1 / 23

Zhou Dynasty (1022- 256 BCE)

Zhou Dynasty (1022- 256 BCE). Established by Wu Wang after a rebellion in the mid 1000’s B.C. Ruled under the Mandate of Heaven – idea that the right to rule came from Heaven

Download Presentation

Zhou Dynasty (1022- 256 BCE)

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. Zhou Dynasty (1022- 256 BCE) Established by Wu Wang after a rebellion in the mid 1000’s B.C. Ruled under the Mandate of Heaven– idea that the right to rule came from Heaven Justified conquest by declaring that the Shang king had been such a poor ruler that the gods had taken away their kingdom

  2. Zhou Dynasty

  3. 2. Redistributes lands, appoints officers, rebuilds defense walls, roads, and canals 1. New dynasty claims Mandate of Heaven and restores peace Dynastic Cycle in China 3. Over time, dynasty ages and becomes corrupt 6. Dynasty is overthrown and replaced by a new one 4. Disasters occur: floods, famines, peasant revolts and invasions 5. Dynasty loses Mandate of Heaven; rebellion justified http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PNR0ccrvnBc&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1

  4. Feudalism • political system in which nobles or lords, are granted the use of lands that legally belong to the king. In return the nobles owe loyalty and military service to the king and protection to the people who live on their estates

  5. Zhou Society & Religion Adopted much of Shang culture Polytheistic Economy Based on agriculture and trade Introduced coin money

  6. Zhou Accomplishments Five Classics– series of books used to train scholars and civil servants Kites– originally used as a military weapon Built roads and canals to stimulate trade and agriculture Used iron for weapons and tools

  7. Military Kites

  8. Zhou Decline Invasions and fighting among nobles caused decline – known as the “Period of Warring States”

  9. As the Zhou dynasty collapsed, three schools of thoughts emerged to help promote social stability

  10. Qin (Chin) Dynasty • Founded by Shi Huangdi “First Emperor” in mid 200’s BCE • Unifies China and seizes the Mandate of Heaven • Strong Central government • Loved Legalism • 210 BCE: Shi Huangdi dies and his son loses the throne

  11. Hero or Jerk? • Murdered hundreds of Confucian scholars • Burned Confucian books • “Strengthen the trunk to weaken the branches” • Forced 120,000 noble families to give up their lands and move to the capital • Made 36 of his own districts with his own officials • What system from the Zhou dynasty did he upset?

  12. Hero or Jerk? • Built over 4000 miles of roads => trade booms • Standardized writing, law, currency, and weights • Irrigation projects increased food • Great Wall of China • Why was the Great Wall of China built? • To protect from nomadic people from the north called the Xiongnu • http://www.history.com/topics/ancient-history/xian-tombs/videos

  13. Unhappiness • High Taxes • Little human freedom • People forced to “work on the wall or die” • Scholars angry about the loss of knowledge • Nobles angry about their land being taken

  14. The Han Dynasty • The Han Dynasty lasted over 400 years from 206 B.C. to 220 A.D.

  15. Papermaking • The Han probably made paper for the first time in 100 B.C. • The emperor found out about paper about 200 years later in 100 A.D.

  16. Civil Service • Honorable to serve in the government • Very selective • Had to take a test • Promotions & appointments based on merit • What school of thought would have made it more popular for more men to take the civil service exam?

  17. Han Art • The Han also developed the arts. • Landscape and portrait paintings were advanced. • Developed some of the earliest porcelain, a type of ceramics • What is the commonly known nickname for this type of dishware?

  18. Han Religions • The Han made Confucianism the official religion of China. • Han rulers also supported Daoism which teachers the key to happiness is accepting life as it is.

  19. Chinese Trade • The Chinese product most in demand by other people was silk. • The trade route from China to Arabia and Europe takes its name from silk. It was called the Silk Road. • Traders traveled from China with silk. • They returned with lumber, horses, and other products the Chinese people needed.

  20. Map of the Silk Road

  21. The Silk Road • The Chinese used the Silk Road to export their silk. • Export means that they sent their goods to other lands to be sold. • The Chinese also imported what they needed from other countries. • Import means goods that are brought in. • The Chinese made profits, or money gained, from their exporting on the Silk Road. • How is this pattern of trade different than earlier dynasties?

  22. Spread of Buddhism • How many years does it take to spread? • Where does it reach the furthest?

More Related