World History: The Earth and its Peoples

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World History: The Earth and its Peoples Chapter 20 Eurasia, 1500-1800

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World History: The Earth and its Peoples. Chapter 20 Eurasia , 1500-1800. Objectives. Understand the roles of the Jesuits and the East India Companies in the development of cultural exchange and trade between Europe and Eastern Eurasia. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of World History: The Earth and its Peoples

Page 1: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

World History:The Earth and its Peoples

Chapter 20Eurasia,

1500-1800

Page 2: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

Objectives• Understand the roles of the Jesuits and the East India

Companies in the development of cultural exchange and trade between Europe and Eastern Eurasia.

• Be able to use the concept of “land-based empires” to analyze the territorial expansion, the economic and political structures, and the foreign relations of the Russian and Qing empires.

• Be able to describe the causes and symptoms of the decline of the Qing state in the eighteenth century.

• Be able to describe the Tokugawa political system and explain why and how the decentralized political structure contributed simultaneously to economic growth and the weakening of the Tokugawa state.

Page 3: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

Eastern Eurasia, 1500-1800

Eurasian Patterns– no central rule– weakening of overland trade– advent of seaborne trade

• Land–Based Empires– Ottoman, Mughal, Russian, Ming

• emphasis on agriculture– forced labor, serfdom

• political centralization– disadvantage to sea-based

• European Influence– Society of Jesus (Jesuits)

• missionaries– Matteo Ricci (1552-1610)

• European technology

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The Russian Empire

Muscovite Princes– Moscow– Ivan IV – 1547

• tsar– removal of Golden Horde– “Time of Troubles”

• Sweden, Poland, Ottomans• replacement of Princes• Mikhail Romanov

– boyar– consolidation and competition

Russian Culture– Slavic (Russian) and Turkic– Cossacks

• Turkic word – ‘warrior’• Turks, E. Europeans, Mongols• defended western frontier

Page 5: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

The Russian Empire

Peter the Great – 1689-1725– Black Sea port, Christianity– ‘Great Northern War’ – 1700-21

• Baltic Sea access• European recognition

– St. Petersburg – 1712• “window on the West”• strengthen state / autocracy

– Political autocracy• boyars, church, peasants

– serfdom• Eastern Push

– less threat in west– Mongolia / Siberia / Pacific

• fur trade• natural resources

– timber, precious metals

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Ming and Qing Empires, 1500-1800

Late Ming - 1500-1644• Strengths

– silk, furniture, porcelain• Portuguese and Dutch

– tributary status– vast population (100M)

• Weaknesses– climate change

• famine and disease• external pressure

– Mongolia– Manchus

» Japan in Korea - 1582– ‘silver’ inflation

• uprisings• 1644 rebellion

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Ming and Qing Empires, 1500-1800

Qing Empire - 1644-1783– Manchus

• minority rule• Taiwan, C. Asia (Tibet)

• Kangxi - 1662-1722– Russian struggles– Treaty of Nerchinsk - 1689

• Amur River border– Mongolia - 1691– Jesuit influence - 1600s

• Confucian ancestor worship• two-way influence

– variolation

• Qianlong - 1736-1796

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Amur River

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Ming and Qing Empires, 1500-1800

European Thirst– Luxury items

• tea, silk, porcelain, wallpaper– political philosophy

• benevolent despots– limitless profit potential

• EIC

Chinese Trade– imperial control

• taxation; limit piracy• kowtow (VOC)

– “the Canton system”• Portugal, Holland, England

– Macartney mission - 1793• open trade with G. Britain

– negative European reaction

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Ming and Qing Empires, 1500-1800

Qing Stresses– rising population

• 400M by 1700• stagnant agriculture

– deforestation• erosion• Grand Canal

– localized misery• migration

• failure to adapt to changes– local elites– corruption

• shrinking revenues– land-based empires

• maintenance costs

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Tokugawa Japan to 1800

Shogunates - 1200-1500– little centralized rule

• Tokugawa Shogunate - 1600– relative peace– land grants for support

• daimyo– rice– samurai

– emperor as figurehead• Edo to Kyoto traffic• urban centers for trade

– Shogun responses• samurai

– economic well being• merchants

– control prices

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Outer Lords (Daimyos)

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Tokugawa Japan to 1800

Merchant Class– rise in wealth

• alliances with daimyo– key to industrial transformation

Isolation– Jesuits

• mixed response– few converts (farmers)

• peasant revolts– Christian blame

• closing of country - 1649– prevent outside influences– “Dutch studies”– Effect

• ignored by some daimyos– ‘outer’ lords

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Tokugawa Japan to 1800

Instability– ‘outer’ lord sea trade– population growth– increasing rice prices– samurai economic decline

• debt to merchants• Shogunate Power

– rested on daimyo / samurai health

– traditional land-based response• Confucian ideals

– decentralized government• little economic control

• Military to Civil Society– “Forty-seven Ronin” - 1702