others first, herself last… Lay the (girl) baby (at birth) below the bed to plainly indicate that she is lowly and weak, and should regard it as her primary duty to humble herself before others… A husband can marry twice, but his wife must never remarry. Just as Heaven cannot be disobeyed, so the wife cannot keep away from her husband." Madam Ban Zhao, Female Confucian philosopher and historian, (ca. 45-116 CE)

Han Dynasty Continued… The Sack of Chang’an: Wang Man was a government official who usurped the throne and proclaimed the beginning of a new dynasty called Xin, or “new”, in 9 CE. He took advantage of the fact that since the time Emperor Wu died in 87 BCE, the Han Dynasty had been immersed in various political and social conflicts. The gap between rich and poor was already a serious problem. Wang Man wanted to re-establish the social order by changing the land owning structure; he decreed that large estates be dissolved and their lands distributed among peasants. Unable to fulfill his land redistribution plan, coupled with a terrible flooding of the Yellow River, led to peasant rebellions. The peasants smeared red paint on their foreheads, dubbed “Red Eyebrows”. In 23 CE the Red Eyebrows entered Chang’an, sacked it, and cut off Wang Man’s head. Liu Xiu, a descendant of Liu Bang, took back control of the empire thus re-establishing the Han lineage. He moved the capital to Luoyang. The Han reign in Chang’an is usually referred to as Western Han or Former Han, while the period in Luoyang is normally called Eastern Han or Later Han.

Luoyang Buddhas

IV Decline of the Han Dynasty A) By the end of the 1st century CE, tremors and floods lead people to believe the Han had lost the Mandate of Heaven. The Confucian academy protested against the corruption of the government. In 184 CE a large peasant uprising known as the Yellow Scarves Rebellion threatened the imperial capital. A warlord named Dong Zhou seized control of the imperial capital in 190 CE and placed a child, Liu Xie, as the new ruler. Liu Xie was also a member of the Han family, but real power was in the hands of Dong Zhou. Dong Zhou burned Luoyang to the ground. Liu Xie finally abdicated in 220 CE, the last year of the Han period. Wars between warlords and states continued and China would have to wait around 350 years to be unified again.

Decline of the Han Dynasty Continued… B) In 560, there were four kingdoms in the area. This was called the Southern and Northern Dynasties Era (420–589 CE). One of the four kingdoms of this era was called the Northern Zhou. The Northern reached from Mongolia and down into the southwest. It was far from the sea. In 581, the Sui Dynasty began when a member of the ruling clan of Northern Zhou killed about 60 of his brothers and relatives and made himself the emperor of his kingdom.

V The Sui Dynasty 589 – 619 CE A) The Sui linked the Grand Canal, increasing trade. They also expanded the Great Wall. B) Emperor Wen was a Buddhist and tried to spread Buddhism. He made Luoyang his capital.

HW Questions Fill in your Period 2 civilization chart for the Qin, Han, and Sui dynasties. Read your textbook pages 50-51 “Women in Patriarchal Societies”. How do you think most women reared in a patriarchal society would react to their conditions? B) According to Madam Ban Zhao, what is the role of a woman during Han China? C) If you could meet Madame Ban Zhao today, what would you tell or ask her? 2. Read the quote below. Do you agree or disagree and why? “The West inherited its traditions from the Romans and the Greeks, while China inherits from the Han.” -Liu Qingzhu, director of the Institute of Archaeology in Beijing

Key Vocabulary One Hundred Schools of Thought Acupuncture Chang’an Qin Dynasty Civil service exam Qin Shi Huangdi Confucianism Red Eyebrows Eastern Han Silk Road Emperor Wen Sui Dynasty Emperor Wu Taoism/Daoism Great Wall of China Wang Man Han Dynasty Warring States Legalism Western Han Liu Bang Yellow Scarves Rebellion Liu Xiu Luoyang