1 / 10

Ancient China

Ancient China. Trade and Commodities. Silk Culture. Legendary Beginnings Lady His-Ling-Shih (wife of Yellow Emperor) began raising silk worms and invented the loom (believed to have reigned approx. 3000 BC) Excavated silkworm cocoon dated between 2600 to 2300BC

don
Download Presentation

Ancient China

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ancient China Trade and Commodities

  2. Silk Culture • Legendary Beginnings • Lady His-Ling-Shih (wife of Yellow Emperor) began raising silk worms and invented the loom (believed to have reigned approx. 3000 BC) • Excavated silkworm cocoon dated between 2600 to 2300BC • Other evidence suggests silk cultivation began much earlier

  3. Silk Culture • The worm • Many varieties throughout the world • Chinese species is blind, flightless • Lays 500 eggs in 4-6 days • 100 eggs weigh less than 1 gram • Silk worm has a smoother, finer filament than other species

  4. Silk Culture • Secrets of Cultivation (sericulture) • Need to be carefully changed from 65 to 77 degrees to hatch • Baby worms are feed night and day until they are plump • Roomful of worms have to be kept at a constant temperature – sounds like heavy rain falling in the roof • Have to be kept warm when cocooning and isolated from noises and smells • Produce white fluffy looking cocoons • After 8 days in a warm place, worms are steamed/baked to kill the worms

  5. Silk Culture • Cultivation • Entire process of feeding to weaving takes 6 months • Dip puff balls in water to loosen filaments • Unwind filaments onto a spool • One cocoon is between 600-700 meters long • 5-8 filaments are twisted together to make thread • Considered part of household duties for women

  6. Silk Culture • Product • Clothes are light weight • Warm in winter • Cool in summer • Silk Privilege • First – reserved only for emperor and family • Wore robe of white inside palace, yellow outside (color of the earth) • Other classes began wearing silk • Silk developed as an industrial product • Instruments, fishing lines, bowstrings, paper

  7. Silk Culture • Tribute paid in rice and silk • Currency – items were priced in lengths of silk • Lost monopoly in 200 AD when Chinese immigrants began to move to Korea • West gained sericulture in 550AD when two monks appeared in Justinian’s court with eggs in hollowed staffs • Silk Road • Precious commodity to foreigners • Traders traveled the silk road overland – for months at a time – to get silk • Important artifacts found along the Silk Road

  8. Rice Culture • History • Chinese have been cultivating rice for thousands of years • Strong dependence and work put into rice added to strong rural essence • Chinese culture can be called ‘rice culture’ • Hunters and gathers left seeds in low-laying areas and developed system of rice farming • Originated in Yellow (Huang He) and Hanshui basins • Large areas of land viable for rice planting

  9. Rice Culture • Evidence of rice farming as long as 3 to 4 thousand years • Widely accepted by Zhou dynasty (1100-771BC) • By Han dynasty, rice was a staple (260BC-220AD) • Developments • Complicated irrigation techniques were required for farming • Year round – ploughing spring, weeding in summer, harvesting in autumn, hoarding in spring • Used to brew wine and offer as sacrifices to gods and ancestors

  10. Rice Culture • Central part of Spring Festival – lunar new year • Gao – specialty rice used for celebrations • Rice dumplings made on 15th night of the 1st lunar month – for luck • Throw rice in river 5th day of 5th month to prevent fish from eating the body of legendary leader Qu Yuan (Chu official) • 9th day of 9th month eat double 9 festival cakes • 8th day of 12th month people eat porridge with rice, beans, nuts, and dried fruit • Believed that Sakyamuni achieved Buddha-hood on this day

More Related