THE SPREAD OF CIVILIZATION IN EAST ASIA - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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THE SPREAD OF CIVILIZATION IN EAST ASIA

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Title: THE SPREAD OF CIVILIZATION IN EAST ASIA Author: Paul Philp Last modified by: Paul Philp Created Date: 11/27/2005 9:56:52 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: THE SPREAD OF CIVILIZATION IN EAST ASIA


1
THE SPREAD OF CIVILIZATION IN EAST ASIA
  • JAPAN, KOREA AND VIETNAM IN THE POST-CLASSICAL AGE

2
GEOGRAPHY INFLUENCES HISTORY
  • Relative Location
  • Korea, Vietnam border China
  • Japan located off coast of East Asia
  • Physical Characteristics
  • Korea, Vietnam
  • Mountainous, cut by river valleys
  • Population located on plains
  • Japan
  • Volcanic islands, very mountainous
  • Deep valleys with plains
  • Demography
  • Populace generally heavy on plains
  • Rice was principal crop
  • Cities exist but rarer than China
  • Cities centers of Chinese culture
  • Countryside resistant to Sinification

3
THE CONFUCIAN WORLD
4
KOREA THE BRIDGE
  • Korea in the Ancient and Classical Periods
  • Influenced by developments in China
  • Chinese armies invaded periodically
  • Chinese established control of parts of Korea
  • Nomadic invasions frequent
  • Fall of Han left regional Korean aristocrats in
    control
  • Korean History 669 1392 C.E.
  • Tang armies conquered much of Korea
  • Silla dynasty allied with Tang, ruled peninsula
  • Entered into a tributary relationship with China
  • Song replaced Tang
  • Koguryo conquered Silla in 935, ruled to 1392
  • China's influence in Korea
  • Sinification becoming Chinese
  • Koreans borrowed what was useful, unavoidable
    avoided what was not
  • Tributary embassies included Korean royal
    officials and scholars
  • Silla kings built new capital at Kumsong modeled
    on the Tang capital
  • Older Traditions
  • Ancestor worship strong in Korean society

5
VIETNAM A BORDER STATE
  • Nam Viet people originated in Southern China
  • Rise of Han and southern settlement of Chinese
    pushed Viet out
  • Viet migrated into Red River Valley, down coast
    fighting local inhabitants
  • Vietnam under Chinese rule to c. 983 CE
  • Han first conquered Northern Vietnam in 111 BCE
  • Viet elites adopted Chinese agriculture, schools,
    thought intermarried
  • Massive migration of Chinese official, scholars,
    bureaucrats to Vietnam
  • Trung sisters led revolt against Chinese rule (40
    43 CE)
  • Peasants resented Chinese influence, role of
    towns, cities
  • 1,000 year struggle for independence
  • Relationship often tributary to China
  • Independent Vietnam (c. 983 CE)
  • Ruled by Dynasties, capital moved between Hanoi,
    Hue
  • Constant pressure against hill peoples, pushing
    south
  • Difference from China
  • Role of village equal to role of family in China
  • Few cities village dominate countryside, elders
    ran villages
  • Many Vietnamese retained their religious
    traditions
  • Women played more prominent roles in Vietnam

6
EARLY JAPAN
  • Ancient Japan
  • Earliest inhabitants were nomadic Caucasians
    (Ainu) from Northeast Asia
  • Japanese related to Koreans, migrated into
    islands, pushed Ainu north
  • Ruled by several dozen states dominate by clans,
    1st millennium BCE
  • Shinto Ancestor veneration with deification of
    nature, spirits (kami)
  • Nara Japan (710-794 C.E.)
  • Inspired by Tang, Yamato clan claimed imperial
    authority
  • The imperial court modeled on that of the Tang
  • Built a new capital (Nara) in 710 C.E., modeled
    on Chang'an
  • Prince Shotoku wrote first Japanese constitution
  • Adopted Confucianism and Buddhism, but maintained
    Shinto
  • Heian Japan (794-1185 C.E.)
  • Moved to new capital Heian (modern Kyoto) in 794
  • Japanese emperors as ceremonial figureheads and
    symbols of authority
  • Effective power in the hands of the Fujiwara
    family
  • Emperor did not rule
  • Lived in splendid isolation along with court
    elite
  • Effected by bureaucrats, complex etiquette
  • Chinese learning dominated Japanese education,
    culture

7
MEDIEVAL JAPAN
  • Japanese feudalism
  • Called the Shogunate Period
  • Military dictators ruled, Emperors reigned in
    splendid isolation
  • Government was centralized feudalism
  • Countryside divided up into fiefs
  • Daimyo appointed by the shoguns
  • Adopted Neo-Confucianism as state philosophy
  • Provincial lords controlled Japan
  • Called Daimyo, vied for power against each other
  • Constant war to increase personal power, wealth,
    fiefs
  • Kamakura Period (1185-1333 C.E.)
  • Muromachi Period (1336-1573 C.E.)
  • The Samurai
  • The lowest class of aristocratic nobility
  • Professional warriors of provincial lords
  • Observed samurai code called bushido
  • Valued loyalty, military talent, and discipline
    traded military skills for food
  • To preserve their honor, engaged in ritual
    suicide called seppuku
  • Japanese Women

8
FIEFS OF FEUDAL JAPAN
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