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1 Korea and Russia By: Amanda Tuazon, Harold Ho, Nishchala Singhal, and Lauren Loanzon
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China influenced Korea with various governmental methods based on Confucian belief Paid tribute to Chinese Yi dynasty in power 1644: Became a vassal state of China under Qing Dynasty After Japan invaded Korea, yangban (nobility) laid claim in tax paying land Government accepted Confucian idea that agriculture should be basis of state wealth and that merchants should occupy lowly positions because lack of moral character Political Korea
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Major power of Europe by 1750 Free from Mongols, Prince Ivan IV conquered the Golden Horde and pushed borders back 1547: used title tsar (from the Roman imperial title “caesar”) 1689: Treaty of Nerchinsk: Russia claimed west of Mongolia but withdrew settlements east Cossacks kept their political autonomy by rebelling tsars 17 th cent: tsar tried to build political power and est. control over Siberians and the steppe Centralized power rose, peasants freedom fell Political Russia
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Under Golden Horde, Moscow: most important Russian city and center of political power Moscovy rulers and tsars rewarded nobles with land grants including obligations of peasants to work for lords Long warfare in 16 th -17 th century caused disruption and peasants fled to Cossacks or across the Urals Land based flourished; added rich populated lands to west, south, and east Political Russia
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During the Choson dynasty, social hierarchy. Highest class was the king and royal family. Second class made of military officials and land owners (yangban). Social/Gender Korea
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Third class made of workers with specialized skills (artisans, etc.). Called the jungin. Fourth class was the commoners: largest class. Had to pay taxes, provide labor, and serve in the military. The lowest class was made of people such as slaves, entertainers, shamans, outcasts & criminals. Social/Gender Korea
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In accordance with Confucian principles, women were not educated. A woman’s duty was to manage the house: cooking, sewing, and taking care of the children. Women were not considered equal to men. Social/Gender Korea
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Branch of Slavic people of Eastern Europe Pioneers in Siberia dealt with animal pelts Expansion led to people with different languages, religions, and ethnicities Some people spoke Asian languages and non christians Religious and cultural differences caused social tensions Occupations: farmers, hunters, builders, scribes, merchants, herders, caravan workers, soldiers Very diverse Cossacks: warriors; very diverse; cared about good militatry skills Social/Gender Russia
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Cossacks: majority of soldiers and early settlers Aristocracy: boyars Law change in 1649 bound peasants to their land; turned peasants into serfs Serfdom: hereditary status, brutal, and widespread 1723: all slaves transformed into serfs 1795: serfs were half the population Tolerated diversity Social structure compared to hierarchial slave plantations Rulers: absolute in powers, limited by big empires and bureaucracy and corruption Social/Gender Russia
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Korea accepted a subordinate relationship with China and paid tribute to the Chinese dynasty in power. By the 1400s artisans in Korea were producing high-quality pottery with glazes called porcelain which developed into an important popular trade product. Through revived overland routes of communication from Korea to Central Asia, foreign trade was encouraged. Economic Korea
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Economic Russia As empire expanded it incorporated a more diverse population Land grants +obligated peasant workers to loyal nobles 2 week change period encouraged well treatment of peasants Rising commercialization increased value of labor obligations 16 th -early 17 th century civil & foreign warfare caused disruption, economic decline and peasants to flee
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No actual contact during this time period Similarity back in the time of Mongol domination, like Russia, during the Yi regime of Korea they rejected Mongol rule for they sought to reestablish a local identity Russia and Korea
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http://www.worldtimelines.org.uk/world/asia/korea/ AD1392-1910 http://www.worldtimelines.org.uk/world/asia/korea/ AD1392-1910 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History-of-Korea http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History-of-Korea http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Russian_bo yar_from_XVII_century.JPG http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Russian_bo yar_from_XVII_century.JPG Works Cited
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