Name: ______
Date: ______Period: ______
Chapter 12.1 Reading Quiz
- Describe 4 inventions of Tang and Song China and explain their impact.
Porcelain: white ceramic made of a special clay and mineral found only in China / Valuable export- called “china”…technology was secret for centuries
Mechanical clock: machinery was driven by running water, regulated movements / Short-lived, idea was carried by traders to medieval Europe
Printing: block printing and moveable type / Printing technology spread to Korea and Japan
Gunpowder: explosive powder made from saltpeter, sulfur, and charcoal / First used for fireworks, then weapons
Paper Money: paper currency issued by Song government…replaced strings of metal cash / Development of large-scale commercial economy in China
Magnetic compass: floating magnetized needle always pointed north-south / Helped China to become a sea power
- Who was Tang Taizong? (Time Period, Location, Key Achievements)
600-649 CE…took over as Tang emperor and took the title Taizong, meaning “Great Ancestor”…military campaigns extended China’s borders north to Manchuria…also reformed the government organization and law code.
- What was footbinding? What did it signify about a female’s status in society?
- The breaking of a young girls foot, and subsequent binding, which led to her foot being disproportionately small…sign of status because girls/women with bound feet were less able to do menial labor/ stand for long periods of time…showed lower status of women in Chinese society.
Chapter 12.1: Two Great Dynasties in China
- The Tang Dynasty Expands China
- Sui Wendi declared himself the first emperor of the Sui Dynasty…lasted through only 2 emperors from 589 to 618
- Greatest accomplishment was completion of the Grand Canal
- Waterway connected the Huang He (Yellow River ) and the Yangtze River
- Vital trade route between the northern cities and the southern rice-producing region
- 1,000 mile waterway…tens of thousands of peasant men and women toiled…1/2 died
- Thousands more died rebuilding the Great Wall
- People turned against the Sui Dynasty…overworked and overtaxed
- 618: member of the imperial court strangled the 2nd Sui emperor
- Tang Rulers Create a Powerful Empire
- Tang Dynasty- lasted for nearly 300 years (618-907)
- Begun by emperor Tang Taizong (627-649)
- Empire expanded
- Taizong’s armies reconquered the northern and western lands that had been lost after the Han
- 668- China extended influence over Korea
- Empress Wu Zhao- held real power from about 660 on…690, Empress Wu assumed title of emperor for herself- only woman to do that in China
- Tang rulers further strengthened the central government of China
- Expanded the network of roads and canals
- Promoted foreign trade and improvements in agriculture
- Tang China prospered
- Scholar-Officials
- Tang rulers needed to restore China’s vast bureaucracy
- Tang rulers revived and expanded the Civil service system to recruit good officials
- Opened schools around the country to train young scholars in Confucianism, poetry
- Elites: scholar-officials
- Exams technically open to all men, but needed expensive years of schooling to do well
- Eventually, talent and education became more important than noble birth in winning power…many moderately wealthy families shared in China’s government
- The Tang Lose Power
- By the mid-700’s Tang Dynasty was weakening…to pay for military expansion, Tang rulers reimposed crushing taxes
- Times of famine…bandit gangs
- Tang could not control the vast empire that they had built
- Battle of Talas: 751, Arab armies defeated the Chinese…Central Asia passed out of Chinese control
- 907 Chinese rebels sacked and burned the Tang capital at Chang’an…and murdered the last Tang emperor (a child).
- The Song Dynasty Restores China
- After the end of the Tang Dynasty, rival warlords divided China into separate kingdoms
- 960: able general reunited china and proclaimed himself Song Taizu, first Song emperor
- Song Dynasty lasted 3 centuries (960-1279)
- Song ruled a smaller empire than the Han or Tang, but China remained stable, powerful, and prosperous
- Song armies never regained the western lands lost after 751…or the northern lands
- Song paid annual tributes of silver, silk, and tea to northern enemies (ex: Jurchens)
- Early 1100’s, Jurchens (Manchuria) conquered northern China and established the Jin empire…forced the Song to retreat south across the Huang He
- After 1126: Song Emperors ruled only southern China
- New capital at Hangzhou…(coastal city, south of Yangtze)
- Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279) had rapid economic growth
- South as economic heartland
- An Era of Prosperity and Innovation
- Period of Tang and Song dynasties- intense growth
- China’s population nearly doubled to 100 million
- China was the most populous country in the world, and most advanced
- Science and Technology
- Important inventions: movable type and gunpowder
- Movable type: printer could arrange blocks of individual characters in a frame to make up a page for printing
- Gunpowder: led to explosive weapons
- Porcelain
- Mechanical clock
- Paper money
- Use of magnetic compass for navigation
- Chinese developed algebra and used zero…also use of negative numbers
- Agriculture
- Rapid growth of China resulted from advances in farming
- Improvement in cultivation of rice
- 1000- imported “quick-rice” from Vietnam
- Harvest 2 rice crops each year
- Chinese officials distributed seedlings throughout the country
- China able to produce more food to feed a growing population
- Trade and Foreign Contacts
- Foreign trade flourished under the Tang and Song
- Tang imperial armies guarded the Silk Roads
- China lost control over routes during Tang decline…Chinese merchants then relied increasingly on ocean trade
- Advances in sailing technology: use of magnetic compass
- During Song period: China developed into greatest sea power in the world
- International trade
- Merchant ships carried trade goods to Korea and Japan
- Sailed across Indian Ocean to India, Persian Gulf, and coast of Africa
- Chinese merchants established trading colonies around Southeast Asia
- Chinese culture spread through East Asia
- Major cultural export- Buddhism
- Buddhism spread from China, Japan, Korea, and Vietnam
- Tang- tea arrived in China from Southeast Asia- Chinese become avid tea drinkers and tea producers.
- Foreign religions, including Islam and some Eastern sects of Christianity, also spread to China
- A Golden Age of Art
- Prosperity of Tang and Song nourished an age of artistic brilliance
- Scholar-officials- expected to write poetry and to own at least one fine painting
- Tang period produced great poetry
- Li Bo- life’s pleasures
- Du Fu- praised orderliness and Confucian virtues…wrote critically about war
- Chinese painting reached new heights of beauty during the Song Dynasty…shows Daoist influence
- Beauty of natural landscapes…muted colors…black ink was favorite paint
- “Black is ten colors”
- Changes in Chinese Society
- Chinese society became increasingly mobile
- People moved to the cities in increasing numbers
- More opportunities in cities for managers, professionals, and skilled workers
- Civil Service Exam was the most important avenue for social advancement
- Levels of Society
- Power of old aristocratic families faded
- New, much larger upper class emerged…scholar-officials and their families
- Gentry: powerful, well-to-do people
- Gentry attained their status through education and civil service positions, rather than land ownership
- Urban middle class- merchants, shopkeepers, skilled artisans, minor officials, and others
- Bottom of urban society: laborers, soldiers, and servants
- Largest class= peasants
- The Status of Women
- Women always subservient to men in Chinese Society
- Women’s status further declined during Tang and Song periods
- Especially upper class women
- Foot-binding for upper-class girls
- Continued into 20th century
- Young girls feet- arches were broken, curled all but the big toe under “lily-foot”
- Women with bound feet were crippled for life
- Sign of status and of not able to do menial labor