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Chapter 12: Reunification and Renaissance in Chinese Civilization: The Era of the Tang and Song Dynasties. AP World History I Longwood HS. Overview. With the fall of the Han Dynasty in 220 CE, China alternates between periods of political unity and fragmentation
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Chapter 12: Reunification and Renaissance in Chinese Civilization: The Era of the Tang and Song Dynasties AP World History I Longwood HS
Overview • With the fall of the Han Dynasty in 220 CE, China alternates between periods of political unity and fragmentation • Not as traumatic as the fall of Rome for Western Europe • Between 589 and 906 CE, China enjoyed a political revival under the Sui and Tang Dynasties. • China will also be rocked by the advances of the Mongol armies in the 1200s.
The Sui Dynasty • The first strong dynasty to emerge after the fall of the Han was the Sui Dynasty (589-618 CE). • Reunified China • Expanded China’s borders as a result of military conquest
Tang Dynasty • Under the Tang (618-906 CE), China became larger than ever before. • Rulers extend China’s influence to parts of Central Asia, Mongolia, Manchuria, Tibet, and to the south, the Pacific Coast. • Like the Han Dynasty, the Tang forced many of its neighbors into a Tributary System, whereas Korea, Vietnam, Japan and others had to make regular payments to avoid punishment.
Tang Dynasty • Tang economy was very strong due to advanced infrastructure (roads, waterways, canals) • Grand Canal: Begun in the Sui Dynasty to link the Yellow and Yangzi Rivers. • Increased trade stimulated the Tang economy • Silk industry made China exceptionally wealthy
Means of Trade/Exchange • Indian Ocean Trade Network: China’s control of the southern coast allowed participation in the Indian Ocean Trade Network. • China also traded along the 5000 mile Silk Road with the Middle East.
Culture in Tang China • Tang rulers were cultural patrons • Emperor Xuanzong sponsored the creation of the Han Lin Academy of Letters, a key institution of learning • The Tang exerted a strong artistic and religious influence over Korea and Japan. • Tang monarchs expanded and reworked the imperial bureaucracy • Revived Scholar-gentry elite reworked Confucian ideology
Tang Examination System • Tang emperors patronized academies to train state officials and educate them in Confucian classics. • Examination system was greatly expanded. • Patterns of advancement were regularized • While most bureaucrats won their position through success in the Civil Service Examination system, birth and family connections still played a role in securing office.
State and Religion • Buddhism thrived in the time before the Sui and Tang dynasties • Many pre-Tang rulers from nomadic origins were devout Buddhists • Chan variant of Buddhism (Zen) stressed meditation and appreciation of natural beauty. Zen had great appeal to Chinese educated classes. • Tang support of Confucianism threatened to undercut Buddhist success…however, Tang Emperors and Empresses supported the Buddhist establishment (Empress Wu r. 690-705 CE).
State and Religion • Support of Buddhist aroused the envy of Confucian and Daoist rivals. • Confucian leaders stress the economic impact of not taxing Buddhist monasteries, and losing out on labor because they couldn’t conscript peasants who worked on monastic estates. • Under Wuzong (r. 841-847) China openly persecuted Buddhists. • Never again would Buddhism gain the strength it had in the early-Tang era…however, it would survive in China • Confucianism becomes dominant ideology of Chinese civilization from the 9th to early 20th century.
Tang Decline • During the 800’s, a series of peasant rebellions and military disasters weakened the Tang. • In 906, the Tang Dynasty collapsed and several centuries of disunity will follow.
China after the Tang • Following the Tang breakdown, China fragmented into separate states until the late 1200s. • The largest and longest lasting was the Song Empire. • Song empire will last until 1279. • Until 1121, the primary threat to the Song was the Liao empire to the north.
China after the Tang • The Song paid tribute to the Liao via silk and cash, but then destroyed them with the help of Jurchen tribes from the North (even farther north). • However, the Jurchen then proclaimed their own Empire, the Jin, and turned on the Song. • The Song gave up territory and retreated to the South. The smaller Song state, the Southern Song Dynasty, will survive until the Mongol Conquests of the 1270s.
Song Characteristics • Culturally and economically impressive • Steady population growth • World’s largest urbanized society • Largest cities on earth at the time (population over 1 million) • Trade contacts lessened, but still active. • More involvement with the Pacific coast and Southeast Asia. • Port of Canton (Guangzhou) became the world’s busiest and most cosmopolitan trading centers. • Large trading vessels, known as junks, cruised the eastern seas and Indian Ocean carrying goods for trade.
Song Culture and Religion • With the exception of the Abbasid Caliphate, Song China was of the most scientifically and technically advanced societies in the world. • Excellent mathematicians and astronomers. • Accurate clocks, compasses (used at sea in 1090). • Su-Song’s celestial clock was built in 1088 CE • 80 feet tall • Time of day, day of month, positions of the sun, moon, planets, and major stars. • First device in world history to use a chain-driven mechanism powered by flowing water.
Chinese Inventions of the Song Era • Gunpowder • Paper Currency (flying money) • Made use of Block Printing (adopted from the Koreans)
Religion • Great revival of Confucius’ teachings, known as Neo-Confucianism. • Reinforced Chinese culture’s tendency toward hierarchy and obedience. • Put a premium on education and cultured behavior • Civil Service Examination system
Women in Chinese Society • Neo-Confucianism was used to justify the greater subordination of women. • Earlier, a husband’s family had to produce a dowry for a new bride, but during this time period, it reversed…Marriages were arranged for the groom’s benefit. • Chinese subjugation of women was most obvious in foot-binding. • Kept women’s feet tiny and dainty, but crippled them. • Established in the 1200’s, and continued to the 1900’s.
Women in Chinese Society • Women of lower classes were freer than those in the upper classes, but still occupied a secondary status to that of men. • Women of all classes had property inheritance rights, and retained control of their dowry after death or divorce of husband.