|
|
China was unified under its first emperor in 221 BC. For most of
the next 2,000 years it was the largest and most advanced civilizations
in the world. Because it was geographically isolated from powerful
civilizations in the Near East and later in Europe, it was able
to develop and maintain a unique culture that spread its influence
over much of Asia. The one great constant in Chinese life for these
two millenium was political stability. Although emperors might change,
the imperial court kept a firm hold on power. Neither the clergy,
the military, nor the merchant class acquired long-lasting power,
even though religion, warfare, and trade were significant influences
in Chinese life. Of the 12 different dynasties that ruled China
during these 2,000 years, the Sung were one of most important during
the period when the West was passing through its Middle Ages.
| Location |
|
The Sung Dynasty established control over
the middle portion of what is now modern China. The Central
Asian portions to the northwest and Manchuria to the northeast
remained in barbarian hands. In 1126, the barbarian Kin
armies invaded from the north and the Sung imperial court
fled south. The Sung continued to rule the Yangtze Valley
and southern regions, but China remained divided for one
and one-half centuries.
|
| Capital |
|
New Chinese dynasties traditionally changed
their capitals upon taking power. The Sung established
their capital at Kaifeng. The capital was moved to Hangchou
in the south in 1126 when barbarians took control of northern
China.
|
| Rise to Power |
| The T'ang dynasty ruled China from 618 to
907, but the last 100 years of its rule had witnessed tumultuous
peasant revolts and wars between local military rulers that
the imperial court could not end. The years from 907 to
960 were known as the Five Dynasties period. Northern China
was held by barbarians and Southern China split into 10
rival states. From one of these an army general named Chao
K'uang-yin seized power and unified the southern states,
founding the Sung dynasty. His descendants reunited China
within 20 years.
|
| Economy |
|
During the Sung dynasty China changed from a predominately
agricultural economy to a mixed economy where manufacturing
and trade became increasingly important. Far in advance
of the rest of the world, China built up trade both overland
and by sea. The most valuable manufactured goods for trade
were silk fabrics and porcelain pottery. Silk was traded
to the West over the Silk Road, the world's most famous
trade route of ancient and medieval times. Camel caravans
carrying silk crossed Central Asia and the Near East to
bring silk ultimately to Venice and Constantinople. The
silks changed hands several times normally enroute. Tea
exports became increasingly important as well.
The foundation of the Chinese economy remained the peasant
rice farmers who made up the majority of the population.
Several farming families formed a farming village surrounded
by the fields and fish ponds that the group maintained.
There was limited land for pasture so only a few oxen
or water buffalos were kept to help with farming. The
division and control of land was a recurring problem through
the ages. Reforms were attempted on many occasions but
increasing populations, natural disasters, and warfare
often made peasant life harsh. Chinese history is punctuated
with peasant revolts that occasionally toppled dynasties.
Internal trade also increased in importance. The first
great canal was built in 246 BC to make it easier to speed
troops and military supplies to threatened areas. Canals
proved a great boon to the economy by providing water
for irrigation and an efficient highway for trade. The
Grand Canal linking the Yangtze and Huan he (Yellow) River
valleys was opened in 618 and extended to Beijing in the
13th century.
|
| Religion |
|
Three major religions dominated the Chinese culture:
Confucianism, Taoism, and Buddhism. Each had its adherents,
yet all lived together in harmony and tolerance. China
was never subjected to wars based on religion.
Ancient beliefs held that all natural things contained
spirits that were to be respected. There was no all-mighty
god. The emperor was the son of heaven who was given a
mandate to rule. So long as the emperor lived properly
and conducted the correct ceremonies and rituals, life
was expected to be good.
Confucius taught that harmony followed from respecting
social hierarchies, beginning within the family. This
religion was concerned primarily with providing laws for
proper government and personal behavior. Taoism taught
that individuals should develop the inner self and strive
for harmony with nature. Taoists ignored the human laws
proposed by Confucius in favor of the tao, or the way,
of natural laws discovered through meditation. Taoism
drew on the ancient beliefs of China and employed mysticism,
magic, prayer, and diet.
Buddhism arrived from India around the first century
A.D. It had much in common with Taoism, including the
search for natural laws and harmony with nature through
meditation. The goal of Buddhism was nirvana, a state
of heavenly peace when the soul becomes one with the universe.
Achieving nirvana was thought to be a long process that
might take a soul through many reincarnations. The popularity
of Buddhism in China peaked in the 8th century. By then
Buddhist monasteries controlled great tracks of farmland
and many peasants, both beyond the reach of imperial tax
collectors. In the ninth century a T'ang emperor destroyed
four thousand monasteries and forty thousand shrines.
|
| Government |
|
Emperors generally held supreme power as the son of heaven.
Natural disasters or other calamities were taken as proof
that the mandate of heaven had been withdrawn, however,
and could justify revolt and change of power to a new
dynasty.
Mandarins were civil servants who operated most of the
government at the local, province, and imperial level.
Mandarins earned their positions by passing detailed civil
service examinations based mainly on the works of Confucius.
Though dynasties came and went, and foreigners even took
the throne, the conservative civil bureaucracy carried
on and was responsible in large part for the stable culture
that was maintained for millenium.
|
| Military |
|
In contrast to other civilizations of this period, there
was little prestige attached to being in the Chinese military.
The mandarins kept a close watch over military leaders,
controlling them through control of supplies and troops.
Army officers were recruited from families of low nobility.
Soldiers were drawn from the peasant class. Life in the
military was an attractive alternative for men with little
hope of obtaining land of their own.
By the standards of the world, the Chinese army was
amazingly large. It was estimated to contain 400,000 soldiers
in the 8th century and over one million by the 11th century.
The largest European armies at this time might have numbered
in the few tens of thousands. The Chinese army was made
up of foot soldiers predominately, armed with spears,
composite bows, crossbows, and the Ko (a six foot wooden
shaft with an axe-like blade at the end). The Chinese
made what was arguably the best crossbow in the world.
They had invented that weapon in the 4th century BC. Better
equipped soldiers carried iron or even steel swords, long
before the technology of steel making was discovered in
the West. Cavalry units were especially useful against
the ever present threat of barbarian raiders from Mongolia
to the north. Horse and rider were both armored in heavy
cavalry units. The Chinese especially prized Western horses
that were bigger than the typical Chinese pony.
Construction of defensive walls on the northern border
of China begun possibly in the 4th century BC. The first
emperor of China linked previously existing walls to create
what has become known as the Great Wall of China. The
wall was repaired, lengthened, and improved many times
in the following centuries. The wall was intended not
so much to keep barbarians out, but instead to slow their
advance, provide an early warning system, and slow their
withdraw with plunder. Local military leaders then had
time to organize resistance or pursuit against invaders.
Gunpowder was discovered by the Chinese in the 10th
century. It was first used in fireworks and later in weapons
like rockets and hand grenades. A 13th century rocket
with two stages was used in naval warfare. The Chinese
failed, however, to develop cannon or hand-guns.
|
| Decline and
Fall |
|
A side effect of the new industrialization and growth
of cities was the spread of poverty. Masses of beggars
plagued the big cities. Although money was set aside to
house and feed the poor, most was siphoned off by the
mandarins. A severe conservative mentality was imposed
on the culture by the mandarins, discouraging science
and technological advance. Overseas travel was banned,
blocking contact with other civilizations.
Mongols under Kublai Khan invaded from the north and
conquered all of China, deposing the Sung dynasty. The
Mongols established the Yuan dynasty and ruled China from
1280 to 1368. The successors to Kublai Khan eventually
grew weak and corrupt, and lost the military power that
had been their strength. Secret societies arose across
China, determined to mobilize the peasants and throw out
the Mongol usurpers. A Buddhist monk leading one group
of rebels captured Nanking in 1356 and Beijing by 1368.
He established the Ming dynasty that ruled until 1644.
|
| Legacy |
|
For most of the period 450 to 1450 AD, China was the
world's greatest civilization. In terms of population
size, economic production, and technology, it had no peer.
Chinese culture dominated and influenced most of East
Asia. Due to its isolation, however, it remained a land
of mystery and legend to the West.
It is best remembered today for the technologies which
were invented there, usually many centuries before a similar
technology was invented in, or transmitted to, the West.
Important Chinese technologies included the compass, iron
casting, steel, paper, moveable type (printing), paper
money, gunpowder, wheelbarrow, horse harness, stirrup,
clock, calculator (abacus), and the stern-post rudder.
Just as the Europe was beginning its renaissance, with
the help of important Chinese technologies, China withdrew
behind its geographic defenses by banning overseas travel,
discouraging invention, and closing the Silk Road.
For more information

Sung
Dynasty
|
|
NEXT
(English)
|
|
 |