Essential Question: Why were the Tang and Song Dynasties considered the “golden age” of China?

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Essential Question : Why were the Tang and Song Dynasties considered the “golden age” of China?

Transcript of Essential Question: Why were the Tang and Song Dynasties considered the “golden age” of China?

Page 1: Essential Question: Why were the Tang and Song Dynasties considered the “golden age” of China?

Essential Question:Why were the Tang and Song Dynasties considered the “golden age” of China?

Page 2: Essential Question: Why were the Tang and Song Dynasties considered the “golden age” of China?

During the Classical Era, the emperors of Han China created

a large empire and

developed numerous innovations

The Classical Era was a time when great

civilizations (like Greece and Rome) existed and

made enormous contributions to humanity

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For example, the Chinese had civil service exams for government workers; the exams were based on the

teachings of Confucius

This is so workers received their jobs based

on their strong ethics (doing the right thing)

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The Chinese invented silk-making technology that attracted great interest in

trade from people outside of China

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The Silk Road trade route brought Chinese luxury goods to Europe and Asia and increased

cultural diffusion (blending of cultures)

FROM CHINATO ASIA

TO EUROPE

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Much like the Roman Empire and the other Classical civilizations, Classical

China under the Han Dynasty entered an era of decline and eventually fell

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There were many similarities between Han China and Rome, especially with outside

invaders bringing both empires down

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After the Han Dynasty collapsed in the year 220, no emperor was strong

enough to unify the Chinese people into one single territory under one ruler

Over the next 350 years, China was

divided into several small

kingdoms; more than 30

local dynasties rose and fell

A “dynasty” is a ruling family or group that rules during a certain era or time period

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By the year 589, China was unified again and a strong

central government was restored

Bringing back the Confucian examination system allowed

intelligent bureaucrats to help manage the massive

Chinese empire

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During the Tang and Song Dynasties, China experienced an extended “golden age”

China became the richest, most powerful, and most advanced country in the world

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For the first time in China’s history,

emperors actually

encouraged foreign trade

(previously, they had tried to avoid

trading with foreigners)

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Emperors did their best to

protect the trade routes

along the Silk Road

Chinese merchants relied on ocean routes as well to trade with

India and Arabia

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Increased trade led to the spread of Chinese culture (centralized government, Confucianism, and their writing system) to neighboring areas, like Korea,

Japan, and Southeast Asia

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Increased trade helped spread Buddhism throughout China

The orange arrows show where Buddhism

spread in Asia

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Chinese Innovations

INNOVATION: a good, a service, a product, a method, a technology, or an idea that is new and original

The Tang and Song Dynasties were eras of major technological advancement and innovation

These innovative technologies helped make China the most advanced country in the world (at the time)

Much of China’s technological inventions spread to other people in Asia and Europe across trade routes

(such as the Silk Road)

ACTIVITY: look at the following ten inventions and write down what you think each one is

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1. Mechanical Clock

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2. Magnetic compass

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3. Gunpowder

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4. Printing Press

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5. Paper money

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6. Chinese writing

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7. Ship building

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8. Vaccination

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9. Silk weaving

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10. Porcelain

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THE REEMERGENCE OF A UNIFIED CHINA

The collapse of the Han dynasty around 220 CE gave rise to more than three centuries of political fragmentation in China and the rise of powerful aristocratic families

It also meant the incursion of northern nomads, many of whom adopted Chinese customs

Disunity was considered unnatural in the eyes of many Chinese and weakened Confucianism’s hold on China, allowing greater acceptance of Buddhism and Daoism among the elite

During this period, the beginning of a Chinese migration southward toward the Yangzi River began

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This southward migration toward the Yangzi River Valley gave southern China some 60% of the country’s population by 1000 CE.

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But unlike the fall of the western Roman Empire where political fragmentation proved a permanent condition, China regained unity under the Sui dynasty (589-618)

Sui emperors solidified that unity by a vast extension of the country’s canal system, stretching some 1,200 miles in length

-Canals linked northern and southern China Ruthlessness of Sui emperors and a futile

military campaign to conquer Korea exhausted the state’s resources and alienate many people

-The Dynasty was overthrown

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However, no prolonged disintegration of the Chinese state

The Tang 9618-907) and the Song (960-1279) dynasties that followed built on the Sui foundations of renewed unity

Together they established patterns of Chinese life that endured into the twentieth century, despite a fifty-year period of disunity between the two dynasties

Culturally, this period has been regarded as a “golden age” of arts and literature

-And particularly during the Song dynasty, an explosion of scholarship gave rise to Neo-Confucianism, reviving it while incorporating some insights from Buddhism and Daoism

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The examination system was revived and made more elaborate, encouraged by the ability to print books for the first time in world history

-Selecting officials on the basis of merit Despite state efforts to periodically

redistribute land in favor of peasants, families of large landowners continued to encroach on peasant plots

China experienced rapid population growth Agricultural achievements, particularly with

the adoption of a fast-ripening and drought-resistant strain of rice from Vietnam

Most urbanized country in the world -Song capital of Hangzhou was home to

more than a million people

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Supplying cities with food was possible due to the immense network of internal waterways, stretching perhaps 30,000 miles

Industrial production soared -China’s iron industry increased its output

dramatically Inventions in printing, both woodblock and

movable type, generated the world’s first printed books

China’s navigational and shipbuilding technologies led the world

The Chinese invention of gunpowder would soon revolutionize military affairs

Most highly commercialized society, producing for the market rather than local consumption

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In addition, government demands for taxes paid in cash rather than in kind required peasants to sell something in order to meet their obligations. The growing use of paper money as well as financial instruments such as letters of credit and promissory notes further contributed to the commercialization of Chinese society.

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WOMEN IN THE SONG DYNASTY

But this “golden age” was less “golden” for women

Under the influence of steppe nomads, women led less restricted lives-Elite women of the Tang dynasty had participated in social life with greater freedom than in classical times

But by the Song dynasty, a reviving Confucianism and rapid economic growth seemed to tighten patriarchal restrictions on women and to restore some of the earlier Han dynasty images of female submission and passivity

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Once again Confucian writers highlighted the subordination of women to men and the need to keep males and females separate. But the most compelling expression of a tightening patriarchy lay in foot binding.

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Beginning apparently among dancers and courtesans in the tenth or eleventh century CE, this practice involved the tight wrapping of young girls’ feet, usually breaking the bones of the foot and causing intense pain

During the Tang dynasty, foot binding spread widely among elite families and later became even more widespread in Chinese society

It was associated with new images of female beauty and eroticism that emphasized small size, delicacy, and reticence

And a rapidly commercializing economy undermined the position of women in the textile industry as urban workshops and state factories, run by men, increasingly took over the skilled tasks of weaving textiles, especially silk

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Foot binding restricted women to the “inner quarters” due to the pain that now accompanied walking.

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CHINA AND NORTHERN NOMADS

From early times to the nineteenth century, China’s most enduring and intense interaction with foreigners lay to the north, involving nomadic pastoral or semi-agricultural peoples of the steppes

-Mastery of horse riding -Emphasis on raising livestock Nomads were drawn to China through

trading, raiding, and extorting in order to obtain resources vital to their way of life like grain and other agricultural products as well as a desire for China’s luxury goods

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But from the nomads’ point of view, the threat often came from the Chinese, who periodically directed their own military forces deep into the steppes, built the Great Wall to keep nomads out, and often proved unwilling to allow pastoral peoples easy access to trading opportunities within China.

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And yet China needed the nomads, particularly its horses, horses that were essential for the Chinese military

Nomads also controlled much of the Silk Road trading network

The Chinese came to view China as the “middle kingdom” or the center of the world, infinitely superior to the “barbarians” beyond its borders

That worldview took shape as a practical system for managing China’s relations with its northern nomads and other non-Chinese peoples

-A “tribute system” -A set of practices that required non-Chinese

to acknowledge Chinese superiority and their own subordinate place in the world

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Foreigners had to perform the kowtow, a series of ritual bowings and prostrations, and present their tribute, produce of value from their countries, to the Chinese emperor. In return, the emperor would grant permission for foreigners to trade.

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But sometimes China was confronting large and powerful nomadic empires like the Xiongnu, established about the same time as the Han dynasty. Rather than tribute, the Chinese were forced to pay a kind of “protection money” to the Xiongnu. Then the Xiongnu refrained from military incursions into China.

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But the founders of the Sui and Tang dynasties were of mixed nomad and Chinese ancestry and came from the borderland regions where a blended Chinese/Turkic culture had evolved. So, the boundaries between Chinese and nomadic cultures were rarely culturally fixed boundaries.

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STRAYER QUESTIONS

Why are the centuries of the Tang and Song dynasties in China sometimes referred to as a "golden age"?

In what ways did women's lives change during the Tang and Song dynasties?

How did the Chinese and their nomadic neighbors to the north view each other?

What assumptions underlie the tribute system?

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How did the tribute system in practice differ from the ideal Chinese understanding of its operation?

In what ways did China and the nomads influence each other?