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Ancient China. Ms. Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY Edited by Ms. Steward Gateway Middle School. Neolithic China. “Peking Man” (750,000 – 500,000 BCE). Sinanthropus pekinesis. The 4 Old-World River Valley Cultures. Yellow River Civilization. Isolated River valleys
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Ancient China Ms. Susan M. PojerHorace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY Edited by Ms. Steward Gateway Middle School
Neolithic China
“Peking Man”(750,000 – 500,000 BCE) Sinanthropuspekinesis
Isolated River valleys 1. Yellow(Huang Ho) earliest civilization - damaging floods 2. Yangtze- very important in unification- transportation- irrigation Geographic Influences
Hsia Dynasty 2205-1027 BCE
Hsia • Only know about this dynasty because of legend • Associated with invention of wheeled vehicles, ships, armor, pottery, and silk making
Shang Dynasty 1766-1027 BCE
Raised silk worms; production of silk Bronze Age, daggers, sculptures, jade Ancestor worship The family was most important; not the government, not the self, not the religion Distinct Characteristics
Peasants support nobles, officials, bureaucracy, etc. Government centered in towns Warrior elite; Poor live in primitive conditions Differences between rich and poor price of civilization ? Society
The Evolution of ChineseWriting during the Shang Semantic-Phonetics Pictographs
Axe Scepter – 1100 BCE - jade Ceremonial Dagger – 1028 BCE
Zhou Dynasty 1027 - 256 BCE
Probable nomadic invaders ended Shang dynasty the Zhou dynasty 1027 B.C. replaced one ruling class with another “meet the new boss...same as the old boss.” Zhou/Chou Dynasty
Decentralized government Local nobility Long running problem 771 B.C. Chou driven east Zhou Characteristics
The mandate of Heaven Universal monarch favors consolidation xenophobic Emperor is the Son of Heaven Feudal monarchy Political Theory
“T’ien Ming” The Mandate of Heaven • The leader must lead by ability and virtue. • The dynasty's leadership must be justified by succeeding generations. • The mandate could be revoked by negligence and abuse; the will of the people was important.
771 B.C. Dozen-plus states Balance of power until 500’s Period of consolidation by warfare warfare chronic Period of Warring States
Response to crisis and uncertainty Confucianism a sort of philosophy Taoism a sort of religion Development of Intellectual Movement
The Dynastic Cycle Secular Law Beginnings of political philosophy through which a ruler must prove he/she is legitimate Mandate of Heaven Imperial China’s Impact on History
A new dynasty comes to power. The emperorreforms the govt.& makes it moreefficient. Start here Emperor isdefeated !! Lives of common people improved;taxes reduced;farming encouraged. TheDynasticCycle Rebel bands findstrong leader whounites them.Attack the emperor. Problems begin(extensive wars,invasions, etc.) Poor looserespect for govt.They join rebels& attack landlords. Taxes increase;men forced towork for army.Farming neglected. Droughts,floods,famines occur. Govt. increasesspending; corruption.
Imperial China: Qin to Ming Dynasties
Established China’s first empire Shi Huangdi (221-206 BC) Legalist rule Bureaucratic administration Centralized control Military expansion Built large section of the Great Wall Qin (Ch’in) Dynasty 221-206 B.C.
Ruled for 400 years New bureaucracy Emphasis on centralization weakening of the aristocracy Imperial expansion Han dynasty
Han Dynasty, 206 B.C.E.-220 C.E. • Paper invented [105 B.C.E.] Silk Road trade develops; improves life for many, cities develops • Buddhism introduced into China • Expanded into Central Asia
Han Dynasty 206BCE-220 CE (Roman Times) -Advanced in science and literature -Invented rudder, paper, magnetic compass, acupuncture -Short period of Civil War- Sui Dynasty connected two rivers with canal- over extended
Han Artifacts Imperial Seal Han Ceramic House