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Music & Entertainment
Life & People in East Asia
         -- A brief introduction

                  By Ke Peng
History & Musical Instruments
? Chinese History is very long!!
? Pre-dynastic: flutes, ocarinas, bronze bells, stone
  chimes
? Shang (16th-11th c. BC) and Zhou (11th-221 BC):
  Sophisticated stringed instruments
? Qin (221 BC-207 BC) and Han (206 BC ¨C 220 AD):
  portable plucked instruments
? Wei (220 ¨C 265) Jin (265 ¨C 420) through Tang:
  double reeds, bowed fiddles.
? Song, Yuan, Ming, Qing: fiddle popularity
Court, Religious, Folk
? Music seen by Kongzi(Confucious) as ritual, vital to
  the regulation of the state: the material of the
  instruments expressed the material of the universe
? Foreign Influences (trade routes, captives, ethnic
  groups) on ¡°folk¡± and ¡°urban¡± entertainment
? Buddhist chant
Areas of Chinese Influence
Instruments
? The eight categories are: silk, bamboo, wood,
  stone, metal, clay, gourd and hide.
? (Western instruments are: wind, brass,
  percussion, strings)
Silk | Guqin (Zither)
?   Seven strings, no frets, no bridges
?   Associated with the literati (a man's instrument)
?   Made from a special wood
?   Called the koto in Japan
?   Dates from the Warring States Period
? Joy of Gods and Men ÉñÈ˳©    (http://youtube.com/watch?v=VO9S5pHxaA8)
Silk | plucked
? Guzheng (¹Å¹~) ¨C
   16-26 stringed zither with
   movable bridges
   High Mountain and Flowing
   Water
  (http://youtube.com/watch?v=UBbUuvGl8kc)
? JAPAN: Koto
   (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dhxl
   QlZafvY   )
? KOREA: Kayageum,
   Kumongo
Silk | plucked
? Pipa (ÅýÅÃ) - 4 or 5 stringed
  pear-shaped lute
  ¡° Moonlight of Spring River¡± ´º½­»¨
  ÔÂÒ¹
  (http://youtube.com/watch?v=Lykgg5phVJE)

? Sanxian (ÈýÏÒ) - A plucked
  lute with body covered with
  snakeskin and long fretless
  neck
? JAPAN: Shamisen, Biwa
Silk | plucked
? Ruan (Chinese: Èî; Pinyin:
  ru n) - Moon-shaped lute in
  five sizes:
? Liuqin (ÁøÇÙ) - A small
  plucked lute with a pear-
  shaped body and four
  strings
? Yueqin (ÔÂÇÙ) - A plucked
  lute with a wooden body, a
  short fretted neck, and four
  strings tuned in pairs
Silk | bowed
? Huqin (ºúÇÙ) - Family of vertical
   fiddles
? Erhu (¶þºú) - Two-stringed fiddle
? Zhonghu (Öкú) - Two-stringed
   fiddle, lower pitch than erhu
? Gaohu (¸ßºú) - Two-stringed
   fiddle, higher pitch than erhu
? Banhu (°åºú) - Two-stringed
   fiddle with a coconut resonator and
   wooden face
? Jinghu (¾©ºú) - Two-stringed
   fiddle, very high pitched, used mainly
   for Peking Opera
Silk | struck
? Yangqin (“PÇÙ) - Hammered dulcimer of varying
  strings struck using two bamboo hammers
  (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C4n4NuGaaOk)
Bamboo
? Dizi (µÑ×Ó) - Transverse
  bamboo flute with
  buzzing membrane
? Xiao - End-blown flute
? Suona - A double reed
  wind instrument with a
  flaring metal bell; also
  called haidi (º£µÑ)
  (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3i5_I
  _adjqU)
Japanese Flutes
? Fue
? Shinobue
? Shakuhachi
  http://youtube.com/watch?v=y1vW24fFeDM
Wood
? Muyu - A rounded woodblock carved in the shape of
  a fish, struck with a wooden stick. Often used in
  Buddhist chanting
Stone
? Bianqing (¾Žíà or ±àíà) - A rack of stone tablets that
  are hung by ropes from a wooden frame and struck
  using a mallet
Metal
? Chuzeng Baizhong (³þÔø°ÙçŠ) - 100 bronze bells
  hung on a rack, struck using poles
? Bianzhong (¾ŽçŠ) - 65 bronze bells hung on a rack,
  struck using poles
Clay
? Xun (‰_) - Ocarina made of baked clay
  (http://youtube.com/watch?v=_GabHGlGm14)
Gourd
? Sheng - A free reed mouth organ consisting of
  varying number of bamboo pipes inserted into
  a gourd chamber with finger holes
? Japan: Sho
? Hulusi - A free reed wind instrument with
  three bamboo pipes which pass through a
  gourd wind chest; one pipe has finger holes
  and the other two are drone pipes; used
  primarily in Yunnan province
Hide (¸ï)

? Dagu - Large drum
? Huagu - Flower drum
? Bangu - Small, high pitched drum used in
  Beijing oper
?   YouTube Video | http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hwUeVu0odPA
Ensemble music
? Silk and Bamboo
? Theatrical traditions
  - Beijing Opera (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U4QApzExgSo )
    -   Noh (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-jd9XJeb-PY& )
    -   Kabuki
    -   Pansori (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wt_ifMmvMik )
    ¨C   Orchestral and Modern
        - Korean Popular Singer | Rain
         (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O5B0XItDpSM )
        - Taiwan | Jay-Chou (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZF7iZwweFGs )
        - Japanese | Utada Hikaru (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iK1ScnCibtE )
Life back in the Tang Dynasty
        & Its Influence
       (618 - 907 AD) 290 Years
The Center of the World
? Cities in China      ¨Cwalls and markets
? 754: 1,859 cities, 321 prefectures, and 1,538
  counties
? The greatest: Chang'an, population of 2 million
? Walls: 18 feet high, enclosed an area of 30
  square miles¡ªmore for security than to stop an
  invasion
? Roads: Narrowest, 82 feet wide, those leading
  to the gates¡ª328 feet wide, imperial way = 492
  feet
Music Entertainment Of East Asia
Religious Institutions
? 91 Buddhist monasteries in Chang'an (64 for
  monks, 27 for nuns)
? 16 Daoist temples (10 for priests, 6 for
  priestesses)
? 2 Nestorian Christian churches
? 4 Zoroastrian Shrines
? Some Buddhist monasteries were the size of
  entire wards
Large Goose Pagoda (210 feet)
Left: Large Goose Pagoda

Top: Small Goose Pagoda (149 feet)

These are the only structures to
survive from the Tang relatively intact

(One was said to rise to 330 feet)
The Pleasure Quarters
? Locale for high-class courtesans (many of
  whom were from poor families)
? Girls were only let out on the 8, 18th, 28th days
  of the month, to hear Buddhist lectures in a
  nearby monastery
? Best courtesans were skilled in singing,
  dancing. They supervised feasts, played games,
  kept the party moving
Han Xizai's Party by Gu Hongzhang (Five Dynasties)
                (907 - 960 AD ) 54 Years
Top: Han Xizai's Party (in full)

Right: Fairies in Fairyland,
Yuan Gao (Five Dynasties)
Clothing
? Commoners: loose, baggy trousers, tunics,
  sashes tied at the waist, bamboo hats
? Formal dress (men): Robes (think bathrobes),
  silk, patterned, two layers, sash, large sleeves,
  cloth cap/turban, boots
? Formal dress (women): Similar to the kimono
  or the hanbok. Could be revealing (low cut), or
  exposing the shoulders
Left: Hanbok¡ªKorea

Right: Kimono¡ªJapan

Both were derived from Tang elite fashion in China
Cont.
? Jewelry:
? Men: element of formal court wear. Girdle
  pendants, belt hooks, leather belts with jade
  plaques
? Women: earrings, necklaces, bracelets, hairpins
  the most important (personal decorations)
? Women plucked their eyebrows and colored
  them back on, beauty marks were added as
  well
Tang mirrors
Entertainment
? Entertainers: magicians, dancers, musicians
  (troupes), acrobats
? Sports: polo, football (soccer), archery
? Early drama, puppetry, storytellers
? Games: Chinese chess, pitch pot,
? Parties: poetry, drinking, gambling
Lives of Men and Women
? The life cycle:
? Pre-natal: Mother should burn incense, read
  poetry, sit properly and strum the guqin¡ª
  fetal teaching
? Woman went into seclusion a month before
  birth
? Child (if well-to-do) could be nursed by wet-
  nurses, or even raised by them
? Child was considered one year old at birth
  (life starts at conception)
Examinations
? Tested for child prodigies
? 3 exams: Classical Masters, Advanced Scholars,
  Elevated Warriors
? Took place in spring¡ªClassical Masters most
  prestigious
? Example: 740 test: 65 fill in questions for 8
  classics, oral exam, 10 questions on
  interpretation, 3 essays on contemporary
  problems
A shirt covered with excerpts from the Classics and commentaries,
possibly used for cheating in the exams
Marriage
? A social contract between families (power,
  wealth, or out of friendship)
? Arranged, love matches were rare
? Girl leaves her family and moves in with
  husband's family (patrilocal)
? Expected to serve her husband and more
  importantly, his parents as if they were her own
Justifications for Divorce

? The ¡°Seven Dismissals¡± (even if the wife
  disagrees)
? 1) No children (sons) by the age of 49
? 2) Adultery (on her part)
? 3) Refusal to serve her in-laws
? 4) Talkativeness (exposing family affairs)
? 5) Jealousy
? 6) Theft (in-laws property)
? 7) Incurable disease
Three Ways She Can Stay
? The law offered certain protections:
? 1) If she had observed the 27 month mourning
  period for her husband's parents (filial)
? 2) He had gained wealth, rank, since she had
  married him
? 3) She had no family to return to
? If he divorced her and one of these applied, he
  was subject to 100 blows from the thick rod
  and forced to take her back
China During the ¡°Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms¡±
The Song Dynasty
    (960 - 1279 AD
      320 Years )
Music Entertainment Of East Asia
Song Taizu (Zhao Kuangyin)

The Song marked return to
Han Chinese rule in China¡ªfor
the first time in a major dynasty
since the Han itself.
Ding ware, a thin
white porcelain was
produced in the Song
and was known for its
high quality
Urbanization
? Shift to the cities: 10% of the population living
  in cities
? Kaifeng (capital): trade valued at 50% more
  than London in 1711 (not equalled in Europe
  until 18th century)
? Popular urban culture: street shows, dramas,
  increasing freedom of movement
? Cities as the center of cultural life¡ªamusement
  quarters
The ¡°Qingming Scroll¡± showing Kaifeng during the Song (attributed
to Zhang Zeduan)--the entire painting is 5.25 meters long!
Movable type printing
Music Entertainment Of East Asia
Footbinding
? Origin traced to the Tang (Emperor's
  concubine¡ªdancer)
? Becomes popular during the Song¡ªrestricted to
  upper classs. Why?
? How? Early forms not as severe as the Qing¡ªbut
  ideal foot size was eventually 4 in. in length
? Bound by mother/grandmother at age 4-7¡ª
  extremely painful, could take up to 10 years
? Why? Sexual appeal, a symbol of class, and later,
  a marker of civilization (vs. barbarians)
Are these kinds of body
alterations unique in the
world?
The Mongol Invasion
     (1271 - 1368 AD
        98 Years )
Music Entertainment Of East Asia
Within 20 years of Genghis Khan¡¯s death, the Mongol Empire spanned much of
Russia, China, Azerbaijan, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Kuwait, Armenia,
Korea (North and South), Afghanistan, Turkmenistan, Moldova, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Georgia, Iraq and Iran. It was the largest land empire in history.
The extent of the Mongol Empire and the route that Marco Polo took
Khubilai Khaghan and his wife, Chabi
Music Entertainment Of East Asia
Ming Dynasty
                           (1368 - 1644 AD)
                              277 Years




Zhu Yuanzhong¡ªMing Taizu
The Last Dynasty ¨CQing
        (Qing Dynasty
       1644 - 1911 AD
          267 Years )
The Qing (1644-1911)
?   Conquered the Ming
?   No change in landownership
?   Kept civil service examination
?   Kept the Ming Code (laws)
?   Respect of Chinese customs
?   Differences: Manchu clothes and the queue
The Manchus
? Northern group¡ªclaim shared cultural traits
  with the Jurchen
? Banner system¡ªway of organizing society (300
  households form a company, 50 companies
  form a banner
? Brutal conquest of the south¡ªmassacre in
  Yangzhou
¡°Keep your hair, lose your head. Keep your head, lose your hair.¡±
The Three Great Emperors




Qing Taizu (Nurhaci)   Kangxi (r. 1661-72)   Qianlong (r. 1736-96)
General Events
? Increase in population: from 60 million --> 150
  million --> 300 million (end of the 18th century)
? Continued policy of autocratic rule, exams,
  ¡°Confucian rulers¡±--move to legitimacy¡ªfar
  more successful than the Mongols
? Additions to the empire: Tibet (iffy), Xinjiang,
  Taiwan (Zheng Chenggong/Koxinga¡ª1681)
Music Entertainment Of East Asia

More Related Content

Music Entertainment Of East Asia

  • 1. Music & Entertainment Life & People in East Asia -- A brief introduction By Ke Peng
  • 2. History & Musical Instruments ? Chinese History is very long!! ? Pre-dynastic: flutes, ocarinas, bronze bells, stone chimes ? Shang (16th-11th c. BC) and Zhou (11th-221 BC): Sophisticated stringed instruments ? Qin (221 BC-207 BC) and Han (206 BC ¨C 220 AD): portable plucked instruments ? Wei (220 ¨C 265) Jin (265 ¨C 420) through Tang: double reeds, bowed fiddles. ? Song, Yuan, Ming, Qing: fiddle popularity
  • 3. Court, Religious, Folk ? Music seen by Kongzi(Confucious) as ritual, vital to the regulation of the state: the material of the instruments expressed the material of the universe ? Foreign Influences (trade routes, captives, ethnic groups) on ¡°folk¡± and ¡°urban¡± entertainment ? Buddhist chant
  • 4. Areas of Chinese Influence
  • 5. Instruments ? The eight categories are: silk, bamboo, wood, stone, metal, clay, gourd and hide. ? (Western instruments are: wind, brass, percussion, strings)
  • 6. Silk | Guqin (Zither) ? Seven strings, no frets, no bridges ? Associated with the literati (a man's instrument) ? Made from a special wood ? Called the koto in Japan ? Dates from the Warring States Period ? Joy of Gods and Men ÉñÈ˳© (http://youtube.com/watch?v=VO9S5pHxaA8)
  • 7. Silk | plucked ? Guzheng (¹Å¹~) ¨C 16-26 stringed zither with movable bridges High Mountain and Flowing Water (http://youtube.com/watch?v=UBbUuvGl8kc) ? JAPAN: Koto (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dhxl QlZafvY ) ? KOREA: Kayageum, Kumongo
  • 8. Silk | plucked ? Pipa (ÅýÅÃ) - 4 or 5 stringed pear-shaped lute ¡° Moonlight of Spring River¡± ´º½­»¨ ÔÂÒ¹ (http://youtube.com/watch?v=Lykgg5phVJE) ? Sanxian (ÈýÏÒ) - A plucked lute with body covered with snakeskin and long fretless neck ? JAPAN: Shamisen, Biwa
  • 9. Silk | plucked ? Ruan (Chinese: Èî; Pinyin: ru n) - Moon-shaped lute in five sizes: ? Liuqin (ÁøÇÙ) - A small plucked lute with a pear- shaped body and four strings ? Yueqin (ÔÂÇÙ) - A plucked lute with a wooden body, a short fretted neck, and four strings tuned in pairs
  • 10. Silk | bowed ? Huqin (ºúÇÙ) - Family of vertical fiddles ? Erhu (¶þºú) - Two-stringed fiddle ? Zhonghu (Öкú) - Two-stringed fiddle, lower pitch than erhu ? Gaohu (¸ßºú) - Two-stringed fiddle, higher pitch than erhu ? Banhu (°åºú) - Two-stringed fiddle with a coconut resonator and wooden face ? Jinghu (¾©ºú) - Two-stringed fiddle, very high pitched, used mainly for Peking Opera
  • 11. Silk | struck ? Yangqin (“PÇÙ) - Hammered dulcimer of varying strings struck using two bamboo hammers (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C4n4NuGaaOk)
  • 12. Bamboo ? Dizi (µÑ×Ó) - Transverse bamboo flute with buzzing membrane ? Xiao - End-blown flute ? Suona - A double reed wind instrument with a flaring metal bell; also called haidi (º£µÑ) (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3i5_I _adjqU)
  • 13. Japanese Flutes ? Fue ? Shinobue ? Shakuhachi http://youtube.com/watch?v=y1vW24fFeDM
  • 14. Wood ? Muyu - A rounded woodblock carved in the shape of a fish, struck with a wooden stick. Often used in Buddhist chanting
  • 15. Stone ? Bianqing (¾Žíà or ±àíà) - A rack of stone tablets that are hung by ropes from a wooden frame and struck using a mallet
  • 16. Metal ? Chuzeng Baizhong (³þÔø°ÙçŠ) - 100 bronze bells hung on a rack, struck using poles ? Bianzhong (¾ŽçŠ) - 65 bronze bells hung on a rack, struck using poles
  • 17. Clay ? Xun (‰_) - Ocarina made of baked clay (http://youtube.com/watch?v=_GabHGlGm14)
  • 18. Gourd ? Sheng - A free reed mouth organ consisting of varying number of bamboo pipes inserted into a gourd chamber with finger holes ? Japan: Sho ? Hulusi - A free reed wind instrument with three bamboo pipes which pass through a gourd wind chest; one pipe has finger holes and the other two are drone pipes; used primarily in Yunnan province
  • 19. Hide (¸ï) ? Dagu - Large drum ? Huagu - Flower drum ? Bangu - Small, high pitched drum used in Beijing oper ? YouTube Video | http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hwUeVu0odPA
  • 20. Ensemble music ? Silk and Bamboo ? Theatrical traditions - Beijing Opera (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U4QApzExgSo ) - Noh (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-jd9XJeb-PY& ) - Kabuki - Pansori (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wt_ifMmvMik ) ¨C Orchestral and Modern - Korean Popular Singer | Rain (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O5B0XItDpSM ) - Taiwan | Jay-Chou (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZF7iZwweFGs ) - Japanese | Utada Hikaru (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iK1ScnCibtE )
  • 21. Life back in the Tang Dynasty & Its Influence (618 - 907 AD) 290 Years
  • 22. The Center of the World ? Cities in China ¨Cwalls and markets ? 754: 1,859 cities, 321 prefectures, and 1,538 counties ? The greatest: Chang'an, population of 2 million ? Walls: 18 feet high, enclosed an area of 30 square miles¡ªmore for security than to stop an invasion ? Roads: Narrowest, 82 feet wide, those leading to the gates¡ª328 feet wide, imperial way = 492 feet
  • 24. Religious Institutions ? 91 Buddhist monasteries in Chang'an (64 for monks, 27 for nuns) ? 16 Daoist temples (10 for priests, 6 for priestesses) ? 2 Nestorian Christian churches ? 4 Zoroastrian Shrines ? Some Buddhist monasteries were the size of entire wards
  • 25. Large Goose Pagoda (210 feet)
  • 26. Left: Large Goose Pagoda Top: Small Goose Pagoda (149 feet) These are the only structures to survive from the Tang relatively intact (One was said to rise to 330 feet)
  • 27. The Pleasure Quarters ? Locale for high-class courtesans (many of whom were from poor families) ? Girls were only let out on the 8, 18th, 28th days of the month, to hear Buddhist lectures in a nearby monastery ? Best courtesans were skilled in singing, dancing. They supervised feasts, played games, kept the party moving
  • 28. Han Xizai's Party by Gu Hongzhang (Five Dynasties) (907 - 960 AD ) 54 Years
  • 29. Top: Han Xizai's Party (in full) Right: Fairies in Fairyland, Yuan Gao (Five Dynasties)
  • 30. Clothing ? Commoners: loose, baggy trousers, tunics, sashes tied at the waist, bamboo hats ? Formal dress (men): Robes (think bathrobes), silk, patterned, two layers, sash, large sleeves, cloth cap/turban, boots ? Formal dress (women): Similar to the kimono or the hanbok. Could be revealing (low cut), or exposing the shoulders
  • 31. Left: Hanbok¡ªKorea Right: Kimono¡ªJapan Both were derived from Tang elite fashion in China
  • 32. Cont. ? Jewelry: ? Men: element of formal court wear. Girdle pendants, belt hooks, leather belts with jade plaques ? Women: earrings, necklaces, bracelets, hairpins the most important (personal decorations) ? Women plucked their eyebrows and colored them back on, beauty marks were added as well
  • 34. Entertainment ? Entertainers: magicians, dancers, musicians (troupes), acrobats ? Sports: polo, football (soccer), archery ? Early drama, puppetry, storytellers ? Games: Chinese chess, pitch pot, ? Parties: poetry, drinking, gambling
  • 35. Lives of Men and Women ? The life cycle: ? Pre-natal: Mother should burn incense, read poetry, sit properly and strum the guqin¡ª fetal teaching ? Woman went into seclusion a month before birth ? Child (if well-to-do) could be nursed by wet- nurses, or even raised by them ? Child was considered one year old at birth (life starts at conception)
  • 36. Examinations ? Tested for child prodigies ? 3 exams: Classical Masters, Advanced Scholars, Elevated Warriors ? Took place in spring¡ªClassical Masters most prestigious ? Example: 740 test: 65 fill in questions for 8 classics, oral exam, 10 questions on interpretation, 3 essays on contemporary problems
  • 37. A shirt covered with excerpts from the Classics and commentaries, possibly used for cheating in the exams
  • 38. Marriage ? A social contract between families (power, wealth, or out of friendship) ? Arranged, love matches were rare ? Girl leaves her family and moves in with husband's family (patrilocal) ? Expected to serve her husband and more importantly, his parents as if they were her own
  • 39. Justifications for Divorce ? The ¡°Seven Dismissals¡± (even if the wife disagrees) ? 1) No children (sons) by the age of 49 ? 2) Adultery (on her part) ? 3) Refusal to serve her in-laws ? 4) Talkativeness (exposing family affairs) ? 5) Jealousy ? 6) Theft (in-laws property) ? 7) Incurable disease
  • 40. Three Ways She Can Stay ? The law offered certain protections: ? 1) If she had observed the 27 month mourning period for her husband's parents (filial) ? 2) He had gained wealth, rank, since she had married him ? 3) She had no family to return to ? If he divorced her and one of these applied, he was subject to 100 blows from the thick rod and forced to take her back
  • 41. China During the ¡°Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms¡±
  • 42. The Song Dynasty (960 - 1279 AD 320 Years )
  • 44. Song Taizu (Zhao Kuangyin) The Song marked return to Han Chinese rule in China¡ªfor the first time in a major dynasty since the Han itself.
  • 45. Ding ware, a thin white porcelain was produced in the Song and was known for its high quality
  • 46. Urbanization ? Shift to the cities: 10% of the population living in cities ? Kaifeng (capital): trade valued at 50% more than London in 1711 (not equalled in Europe until 18th century) ? Popular urban culture: street shows, dramas, increasing freedom of movement ? Cities as the center of cultural life¡ªamusement quarters
  • 47. The ¡°Qingming Scroll¡± showing Kaifeng during the Song (attributed to Zhang Zeduan)--the entire painting is 5.25 meters long!
  • 50. Footbinding ? Origin traced to the Tang (Emperor's concubine¡ªdancer) ? Becomes popular during the Song¡ªrestricted to upper classs. Why? ? How? Early forms not as severe as the Qing¡ªbut ideal foot size was eventually 4 in. in length ? Bound by mother/grandmother at age 4-7¡ª extremely painful, could take up to 10 years ? Why? Sexual appeal, a symbol of class, and later, a marker of civilization (vs. barbarians)
  • 51. Are these kinds of body alterations unique in the world?
  • 52. The Mongol Invasion (1271 - 1368 AD 98 Years )
  • 54. Within 20 years of Genghis Khan¡¯s death, the Mongol Empire spanned much of Russia, China, Azerbaijan, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Kuwait, Armenia, Korea (North and South), Afghanistan, Turkmenistan, Moldova, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Georgia, Iraq and Iran. It was the largest land empire in history.
  • 55. The extent of the Mongol Empire and the route that Marco Polo took
  • 56. Khubilai Khaghan and his wife, Chabi
  • 58. Ming Dynasty (1368 - 1644 AD) 277 Years Zhu Yuanzhong¡ªMing Taizu
  • 59. The Last Dynasty ¨CQing (Qing Dynasty 1644 - 1911 AD 267 Years )
  • 60. The Qing (1644-1911) ? Conquered the Ming ? No change in landownership ? Kept civil service examination ? Kept the Ming Code (laws) ? Respect of Chinese customs ? Differences: Manchu clothes and the queue
  • 61. The Manchus ? Northern group¡ªclaim shared cultural traits with the Jurchen ? Banner system¡ªway of organizing society (300 households form a company, 50 companies form a banner ? Brutal conquest of the south¡ªmassacre in Yangzhou
  • 62. ¡°Keep your hair, lose your head. Keep your head, lose your hair.¡±
  • 63. The Three Great Emperors Qing Taizu (Nurhaci) Kangxi (r. 1661-72) Qianlong (r. 1736-96)
  • 64. General Events ? Increase in population: from 60 million --> 150 million --> 300 million (end of the 18th century) ? Continued policy of autocratic rule, exams, ¡°Confucian rulers¡±--move to legitimacy¡ªfar more successful than the Mongols ? Additions to the empire: Tibet (iffy), Xinjiang, Taiwan (Zheng Chenggong/Koxinga¡ª1681)