Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the...

36
Chapter 8 China

Transcript of Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the...

Page 1: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

Chapter 8

China

Page 2: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

China Reunified

• In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar-gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced the old landed aristocracy.

• Emperor Tang Xuanzang (Wan-dzong) is remembered for his devotion to a commoner’s daughter.

Page 3: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

• Technological developments during the Tang dynasty included gunpowder, steel, and cotton cloth.

• The Silk Road was renewed and as a result of trade, the city of Changan became the wealthiest city in the world.

Fire lance

Page 4: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.
Page 5: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

• Also, during this time the scholar-gentry replaced the old aristocracy as the political and economic elite of China.

• Li Bo his poem “Quiet Night Thoughts” has been memorized by schoolchildren for centuries

Page 6: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

Quiet Night Thoughts

• Before my bedthere is bright moonlight,So that it seemslike frost on the ground.

• Lifting my headI watch the bright moon,Lowering my headI dream that I`m home.

Page 7: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

Mongols and China

• In 1206, Temujin was renamed Genghis Khan, after which he devoted himself to conquest, eventually establishing the Mongol Empire.

Page 8: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

• The Mongols, led by Genghis Khan, brought much of the Eurasian landmass under a single rule, creating the largest land empire in history.

Page 9: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.
Page 11: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.
Page 12: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

• Between the Tang and Ming dynasties, Chinese literature flourished because printing was invented.

Page 14: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

Early Japan and Korea

• samurai means “those who serve”

• The samurai of Japan were a new class of military servants whose purpose was to protect the security and property of their employers.

Page 15: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.
Page 16: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

• The samurai lived by a strict code known as Bushido, which was based on loyalty to the samurai’s lord.

Page 18: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

• Although Korean society was strongly influenced by the Chinese model of society, it was also influenced by Japan.

Page 20: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

• Consequently, from the ninth to the twelfth centuries, women were the most productive writers of prose fiction in Japanese.

• Females learned to read and write at home, and they wrote diaries, stories, and novels to pass the time.

Page 21: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

• From this tradition appeared one of the world’s great novels, The Tale of Genji, which was written by Murasaki Shikibu around the year 1000.

Page 22: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

India After the Guptas

• Followers of Mahayana saw Buddhism as a religion, not a philosophy, with Buddha as a divine figure.

Page 23: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.
Page 24: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

• Muslim rulers in India were tolerant of Hindus because they realized there were simply too many Hindus to convert them all.

Muslims in front of the Taj Mahal

Page 25: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

• Theravada Buddhism became the religion of the masses in Southeast Asia partly because it tolerated local gods and posed no threat to established faiths.

Page 26: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

Wat Phra Buddha Baat,Theravada Buddhist templein Thailand.

Page 27: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

• The Rajputs were Hindu warriors who resisted the advance of Mahmud of Ghazni & the Muslim rule he brought with him.

Page 28: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

Rajputs

Page 29: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

Southeast Asia

• Followers of Theravada see Buddhism as a way of life.

• Timur Lenk was the ruler of a Mongol state based in Samarkand.

Samarkand: In modern day Uzbekistan

Page 30: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

• The trading societies of Southeast Asia included Srivijaya and the Sultanate of Melaka.

Page 31: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

• The two major parts of Southeast Asia include the mainland down to the southern tip of the Malay Peninsula and the archipelago of present-day Indonesia and the Philippines.

Page 32: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

Part 1:Malaya Peninsula

Part 2:Indonesia &Philippines

Page 33: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

• The temple of Angkor Wat combines Indian architectural techniques with native inspiration.

Page 34: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

Angkor Wat

Page 35: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

• Most societies in Southeast Asia gave greater rights to women than did those of China and India.

Page 36: Chapter 8 China. China Reunified In the Tang (TONG) and Song Eras, the scholar- gentry as the political and economic elite of Chinese society, replaced.

• Women worked alongside men in the fields.

• They also played an active role in trading activities.