Transcript Chapter 12

Discussion Notes
Importance of this Chapter
 Transition from Han to Sui was a period of political
chaos known as the “period of Six Dynasties” (220-589
C.E.)
 Scholar-gentry lost ground to landed families
 Nomadic peoples ruled much of China
 Buddhism replaced Confucianism as a primary force in
cultural life.
=economic, technological and urban decline.
Importance – Sui-Tang-Song restore Chinese
civilization
 Political unity returned with Sui and Tang
 nomads and nobility were brought under state control
 Bureaucracy was rebuilt
 Primary political focus was on southern and eastern
coastal areas which was further south of the original
core area.
 Song restored the Confucian order and was a time
of artistic, literary and technological flourishing.
(Neo-Confucianism)
 Male Dominance reached new heights with the
Neo-Confucianism.
How did the Sui rise to Power?
 Wendi used support from nomadic military
leaders to win control of northern China.
 He then defeated the Chen kingdom which ruled
much of the south.
 These efforts allowed him to establish rule over the
traditional Chinese core.
 Its one thing to conquer and another to rule. He
gained popularity by lowering taxes and
establishing granaries to ensure a stable, cheap
food supply.
How did the Sui Collapse?
 Wendi’s son Yangdi was so ambitious that he killed his
father to gain the throne.
 On the one hand, he continued to strengthen the state
by further success against the nomads. He reformed
the legal code and the Confucian educational system
therefore bringing the scholar-gentry back into the
administration.
On the other hand
 Yangdi spent a lot of resources on
 The new capitol at Loyang
 A series of canals to link the empire
 Unsuccessful attempts at conquering Korea
 As resentment grew inside the kingdom external
pressures grew.
 Unsuccessful defense from Turkic nomads in central
Asia in 615.
 Assassination occurred after widespread revolt in 618.
The Tang Takes Over
 Li Yuan was known as the Duke of Tang.
 He had been a former supporter of the Sui.
Thankfully, he gained control and stabilized the
empire.
 Tang armies were strong and were able to defend and
extend all the way to Afghanistan.
 Utilized Turkic nomads in its army and tried to
assimilate them into the Chinese culture.
The Tang Takes Over
 The Great Wall was repaired.
 The empire continued to expand into Tibet, Vietnam,
Manchuria and Korea.
In what way was the rise of the Tang
associated with the Confucian renaissance?
 It was the restored scholar-gentry elite and reworked
Confucian ideology that helped the Tang maintain
centralized authority.
 The exam system was extended but birth and family
connections remained important for attaining high
office.
 Civil service advancement patterns were regulated
through the Ministry of Rites.
 The power of the aristocracy was reduced.
 The Bureau of Censors however helped maintain strict
controls over the bureaucracy.
State Religion in the Tang-Song Era
 Many regional leaders and early leaders of the
Tang had been Buddhist supporters.
 Confucian revival threatened Buddhism’s place in
Chinese life.
 Though monks had given it some Chinese
qualities, it was still seen as foreign.
 Mahayana won commoner converts during political
chaos
 Chan won elite converts as it stressed meditation and
appreciation of natural and artistic beauty.
Support Followed by Backlash
 Empress Wu (690-705) – big supporter
 Endowed monasteries
 50,000 by mid ninth century
 Commissioned colossal statues of Buddha
 Sought to make Buddhism the state religion.
 Confucianists and Daoists opposed Buddhist
growth as a foreign faith.
 Daoist stressed their own magical and predictive
powers.
 Confucianists argued that untaxed Buddhist
monasteries posed an economic threat to the empire
Confucianism Victorious
 Emperor Wuzong (841-847)
 Open persecution of Buddhists and Buddhism
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Thousands of monasteries and shrines destroyed
Hundreds of thousands of monks and nuns lost religious
employment
Buddhist lands were taxed or redistributed to taxpaying
nobles and peasants.
 Confucianism emerged as the enduring central ideology
of Chinese civilization.
What accounts for the decline of the Tang
dynasty?
 The peak of Tang power had been during the rule of
Emperor Xuanzong (713-756)
 He initially advanced political and economic reform
 Later he turned to patronizing the arts and the pleasures
of the imperial city.
 That’s when the trouble really started.
The Chinese Siren
 Xuangzong became infatuated with an imperial harem
woman, Yang Guifei
 She filled upper levels of government with her relatives
and gained authority in court politics.
 Rival cliques stimulated unrest, while lack of royal
direction caused economic distress and military
weakness.
 A serious revolt took place in 755.
 The rebels were defeated and Yang Guifei was killed, but
Zuanzong and succeeding rulers provided weak
leadership for the dynasty.
 Nomadic frontier peoples and regional governors used
the disorder to gain virtual independence.
 Worsening economic conditions in the ninth century
caused many revolts, some of them popular movements
by peasants.
In what way was the Song empire weaker
than the Tang?
 After the last Tang emperor resigned in 907 Zhao
Kuangyin (Taizu) reunited China and started the
Song Dynasty.
 His dynasty never defeated the Liao of Manchuria
that had been formed by the Khitan nomads in
907.
 At a later point, the Song would end up paying
tribute to the Liao, maintain large military force
there which ultimately contributed to the drain on
state resources. The peasants always take on the
burden of the spending done by the government.
 Despite positive efforts to place the scholar-gentry
above Buddhist and aristocratic rivals who work against
centralization, the Song never matched the political or
military strength of the Tang.
 There was an over-correction for the way the Tang
ended that created a military subordinated to the
scholar-gentry.
 According to the text, the scholar-gentry became
bloated resulting in a lot of useless, highly paid paper
shufflers.
Wang Anshi- Chief Minister
 Tried to rescue the Song by using legalist principals.
 Encouraged agricultural expansion through cheap loans
and government-assisted irrigation projects.
 The landlord and scholar-gentry were taxed, and the
revenues went for military reform.
 Attempted to revitalize the education system by giving
preference to analytical skills.
Without the Emperor…
 The new emperor supported opposing reformers and
reversed Wang’s policies.
 This led to economic difficulties that led to military
ineffectiveness.
 Nomadic Jurchens overthrew the Liao and pressed into
China.
 The Song fled south and established a capitol at
Hangzhou in the Yangtze River Basin this lasted from
1127-1279.
What were the aspects of economic
prosperity during the Tang-Song era?
 This was considered a Golden Age due to the
amount and new trade routes that opened.
 The Grand Canal 1200 + miles long connected the
traditional core areas (produced wheat) with the newer
Southern constituents that harvested rice
 The Canal made Northern rule of the food producing
south much easier.
 Population did end up shifting to the south.
Consequences
 The canal system promoted commercial expansion.
 The Silk Routes were reopened bringing China back in
contact with Buddhist and Muslim worlds.
 China exported their manufactured goods for products
they saw as luxury items. Of course many of their
manufactured goods were identified by those to the
west as luxury items. * Peaches!
 It is important to recognize that China really didn’t
need the commerce with people from the west as
much as the people of the west sought Chinese
products.
Discuss the status of women during the
Tang-Song era.
 Women’s position was improved by Buddhism for
a short period of time under Tang and early Song.
 Marriage alliance done by professional female go-
betweens.
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Partners were of the same age
Marriage did not occur until puberty
Upper-class consumated later than commoners
 Upper class women had opportunity for personal
expression.
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Empress Wu, Empress Wei, Yan Guifei
Legal rights for women in divorce situation.
Wealthy urban women could have lovers.
This was followed by a severe
decline with Neo-Confucianism.
 Roles stressed included home-maker and mother, bridal
virginity, wifely fidelity, widow chastity while men were
permitted free sexual behavior and remarriage.
 Men favored in new laws of inheritance and divorce.
 Females excluded from education system.
 Painful footbinding
What was the overall impact of the TangSong era on Chinese history?
 Central administration and bureaucracy were re-
established and strengthened.
 The scholar-gentry class came back to the forefront for
another 650 years.
 Much more territory controlled and more neighboring
areas influenced by China.
 Was the market leader in orientation until the
eighteenth century.
 Numerous inventions
What innovations were made during the
Tang-Song era?
 Junks allowed Chinese merchants to go directly to
prominent port areas and were the best ships in the
world.
 Enlarged market quarters.
 Deposit shops
 Paper Money
 Credit vouchers – flying money
 New crops
Invention
 Technology – Grand Canal, dikes and dams,
irrigation systems, bridges
 Explosive powder for fireworks then military use
 Naphtha flame-throwers, poisonous gases, rocket
launchers
 Chairs, tea drinking, coal for fuel, kites, compasses
and the abacus
 Moveable type to go along with the Han invention
of paper = most literate society in the world at that
time.