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Chapter 8. The Unification of China. Qin dynasty develops, 4 th -3 rd centuries BCE Generous land grants under Shang Yang Private farmers decrease power of large landholders Increasing centralization of power Improved military technology. Unification of China.
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Chapter 8 The Unification of China
Qin dynasty develops, 4th-3rd centuries BCE • Generous land grants under Shang Yang • Private farmers decrease power of large landholders • Increasing centralization of power • Improved military technology Unification of China
Qin Shihuangdi (r. 221-210 BCE) founds new dynasty as “First Emperor” • Dynasty ends in 207, but sets dramatic precedent • Basis of rule: centralized bureaucracy • Massive public works begun • Precursor to Great Wall The First Emperor
Emperor orders execution of all critics • Orders burning of all ideological works • Some 460 scholars buried alive • Others exiled • Massive cultural losses Resistance to Qin Policies
Standardized: • Laws • Currencies • Weights and measures • Script • Previously: single language written in distinct scripts • Building of roads, bridges Qin Centralization
Built by 700,000 workers • Slaves, concubines, and craftsmen sacrificed and buried • Excavated in 1974, 15,000 terra cotta sculptures of soldiers, horses, and weapons unearthed Massive Tomb Projects
Civil disorder brings down Qin dynasty 207 BCE • Liu Bang forms new dynasty: the Han (206 BCE-220 CE) • Former Han (206 BCE-9 CE) • Interruption 9-23 CE • Later Han (25-220 CE) The Han Dynasty
Relaxed Qin tyranny without returning to Zhou anarchy • Created large landholdings • But maintained control over administrative regions • After failed rebellion, took more central control Early Han Policies
The Martial Emperor: Han Wudi (141-87 BCE) • Increased taxes to fund more public works • But huge demand for government officials, decline since Qin persecution Han Centralization
Han Wudi establishes an Imperial University in 124 BCE • Not a lover of scholarship, but demanded educated class for bureaucracy • Adopted Confucianism as official course of study • 3000 students by end of Former Han, 30,000 by end of Later Han Confucian Educational System
Invasions of Vietnam, Korea • Constant attacks from Xiongnu • Nomads from Central Asia • Horsemen • Brutal: Maodun (210-174 BCE), had soldiers murder his wife, father • Han Wudi briefly dominates Xiongnu Han Imperial Expansion
East Asia and central Asia at the time of Han Wudi, ca. 87 BCE
Classic of Filial Piety • Subordination to elder males • Admonitions for Women • Female virtues: • Humility, obedience, subservience, loyalty Patriarchal Social Order
Expansion of iron manufacture • Iron tips on tools abandoned as tools entirely made from iron • Increased food production • Superior weaponry Iron Metallurgy
Cultivation of silkworms • Breeding • Diet control • Other silk-producing lands relied on wild worms • Development of paper • Bamboo, fabric abandoned in favor of wood and textile-based paper Other technological Developments
Population Growth in the Han Dynasty • 220 BCE 20 million people • By 9 CE 60 million people • General prosperity • Increased agricultural productivity • Taxes small part of overall income • Produce occasionally spoiling in state granaries
Expenses of military expeditions, esp. vs. Xiongnu • Taxes increasing • Arbitrary property confiscations rise • Increasing gap between rich and poor • Slavery, tenant farming increase • Banditry, rebellion Economic and Social Difficulties
Wang Mang regent for 2-year old Emperor, 6 CE • Takes power himself 9 CE • Introduces massive reforms • The “socialist emperor” • Land redistribution, but poorly handled • Social chaos ends in his assassination 23 CE Reign of Wang Mang (9-23 CE)
Han Dynasty emperors manage, with difficulty, to reassert control • Yellow Turban uprising challenges land distribution problems • Internal court intrigue • Weakened Han Dynasty collapses by 220 CE Later Han Dynasty
Chapter 9 State, Society, and the Quest for Salvation in India
520 BCE Persian Emperor Darius conquers north-west India • Introduces Persian ruling pattern • 327 Alexander of Macedon destroys Persian Empire in India • Troops mutiny, departs after 2 years • Political power vacuum India Before the Mauryan Dynasty
Most significant remaining kingdom after Alexander’s departure • Central Ganges plain • Economic strength • Agriculture • Trade in Ganges valley, Bay of Bengal • Dominated surrounding regions in north-eastern India Kingdom of Magadha
Took advantage of power vacuum left by Alexander • Overthrew Magadha rulers • Expanded kingdom to create 1st unified Indian empire • Mauryan Dynasty Chandragupta Maurya
Advisor Kautalya • Recorded in Arthashastra, manual of political statecraft • Foreign policies, economics • Domestic policies • Network of spies • Legend: Chandragupta retires to become a monk, starves himself to death Chandragupta’s Government
AshokaMaurya • Grandson of Chandragupta • Represents high point of Mauryan Empire, r. 268-232 BCE • Expanded empire to include all of Indian subcontinent except for south • Positive ruler ship integrated Indian society • Much better known as a ruler than conqueror
Economic crisis follows death of Ashoka • High costs of bureaucracy, military not supported by tax revenue • Frequent devaluations of currency to pay salaries • Regions begin to abandon Mauryan Empire • Disappears by 185 BCE Decline of the Mauryan Empire
Northwestern India • Ruled by Greek-speaking descendants of Alexander’s campaigns • Intense cultural activity accompanies active trade Regional Kingdom: Bactria
Northern India/Central Asia • C. 1-300 CE • Maintained silk road trade network Regional Kingdom: Kush
Based in Magadha • Founded by Chandra Gupta (no relation to Chandragupta Maurya), c. 320 CE • Slightly smaller than Mauryan Empire • Highly decentralized leadership • Foundations for studies in natural sciences and mathematics The Gupta Dynasty
Frequent invasions of White Huns, 5th c. CE • Gupta Dynasty disintegrates along regional fault lines • Smaller local kingdoms dominate until Mughal Empire founded in 16th c. Gupta Decline
Manufactured goods in big demand • Developed in dense network of small workshops • Trade intense, capitalizes on trade routes across India Economy: Towns and Manufacturing
Persian connection since Cyrus, Darius • Massive road-building projects under Persian rule • Alexander extends trade west to Macedon • Trade routes through Kush mountains, the silk roads Long-Distance Trade
Seasonal sea trade expands • Spring/winter winds blow from south-west, fall/winter winds blow from north-west • Trade from Asia to Persian Gulf and Red Sea, Mediterranean Trade in the Indian Ocean Basin
Patriarchy entrenched • Child marriage common (8 year old girls married to men in 20s) • Women encouraged to remain in private sphere Society: Gender Relations
Social Order • Caste system from Aryan times • Brahmins (priests) • Kshatriyas (warriors, aristocrats) • Vaishyas (Peasants, merchants) • Shudras (serfs)
Increasing economic diversification challenges simplistic caste system • Jatis formed: guilds that acted as sub-castes • Enforced social order • “outcastes” forced into low-status employment Castes and Guilds
Upward social mobility possible for Vaishyas, Shudras • Wealth challenges varna for status Wealth and the Social Order