Chinese Empire

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CHINESE EMPIRE Chapter 9

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Chinese Empire. Chapter 9. Monday, February 24, 2014. Homework: Sign & return chapter 8 tests Do Now: Read page 271-273 When finished, please get a worksheet from the back table and complete it. The Qin. Qin was a mountainous kingdom located in northwestern China - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Chinese Empire

CHINESE EMPIRE

Chapter 9

Thursday, February 26, 2015

Homework: Read section 1 (starting on page 274)

Do Now: Please take out your homework from yesterday

The Qin

Qin was a mountainous kingdom located in northwestern China

Beyond the kingdom, there were foreign lands of Asia

Although by the late Zhou dynasty, Qin had become the strongest kingdom in western China, King Zheng wanted more power!

Uniting the Warring States

Kin Zheng of Qin was ruthless, he defeated each kingdom one by one

By 221 BC, Qin forces defeated their last enemy and united China There are still challenges:

Languages and customs varied Rebellion may occur Invasion by nomads

The First Emperor

The Qin ruler decided that the Chinese needed to become one people by one government

King was too small of a word for such a vast empire He then declared himself Shi Huangdi –

“First Emperor” “Huagdi” is tied to the gods and legendary

rules of China’s past

The Great Wall

Before the Qin unification, the smaller kingdoms had walls to protect themselves from other kingdoms

Shi Huagdi had these walls torn down and began work on one of the largest public works projects in history The Great Wall

A long wall running east and west along his empire’s northern border to defend the empire from nomads living close by

Protection

Building the wall was dangerous and many workers died

It did not always keep invaders out, but other emperors who followed also relied on the wall for protection

Establishing Standards

Shi Huagdi knew he needed to standarize daily life Standards for economy Standards for culture

Anyone who did not follow the standards was punished as a traitor

Most importantly, the empire established a single written language

Establishing Standards

Transportation became standardized The government established a standard length

for the axles of all vehicles, making travel between different areas easier

All carts and wagons could travel in the same ruts on the same roads

A uniform set of weights and measures was also set into place This made trade easier Currency was the same throughout China

Organization

Shi Huagdi introduced the concept of centralization (central government system)

He organized China into 36 provinces Each province was divided into counties Each county had a leader who reported to

central government who then reported to the emperor

To prevent rebellion, Shi Huagdi forced thousands of noble families to move to the capital where spies could watch them

A Legalist Government

In the alte Zhou dyansty, the Qin rulers brought in advisors to help make the Qin stronger

Shang Yang was a very important advisor who belonged to a school of thought called Legalism According to this, a strong leader and a

strong legal system are needed to create social order

A Legalist Government

The Qin kings took more direct control over the common people with heavy taxes and labor requirements

The kingdom became stronger and more orderly

Shi Huagdi became very interested in harsh laws and following Legalist Han Feizi

Rules and Punishment under Legalism Han Feizi did not agree with Confucianism

Instead, he believed people must be forced to do good

This was done by making strict laws and enforcing them

Shi Huagdi made a uniform legal code across his empire with very severe punishments Ex: a thief could face physical punishment as harsh

as cutting off the feet or nose Ex: less serious theft may receive punishment of

harsh labor such as working on the walls or the roads

Censoring Thought

The First Emperor tried to control Chinese thought by censoring ideas he found dangerous or offensive

Debate about the government was banned

People could not praise past rulers or criticize the present one

Books that did not support his policies were burned

Fall of the Qin Dynasty

About 3 years after Shi Huagdi’s death, the dynasty collapsed

A soldier named Chen Sheng led a rebellion He was leading troops north to defend the

borders of China, but a storm of heavy rains delayed them

He knew that arriving late would have a severe penalty so he and his men decided they had nothing to lose by rebelling

Fall of the Qin Dynasty

As news of Chen Sheng’s uprising spread, many others rose up to support him

Qin generals tried but could not put down these rebellions

Knowing the punishment for failure, some of the generals joined the rebellions

The rebels joined together long enough to defeat the Qin, but then began fighting amongst themselves and chaos erupted AGAIN