AP World History - Stearns
Chapter 2 – Classical Civilization: China
I. Introduction – longest-lived civilization in history
A. Isolated
1. Couldn’t learn from other cultures
2. Rare invasions
3. Distinctive identity
4. Relatively little internal chaos w/ decline of Shang dynasty
a. Greatest links to classical society
B. Intellectual theory
1. Harmony of nature – yin and yang – balance
2. Seek Dao – the way
a. Avoid excess
b. Appreciate balance of opposites
c. Humans part of world, not on outside – like Mediterranean
Thesis: China emerged with an unusually well-integrated system in which government, philosophy, economic incentives, the family, and the individual were intended to blend into a harmonious whole.
II. Patterns in Classical China
1. Dynasty, family of kings – create strong politics, economy
2. Dynasty grew weak, taxes declined
3. Social divisions increased
4. Invasion or internal rebellion
5. Another dynasty emerged – general, invader, peasant rebel
B. Zhou Dynasty – 1029-258 BCE
1. Started decline in 700 BCE
2. Ruled w/ local princes – alliance system
a. Successful in agricultural communities – ie manor system Europe
b. Princes received land for troops/tax
3. Eventually local leaders ignored central gov’t
4. Contributions
a. Extended territory to “Middle Kingdom” – wheat north, rice south
1. Transportation/communication difficult – hard to govern
b. Mandate of Heaven – Sons of Heaven – emperors live affluent life
c. Greater cultural unity
1. Banned human sacrifice
2. Standardized language – Mandarin – most people speaking same
d. Confucius – wrote on political ethics
5. 402-201 BCE Era of the Warring States
C. Qin Dynasty – China’s namesake
1. Xin Shi Huangdi – first emperor – brutal leader
a. Undid power of regional leaders
b. Nobles brought to emperor’s home
c. Officials selected from nonaristocratic groups – allegiance
d. Extended territory south
e. Built Great Wall – 3000 miles
f. Burned books, attacked culture – hurts his autocratic rule
2. Innovations
a. National census – tax and labor service
b. Standardized coins, weights, measures
c. Uniform written language
d. Irrigation projects
e. Promoted manufacturing – silk
3. Downfall – unpopular
a. high taxes, attacks on intellectuals
b. killed men, punished brutally
c. Died in 210 BCE – revolts broke out
D. Han Dynasty – 202 BCE-220 CE
1. Kept centralized power of Qin, but reduced repression
2. Extended borders – opened trade to India, Mediterranean
3. Wu Ti – period of peace – like Pax Romana
4. Advancements
a. Formal training
b. Supported Confucianism
1. Shrines built to worship Confucius as god
5. Invasions – Huns – led to decline
6. 220 – 589 CE China in chaos
III. Political Institutions
A. Strong central government
1. Qin stressed unquestioned central authority
2. Han – expanded bureaucracy
B. Political framework
1. Strong local units remained, but power diminished
a. Relied on patriarchal families
b. Ancestor worship linked families
c. Village leaders helped coordinate farming/harvesting
2. Single law code
3. Universal tax system
4. Central authority appointments – not based on local government nominations
5. Delegation done to emperor’s ministers
C. Huge bureaucracy – 130,000 bureaucrats
1. Civil Service tests
2. Scholar bureaucrat
3. Not exclusively upper class rule - occasionally lower class recruited
4. Rulers often could be controlled by bureaucrats – didn’t do crazy stuff of Rome
D. Most tightly governed people
1. Rules administered by trained scholars
2. Father unquestioned power – passed down from ancestors
3. Harsh punishments to put down rebellion
E. Government traditions
1. Not heavily militaristic – not huge need
2. Promoted intellectual life – not Qin
3. Active in economy
a. Organized production of iron/salt
b. Han tried storing grain for bad harvests
c. Sponsored public works – canals/irrigation
F. Technology made it difficult to control, but…
1. Torture and execution used to keep obedience
2. Taxed
3. Annual labor
G. Invaders – Huns – couldn’t create better system for governing – kept bureaucrats
IV. Religion and Culture – people not united by religion – no political threat
A. Religion – relation to politics
1. earthly life/obedience more important than speculating about God
2. harmonious earthly life – prevent excess
3. traditions
a. Ancestor ceremonies
b. Special meals
c. Politeness at meals – tea ceremonies/chopsticks
B. Confucius - Analects
1. Political virtue and good government
a. secular views, not religious
2. Respect for superiors- even if bad
3. Respect for tradition
4. Leaders should behave modestly without excess
a. Work hard as a leader and lesser people will serve superiors
b. “When the ruler does right, all men will imitate his self-control”
c. Rulers not just punish – be humble and sincere
5. Satisfied upper class distaste for mystery, and interest in learning/manners
6. Gov’t used to maintain order
7. Careful socialization of children
8. Lacks spiritual side
C. Legalism – pragmatism
1. Better gov’t is one that rules by force
2. Human nature evil – needs restraint
3. Confucian façade + legalist strong arm tactics
D. Polytheistic beliefs – appealed to peasants
1. Spirits of nature
2. Ancestors
3. Dragons – fear plus playful respect
E. Daoism – first to upper class who wanted spirituality
1. Nature has divine impulse that directs life
2. Understanding comes from withdrawing and thinking of “way of nature”
3. Espoused humility and frugal living
F. Intellectual
1. Five Classics – speeches, songs, poems, etiquette, political materials
a. Poetry mark of an educated person
2. Art form
a. Calligraphy
b. Chinese artists, pottery, carved jade
c. No monumental buildings – except palaces/Great Wall
1. No singular religion
2. Confucianism against temples soaring to heaven
3. Science – practical work – not imaginative theorizing
a. Calculated motion of planets 1500 years before Copernicus
b. Medicine – anatomical research – proper hygiene for longer life
V. Economy and Society
A. Class – social status passed from one generation to the next
1. Upper class literate, wealth, culture denied peasants
a. Mandarins – educated bureaucrats + landowning aristocracy
2. Land owners 2%, peasantry the rest
a. “mean” people – lowest status – like India’s untouchables
3. Property owned communally
B. Trade
1. Luxury items – silk, jewelry, leather goods, furniture – Silk Road
a. Carried by merchants
2. Merchants not highly important – Confucius prioritized learning/political service
C. Technological Advance – practical usage – remained agricultural
1. Ox-drawn plow/collar for animals
2. Iron mining – pulleys and winding gear
3. Production methods advanced – water powered mills
4. Paper invented – needed for bureaucracy
D. Family life – father unquestioned leader
1. “There are no wrongdoing parents”
a. law courts don’t punish parents
2. Strict control of emotions
a. Home training ground for personality
3. Women gained power through sons/mother-in-laws to women brought in
4. Power to oldest son, boys over girls
VI. How Chinese Civilization Fits Together – Chinese wholeness – not a divided society
VII. Global connections – Heavy influence on the world
Source: http://www.course-notes.org/sites/www.course-notes.org/files/past/StearnsChapter2_0008.doc
Web site to visit: http://www.course-notes.org
Author of the text: not indicated on the source document of the above text
If you are the author of the text above and you not agree to share your knowledge for teaching, research, scholarship (for fair use as indicated in the United States copyrigh low) please send us an e-mail and we will remove your text quickly. Fair use is a limitation and exception to the exclusive right granted by copyright law to the author of a creative work. In United States copyright law, fair use is a doctrine that permits limited use of copyrighted material without acquiring permission from the rights holders. Examples of fair use include commentary, search engines, criticism, news reporting, research, teaching, library archiving and scholarship. It provides for the legal, unlicensed citation or incorporation of copyrighted material in another author's work under a four-factor balancing test. (source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fair_use)
The information of medicine and health contained in the site are of a general nature and purpose which is purely informative and for this reason may not replace in any case, the council of a doctor or a qualified entity legally to the profession.
The following texts are the property of their respective authors and we thank them for giving us the opportunity to share for free to students, teachers and users of the Web their texts will used only for illustrative educational and scientific purposes only.
All the information in our site are given for nonprofit educational purposes
The information of medicine and health contained in the site are of a general nature and purpose which is purely informative and for this reason may not replace in any case, the council of a doctor or a qualified entity legally to the profession.
www.riassuntini.com