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Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

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Page 1: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia

500-1650

Page 2: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Section 1- Two Golden Ages of China

Confucius

Page 3: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Tang Dynasty Reunifies China

• Sui Dynasty under Sui Wendi (589-618)

• First Tang emperor was Li Yuan

• Vietnam, Tibet, and Korea become tributary states – states that remained self-governing, but recognized Chinese supremacy and pay tribute

Tang Warrior Sui Wendi

Page 4: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Tang Government

• Reinstituted Han government

• Recruited talented officials trained in Confucian philosophy

• Tang brought land reform– Split land holdings among the peasants– Weakened the power of large landowners

Page 5: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Tang Declines

• Lost land to Arabs

• Downward swing of dynastic cycle– Corruption, high taxes, drought, famine,

rebellions

Ceramic colored horseFrom Tang DynastyOn display in Shanghai Museum

Page 6: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

The Song Dynasty

• Ruled for 319 years• Smaller state than the Tang• Constant bombardment from the North• Song culture flourished • Grand Canal- linked the Huang and Chang Rivers• New type of rice• Foreign trade thrived under the Tang and Song Dynasties

This Song-period reproduction of an eighth-century landscape depicts Tang dynasty emperor Xuanzong (the mounted figure in foreground wearing red) fleeing with his party to Szechwan.

Page 7: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

China’s Ordered Society

• Gentry- wealth landowning class• Gentry valued education above all else• Peasants worked and lived off the land• The emperor was far removed from peasant life• Slavery played a minor role in Chinese society• Merchants are the lowest class because

Confucian virtues said that merchants gained their wealth from others work

• Attitudes toward merchants effected the economy

Page 8: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

The Status of Women

• Higher in Tang and early Song periods that later• Control of household issues• Women could not keep dowries or remarry• Boys valued more that girls• Girls become part of their husbands family

when they married• Foot binding

Page 9: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Tang and Song Culture

• Artist Paint Harmony

• Architecture- pagoda– Similar to Indian

stupa

• Porcelain- “chinaware”

• Chinese writing- Li Bo

Page 10: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Section 2- Mongol and Ming Empires

Page 11: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Mongols

• Mongols are nomads from Central Asia

• Graze horses and kept sheep on the steppes- vast, treeless plains

Page 12: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Genghis Khan

• United Mongolian tribes

• Highly trained horsemen

• Fierce leader

• Used cannons and gun powder

• Died before conquest was complete, but his heirs finished the job

Page 13: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Pax Mongolia

• “Mongol Peace”

• 1200s-1300s– Mongols not oppressive rulers– Made travel on the Silk Road safe– Trading and inventions reach Europe

Page 14: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

China Under Mongol Rule

• Kublai Khan– Genghis Khan’s grandson– Defeated the last Song emperor in 1279– Ruled all of China, Korea, and Tibet– He wanted to keep the Mongols and Chinese

separate– Gave top positions to Mongols only– Welcomed foreigners to his court

Page 15: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Li Bai Taking a Stroll

13th Century Southern Song Dynasty

Page 16: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Ma YuanSong DynastyOn a Mountain Path in Spring

Brushed by his sleeves,Wild flowers dance in the wind;Fleeing from him,Hidden birds cut short their song.

Page 17: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Marco Polo 1254-1324

• Traveled from Venice, Italy to China

• Spent 17 years in Kublai Khan’s service

• Sparked European interest in Asia

• He left a written account of his travels– p. 378-379, complete questions 1 and 2 in

pairs and discuss

Page 18: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650
Page 19: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Ming Restore Chinese Rule

• Yuan dynasty declined after Kublai Khan’s death in 1294

• Chinese hated Mongol rulers• Uprisings were common• Zhu Yuanzhang, a peasant leader, created

a rebel army• He established the Ming (brilliant) dynasty

in 1368• Ming restores typical Chinese government

Page 20: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650
Page 21: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Chinese Fleets Sail the Seas

• Zheng He- Chinese admiral and diplomat– Sailed all around the Pacific and Indian

Oceans with his huge fleet and 28,000 sailors– Reached India, Persian Gulf, and the east

coast of Africa– Showed lesser kingdoms the power and

prestige of the Chinese– Some Chinese permanently settled in these

trading port cities

Page 22: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650
Page 23: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Exploration Ends

• Zheng He died in 1435• In the same year the Ming emperor

banned the building of seagoing ships• Why would they do this?

– Urging of traditional Confucian scholars?– Costly fleets?– What might have happened if Ming China kept

exploring? (Hint: Think Christopher Columbus)

Page 24: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Section 3- Korea and Its Traditions

p. 383-386

Page 25: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Geography of the Korean Peninsula

• Located on a peninsula that juts out from China

• Points south toward Japan

• 70% mountains• Most people live on the

fertile west coast• Its location so close to

China and Japan profoundly effected the course of Korean history

Page 26: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Development of Korea

• Korean migrated from Siberia and Manchuria during the Stone Age

• They developed their own culture before China’s influence during the Han dynasty

• From 100 B.C. to A.D. 676 there were 3 kingdoms: Koguryo in the north, Paekche in the southwest, and Silla in the southeast

Page 27: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Korea during the 3 kingdom period

Page 28: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Development of the Silla and Koryo Dynasties

• The 3 kingdoms often fought with each other and with China

• Chinese influence government, Buddhism, arts• Backed by the Tang emperor, the Silla kingdom

defeated Paekche and Koguryo in 676, uniting Korea

• Silla 668-935• Koryo 918-1392• Choson 1392-1910

Page 29: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Silla Dynasty

• Prosperous time in Korean history

• Traded with China

• Buddhism flourished

• The capital of Kyongju was modeled off the Tang capital of Chang’an

• Copied Chinese civil service examinations but only allowed aristocrats to take the tests

Page 30: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Koryo Dynasty

• New capital at Songak

• The name Korea comes from this dynasty

• Invented movable type

• Created porcelain called Celadon- bluish green glaze– Very difficult to perfect– Highly prized throughout Asia

Page 31: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650
Page 32: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Koryo DynastyIncense burner

Celadon pottery from start to finish

Page 33: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

Choson Dynasty

• Hangul is created as the new alphabet– Made during the reign of King Sejong– Uses symbols to represent the sounds of

spoken Korean– Promotes a very high literacy rate

The Japanese invaded in the 1590s causing destruction and brought many Korean artisans back to Japan

Page 34: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

The original decree by Korean King Sejong establishing the Hangul writing system. In 1446, Sejong promulgated a new writing system, intended to enable the common people to read and write. However, the Chinese language remained the preferred linguistic medium of the scholarly bureaucracy and of educated Koreans.

Page 35: Ch. 12 The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia 500-1650

King Sejong