1450-1750
Early Modern Period
- Major Empires
- European Overview
- Most monarchies
- divine right ordained by God
- Retain pure bloodlines to God
- intermarriage among royal families of different nations common
- monarchies of one nation gained international influence
- ties of marriage/inheritance led to alliances
- Strong national loyalties
- Led to internal/external conflicts
- religious fights between Protestants and Catholics
- internal civil wars between monarch and nobles
- battles stemming from trade disputes between rival nations
- Led to internal/external conflicts
- Spain/Portugal start off strong – England/France replace
- Most monarchies
- Ottoman
- Background Information
- Abbasid Caliphate loses power in 1200s
- Decades of chaos and confusion followed
- Strong Islamic empires emerged to replace fallen caliphate
- Ottoman Empire
- Safavid Empire in Persia
- Mughal Empire in India
- Characteristics of all three
- extremely centralized
- technologically advanced
- military powerful
- “gunpowder empires”
- Mastery of weaponry
- Effective use of weapons for maintaining regional power
- History of Ottoman Empire
- Islamic Empire overrun by Mongols in 13th century
- Byzantine Empire huge influence
- controlled most of Turkey
- Influenced Southeastern Europe/Russia
- Mongol Empire fell, Osman Bey led Muslim Ottoman Empire
- Eastern Turkey – named after first leader Osman
- On the steppes of Central Asia
- Migrated westward to Asia Minor in 1200s
- Vassals of the Seljuk Turks
- Established own state in 1280 and then slowly expanded
- Challenged Byzantine Empire
- Over 14th century, gradually expanded
- 1453 invaded Constantinople
- Eastern Turkey – named after first leader Osman
- by 1550 controlled most of former Roman Empire, except for Italy west
- Constantinople renamed Istanbul
- Converted cathedrals to mosques – Hagia Sophia
- Religious policy – extremely tolerant – most tolerant empire in Europe
- Jews/Christians allowed to practice
- As empire grew, so did religious persecution
- conquered large areas – enslaved Christian subjects’ children
- fighting warriors – Janisaries
- conquered large areas – enslaved Christian subjects’ children
- Selim I – 1512 - claimed to be rightful heir of caliphs
- Istanbul became center of Islamic civilization
- Suleiman I – the Magnificent started Golden Age
- Increased military spending
- encouraged development of the arts
- 1529 – laid siege on Vienna, but stopped
- Could have changed course of Western Europe
- Lasted until 1922
- greatly expanded reach of Islam
- kept Eastern Europe in state of flux/always threatened
- Western Europe could dominate
- Exploration allowed them to bypass Ottoman Empire
- Traded directly with India, China, Americas
- Accomplishments
- transforming Constantinople into Muslim capital – Istanbul
- turning many of the great Byzantine churches, such as Hagia Sophia, into mosques
- building an empire on part of 3 continents
- maintaining large multiethnic empire from Belgrade to Egypt for 600 years
- creating extensive civil service and bureaucracy
- Using slaves and subject peoples for labor
- reasonably accessible government allowing citizens to petition the sultan regarding religious and political issues
- Abbasid Caliphate loses power in 1200s
- Political Structure
- Sultan – sovereign over ministers – wazirs
- Ruled with help of provincial governors – beys
- Gradually power taken from local rulers
- held from Topkapi Palace “Cannon Gate” – Istanbul
- 1500 sultan claims title of caliph – religiously legitimizing political authority
- Military
- Conquests
- Destruction of Byzantine Empire – 1453
- 80,000 army + artillery
- Pressed into N. Africa
- Pushed into Europe – Romania
- Constant assault on Austria’s Holy Roman Empire
- Defeated Hungary
- Superiority of Mediterranean until 1500s
- Remained powerful presence until World War I
- Destruction of Byzantine Empire – 1453
- Military
- Incorporated gunpowder artillery, cannon into armies
- Cannon on navies
- Cavalry supported with janissaries “new troops”
- recruited from childhood from conquered Christians
- Converted to Islam and raised to be loyal to sultan
- Slaves…but with many privileges
- Advanced training in using gunpowder
- System kept them at forefront of world military affairs
- Politics and religion
- Governed diverse religions
- Variety of Christians – Orthodox, Nestorian, Coptic, Catholic, Protestant
- Sunni and Shiite Muslims
- Many languages – Turkish, Arabic, Persian
- Religious tolerance for non-Muslims
- Allowed to convert to Islam, but not forced
- Pay a special head tax
- Not treated badly – not totally equal, but not persecuted
- Kept peace with economic benefits
- Divided into administrative units – millets
- Sultan position hereditary
- not always inherited
- sultan usually didn’t marry – heirs through concubines
- concubine’s son chosen as heir = “queen mother”
- Influence as advisor
- New sultan often killed brothers to eliminate competition
- not always inherited
- Governed diverse religions
- Conquests
- Sultan – sovereign over ministers – wazirs
- Social
- Women
- Elite
- Several influential, yet informal roles
- Queen mothers
- ran royal house
- diplomatic relations w/ foreign naitions
- Controlled marriage alliances
- Harem – complex elite social network
- Originally slaves (not Islamic) or prisoners b, Trained to read Qu’ran, sew, perform music
- Ranked by status
- Could leave harem to marry officials
- Few used for sexual purposes
- Members of sultan’s extended family
- Mother influence over sons – raised and then respected
- Queen mothers
- Several influential, yet informal roles
- Outside imperial family
- Not seen in public in Istanbul/major cities
- Right to own/retain property
- Purchased urban real estate
- Could testify for selves in court
- Elite
- Culture
- Intellectual advancement high
- Lost dominance over Europeans in 1600s
- Europe’s Scientific Revolution
- Complacency
- Lost dominance over Europeans in 1600s
- Skilled architects
- Mosques + minarets/large domes
- Renowned for mosaics
- Intellectual advancement high
- Class structure
- Sultan – leader
- Vizier – prime minister
- Divan – cabinet of advisors
- Janissaries – elite military corps of converted slaves
- Regional officials
- General population
- merchants, farmers/peasants, artisans
- Women
- Background Information
- China
- Political
- History - Ming
- Ming Dynasty – 1368-1644
- Founded by Zhu Yuanzhang
- Warlord who assisted in kicking out Mongols
- Reacted against Mongol rule by returning to Chinese tradition
- Founded by Zhu Yuanzhang
- Ming Dynasty reforms
- Scholar gentry restored
- Confucian based civil service exam reinstated/expanded
- Women still banned from taking exam
- Currupt/incompetent public officials beaten in public
- Brief attempts at exploration trade
- Zheng He – brief, several major expeditions of exploration/trade
- Sailed through Indian Ocean, Arabian Sea, Persian Gulf
- By 1430 scholar-gentry persuaded Ming leaders to call back
- Too costly, need to spend money on Mongol threat
- Successes
- Politically dynamic and militarily active state – conquered neighbors
- Economically prosperous
- Population grew steadily in 1300s and 1400s – recovering from war/disease
- Decline
- Last 200 years ruled by incompetent rulers
- Maintenance of dams, dikes, irrigation systems neglected
- Classic pattern of decline
- rulers effective/dynamic at beginning - 14th/15th
- Become complacent – withdraw to Forbidden City
- Nomadic peoples continued to pressure Great Wall
- Led to higher taxes
- 1644 – Jurchens, Manchus, conquered Ming dynasty
- Became the Qing dynasty – ruled into 20th century
- Last dynasty
- Court eunuchs became very powerful/corrupt – influenced decisions
- Scandals involving misappropriation of imperial funds
- scholar-gentry protest
- Massive influx of precious metals triggered inflation
- Spanish/Portuguese only had silver to offer
- Agricultural yields shrank
- Soil quality worsens + cooler climate
- Land can’t accommodate population growth
- Peasant revolt
- Last Ming emperor – Chung-cheng committed suicide after trying to kill family
- Last 200 years ruled by incompetent rulers
- Remained relatively isolated from the west
- Ming Dynasty – 1368-1644
- History – Qing/Manchu Dynasty – 1644-1911
- Manchu
- Pastoral nomads from North
- Manchuria – ethnically distinct
- last imperial family/foreign rule of China
- Incorporated elements of Chinese culture
- used traditional civil service examination
- encouraged neo-Confucian values
- obedience to ruler strictly enforced
- Confucian ideal of traditional agriculture
- Disallowed technical advancement
- Return to feudal past
- Eunuchs employed as court officials
- Adopted a xenophobic foreign policy
- Manchus given superior positions over Chinese
- Kept themselves apart as rulers
- Pastoral nomads from North
- Qing economics
- Full scale trade with Europeans began under Qing – 1690s
- Closely regulated trade by state
- Went through port of Canton exclusively – like Nagasaki
- Sold porcelain, tea, and silk
- Allowed few imports – usually paid with silver
- favorable balance of trade
- Qing decline
- rulers grew softer and less active
- population grew faster than economy
- poverty worsened
- slipping backward in terms of technological innovation, scientific advancement, global power
- Left selves open to influence and the later domination
- Manchu
- During time period, power shift began
- didn’t benefit from scientific/technological advances of Europe
- History - Ming
- Social
- Ming Dynasty reforms
- Thought control sanctioned by government
- Neo-Confucianism increased its influence – strict obedience to state
- Women continued to occupy a subordinate position
- Foreigners allowed under Ming
- late 16th century – Jesuits allowed to enter
- Chinese interested in scientific and technological knowledge
- Allowed to remain through Ming Dynasty
- late 16th century – Jesuits allowed to enter
- Social hierarchy under Ming
- Absolute power from ruler > scholar gentry > farmers > merchants
- Denigration of commercial class becomes problem later on
- Aggressive European traders able to have impact in 1700s
- Absolute power from ruler > scholar gentry > farmers > merchants
- Under Qing – Manchu
- Manchus above Chinese
- Manchus not allowed to engage in trade or manual labor
- Marriage between Manchus and Chinese forbidden
- All Han men required to wear their hair braided in the back
- Found humiliating
- Hairstyle – que – visual image west has of China
- shave their foreheads “lose your hair or lose your head” Chinese proverb
- Cultural grandeur/elegance – peak during Ming dynasty
- literary masterpieces, fine porcelain, architecture, revival of Confucianism
- Ming Dynasty reforms
- Political
- Portugal
- Political
- Social
- Spain
- Political
- King Ferdinand from Christian North + Queen Isabella from Muslim South united
- created nation-state
- aggressively supported exploration
- underwriting Columbus’ exploration
- establishing empires in the New World
- Formidable navy fleet – Spanish Armada
- Ruled the seas for 16th century
- Charles V
- Grandparents on one side Hapsburgs on the other side Isabella and Ferdinand
- Empire stretched from Austria to Germany to Spain
- 1519 – Holy Roman Emperor
- Held parts of France, Netherlands, Austria, Germany, Spain
- Possessions brought wars/riches
- Fought France for Italy
- Fought Ottoman Empire for Eastern Europe
- Defended Catholicism in Germany
- 1556 – retired to monastery – split throne
- 1519 – Holy Roman Emperor
- Philip II gets throne of Spain
- Controls part of France, Sicily and Netherlands
- Greatest expansion in the New World
- Rebirth of culture under Spanish Renaissance
- Devout
- continuation of Spanish Inquisition for heretics
- Catholic Reformation against Protestants
- Increase in missionary work
- Dutch revolted
- wanted autonomy – develop own empire
- Protestant
- 1581 – Northern provinces gained independence – Dutch Netherlands
- Southern part remains loyal to Spain – later becomes Belgium
- Other signs of failure
- Spanish forces fighting for Catholicism in France unsuccessful
- English defeated Spanish at the British Isles
- Containment of Spain, Rise of Britain
- Mid 17th century had colonial holdings, but influence failing
- Why Spanish failure?
- Amassed enormous sums of gold
- Spent just as quickly
- Wars
- Missionary activity
- Maintenance of huge fleet
- Controls part of France, Sicily and Netherlands
- Accomplishments
- expelling Moors and ending Islamic rule in southwestern Europe
- sponsoring maritime exploration that led to the creation of a vast overseas Spanish Empire
- close ties with the Catholic Church
- loss of the Netherlands as a Spanish holding
- literary flowering that produced Don Quixote – one of the greatest modern works of Western literature
- King Ferdinand from Christian North + Queen Isabella from Muslim South united
- Social
- Exploration and colonization ensured spread of Spanish language, culture, Catholicism
- extended across Atlantic
- Exploration and colonization ensured spread of Spanish language, culture, Catholicism
- Political
- Russia
- Political
- Effects of Mongol Rule
- Nation with weakened emphasis on education, trade and manufacturing
- Third Rome
- After Rome, Constantinople – Orthodox Christianity moved to Moscow
- Ivan III/IV – declared Russia free of Mongol control – 1480
- established absolute rule in Russia
- expanded empire eastward
- with expansion added substantial Muslim minority
- Cossacks
- Recruited peasants – freed from feudal relationship
- Conquer eastern land
- Inhabit eastern land
- Ivan the Terrible – Czar – Russian for Caesar
- Ruled under reign of terror
- Executed anyone who disagreed
- Ruled under reign of terror
- Recruited peasants – freed from feudal relationship
- Comparing Russia with Western Europe
- Russia – centralization of authority, but still feudalism vs. W. Europe evolving
- Russia remains isolated from west, pushed eastward
- W. Europe – Renaissance , exploration, religious debate, scientific rev/enlightenment passed over
- Not part of Renaissance, controlled by illiterate Mongols
- Not part of Reformation, not Catholic
- W. Europe – Renaissance , exploration, religious debate, scientific rev/enlightenment passed over
- Growth territorial, not artistic/intellectual
- Following Ivan IV 1584
- Fight for the throne – Time of Troubles
- Feudal lords vie for power – kill one after another
- Michael Romanov czar 1613
- Romanov family rules until 1917
- Romanov family
- consolidated power, ruled ruthlessly
- peasants became slaves/serfs
- spread empire – 1689 from Ukraine to Manchuria/Pacific Ocean
- Created state control over the Russian Orthodox Church
- Peter the Great – 1682-1725
- Convinced he must westernize Russia
- Larger agricultural nation than East Asian empires or W. Europe
- Travels to Europe to try to get support against Turks
- Gained appreciation for Western ideas
- Russia’s first navy
- New capital – St. Petersburg
- Home to hundreds of engineers, scientists, artists, architects
- War with Sweden gained warm water port
- Did not accept Western democratic trends – parliamentary government
- Created secret police
- Encouraged the continuation of serfdom
- Bound to land only – not to person
- Kept economy bound to agriculture
- Convinced he must westernize Russia
- Catherine the Great
- Continued xpansionist and westernization policies of Peter
- Laws restricting serfs were harsher than before
- Reduced severe punishments for crimes
- Added new territory down to Northern California
- Social
- Before Romanov family, excluded from Western Change
- Illiteracy of Mongols + Orthodox + Geography
- Peter the Great
- St. Petersburg- “window to the west”
- recruited finest scientists/artists to change Russia
- Women nobles forced to dress in western fashions
- Men shaved beards, wear western clothing
- Out with the old, in with the new
- Showed denial of Mongol traditions
- Architecture of city done by serfs
- St. Petersburg- “window to the west”
- Catherine the Great – 1762-1796
- Enlightened policies of education and wester culture
- Fiercely enforced serfdom
- Devalued merchant class
- Territorially expanded west – Poland/Black Sea territory – Mediterranean
- Westernization
- By end of 18th century looked a lot different
- Gained sea access through Black/Baltic Seas
- Actively sought cultural access to the west
- Unlike Chinese/Japanese who fully withdrew
- Russians wanted to engage the West, emulate it
- By end of 18th century looked a lot different
- Before Romanov family, excluded from Western Change
- Effects of Mongol Rule
- Political
- France
- Political
- Unification began after Hundred Years War drove English from France
- central authority in a strong monarch
- Religious differences prevented full unity
- Largely Catholic
- French Protestants – Huguenots
- Sizable and influential minority
- Mid to late 16th century fought brutally
- 1598 – Henry IV – Edict of Nantes – environment of toleration
- Henry IV – Bourbon king
- Bourbons ruled France until 1792
- Comparing England and France in 17th century
- France ruled by series of strong and able monarchs – Bourbon Dynasty
- After Elizabeth, England went from…
- Monarchy>commonwealth>Restoration>Glorious Revolution
- France’s Estates General weaker than England’s Parliament
- Estates General didn’t meet for most of 17th century
- King ruled successfully under divine right
- Parliament in England
- limited power of monarchs
- representatives chosen by voters from elite classes
- Estates General didn’t meet for most of 17th century
- Cardinal Richeliu
- Catholic – chief advisor to Bourbons
- Strengthened French crown
- Didn’t seek to destroy Protestants
- Helped them attack Catholic Hapsburgs of Holy Roman Empire
- Empire’s fall would benefit France
- New bureaucratic class
- noblesse de la robe – bureaucrats – run government
- prepared France for strong position under Louis XIV
- Louis XIV
- Four years old when took crown – mother/Cardinal Mazarin ruled for him
- Long rule 1643-1715 exemplified grandiose whims of absolute monarchy
- “Sun King” “Most Christian King”
- Patronized arts – contributed to culture, glory of France
- “I am the State”
- Built Versailles to prove power
- Never summoned Estates General to meet
- Revoked Edict of Nantes – forced Huguenots to leave
- Appointed Jean Baptiste Cobert to manage royal funds
- Increase size of French empire
- More business transactions
- More taxes
- France constantly at war
- Warfare and mercantilist policies allowed French to get rich
- War of Spanish Succession – 1701-1714 hurt plans
- Increase size of French empire
- War of Spanish Succession
- Louis XIV’s grandson inherits Spanish thrown
- Europe afraid of supernation/empire
- France controls huge chunk of Americas
- Spain controls most of Mexico, South America
- England, Holy Roman Empire, German princes vs. France
- Eventually – grandson – Philip V can rule
- Spain loses land to England
- Spain can’t unite with France
- Louis XIV’s grandson inherits Spanish thrown
- By 1750 military strength starting to fade
- Still center of culture for Europe
- Accomplishments
- Established academies for study of commerce and science
- Close ties between the Catholic Church and the French state formed
- Solidified autocratic control over France
- Most ornate and expensive palace in Europe was built at Versailles
- Sponsored writers and musicians
- Engaged in costly wars that strained the royal treasury
- Characteristics of absolute monarchies
- maintenance of strong armies
- establishment of elaborate bureaucracies
- high taxes to support the frequent wars
- believed in divine right of kings
- territorial expansion a goal
- Characteristics of European nation states
- well-suited to continent full of various cultural groups
- governs people who share a common culture, common language
- has definite geographic boundaries
- enjoys sovereignty
- created rivalries and divisions that often led to war
- Unification began after Hundred Years War drove English from France
- Social
- Political
- England
- Political
- Mid 1400s war between two powerful families
- The War of the Roses
- House of Lancaster vs. the House of York
- New ruling dynasty – the Tudors – Henry VIII and Elizabeth
- Accomplishments
- broke with the Catholic Church and fromed the Church of England
- monarch at the head
- Wales was absorbed into the domain of England
- Defeated the Spanish Armada in 1588
- Marked beginning of Spanish decline, Egnland ascendancy
- Encouraged the arts – High Renaissance bloomes
- Literary achievement notable – Ben Johnson and William Shakespeare
- broke with the Catholic Church and fromed the Church of England
a, Henry VIII – 1509-1547 - Church of England
- Henry VIII nullified pope’s authority in England – Act of Supremacy
- Divorce wife and marry Ann Boleyn for male heir
- Daughter was Elizabeth – oversaw golden/bloody age
- Divorce wife and marry Ann Boleyn for male heir
- Elizabethan Age – 1558-1603
- Commercial expansion
- Muscovy Co mpany – first joint stock company – to Russia
- British East India Company
- Exploration and colonization in the New World
- Sped up after defeat of Spanish Armada in 1588
- Sir Francis Drake circumnavigated the globe
- First English colonies in Virginia – Jamestown
- Religious battles unleashed by Protestant Reformation
- Anglicans – Church of England battling Catholics
- Puritans regularly persecuted
- Commercial expansion
- James I power in 1607
- Attempted to accommodate Catholics and Puritans – problems persisted
- Puritans didn’t recognize king for religious matters
- James claims divine right
- Pilgrims find a new home in New World
- Puritans didn’t recognize king for religious matters
- Attempted to accommodate Catholics and Puritans – problems persisted
- Charles I – 1625
- Petition of Right – desperate for money – Parliament has power of purse
- Limited taxes
- Forbid unlawful imprisonment
- Ignores petition after getting funds – doesn’t let parliament meet 11 yrs
- 1640 Scotland doesn’t like Charles rule
- Parliament called back
- Long parliament – 20 years – 1640-1660
- Refused to give him money to fight Irish
- Charles sends troops to arrest parliament members
- Leads to civil war
- Roundheads – Oliver Cromwell vs. Charles’s Cavaliers
- Roundheads win – king executed
- Cromwell rose to power as Lord Protector
- Beginnings of English Commonwealth
- Parliament called back
- Petition of Right – desperate for money – Parliament has power of purse
- Oliver Cromwell
- Religious intolerance
- Violence against Catholics/Irish
- Encouraged Protestants to move to Northern Ireland
- Led to conflicts later
- Much resentment
- Encouraged Protestants to move to Northern Ireland
- Violence against Catholics/Irish
- Upon Cromwell’s death – Charles II brought to throne for limited monarchy
- Stuart Restoration
- Religious intolerance
- Charles II – 1660
- Closet Catholic – gave religious rights to people
- Habeus Corpus – no unlawful arrests without due process
- James II – openly Catholic
- Believed in Divine Right of Kings
- People feared he’d make a Catholic nation
- Fled to France under Glorious Revolution
- Replaced in 1688 by son-in-law and daughter – William and Mary
- Believed in Divine Right of Kings
- William and Mary – 1689
- Protestant rulers of the Netherlands
- English Bill of Rights – created constitutional monarchy
- England’s future rulers Anglican
- Powers limited
- laws passed by parliament now laws of the land
- all taxes only levied by parliament
- citizens allowed to petition monarch with grievances
- freedom of speech within Parliament
- Radical replacement of sitting king, set precedent for making royalty figureheads
- Mid 1400s war between two powerful families
- Social
- Elizabethan Age
- Shakespeare wrote his masterpieces
- Elizabethan Age
- Political
- Tokugawa Japan
- Political
- History
- The Warring States Period – 1467-1600 – Era of Independent Lords
- Open defiance of the Shogun led to political fragmentation
- small regions fighting against each other
- Governed by a series of military governments – shogunates
- By late 1300s/1400s, becoming increasingly decentralized
- 200 daimyo – feudal lords fought each other
- Samurais followed bushido – way of the warrior
- Some left masters/masters killed - ronin
- Samurais followed bushido – way of the warrior
- “samurai military aristocracy” further established
- Ended in climatic battle of 1600
- Toyotomi Hideyoshi united Japan
- Appointed five regents to rule until son got older
- These five regents fought each other for power
- Winner Tokugawa Ieyasu
- Forced Hideyoshi’s son to kill himself
- Technically ruled in the name of the emperor, but…
- Toyotomi Hideyoshi united Japan
- Open defiance of the Shogun led to political fragmentation
- Tokugawa Shogunate – bakufu - 1603 – Tokugawa family acquired the title of shogun
- Ruled Japan from city of Edo – Tokyo – known as Edo period
- ended the feudal fighting
- Established new feudal order that would last for centuries
- 15 Tokugawa shoguns
- Stability, law and order their priorities
- Known as the Great Peace
- The Warring States Period – 1467-1600 – Era of Independent Lords
- Centralized authority
- Large estates of daimyo broken up and taken over by Tokugawa
- Peace came at the price of dictatorship
- Increased social stratification
- Economic gains
- Population grew rapidly
- Rice and grain production more than doubled
- Highly urbanized – Edo one of world’s largest cities
- Built elaborate network of roads and canals
- Manufacturing – lacquerware, pottery, steel, and quality weapons
- Merchant class gains in wealth and power
- History
- Social
- Warring States Period
- Religion
- New sects of Buddhism arrived from China
- attracted Samurai class
- Buddhist detachment from worldly pain
- impervious to suffering
- attracted Samurai class
- New sects of Buddhism arrived from China
- Religion
- Edo Period – Tokugawa Shogunate
- Class hierarchy – social stratification becomes unbreakoutable
- Samurai – martial elite, including shogun, all daimyo, soldiers
- Farmers – peasants whose duty was to feed the nation
- Craftspeople – makers of goods such as clothes/tools
- Traders/merchants – business class who bought and sold
- Eta:outcasts – engaged in “unclean” professions – animal skinning/tanning
- Tokugawa laws – rigid to protect the status quo/privileges of samurai
- Social class defined at birth
- Farmers had to stay on their land
- only samurai allowed to carry long sword
- Japanese forbidden from leaving Japanese islands – death
- One Dutch ship could trade per year – Kyushu
- Families of daimyo lived in Edo – guarantees loyalty
- Christianity outlawed
- Some southern daimyo converted and rebelled – cause
- Class hierarchy – social stratification becomes unbreakoutable
- Warring States Period
- Neo-Confucianism
- Tokugawa adopted to form traditional basis
- Like China, reciprocal relationship between ruled and ruler
- Ruler maintains order/acts benevolent and ruled obey those in charge
- Creates harmony in society
- Hallmarks – primary points
- Historicism – looked to the past as a guide – Shogun ruled in name of Emperor
- Rationalism – investigate natural and human world to discover principles of human interactions
- Basic Human Relations – Stressed social order, rejected Buddhist metahphysics – Five Relationships
- Ethnocentrism – saw selves as superior to outsiders
- Pride in divine emperor
- Own uniqueness as a people
- Tokugawa adopted to form traditional basis
- Women
- Women lived under increased restrictions
- Particularly the samurai class – guided by Confucian teachings
- Wives obey husbands or face death
- Little authority over property
- Females educated at home, brothers at school
- Upper class families – women expressed their literacy through creativity
- Must display social graces that matched husband’s rank and status
- Lower class women
- Gender relations more egalitarian
- Both worked in fields
- Women given respect as homemakers/mothers
- Some peasant women active in social protests/political demonstrations
- Girl children less valued
- Some sold into prostitution
- Some put to death
- Women lived under increased restrictions
- Culture
- Castle architecture partially imitated Europe
- hilltop, stone, small windows, watchtowers, massive walls
- Drama
- More restrained drama replaced with kabuki theater
- Kabuki – emphasized violence, physical action and music
- Often depicted urban life – brothels, dance halls
- Criticized for its potentially corrupting effect
- Art
- Woodblock Print becomes established artform
- Borrowed from outsiders
- Japanese potters borrowed Korean ceramics techniques
- Experimented with western style oil painting
- Perspective/interplay of light
- Reason for difference
- Urban areas developing rapidly
- Merchant and artisan class developing – patrons
- Confucian values carried less weight
- Castle architecture partially imitated Europe
- Political
- Mughal India
- Political
- History
- Collapse of Delhi Sultanate in 1300s
- Began to lose territory
- Delhi taken and ransacked by Mongol Timur in 1398
- 1526, Babur – descendant of Mongols/Turks
- Migrated from steppes to India
- Had lost kingdom in central Asia – came from Afghanistan
- 12,000 men defeated over 100,000
- Used superior gunpowder technology to conquer northern India
- Empire lasted until mid 19th century
- Collapse of Delhi Sultanate in 1300s
- Akbar – 1560-1605
- expanded empire through north and central India under control
- Established a bureaucracy
- patronized the arts
- encouraged cooperation between Hindus and Muslims – relatively tolerant
- Mughal Empire
- Mughal – Persian word for Mongol – English rich person called mogul
- Empire continued for 200 years 1530-1700s
- Mughal rulers – Muslim
- One of three great Muslim empires – Ottoman Empire/Safavid Persia
- One of the “gunpowder” empires
- Used military force and weapons technology to maintain power
- Lost ground to nations of Europe during late 1600s
- One of the “gunpowder” empires
- One of three great Muslim empires – Ottoman Empire/Safavid Persia
- Economics
- Thrived thanks to boom in Indian cotton trade
- Decline
- cost of warfare and defensive efforts to protect northern border
- Tried to attack Marathas in the south
- leaders failed to bridge differences between Hindus and Muslims
- Centralized government returned to local political organizations
- Decline of centralized power opened up to foreign control
- British
- Last emperor – Aurangzeb tried to impose orthodox Islam
- Undid earlier tolerant policies
- Got rid of Hindus from public service
- Undid earlier tolerant policies
- cost of warfare and defensive efforts to protect northern border
- European arrival
- set up trading ports and factories
- Portuguese set up on coast of Goa
- 1696 – British East India Company takes over Calcutta from Mughals
- Hindu princes allies to push out Mughal rule
- History
- Social
- Treatment of women
- Akbar broke with Hindu/Muslim tradition regarding treatment of women
- encouraged widows to remarry
- outlawed sati – ritual suicide at husband’s funeral pyre
- encouraged merchants to arrange market days for women
- Allows those following purday – confinement – to get out
- By end of Mughal empire – changes had largely been discontinued
- Child marriage attempts to slow/end
- Female aristocrats
- awarded titles
- earned salaries
- owned land
- ran businesses
- some received education and expressed creative talents openly
- Women of all castes able to supplement income with woven products
- But…some ideas reflected Muslim law
- Cloistered inside the home – especially upper class women
- Women expected to serve under husbands
- Mughal art and architecture
- blended Muslim styles with those of other societies
- Mughal artists created miniatures – some of Christian religious subjects
- Architects blended white marble of Indian architecture
- W/ Muslim arches and domes
- Taj Mahal constructed by Shah Jahan as tomb for wife
- Dynastic patronage of the arts
- Substantial written works on Indian history and philosophy
- Treatment of women
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