THE CIVILIZATIONS OF INDIA, CHINA AND JAPAN - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

THE CIVILIZATIONS OF INDIA, CHINA AND JAPAN

Description:

THE CIVILIZATIONS OF INDIA, CHINA AND JAPAN Early Indian Civilization Harappan Civilization The Vedic Age Hinduism The Caste System Birth of Buddhism in India What is ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:464
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 93
Provided by: hannah107
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: THE CIVILIZATIONS OF INDIA, CHINA AND JAPAN


1
THE CIVILIZATIONS OF INDIA, CHINA AND JAPAN
2
Early Indian Civilization
  • Harappan Civilization
  • The Vedic Age
  • Hinduism
  • The Caste System
  • Birth of Buddhism in India

3
The Harappan Civilization
3300 BCE - 2400 BCE
4
Aerial View of Mohenjo-Daro
5
Wide View, Mohenjo-Daro
6
Harappan Writing
Undecipherable to date.
7
The Vedic Age (1500 BCE - 500 BCE)
8
Aryan Migration
  • Invaders on horseback from Persia (Iran) and
    Central Asia

9
Sanskrit writing
10
What is Hinduism?
  • One of the oldest religions of humanity
  • The religion of the Indian people
  • Gave birth to Buddhism, Jainism, Sikhism
  • Tolerance and diversity "Truth is one, paths are
    many"
  • Many deities but a single, impersonal Ultimate
    Reality
  • A philosophy and a way of life focused both on
    this world and beyond

11
No universally accepted definition
  • The Hindu religion, unlike other religions in
    the world, does not claim any one prophet it
    does not worship any one god it does not
    subscribe to any one dogma it does not believe
    in any one philosophic concept it does not
    follow any one set of religious rites in fact it
    does not appear to satisfy the narrow traditional
    features of any religion or creed. It may broadly
    be described as a way of life and nothing more
  • Chief Justice P.B. Gajendragadkar (Supreme Court
    Ruling, 1995)

12
What are the Sacred Texts?
  • The four Vedas (truths) the basic texts of
    Hinduism stories, rituals, chants
  • Upanishads - metaphysical speculation on how the
    soul can be united with Brahma
  • The Great Indian Epics
  • Ramayana the story of Rama and Sita
  • Mahabharata (includes the Bhagavad-Gita, the
    story of Krishna)
  • The Laws of Manu Hindu ten commandments and four
    stages of life

13
What do Hindus believe?
  • One impersonal Ultimate Reality Brahman
  • Manifest as many personal deities
  • True essence of life Atman, the soul, is
    Brahman trapped in matter (That art thou)
  • Reincarnation atman is continually born into
    this world lifetime after lifetime (Samsara)
  • Karma spiritual impurity due to actions keeps
    us bound to this world (good and bad)
  • Ultimate goal of life to release Atman and
    reunite with the divine, becoming as one with
    Brahman (Moksha)

14
Who do Hindus worship? the major gods of the
Hindu Pantheon
Brahma, the creator god
15
Who do Hindus worship? the major gods of the
Hindu Pantheon
Vishnu, the preserver god
Incarnates as ten avatars (descents) including
Rama (featured in the Ramayana)
Krishna (featured in the Mahabharata)
(Each shown with his consort, Sita and Radha,
respectively)
16
The major gods of the Hindu Pantheon
Shiva, god of constructive destruction(the
transformer)
Appears as Shiva Nataraj,lord of the dance of
creation
and with his wife, Parvati, and son Ganesha(the
elephant headed remover of obstacles)
17
What about the goddesses?Devi the feminine
divine essence. She is the core from which all
other goddesses derive.
Lakshmi, goddess of good fortune, consortof
Vishnu
18
What about the goddesses?
Parvati, divine mother, wife ofShiva
19
What about the goddesses?
Durga, protectress
Kali, destroyer of demons
20
All these deities are but Manifest forms
(attributes and functions) of the impersonal
Brahman
21
Varna (Caste Hierarchy)
Brahmins
Kshatriyas
Vaishyas
Shudras
Pariahs Harijan ? Untouchables
22
The Caste System
Brahmins
Kshatriyas
  • Each member of a varna is also associated with a
    jatia community based on a specific job
    function.
  • A persons surname usually indicates the
    profession of ones ancestors. For example
    Gandhi perfume maker

Vaishyas
Shudras
23
Goal of Hinduism
Moksha release or liberation
United forever with the divine
Infinite bliss and awareness
24
Reincarnation (Samsara)
  • Samsara is the wheel of rebirth which means the
    soul is reborn
  • from one life form to another.
  • People may be reincarnated at a higher or lower
    level of existence depending on their karma from
    their present life.
  • People may be reborn as plants or animals or they
    may be elevated to a higher caste as a human.
  • Death is not final for Hindus as they expect to
    be reborn many times.

25
Karma Dharma
  • Karma action or deeds
  • Every action produces a Justified effect based
    on its moral worthiness.
  • Karma determines all the particular circumstances
    and Situations of ones life.
  • Dharma ethical duty based on the divine order
    of reality. The word is the closest equivalent to
    religion.

26
(No Transcript)
27
Siddhartha Gautama (563-483 BCE)
  • Born in NE India (Nepal).
  • Raised in great luxuryto be a king.
  • At 29 he rejectedhis luxurious life toseek
    enlightenmentand the source ofsuffering.
  • Lived a strict,ascetic life for 6 yrs.
  • Rejecting this extreme, sat in meditation, and
    found nirvana.
  • Became The Enlightened One, at 35.

28
What is the fundamental cause of all suffering?
Desire!
  • Therefore, extinguish the self, dont obsess
    about oneself.

29
Four Noble Truths
  • There is suffering in the world. To live is to
    suffer. (Dukkha)
  • The Buddha found this out when he was young and
    experienced suffering and death in others.

30
Four Noble Truths
  1. The cause of suffering is self-centered desire
    and attachments. (Tanha)

31
Four Noble Truths
  1. The solution is to eliminate desire and
    attachments. (Nirvana extinction)

32
Four Noble Truths
  1. To reach nirvana, one must follow the Eightfold
    Path.

33
Eightfold Path
Nirvana
  • The union with the ultimate spiritual
    reality.
  • Escape from the cycle of rebirth.

34
Buddha 19c Thailand
35
Mandala Wheel of Life Motif
36
(No Transcript)
37
Chinese Civilization
  • Institutions, World Views, and Significance, 2205
    B. C. E. - 1644

38
Generalizations About Chinese Civilization
  • Zhong guo mentality China the center of the
    universe
  • Powerful Central Authorityemperor. But mandate
    of heaven can justify dynasty change
  • Importance of family veneration of Ancestors
  • Confucianism is official governing philosophy
    until 20th c.
  • Scholars the most respected social class
  • Chinese citizens mix Confucian beliefs with
    Daoism
  • Perennial problemsfood production, invasion, and
    internal strife

39
Confucianism
40
Confucius
  • Kung Fu Tsu 551 479 B.C.E.
  • Born in the feudal state of Liu.
  • Became a teacher and editor of books.

41
Major Confucian Principles
  • Li --gt Rite, rules, ritual decorum (Binding
    force of an enduring stable society)
  • Jen --gt humaneness, benevolence,
    humanity, politeness
  • Shu --gt Reciprocity, empathy
  • Do not do unto others what you would not want
    others to do unto you.
  • Yi --gt Righteousness (do the right thing)
  • Xiao --gt Filial Piety (Respect your elders!)

42
5 Principle Relationships
1. Ruler
Subject
2. Father
Son
3. Husband
Wife
4. Older Brother
YoungerBrother
5. Older Friend
YoungerFriend
43
Organizing Principles
  • Status
  • Age
  • Gender

44
The Analects
  • The single most important Confucian work.
  • In Chinese, it means conversation.
  • Focus on practicalities of interpersonal
    relationships and the relationship of the role
    of rulers and ministers to the conduct of
    government.

45
Sayings from The Analects
  • Knowing what he knows and knowing what he
    doesnt know, is characteristics of the person
    who knows.
  • Making a mistake and not correcting it, is
    making another mistake.
  • The superior man blames himself the inferior
    man blames others.
  • To go too far is as wrong as to fall short.

46
Confucius' Tomb
47
Mencius
  • 372 - 289 B.C.E.
  • Disciple of Confucius.
  • Starts off with the assumption that people
    are basically good.
  • If someone does something bad, education, not
    punishment, is the answer.
  • Good people will mend their ways in
    accordance to their inherent goodness.

48
Social Cohesion is Paramount!
  • A secular code of behaviornothing religious or
    spiritual
  • The emperor is the example of proper behavior
    --gt big daddy
  • Social relationships are based on rites or
    rituals.
  • Even religious rituals are important for
    SOCIAL, not religious reasons, acc. to
    Confucius.

49
Differences in Cultures
INDIA
CHINA
1. Brahmin
1. Scholar-Gentry
2. Kshatriyas
2. Peasants
3. Vaishyas
3. Artisans
4. Shudras
4. Merchants
Untouchables
Soldiers
Domestic Slaves
50
Daoism
51
Lao Zi Lao-Tzu
  • Not sure when he died. 604 B.C.E. - ?
  • His name means Old Master

52
Major Daoist Principles
1. Dao Tao is the first-cause of the
universe. It is a force that flows through all
life. 2. A believers goal is to become one
with Dao one with nature. 3. Wu wei --gt
Let nature take its course. --gt The
art of doing nothing. --gt Go with
the flow! 4. Man is unhappy because he lives
acc. to man-made laws, customs, traditions
that are contrary to the ways of nature.
53
The "Dao" Tao
To escape the social, political, cultural
traps of life, one must escape by
1. Rejecting formal knowledge and learning.
2. Relying on the senses and instincts. 3.
Discovering the nature and rhythm of the
universe. 4. Ignoring political and social laws.
54
The Universe of Opposites Find the Balance!
Yin
  • Masculine
  • Active
  • Light
  • Warmth
  • Strong
  • Heaven Sun
  • Feminine
  • Passive
  • Darkness
  • Cold
  • Weak
  • Earth Moon

Yang
55
The Uniqueness of Daoism
How is a man to live in a world dominated by
chaos, suffering, and absurdity??
Mind Meditation and ritual to lead the body
into a balanced state
Physical Diet, exercise, medicine, martial
artsto contribute to balance and even
immortality. Goal The Tai-ping or heavenly
kingdom here on earth (Revolutionary!)

56
The Traditional Chinese Family
  • Basic unit of society consists of kin related by
    blood, marriage or adoption
  • Family members of several generations live
    together with a common budget and common property
  • Patriarchal family Daughters marry out sons
    bring their wives home
  • The patriarch, head of family, has power to
    direct activities of each member for good of
    whole family

57
Women in Traditional Chinese Society
  • European visitors in 19th century shocked by
    situation of Chinese women
  • Girls sold by parents at five or six as
    indentured servants
  • Widows could not remarry, even if it meant
    poverty or starvation
  • Foot binding begins in 10th c. and continues
    until outlawed in the 20th c.

58
Foot-Binding in Tang China
  • For upper-class girls, it became a new custom.

59
The Results of Foot-Binding
60
Yuan (Mongol) Dynasty, 1279-1368 C.E.
  • Kublai Khan r. 1260-1294
  • Pax Mongolica Mongol Peace
  • Tolerated Chinese culturebut lived apart from
    them. ?
  • No Chinese in top govt. posts.
  • Believed foreign officials were moretrustworthy
    and loyal
  • Encouraged foreign trade foreign merchants to
    live and work in China.

61
The MingChinas last native imperial dynasty!
1368-1644
62
The Ming Dynasty 1368-1644
  • Founded by the Emperor Hongwu (1368-1398)
  • Builds centralized state. Uses eunuchs as
    officials.
  • Emperor Yongle (1403-1424) launches naval
    expeditions into Indian ocean that reach the
    coast of East Africa.
  • Yongle moves capital of China to the Forbidden
    City in Beijing.

63
The Forbidden City Beijing Chinas New Capital
64
Ming Emperors complete Great Wall of China (1,550
miles long)
65
The Ming Revive the Civil Service Examination
  • Government sponsors study of Chinese cultural
    traditiion
  • Civil Service exams based on teachings of
    Confucius
  • Creates government based on scholar bureaucrats

66
Ming Cultural Revolution
  • Printing Literacy
  • Cheap, popular books
  • woodblock printing.
  • cheap paper.
  • Examination system.
  • Leads to explosion in literacy. ?
  • Leads to further popularization of the commercial
    market.
  • Exposure to Christianity and European science
  • Culture Art
  • Increased literacy leads to increased interest in
    cultural expressions, ideas, and things
  • Literature.
  • Painting.
  • Ceramics.
  • Opera.

67
Ming Silver Market
  • Spanish Silver Convoys
  • Triangle route
  • Philippines to China to Japan.
  • Silver floods Chinese Market
  • Causes devaluation of currency recession
  • Adds to reasons for Chinese immigration overseas.
  • Reduces price of Chinese goods in Europe
  • Increases interest in Chinese culture ideas in
    Europe.
  • Helps fund conquest of New World ?
  • Encourages Europeans in conquest trade.

68
The Tribute System
69
Admiral Zheng He (Cheng Ho)
  • Ming Treasure Fleet
  • Each ship 400 long 160 wide

1371-1435
70
Admiral Zheng He (Cheng Ho)
  • Chinas Columbus? ?

71
Admiral Zheng Hes Voyages
  • First Voyage 1405-1407 62 ships 27,800 men.
  • Second Voyage 1407-1409 Ho didnt go on this
    trip.
  • Third Voyage 1409-1411 48 ships 30,000 men.
  • Fourth Voyage 1413-1415 63 ships 28,500 men.
  • Fifth Voyage 1417-1419
  • Sixth Voyage 1421-1422
  • Emperor Zhu Gaozhi cancelled future trips and
    ordered ship builders and sailors to stop work.
  • Seventh Voyage 1431-1433
  • Emperor Zhu Zhanji resumed the voyages in 1430 to
    restore peaceful relations with Malacca Siam
  • 100 ships and 27,500 men Cheng Ho died on the
    return trip.

72
Ming Decline and Collapse
  • Ming Emperors in late 16th and 17th centuries
    inept and detached from their people.
  • Court eunuchs govern with inefficiency and
    corruption.
  • Matteo Ricci attempts to introduce Christianity
    to China but attracts only a small number of
    converts.
  • Famines in 17th century lead to peasant
    rebellions in the 1630s.
  • The Manchus invade from the north and overthrow
    the Ming Dynasty.

73
The Qing Dynasty 1644-1911
  • Nurhaci (1616-1626) unifies Manchu tribes
  • Manchu armies occupy Beijing in 1644
  • By 1680s control all of China
  • Emperor Kangxi (1661-1722) a Confucian scholar,
    conquers Mongolia and Tibet. Orders end to
    conversions to Christianity.
  • During reign of Emperor Qianlong (1736-1795)
    China at peak of stability and prosperity
  • Introduction of food crops from the Americas
    increases food supply and supports population
    growth

74
The Unification of Japan
  • Chinese influences on Japanese culture
  • Feudal Japan
  • Christian missionaries and contacts with Europe
  • The Tokugawa Shogunate

75
JAPANESECultural Borrowing 3RD TO 7TH CENTURIES
1. Chinese writing (kanji characters) 2.
Confucianism 3. Chinese artistic styles 4.
Buddhism (in the form of Zen) 5. But not the
Chinese Civil Service
76
Heian Period 794-1156
  • Characteristics
  • Growth of large landed estates.
  • Arts literature of China flourished.
  • Elaborate court life highly refined
  • ETIQUETTE. ?
  • Personal diaries
  • The Pillow Book by Sei Shonagon 10c
  • Great novel
  • The Tale of Genji by Lady Murasaki Shikibu
    1000 pgs. ?
  • Moving away from Chinese models in religion,
    the arts, and government. ?

77
Heian Court Dress
78
Tale of Genji (first novel)
79
Lady Murasaki Shikibu
She contributed much to the Japanese script known
as kana, while men wrote with Chinese characters,
kanji.
80
Minamoto Yoritomo
Founded the Kamakura Shogunate 1185-1333
81
The emperor reigned, but did not always rule!
Feudal Society
82
Feudalism
A political, economic, and social system based on
loyalty, the holding of land, and military
service. Japan
Shogun
Land - Shoen
Loyalty
Daimyo
Daimyo
Land - Shoen
Loyalty
Samurai
Samurai
Samurai
Food
Protection
Peasant
Peasant
Peasant
Peasant
83
Code of Bushido
  • Fidelity
  • Politeness
  • Virility
  • Simplicity

84
Full Samurai Attire
85
Early Mounted Samurai Warriors
86
Zen Buddhism
  • A Japanese variation of the Mahayana
    form of Buddhism, which came from India
    through China.
  • It reinforced the Bushido values of mental
    and self-discipline.

87
MongolInvasionsof Japan
4,400 ships and 140,000 men, but kamikaze winds
stopped them.
88
R O E N S
89
The Age of the Warring States(1467 - 1568)
  • Castles built on hills in different
    provinces.
  • Power shifts from above to below.
  • Europeans arrive in Japan ? bringing
    firearms Christianity.
  • Christianity foreign trade flourish.

90
Catholic Jesuits in Japan
St. Francis XavierFirst Catholic Mission in
1549 By 1615, 300,000 Japanese Christians
91
Tokugawa Ieyasu (1543-1616)
  • Appointed shogun by the Emperor.
  • Finishes process of unifying Japan
  • Four-class system laid down with marriage
    restricted to members of the same class! ?
  • Warriors.
  • Farmers.
  • Artisans.
  • Merchants.

92
Tokugawa Shogunate Period 1603-1867
  • Japan closed off to all trade except to the
    Dutch and Chinese. ?
  • The Dutch were restricted to a small island
    in Nagasaki harbor.
  • Japanese forbidden to travel abroad
  • Prohibit building of large ships
  • Japanese Christians brutally persecuted and
    Christianity is forbidden.
  • The government is centralized with all power
    in the hands of the shogun.
  • The power of the Daimyo (powerful territorial
    lords) is reduced
  • Domestic trade flourishes.
  • Towns, esp. castle towns, increase.
  • Merchant class becomes rich! ?
  • New art forms ? haiku poetry, kabuki theater.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com