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Unit 6- East Asia Flashcards

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110651043The MongolsLargest empire until Britain. Great horsemen and archers.0
110651044Origins of the MongolsGroup of tribes of mixed Turks and Paleoastics. Emerged in open plains of central Asia. Originally nomadic, herded livestock. Developed a law code, written language, religious practices (Buddhism), technology, cultural borrowing from China.1
110651045Genghis Khan and the Unification of the Mongols1100's- Mongol population between 1.5 and 3 million, 20 tribes. Tribes fought each other. Genghis Khan (1155) became a tribal leader and united dozens of tribes2
110651046Mongol SuccessLarge armies (80,000-100,000). Talented cavalry and archers, endurance, military groups of 10, seize warfare experts (learned from China)3
110651047Ogodei's ConquestsOgodei (Genghis Khan's 3rd son) ruled Mongols until his death in 1241. Ododei's armies moved into almost all of Northern and Western China (1234) and Korea (1241)4
110651048Mongols Drive Into EuropeOgodei's nephew, Batu, had 150-200,000 troops. 1237-1240- Batu conquered most of Russia and Udraine. 1240-1242- Pushed into Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary, and Poland.5
110651049Baku's GovernmentGolden Horde6
110651050Mongol Empire at its PeakTwo Khans- Guyuk and Mongke. 1240s and 1250's- Mongol empire grew larger. 1252- Eastern Tibet and 1250's- Middle East- destroyed Abbasid Caliphate. Captured Mesopotamia, Turkey, Persia, Syria. From East Europe to Pacific Ocean, the Mongols imposed a single political authority, encouraged economic exchange, made travel safer, imposed legal orded, Silk Road flourished7
110651051Break up of Mongol EmpireLast Khan- Mongke. Died in 1260 and civil war broke out between nephews and grandsons of GEnghis Khan. Empire's 4 largest units became independent states.8
110651052Great Kahn and Yuan ChinaMongolia and East territories. 1265- Khubilai (Grandson of Genghis) took over. Shifted political focus to Yuan Empire.9
110651053Golden HordeRussia, East Europe. Controlled Russia until mid-1400's. Control ended bu rising city-state of Moscow.10
110651054Jagakai KhanateCentral Asia. 1370-1405- Timur rose up and conquered central Asia, Persia, North India, Middle East. Converted to Islam.11
110651055Il-KhansMiddle East. Converted to Islam. Attacked by fellow Mongols, displaced by Ottoman Turks.12
110651056Song EmpireAfter collapse of Tang Dynasty in 906, China fragmented into separate states until 1200's. Lasted until 1279, wars with Liao and Jin Empires.13
110651057Liao Empire916-1121. Mongolia and Northern China. Ceramics, painting, armies (cavalry and seize craft). 1110- Song made alliance with Jurchens (neighbors). Song took over.14
110651058Jin EmpireFormed by Jurchens, who attacked Song and Song eventually fell to Mongols. 1211- Khan attacked.15
110651059Song SocietyWorld's heaviest urbanized society, several cities had over 1 million people, silk road cities, trade, trading vessels (Junks), mathematics, astronomers (Su Sung Clock), Neo-Confucianism, Zen Buddhism16
110651060Yuan Empire1271- Formed by Khubilai Khan. Mongol leaders adopted Buddhism, Mandarin language, rebuilt economy, restored trade (Silk Roads). After Khubilai's death and the Black Plague, econimic plague, collapse.17
110651061Ming Empire1386-1644. Formed by Hung-Wu. Made alliances w/ Vietnamese states, expanded borders,. Large army and navy. Admiral Zheng He made 7 long voyages to SE Asia, Indonesia, India, Africa, Africa. Sheng He forced 50 nations and city-states to pay tribute. Populatin rebound. Confucianish and Buddhism restored, pottery, printers. Beijing transformed (capital) into forbidden city-Imperial residence, fortress, gov't complex. First European explorers arrived in Asia now. China was too large and powerful for Portuguese and Spanish to conquer. Catholic missionaries popular.18
110651062Collapse of Ming Empire1600's- Rapid decline, rulers allowed decentralization and massive influx of silver (economic collapse), agricultural yields shrank, military threats from Mongolia and Manchuria.19
110651063Qing Empire1644-1911. Founded by Manchus. 1644 N. China, 1683- Southern China. Brought contact with Russia. Trade regulated (Cantun)20
110651064Qing Empire RulersKanqi- 1662-1722. Qian Long- 1736-1795.21
110651065Decline of Qing EmpirePopulation grew too fast in late 1700's22
110651066Peak of Qing DynastyManchu rulers conquered China from the North in 1644. Dynasty's peak had been the long reign of Kanqi (1622-1722) and emperor Qian Long (1736-1795). During last half of 1700's, Qian Long defended China's long borders, kept the empire's regions under control, improved economic growth, and sponsored art and learning.23
110651067Internal Decline of the QingSeveral negative trends began to weaken China simultaneously after Qian Long's death. Quality of leadership declined as weak emperors took the throne. The government growth became too rapid. Discontent with government led to White Lotus Rebellion (1796-1804)24
110651068Chinese Foreign Trade Before 1830'sAs late as 1810's, the Chinese had the upper hand in their relationship with the West. Too strong to conquer, advantage in trade balance. Sold silks, porcelain, wire, and tea to West. West paid China bast amounts of silver bullion.25
110651069Opium TradeIn 1820's and 1830's, British began to fold China with opium. Became drug of choice for Chinese of all classes, 10-15% of population addicted. Britain dominated business, controlling 80% of opium trade.26
110651070First Opium WarQing government tried to strike back by arresting dealers, seizing opium supplies, and intercepting boats carrying the drug. Chinese navy blocaded Canton, one of few ports connected to foreign traders, which sparked First Opuim War (1839-1842), between Britain and China. Britain won easily and formed Treaty of Nanking.27
110651071Treaty of NankingResult of First Opium War. Required Qing government to open five more ports to foreign trade, lower tariffs on British goods, and grant extraterritorial rights to areas in China where the Britis lived and worked.28
110651072Second Opium WarArrow War. Treaties arrived at from 1858-1860 made opium trade legal, opened more ports to foreign trade, and granted greater powers to the Portuguese, French, British, Americans, and Russains. By 1898, foreign vessels were allowed unrestricted travel up Chinese rivers29
110651073Taiping Rebellion1850-1864. Costliest and most devastating civil war in history. Claimed 20-30 million lives, making it the 2nd deadliest war in history. Uprising started by Hong Xiuquan, Cantonese clerk. Convinced he was Jesus Christ's brother, destined to establish a "Heavenly Kingdom of Supreme Peace" (Taiping). Hong's vision of a new China proved appealing to millions of ordinary Chinese who resented Qing's high taxes, oppressive rule, and the fact that the Manchu emperors were foreign rulers dominating their Chinese subjects. 1853- Taiping rebels captured major city of Nanjing. At their peak, Hong and the Taiping leaders controlled 1/3 of China. Rebellion left China in ruins30
110651074Leadership of Dowager Princess CixiRuled China from 1878-1908 (death). Qing rule became more oppressive. China's outlying possesions (Tibet, Gobi Desert, Mongolia, Chinese Turkestan) began to slip away and gain greater autonomy pr fall into foreign hands31
110651075Sino-Japanese WarJapan defeated China. 1894-1895.32
110651076Open Door Policy1898, U.S. arranged for all Western nations to have equal access to Chinese markets33
110651077Missionaries in ChinaFrom late 1800's through 1900's. More and more common for Protestant and Catholic clergy and volunteers to travel from Europe and U.S. to China to spread Christianity and teach Western languages. Missionaries also brought scientific and technological knowledge and treated diseases and ailments with modern medicine.34
110651078Boxer Rebellion1900. Many rebels were Chinese martial art experts. Rebels' rage was directed at foreigners in Beijing. Put down by mainly foreign troops.35
110696358Sun Yat-Sen1866-1925. Father of modern China. United a number of opposition groups into Revolutionary Alliance. Hoped to carry out a government takeover that would progress from military revolt to formation of a constitutional democracy. Movement founded of People's Principals36
110696359People's PrincipalsNationalism, Democracy, People's Livelihood37
110696360Collapse of Qing and Establishment of Chinese RepublicFounded 1912. Sun-Yat Sen- President. Nationalist Party- Politician brought to office by popular action. 1949- Republic destroyed, replaced by communist government38
110696361Heian Japan794-1185. Ruled by Fujiwara Clan. Started capital in Heian (Kyoto), noble clan power. Peaceful, prosperous. Painting, literature, Buddhism, writing. 1100's- Warrior clans fought each other. Civil War- Taira and Minamote clans. 1160- Minamoto won. New government- Shogunate39
110696362Samurai Class1185- Feudalism pd. begins. Shogun (general) ruled. 1185-1333 Kamakura Shogunate. Below Shoguns- Daimyo (warlords, nobles). Kaimyo came from Samurai. Code- Bishido. Violation of Bishido led to Seppuku- Ritual Suicide40
110696363Tokugawa Shogunate in 1700'sIn 1750's, Japan was ruled by Tokugawa clan, which had seized control of the country at the beginning of the 1600's. Strong, dynamic rulers. Centralized Japan and transformed it from constant wars to peace41
110696364Partial Modernization in TokugawaPopulation growth was steady. Edo-population of over a million.Agriculture practice was rationalized, allowing fewer people to grow more food. More important- Trade, commerce, manufacturing42
110696365Dilemma of Partial ModernizationREgime allowed some modernization, but not total capability.43
110696366Commodore Perry and Opening of Japan1853- Matthey Perry asked Japan to open its economy to foreign trade. Shogun agree44
110696367Overthrow of Tokugawa ShugunateSamurai leaders, particularly from southern provinces of Satsuma and Shoshu, urged the shogun to take a hard line with the foreigners and stand up. Sat-Cho Alliance pressed for severance of all ties with West. Moves against the last shogun, Tokugawa Yoshinuobu. Young emperor Meiji, who ascended the throne in 1867, became the first emperor in 1000 years to have full imperial powers45
110696368Meiji RestorationThe political program that followed the destruction of the Tokugawa Shogunate in 1868, in which a collection of young leaders set Japan on the path of centralization, industrialization, and imperialism.46
110696369From Feudalism to Constitutional Monarchy1871- Goal was to abolish feudalism. Civil Code of 1898. Constitution of 1890 provided for the creation of an elected parliament, The Diet. Emperor had much power over the Diet47
110696370Industrialization and Economic ModernizationMinistry of Industry in 1870, as well as state bands to give financial backing to his industrialization campaign. Corporations called ZAIBATSU, sponsored largely by the state, came to dominate much of economy. Japan traded tea, silk, weaponry, ships, and sake48
110696371Social and Class Transformation in JapanThe covil service, based on an examination system, grew from 29,000 in 1890 to 72,000 in 1908. Japanese industrialization increased the size and power of the merchant and middle classes. The farming population decreased, but taxes on them increased considerably. Industrial working class grew steadily. 1872- Funded education49
110696372Japanese Militarism and ImperialismJapan became militaristic. 1876, Japan forced Korean ports open to trade. 1879, took the Ryukyu island chain from China. Throughout the 1880's and eatly 1890's, Japan intensified its military buildup, constructing a steamship navy and drafting a well-equipped and trained army. 1894, China and Japan went to war, Japan won. Afterward, Japan occupied Korea and seized Taiwan.50
110696373Russo-Japanese War1904-1905. Competition over influence in Manchuria51

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