Gamble , LTHS test 4
104127734 | wendi | rose up out of warlords to conquest north china through nomads & commoners. no examination system | 0 | |
104127735 | Li Yuan | allie of yangdi, aquired strongest army in china. start of tang dynasty | 1 | |
104127736 | tang dynasty | great wall restored, nomads forced to become vassals | 2 | |
104127737 | tang dynasty | scholarly gentry resurrected | 3 | |
104127738 | Tang dynasty | buddhism gains popularity , among poor, empress wu adopts | 4 | |
104127739 | tang dynasty | confucianism basis for learning and examination system | 5 | |
104127740 | jin shi | highest goverment positions gained from passing all examination tests | 6 | |
104127741 | tang dynasty | scholarly gentry still pulled strings to get their children postions | 7 | |
104127742 | scholarly gentry | believed in daoism and confucianism | 8 | |
104127743 | buddhist | were not taxed so they were seen as a threat & persecuted | 9 | |
104127744 | tang dynasty | buddihist, empress wu , open dynasty | 10 | |
104127745 | song dynasty | confucianism, foreigners bad, no trade, merchants lower class | 11 | |
104127746 | song dynasty | military kept under civil control, only scholarly gentry could be govenors | 12 | |
104127747 | song dynasty | became enclosed as confucians rejected foreigners and foreign philosphys, education more important than military | 13 | |
104127748 | song dynasty | jurchens (nomads) overpowered this dynasty's 1 million man army forced to relocate (1115 AD) | 14 | |
104127749 | minmito | established shogun in japan | 15 | |
104127750 | daimyo | territories in japan | 16 | |
104127751 | vassal | lesser aristocrat | 17 | |
104127752 | emperor | political figurehead in japan | 18 | |
104127753 | japan's economy | trade between daimyos (japan) | 19 | |
104127754 | japan | birthright still determined social class | 20 | |
104127755 | japan | court ritual & social status became focus of imperial life | 21 | |
104127756 | bushi | collected taxes for themselves, and royal court of the emperor. their protection were the sammuri (japan) | 22 | |
104127757 | japan | peasants bound to land because emperor had no power, peasants paid sammuri & bushi for protection | 23 | |
104127758 | shogun | military leader of greatest warlord family in Japan (minimoto) | 24 | |
104127759 | japan | aristocrats formed alliances against shogun and civil war destroyed Kyoto | 25 | |
104127760 | japan | merchants class rose in times of peace because of trade between daimyos increased trade led to reestablished trade with china and culture | 26 | |
104127761 | korea | kings sent scholars to tang court to learn chinese culture | 27 | |
104127762 | korea | copied chinese architechture, favored buddhism over confucianism | 28 | |
104127763 | junks | chinese ships that carried goods all over the indian ocean | 29 | |
104127764 | tang achievements | banks, money, dams, bridges, canals, coal, gunpowder | 30 | |
104127765 | Mongols | developed seige tactics to defeat fortified cities, those that surrendered were sparred. (had to house and feed) | 31 | |
104127766 | Mongols | sparred confucian scholars and muslim engineers to teach the aristocracy | 32 | |
104127767 | Mongols | tolerated muslim & christian religons and often sparred churches | 33 | |
104127768 | Mongols | introduced calvary and gunpowder to the west | 34 | |
104127769 | Mongols | no intermarriage was allowed between them and Chinese. both wrote and spoke in own language | 35 | |
104127770 | Mongols | chinese were lower class when these people settled | 36 | |
104127771 | Mongols | these women were seen as almost equal their own men | 37 | |
104127772 | Mongols | embraced merchant class and were hated by scholarly gentry for opening china to the world | 38 |