Chapter 12
Reunification and Renaissance: The Era of the Tang and Song Dynasties
- I. Introduction
- A. Vital consolidation – changes less fundamental than elsewhere
- B. Though isolated, created “orbit of influence”
- C. After Han – nomadic invasions
- 1. Regional kingdoms
- 2. Landed families with aristocratic backgrounds dominated rulers
- 3. Decline
- a. Foreign religion – Buddhism
- b. non-Chinese nomads ruled
- c. Great Wall divided between kingdoms
- d. trade/city life declined
- e. technology stagnated
- f. thought looked for magical cures/immortality
- D. Rapid return to height under Tang because of
- 1. Preservation of Confucian institutions
- II. Rebuilding the Imperial Edifice in the Sui-Tang Eras
- A. Introduction
- 1. Summary
- a. Sui recentralized control
- b. Under Tang – bureaucracy restored, improved, expanded
- c. Confucian revival
- 2, Sui Dynasty – 580 – return to strong dynastic control
- a. Wendi – northern elite family
- b. Secured power through
- 1. marriage
- 2. support of neighboring nomadi leaders
- a. Reconfirmed titles
- b. Showed no preference for scholar gentry
- c. Won support
- 1. lowering taxes
- 2. creation of food granaries
- 1. Summary
- B. Sui Excesses and Collapse
- 1. Son Yangdi
- a. murdered father
- b. extended father’s conquests
- c. drove back nomads
- d. established milder legal code
- e. restore examination system
- 2. Downfall
- a. Programs hurt aristocratic families and nomadic leaders
- b. Built palaces
- c. Build canal links
- d. extensive game park – imported trees
- e. failed in attempt to take Korea
- 1. Son Yangdi
- C. The Emergence of the Tang and the Restoration of the Empire
- 1. Li Yuan – Duke of Tang took over
- a. Former nomadic leaders forced to submit
- b. Created frontier armies
- 1. Sons of tribal leaders sent to capital as hostages – eventually assimilated
- c. Korea overrun by Chinese armies
- 1. Kingdom of Silla created as tributary state
- 1. Li Yuan – Duke of Tang took over
- D. Rebuilding the Bureaucracy
- 1. To survive, must rebuild and expand imperial bureaucracy
- a. need for loyal/well-educated officials
- b. offset power of aristocracy
- c. power to ruling families + bureaucrats
- d. created ministries
- 1. secretariat – drafted decrees
- 2. secretariat monitored officials
- 3. executive ran ministries – day to day life
- 1. To survive, must rebuild and expand imperial bureaucracy
- E. Growing Importance of the Examination System
- 1. Numbers of bureaucrats grew far past Han
- 2. Ministry of Rites – several kinds of examinations
- 3. Honor to those who passed
- a. Jinshi title
- b. transformed into dignitaries
- c. special social status
- 1. certain clothing
- 2. exempt from corporal punishment
- 3. access to material comfort/pleasures
- 4. Birth and family connections could still help you get into universities, assist
- a. Bureaucracy still overwhelmingly run by established familes
- 5. Merit and ambition important, but birth and family influence count for more
- F. State and Religion the Tang-Song Era
- 1. State support of Confucian ideas
- a. Threatened Buddhist monastic orders
- b. Threatened old aristocratic families
- 2. Previous nomadic rulers – mostly Buddhist
- a. Masses believed in Mahayana Buddhism – salvation
- b. Chan/Zen Buddhism for elite
- 1. Stress on meditation
- 2. appreciation of natural/artistic bueaty
- 3. Empress Wu – 690-705
- a. Tried to make Buddhism state religion
- b. Commissioned Buddhist painting/sculpture
- c. Statues of Buddha carved
- d. Large pagodas built
- e. 50,000 monasteries
- 4. Reached Height in beginning of Tang empire
- 1. State support of Confucian ideas
- G. The Anti-Buddhist Backlash
- 1. Daoists competed by stressing heir own magical/predictive powers
- 2. Economic challenge of Buddhists
- 1. not taxed
- 2. denied labor pool – can’t tax/conscript peasants on monasteries
- 3. Emperor Wuzong
- 1. Thousands of shrines destroyed
- 2. monks/nuns forced to abandon monastic life
- 3. Lands divided among taxpaying landlords/peasants
- 4. But…Buddhism already left mark in law, arts, language, heaven, charity
- A. Introduction
- IIII. Tang Decline and the Rise of the Song
- A. Fall of Tang
- 1. Empress Wei attempts to take throne for son by poison
- 2. Another prince Xuanzong takes over
- a. Initially wanted political/economic reforms
- b. Eventually devoted self to arts, pleasures music
- c. Relation with Yang Guifei – woman from harem of another prince
- 1. Famous, ill-fated romance
- 2. Focus on Yang Guifei
- a. Power to her family – angered others
- b. neglected economy
- c. military weakness
- 3. Military leaders push for revolt
- a. Revolt put down, but emperor has to kill Yang Guifei
- b. Had to make alliances with nomadic leaders/regional kings
- c. Regional lords develop independent armies
- 1. Leads to period of revolts
- B. The Founding of the Song Dynasty
- 1. Just when it seemed like provincial leaders and nomads would again rule…
- 2. Zhao Kuangyin – fearless warrior
- a. Can’t overcome Liao dynasty
- b. Precedent set - *** Song dynasty always plagued by pressure from north
- 1. Had to pay heavy tribute to north
- 2. North militarily dominant
- c. Song empire culturally superior
- C. Song Politics: Settling for Partial Restoration
- 1. Desire to not have same problems as under Tang
- a. Military subordinated to civilian bureaucrats
- 1. Different than Rome/West where military leaders dominate
- b. Civil officials only allowed to be governors
- c. military commanders rotated
- d. promoted interests of Confucian scholar-gentry
- 1. Officials’ salaries increased
- 2. Civil service exams routinized – every three years at three levels
- e. Led to too many officials, but…bureaucracy saved
- a. Military subordinated to civilian bureaucrats
- 1. Desire to not have same problems as under Tang
- D. The Revival of Confucian Thought
- 1. Revival of Confucian ideas
- a. Recover long-abandoned texts (like Renaissance in Europe)
- b. decipher ancient inscriptions
- 2. Neo-Confucians
- a. Personal morality highest goal
- b. Virtue attained through book learning…and…
- c. Personal observation…and…
- d. Contact with wise people
- e. Hostile to foreign philosophies – aka Buddhism
- f. Focus on tradition
- 3. Eventually stifled thought of elite
- 4. Reinforced class, age, gender distinctions
- a. If men/women keep to place, you can achieve social harmony
- 1. Revival of Confucian ideas
- E. Roots of Decline: Attempts at Reform
- 1. Problems
- a. Weakness in phase of Khitan from north, encouraged other nomads
- b. Tribute paid to north weakening economy
- c. Cost of army – 1 million – too expensive
- d. Focus on civilian leaders, meant weak leaders often led armies
- e. Money not spent on fortifications, but on scholarly pursuits/entertainment
- 6. Wang Anshi – attempts to reform
- a. Legalist perspective
- b. Cheap loans
- c. Irrigation projects
- d. Taxed landlord/scholarly class
- e. Established trained mercenary force
- f. Tried to reorganize university education
- 1. Problems
- F. Reaction and Disaster: The Flight to the South
- 1. Song dynasty survived invasion of Jurchens by moving South
- 2. Southern Song dynasty not powerful,but…
- a. Lasted 150 years
- b. One of the most glorious periods of Chinese history – their Golden Age
- A. Fall of Tang
- IV. Tang and Song Prosperity: The Basis of a Golden Age
- A. Grand Canal
- 1. Movement of people and goods
- 2. Population switch made it necessary to improve communications north-south
- a. South producing more food – has larger population
- 3. Million forced laborers
- B. A New Phase of Commercial Expansion – how does the economy get better
- 1. Silk Road expanded and protected
- a. Horses, Persian rugs, tapestries imported
- b. silk textiles, porcelain, paper exported
- 2. Junks – as strong quality wise as dhows of the Arabs
- a. watertight bulkheads
- b. sternpost rudders
- c. oars, sails, compasses, bamboo fenders
- d. gunpowder rockets
- 3. Governments supervised hours/marketing methods at trade centers
- 4. Merchants banded together in guilds
- 5. Expanded credit
- 6. Deposit shops found throughout empire
- 7. paper money – credit vouchers – flying money
- a. Reduced danger of robbery
- 1. Silk Road expanded and protected
- C. World’s Most Splendid Cities
- 1. Surge in Urban Growth
- 2. Imperial City – Changan
- a. Palace/audience halls restricted
- b. Elaborate gardens, hunting park
- 3. Hangzhou – “most noble city” “best in the world” – Marco Polo
- a. Great marketplaces
- b. entertainment
- 1. boating
- 2. singing girls
- 3. bath houses
- 4. restaurants
- 5. acrobats
- 6. tea houses,
- 7. opera performances
- D. Expanding Agrarian Production and Life in the Country
- 1. Agricultural improvements
- a. Encouraged peasant migrations
- b. supported military garrisons in rural areas
- c. state-regulated irrigation/canals
- d. new seeds – Champa rice from Vietnam
- e. great poo – human, animal, fertilizer manure
- f. inventions – wheelbarrow
- g. break up land of aristocracy
- 1. Takes power from aristocrats
- 2. Promoted position of ordinary citizen
- 2. Architecture
- a. Curved roofs meant status
- b. Yellow/green tiles
- 1. Agricultural improvements
- E. Family and Society in the Tang-Song Era
- 1. Women
- a. Showed signs of improving, but then deteriorated
- 1. Marriages among same age women/men
- 2. Importance of marriage alliances helped with dowrys
- 3. Upper classes – women could yield considerable power initially
- a. Range of activities – even polo
- b. Divorce by mutual consent
- c. More defense against husband’s negative behavior than in India
- d. Wealthy women even took lovers in Hangzhou
- a. Showed signs of improving, but then deteriorated
- 1. Women
- F. Neo-Confucian Assertion of Male Dominance
- 1. Women, but with the Neo-Confucianists, women put back in their place
- a. Primary role – bearer of sons – patrilineal line
- b. Advocated confining women – fidelity, chastity, virginity
- c. Excluded from education for civil service
- d. Footbinding – equal to veil/seclusion in Islam
- 1. Preference for small feet – feminine
- 2. Limited mobility – crippling
- 3. Can’t be initially accepted by the poor – still need the labor
- 4. Eventually, because marriage goal, mothers had to bind daughter’s feet
- 2. Men permitted to have premarital sex, concubines, remarry after death
- a. Laws favored men for inheritance
- 1. Women, but with the Neo-Confucianists, women put back in their place
- G. Glorious Age: Invention and Artistic Creativity
- 1. Inventions
- a. New agricultural tools
- b. Banks and paper money
- c. Engineering feats – Grand Canal, dikes, dams
- 1. Bridges – arches, segmented, suspension, trussed – forms used today
- d. Explosive powder
- 1. Grenades, flamethrowers, poisonous gases, rocket launchers
- 2. Checked nomadic invasions
- e. Domestically
- 1. dinking tea, chairs, coal for fule, kite
- f. Key inventions for future civilizations
- 1. abacus, compass, printing – movable type
- 1. Inventions
- H. Scholarly Refinement and Artistic Accomplishment
- 1. Painted landscapes
- 2. Artists generalists, not specialists – you would be the poet, musician, and painter
- 3. Confucian influence vs. Buddhist
- 1. Landscapes, everyday life replace devotional objects
- 4. Paintings
- 1. Symbolic – philosophical or taught lessons
- a. Crane – pine tree – longevity
- b. Bamboo – scholarly class
- 2. Abstract – subtlety and suggestion
- 1. Symbolic – philosophical or taught lessons
- I. Global Connections
- 1. By moving south, Song could withstand nomadic invaders
- 2. More market oriented
- 1. Technological improvements taken from surrounding areas
- 2. Production of luxury goods desired by wealthy class around the world
- 3. Chinese inventions utilized by rest of the world
- 4. Until 18th century – political and economic resources unmatched by other civilizations
- A. Grand Canal
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