Tokugawa Era (1600
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Transcript Tokugawa Era (1600
The Heritage of World Civilizations
Brief Fifth Edition
Chapter
18
East Asia in the Late
Traditional Era
The Heritage of World Civilizations, Brief Fifth Edition
Albert Craig • William Graham • Donald Kagan • Steven Ozment • Frank Turner
East Asia in the Late Traditional Era
Late Imperial China
• Ming (1368–1644) and Qing (1644–1911)
Dynasties
Japan
• Warring States Era (1467–1600)
• Tokugawa Era (1600–1868)
Korea and Vietnam
• Korea
• Vietnam
Seventeenth-century screen painting of a
Shintō river festival
Introduction
• East Asian countries shared many cultural
elements
But differed in institutions and history
Introduction (cont’d)
• Common influence of Confucianism
China and Japan were furthest apart
Chinese dynastic cycle continued in Ming and
Qing
Japan’s history was closer in some ways to
that of Europe
Korea and Vietnam closer to China
Global Perspective: East Asia in the
Late Traditional Era
• What features of Japan or China, other
than those mentioned above, bear on their
lack of progress from commerce to
industry? What other factors presented in
the chapters on Europe are relevant?
• Why was Tokugawa Japan more open to
Western learning than Qing China? Was
population a plus, a minus, or a factor that
did not matter?
Late Imperial China
Ming (1368–1644) and
Qing (1644–1911) Dynasties
Ming and Qing Dynasties:
Land and People
• Ming-Qing continuities: longest stretch of
good government in Chinese history
• China’s population doubled from 1368 to
1644
60 million to 125 million
410 million by mid-nineteenth century
Ming and Qing Dynasties:
Land and People (cont’d)
• Increase in food supply
Rice and new crops such as maize
• Yangzi valley was densely populated
• Ming cash crops – silk and cotton
Third Commercial Revolution
• Expansion between 1500 and 1800
Followed First (Han) and Secont (Song)
commercial revolutions
Commerce expanded in mid-sixteenth
century
- Population surge
- Relaxation of government controls
A porcelain enameled plate
Third Commercial Revolution (cont’d)
•
•
•
•
Stimulus of imported silver
Favorable balance of trade
Urban growth – mainly market towns
Women still restricted by Confucian edicts
Spread of footbinding
Figure 18–1. A Bound Foot
Ming-Qing China:
The Emperor
• Strong emperors
• More direct control
Secretariat abolished
Personal government
• Despotic power
• Forbidden Palace, Beijing
Rebuilt
Centered on emperor’s rule
The Thin Horse Market
The Thin Horse Market
Ming-Qing China:
Bureaucracy
• Similar to Tang, Song times
• Manchus strongly centralize
• Revenues restored
But fixed
Emperors lose out as production rises
• Officials, later called “mandarins”
Competition to enter civil service
Examinations
Gentry
• More important than in the past
• Between bureaucracy and village
• District magistrate
Lowest level
Over population of up to 300,000 by late Ming
“Law of avoidance” – placed outside of home
province
• Urban, not rural, not landed
Pattern of Manchu Rule
• Manchu (Qing) takeover was smooth
Short transition
Manchus were already Sinicized
• Manchus adopted institutions to maintain
themselves as an ethnically elite group
Manchu troops segregated
Examination Stalls
Pattern of Manchu Rule (cont’d)
• Dyarchy
For each key post, one Chinese, one Manchu
• Able Rulers
Kangxi: model emperor, patron of culture and
learning, encouraged trade
Qianlong: Kangxi’s grandson, prosperous
rule, but corruption at end
Emperor Qianlong
Chronology: Late Imperial China
Ming Foreign Relations
• Vigorous expansion under early Ming
Tribute system
• Naval exploration under Zheng He
First armada – 62 major ships, 28,000 sailors
Half century earlier than Portuguese voyages
• Chief threat came from Mongols
Ming Foreign Relations (cont’d)
• Also threat from Japanese and Chinese
pirates
Ming invasion of Korea in late sixteenth
century
Map 18–1. The Ming Empire and the Voyages
of Zheng
Giraffe with Attendant
Qing Foreign Relations, Culture
• Manchu takeover in 1644
Threat still came from north and northwest
• Conquest of Tibet
• Increasing European contact
Jesuits appeal to Kangxi
Christianity later banned
• Macartney mission to China
Jesuit Missionary
Ming-Qing Culture
• Increasingly turned inward
Reaction to Buddhism under Song
Ming-Qing antipathy to Mongol rule
• Gu Yanwu
Example of intellectual refusing to serve
Manchu
Philology
Works only rediscovered in late 1800s
Ming-Qing Culture (cont’d)
• Traditional arts favored: painting,
calligraphy, poetry, philosophy
Japan
Warring States Era (1467–1600)
Warring States Era (1467-1600)
• War of All Against All
• Foot Soldier Revolution
• Foreign Relations and Trade
Japan – Warring States Era
• Warring States Era (1467-1600)
Ashikaga equilibrium was precarious
Warfare among the daimyo
“The strong eat and the weak become the
meat”
• Unification in stages
Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1536-1598)
Tokugawa Ieyasu (1542-1616)
Foot Soldier Revolution
• Foot soldier replaced the aristocratic
mounted warrior as the backbone of the
military
Warfare and society changed as well
• Daimyo took all land revenue
Multigeniture to unigeniture
Foot Soldier Revolution (cont’d)
• Rise of larger armies – 100,000s
New weapons
Thrusting spear
Musket, from Portuguese
Daimyo Castle
Societal Transformation
• In some respects, Japan resembled
postfeudal Europe
Most of the military class were soldiers, not
aristocrats
Military class had reached 7 to 8% of
population
Recruitment of village warriors added
significantly to power of daimyo
Commercial growth continued through the
dark decades of Warring States period
Chronology: Warring
States Japan and the Era
of Unification (14671600)
Foreign Relations and Trade
• Increased trade with China
Shogun appointed “King of Japan”
“Tribute missions” sent to China
• Progress of Japanese crafts
• “Vermilion-seal trade” after Hideyoshi
Arrival of the Portuguese in Japan
Foreign Relations and Trade
(cont’d)
• Seclusion
Trade limited to small community of Chinese
merchants in Nagasaki
Japanese could not leave Japan
Large ship construction prohibited
• Arrival of European ships – Portuguese
Christianity
• Jesuit missionaries
Jesuits directed efforts towards Samurai
300,000 converts by 1600
• Christianity seen as new Buddhist sect
Cosmic Buddha of Shingon and Christian
God seen as similar
Also Bodhisattva Kannon and Virgin Mary
Christianity (cont’d)
• Hideyoshi banned Christianity in 1597
Persecutions under Tokugawa Ieyasu
Nagasaki uprising in 1637 – 37,000 died
Tokugawa Era (1600–1868)
Tokugawa Era (1600–1868)
• Political Engineering and Economic
Growth during the Seventeenth Century
Hideyoshi’s Rule
Establishment of Tokugawa Rule
The Seventeenth-Century Economy
Tokugawa Era (1600–1868) (cont'd)
• Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries
The Forty-Seven Ronin
Cycles of Reform
Bureaucratization
The Later Tokugawa Economy
• Languages of East Asia
Tokugawa Era (1600–1868) (cont'd)
• Hideyoshi’s rule
Problem of dealing with armed peasantry
Hideyoshi ordered “sword hunt” in 1588
• Hideyoshi moved to freeze society
Marrying within own class
Clothing styles dictated
• Surveys of lands
Standardization of weights and measures
Made systematic land tax possible
“Picture-treading” Plaque
Tokugawa Leyasu
• Final unification in 1600
Confiscated lands of defeated enemies
Rewarded vassals and allies
Reshuffling of domains
• Regulation of legal codes
• Hostage system
Map 18–3. Tokugawa Japan and the Korean
Peninsula
Tokugawa Leyasu (cont’d)
• National policy of seclusion
No foreigners to enter Japan
• “Bakufu-domain system”
Edo Castle
Seventeenth-Century Economy
• Doubling of agricultural production
New techniques and innovations
Population grew from 12 million in 1600 to 24
million in 1700
Growth of byproducts: cotton, silk, indigo,
lumber
• Growth of national economy
Taxes
Richness and diversity of urban life
The Commercial District of Osaka
Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries
• Rate of growth and changes slow
Different form of changes began
• Forty-seven rōnin
Loyalty was deeply internalized
State was above ethics
Loyalty and idealism applied to women
Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries (cont’d)
• Alternating periods of reform and laxity
Reformist cliques of officials
Retrench domain’s finances, eliminate
extravagance, austere way of life
Bureaucracy and Economy
• Balance – centralization and
decentralization
No attempts to overthrow the bakufu
• By 1700 the economy approached limit of
expansion under available technology
Commerce grew slowly
Bureaucracy and Economy (cont’d)
• Population of 26 million in the eighteenth
century
Same in mid-nineteenth century
Contraception and abortion were
commonplace
Infanticide in hard times
• Scholars disagree about relationship
between Tokugawa economy and later
rapid industrialization
A Closer Look:
Bridal Procession
• Yohime, the twenty-first daughter of the
eleventh shogun, approaches the main
Edo estate of the Kaga daimyo.
Bridal Procession
Tokugawa Culture
• New urban culture with merchant influence
New secular consciousness
• Revitalization of Zen Buddhism
Hakuin – 1686-1769
• Two urban cultures
Samurai – serious, Chinese styles favored
Townspeople – lowbrow popular culture
• Bashō (1644-1694)
The Narrow Road of Oku
Mother Bathing Her Son
Literature and Drama
• Ihara Saikaku (1642-1693)
The Life of an Amorous Man
The Life of an Amorous Woman
• Chikamatsu Monzaemon (1653-1724)
Wrote for Kabuki and puppet theater
• Kabuki
From 1600s
Women forbidden to perform, 1629
More human than Nō
Confucian Thought
• Tokugawa elite drawn to Confucianism
• Difficult task of fitting Confucianism to
Japan
No room for shogun in Confucianism
- Answer – emperor had mandate of heaven –
entrusted political authority to shogun
Japanese “feudal system” of lord-vassal
View of China as central kingdom
- Manchus lost claim to universality
Confucian Thought (cont’d)
• Tremendous intellectual vitality
National Studies
• Attempt to find in Japanese classics the
original true character of Japan before
Chinese influence
Japanese spirit as free, spontaneous, clean,
lofty, honest
Chinese spirit as rigid and artificial
• Reaffirmation of Japan’s emperor
institution
National Studies (cont’d)
• Weaknesses of National Studies
No substitute for philosophy
Chiefly literary
Chronology: Tokugawa Era (1600-1868)
Dutch Studies
• Ban on Western books lifted in 1720
Recognition that Western anatomy texts were
better than Chinese ones
• Also interest in Western astronomy,
geography, botany, physics, chemistry, art
• Expanded into Western Studies during
1860s
Korea and Vietnam
Korea
Korea and Vietnam: Introduction
• Chinese influences on Korea and Vietnam
Writing
Government
Buddhism
Confucianism
• Points of differentiation
Language
Independence
Map 18–4. Early Korean States.
Early Korea
• Peninsular geography shaped history
• Chinese commanderies (108 B.C.E. – 313
C.E.)
• Three Korean states (313 C.E. – 668 C.E.)
Silla, Paekche, and Koguryo
Silla unified, ruled others (668 – 918 C.E.)
Chinese army helped with unification
Early Korea (cont’d)
• Silla drove Chinese out
Silla became autonomous tribute state to
China
Koryo Dynasty (918–1392)
• Cultural brilliance
Celadon vases, first history (1145), poetry
and literature, moveable type
• Buddhism
Buddhist infrastructure, art, and scholarship
Koryo Dynasty (918–1392) (cont’d)
• Chinese influence on government offices
and laws
Weak society, many slaves
Weak economy based on barter
Weak state dominated by military
Tributary to China
Pulguksa temple
Korea: Choson Era
• Yi Songgye founded Choson dynasty
(1392–1910)
Tied to stability of Ming-Qing China
• Yangban – elite families
Monopolized education and elite posts
• King Sejong (1418–1450)
Supported scholarship and reforms
• Acceptance of Neo-Confucianism
Korea: Invasions
• Korea impacted by invasions
Japanese under Hideyoshi – 1592, 1596
Ming troops
Manchu troops – 1627, 1637
• Famine, death and misery
Internal struggles between royal officials
• Literacy rose
Cultural achievements, women writers
Call for “practical learning”
A Badge of Rank
Chronology: Korean History
Vietnam
Vietnam
• Vietnam in Southeast Asia
• Vietnamese Origins
• A Millennium of Chinese Rule: 111 B.C.E.–
939 C.E.
• An Independent Vietnam
• The Marck South
Vietnam – Overview
• Four historical movements shaped all of
Southeast Asia
Peoples, languages followed river valleys
north to south
Indian traders and missionaries, first to
fifteenth centuries, brought Buddhism and
other influential ideas
Vietnam – Overview (cont’d)
• Four historical movements shaped all of
Southeast Asia
Arab and Indian traders, thirteenth to fifteenth
centuries, introduced Islam
Chinese diaspora, especially after 1842,
formed urban merchant class
• Fifth movement shaped Vietnam
Conquest by China
Creation of Vietnam
• Geography
“Two baskets on a carrying pole”
Vietnamese, Cham, and Khmer peoples
• Chams
More similar to Indonesians than Vietnamese
Champa
Seafarers
Creation of Vietnam (cont’d)
• Khmers (Cambodians)
In modern south Vietnam
• Early history based only on archaeology
Bronze from first millennium B.C.E.
Bronze drum
Map 18–6. Vietnam and Neighboring
Southeast Asia
Chinese Rule (111 B.C.E.–939 C.E.)
• Nan Yueh state formed 208 B.C.E.
Controlled southeast China and Red River
basin
Ruled by China (111 B.C.E.–939 C.E.)
Chinese Rule (111 B.C.E.–939 C.E.)
(cont’d)
• Social change
Chinese cultural influence, especially under
Tang
Revolt led to independence, 939
Ly (1009–1225) and Tran (1225–1400)
dynasties
Formal tribute relationship with China
Vietnam: Second Millennium
• Vietnamese dynastic blocks
Ly (1009-1225)
Tran (1225-1400)
Le (1428-1787)
Nguyen (1802-1880s)
• Not centralized bureaucratic states
Tensions between center and periphery
• Problem of Chinese invasions
Vietnamese formal submission to China
Chronology: Vietnamese History
Fifteenth Century Developments
• Two momentous developments
• Increased use of Chinese institutions and
culture to strengthen the government
Reforms of Le Thanh Tong (1442–1497)
- Neo-Confucian learning, public works
- Civil service exams – weakened nobles
Fifteenth Century Developments
(cont’d)
• Destruction of the Champa state
By Le Tranh Tong in 1471
“The march to the south”
• Nguyen conquest of north, 1802
Nguyen Dynasty, capital at Hue
Hue
Review Questions
1. What factors led to economic and
population growth in late traditional
China? Was the pattern the same in
Japan during those centuries?
Review Questions
2. How was Manchu rule like Mongol rule
during the Yuan Dynasty? How was it like
the rule by Chinese emperors during the
Ming?
Review Questions
3. What were the social and administrative
foundations of the absolute power of
Ming–Qing emperors?
Review Questions
4. Compare and contrast the bureaucracies
of China and Japan in this period. What
influences might you expect their
differences to have on the later histories
of these countries?
Review Questions
5. How did advances in military technology
change warfare in sixteenth-century
Japan? How was the strategic balance of
power reflected in the government
created by Tokugawa Ieyasu?
Review Questions
6. Did literacy ruin the samurai or improve
them? How did literate samurai “fit” the
changed society of the late eighteenth
century?
Review Questions
7. What was Dutch Studies? With what
ideas did Dutch Studies compete, and
why is it important?
Review Questions
8. Who were the yangban, and how did they
influence Korean history?
Review Questions
9. How and why did Vietnam expand to the
south?
Review Questions
10.Summarize the relationship between
Vietnam and China and between Korea
and China. Was either relationship
stronger or more significant? Explain.