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Geography of China. Long distances and physical barriers separated China from other civilizations Isolated This isolation led to their belief that China was the center of the Earth and source of all civilization. Important Chinese Rivers. Huang (Yellow) River. Rise of Civilization in China.
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Geography of China • Long distances and physical barriers separated China from other civilizations • Isolated • This isolation led to their belief that China was the center of the Earth and source of all civilization
Important Chinese Rivers • Huang (Yellow) River
Rise of Civilization in China Chapter 3: Section 4
“River of Sorrows” • The Huang, or Yellow River got its name from the loess fine windblown yellow soil • Was often referred to as the “river of sorrows” • This loess would settle into the bottom of the river and that caused the water levels to rise
Loess Effects • Chinese peasants labored constantly to control the flooding • Often times they were not able to control it and deadly flooding occurred
Shang Dynasty • Capital city was Anyang • Large palaces; tombs
CLans • Princes and nobles governed most of the land • Groups of families who claim a common ancestor
Fu Hao • Wife of a Shang king • Artifacts show that she owned land and helped to lead an army against invaders
Importance of this? • The discovery of her tomb implies that women were held in a higher status during the Shang period
Social Classes Develop • Top level of society included warriors and the royal family • The majority of the population were peasants • Peasants led very hard lives, constantly working in the fields or to repair the floodwalls • If war broke out, they were required to fight for their noblemen
Zhou Dynasty • Rebelled against the Shang Dynasty and were able to defeat them • Believed that they received a “Mandate of Heaven” • Used this to justify their actions against the Shang
Mandate of Heaven • Divine right to rule • Claimed that the last Shang King was so cruel that he had outraged the gods • It was their duty to overthrow the Shang and therefore please the gods
Dynastic Cycle • The rise and fall of dynasties • As long as a dynasty provided good government, it enjoyed the Mandate of Heaven • If the rulers were weak or corrupt, the Chinese believed that heaven would withdraw their support
Other Signs • Natural disasters (floods, famine) were believed to be signs that the Heaven was angry • Leaders would try to step up and overthrow the failing government • The whole cycle would begin once again
Feudalism • The Zhou instituted Feudalism in their lands • Gave local lords power to govern their own lands but they owed military service and other forms of support to their ruler
Economic Growth • The economy grew during the Zhou Dynasty • Ironworking replaced stone and wood tools • More food and new crops • Money was introduced
Shang Di • Supreme god • The King was a link between the people and Shang Di
Shang Di • Believed that ordinary citizens could not pray to Shang Di • Only the ancestors of the King could • The prayers of the rulers and Kings were to serve the whole community
Life Story…The Short Version • Born to a poor, but noble family • Wanted to become an advisor to a local ruler • Wandered from court to court talking with rulers about how to lead • Eventually became a teacher (Like all smart and intelligent people do)
Confucianism • Confucius never wrote down his ideas and teachings • His students collected his sayings and teachings in the Analects
Philosophy • Confucius was not interested in spiritual matters such as salvation • Chose to develop a philosophy instead
Five Relationships Shape Behavior • Ruler to subject, parent to child, husband to wife, elder brother to younger brother, and friend to friend • These relationships were not meant to be equal, with the exception of friendship
Filial Piety • Respect for parents, above all other duties • “Do not to do others what you do not wish for yourself”…sound familiar?
Rulers Responsibility • Single biggest responsibility of a ruler was to provide good government • In return, the people are to be respectful • The best ruler was a virtuous one who led by example
Influence of Confucianism • The universe reflected a delicate balance between two forces, yin and yang • Yin was linked to earth, darkness, and female forces • Yang was stood for heaven, light, and male forces
Daoism • The other major Chinese religion • Started by Laozi • Wrote, The Way of Virtue
Live in Harmony with Nature • Daoism did not care about bringing order to human affairs • Wanted to learn how to live in harmony with nature • “Those who know the Dao do not speak of it. Those who speak of it do not know it”
Daoists • Daoists turned to the unnatural ways of society and became hermits, artists, or poets • Viewed government as unnatural and the cause of problems
Blending of the Two • People took beliefs and practices from each • Confucianism showed them how to behave and Daoism influenced their view of the natural world
Quick-Write • Compare what you consider to be the main goals of Confucianism and Daoism. What did each religion instructs its followers to focus on in life? Which religion do you feel gave the best message to people? • Be specific in your responses. 10 sentence minimum (2 paragraphs). Points are awarded for successful response to each part of the question.
Silk • Learned how to make silk thread from the cocoons of silkworms • Women did the hard work of processing the cocoons into thread and then wove them into a smooth cloth that was colored with dyes • Only royalty and nobles could afford these robes
Kept Process A Secret • Silk became China’s most valuable export • To protect it, they kept the process of silk making a secret for many hundreds of years
Oracle Bones • animal bones or turtle shells on which Shang priests wrote questions addressed to the gods or to the spirit of the ancestor • Priests then heated the bones until they cracked, believed that they could interpret the patterns of the cracks to provide answers
Writing Characters • Writing symbols • Very difficult still to this day • Each character required a number of different penstrokes
Brought People Together • Fostered unity, could sometimes not understand everyone’s spoken language but could understand writing system