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Asian Empires

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Asian Empires. Korea. Classical China. was centered on the Huang He River ( Yellow River ) and was geographically isolated. Gobi Desert. Huange He River. Geographical barriers include the Gobi Desert in the northwest. Himalaya Mountains in the southwest . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Asian Empires

Asian Empires

Korea

Page 2: Asian Empires

Huange He River

Classical China

was centered on the Huang He River (Yellow River) and was geographically isolated.

Gobi Desert

Page 4: Asian Empires

Barbarian invaders raided Chinese settlement in the North.These barbarians were the Mongols, skillful horseman who raised trouble with the Chinese.

Page 5: Asian Empires

Mongol Armies• Destroyed cities and countryside• Conquered China, Russia, and Muslim

states in SW Asia• Created the largest empire ever

Page 6: Asian Empires

Genghis Khan, ruler of the Mongols, conquered most of Asia, including China and Russia. He ruled and conquered using great strategies and fear. He believed in terrifying his enemies.

Page 7: Asian Empires

Due to these invasions from the North, China builds a man-made barrier to keep the Mongols out, the Great Wall of China.

Page 8: Asian Empires

The Great Wall of China was built by Qin Shi Huangdi, emperor of China.It was built as a line of defense against invasions from the North.

Page 9: Asian Empires

Qin Shi HuangdiFirst Chinese Emperor.

Terracotta army buried with Shi Huangdi. Over 2,000 of them.

Page 10: Asian Empires

China was governed by a succession of ruling families called dynasties.

Chinese rulers were considered divine. The gods gave them the right to rule as long as their rule was just.

Page 11: Asian Empires

Dynastic Cycle

They served under a Mandate of Heaven.

Dynasty is founded by a powerful leader

Period of great power and prosperity

Period of Decline

Period of Rebellion and overthrow of Dynasty

Page 12: Asian Empires

It facilitated trade.Helped to maintain contact between China and other cultures as far away as Rome

Silk Road

Page 13: Asian Empires

The Silk Road extends from China to the Mediterranean Sea. This helped with Cultural Diffusion, spreading ideas and culture from China to Rome.

Page 14: Asian Empires

Trade was spread from such cities as, Xi’an (Chang’an) in China to Samarkand in Uzbekistan.

Page 15: Asian Empires

Besides spreading trade, the Silk Road was used to spread such ideas as religion. Buddhism, one of India’s main faiths, spread to China on these major trade routes.

Page 16: Asian Empires

Many scientific and technological advances came about during the Tang and Song Dynasties.

China’s Contributions

Porcelain a white ceramic made of a special clay and mineral only found in China

Page 17: Asian Empires

Silk was kept secret for thousands of years by the Chinese. They raised worms which feed off of mulberry leaves.

The worms are killed in their cocoons and then unwrapped as a continuous thread of over 2,000 feet. It takes approximately 2,000 cocoons to make a pound of silk. Silk production was eventually spread to other Asian countries like Japan.

Page 18: Asian Empires

Paper• Paper making technology spread from China to the

Muslim world and from there to Byzantium and Western Europe

Page 19: Asian Empires

Block Printing was invented by the Chinese. A printer would carve a word or letter in a block of wood, ink the block, and then print. Chinese writing is made up of thousands of characters.

Page 20: Asian Empires

Paper money was invented to replace the heavy metal coins used by merchants, especially those crossing the silk road.

Page 22: Asian Empires

Magnetic Compass• Before its invention, navigators had to depend on

the positions of the sun, the moon, and the north star for their bearings. Used by the Chinese for centuries before the compass reached Europe. Helped to make the Chinese powerful seamen.

Page 23: Asian Empires

Civil Service -A system developed during the Han Dynasty. Chinese civilians could take examinations to see what government jobs they qualified for.

Page 24: Asian Empires

This system of testing was well received by Confucian scholars.

The Civil Service system was part of the Chinese bureaucracy. It included 18 ranks of civil service jobs.

Page 25: Asian Empires

Confucianism was never a religion, it was a philosophy.

It became the foundation for Chinese government and social order.

Confucianism

Page 26: Asian Empires

Confucius spread beyond China and influenced civilizations throughout East Asia.

For Confucius, social order of family and government were the most important.

"Confucius cared most about people

and was perhaps the

first great humanist in

history."--Sanderson Beck

Page 27: Asian Empires

His disciples wrote The Analects, a compiling of Confucius beliefs. These beliefs included:

Belief that humans are good, not bad

Respect for elders

Page 28: Asian Empires

Code of politeness still used in Chinese society today

Emphasis on education

Ancestor worship

Helped to form the social order in China

Page 29: Asian Empires

Taoism (Daoism)

Chinese thinker, Laozi, is the founder.

His values for people included:

Viewed by Chinese as a philosophy and a religion.

Page 30: Asian Empires

Simple life and inner peace - by seeking harmony with nature.

Humility - people can do little to influence the outcome of events

Page 31: Asian Empires

Laozi believed that government should do as little as possible and leave the people alone.

Yin/Yang represent opposite for both Confucianism and Taoism.

It is the balance of opposites (i.e. good/bad, dark/light, man/woman)

Page 32: Asian Empires

BuddhismBegins in India and spreads throughout Asia

Page 33: Asian Empires

Is a religion that stressed that everyone could reach Nirvana - inner peace.

In order to reach Nirvana Buddhist most follow:

Four Noble Truths

Eightfold Path

Page 34: Asian Empires

Spreads throughout Asia with the help of rulers like Asoka.

Page 35: Asian Empires

Buddhism is divided into two major sects:

Mahayana and Theravada

Page 36: Asian Empires

Mahayana - this sect offered salvation to all who worked to save humanity.Primarily found in Tibet, Mongolia, China, Korea, and Japan.

Page 37: Asian Empires

Theravada - this sect held to the Buddha’s strict, original teachings.

Practiced primarily in Burma, Cambodia, Laos, Thailand, Sri Lanka, and Vietnam.