New Note
Chapter 7: India and China Establish Empires, 400 B.C.- A.D. 550
Chapter 7.1: India’s First Empires
Chandragupta Maura may have been born in the powerful kingdom of Magadha.
He gathered an army, killed the unpopular Nanda king, and in about 321 B.C. claimed the throne.
This began the Mauryan Empire.
Chandragupta moved northwest, seizing all the land from Magadha to the Indus.
Around 305 B.C. Chandragupta began to battle Seleucus I, one of Alexander the Great’s generals.
Seleucus inherited part of Alexander’s empire.
He wanted to establish Meacedonian control over the Indus valley.
After several years of fighting Chandragupta defeated Seleucus.
By 303 B.C. the Mauryan Empire stretched more than 2000 miles uniting north India politically for the first time.
He relied on an adviser named Kautilya, a member of the priestly caste.
Kautilya wrote a ruler’s handbook called the Arthasastra.
This book proposed tough minded policies to hold an empire together, including spying on people and employing political assassination.
Chandragupta created a highly bureaucratic government.
He divided the empire into four provinces, each headed by a royal prince.
Each province was then divided into local districts, whose officials assessed taxes and enforced the law.
In 301 B.C. Chandragupta’s son assumed the throne.
He ruled for 32 years.
Chandragupta’s grandson, Asoka, brought the Mauryan empire to its height.
He became the king in 269 B.C.
He at first followed in this grandfather’s footsteps, waging war to expand his empire.
During a bloody war against the neighboring states of Kalinga, 100,000 soldiers were slain, and even more civilians perished.
Asoka felt sorrow over the slaughter at Kalinga.
He studied Buddhism and decided to rule by the Buddha’s teaching of “peace to all beings”
Religious toleration: acceptance of people who held different religious beliefs.
Asoka had extensive roads built so he could reach all parts of India.
This improved travel and communication.
Asoka’s death left a power vacuum.
In northern and central India, regional kings challenged the imperial government.
The kingdoms of central India which had only been loosely held in the Mauryan Empire, soon regained their independence. ]
The Andhra Dynasty arose and dominated the region for hundreds of years.
The Andhra profited from the extensive trade between north and south India and also with Rome, Sri Lanka, and Southeast Asia.
Southern India also experienced turmoil.
It was home to three kingdoms that had never been conquered by the Mauryan.
The people who worked in these regions spoke the Tamil language and are called the Tamil people.
These three kingdoms were often at war with each other and other states.
After 500 years of invasions and turmoil, a strong leader again arose in the northern state of Magadha.
His name was Chandra Gupta.
This was part of India’s second empire, the Gupta Empire.
It oversaw a great flowering of Indian civilization, especially Hindu culture.
The Gupta era is the first period for which historians have much information about daily life in India.
Most Indians lived in small villages.
The majority were farmers, who walked daily from their homes to outlying fields.
Craftspeople had shops on the street level and lived in the rooms above.
Most Indian families were patriarchal.
Patriarchal: headed by the eldest male.
parents , grandparents, uncles, aunts, and children all worked together to raise their crops.
Farmers often had to irrigate their crops.
There was a tax on water, and every month, people had to give a day’s worth of labor to maintain wells, irrigation ditches, reservoirs, and dams.
Southern India followed a different cultural pattern.
Some groups were matriarchal, headed by the mother rather than the father.
Property, and sometimes the throne, was passed through the female line.
The empire ended about 535 due to them being overrun by the Huns or other Central Asian nomads.
Chapter 7.2: Trade spreads Indian Religions and Culture
By 250 B.C. Hinduism and Buddhism were India’s two main faiths.
Hinduism: a complex polytheistic religion that blended Aryan belief with the many gods and cults of the diverse peoples who preceded them.
Buddhism: teaches that desire causes suffering and that humans should overcome desire by following the Eightfold Path.
Over the centuries, both religions had become increasingly removed from the people
Hinduism became dominated by priests, while the Buddhist ideal of self-denial proved difficult for many to follow.
The Buddha had stressed that each person could reach a state of nirvana.
Nirvana was achieved by rejecting the sensory world and embracing spiritual discipline.
The Buddha had forbidden people to worship him.
By the first century A.D. Buddhists had divided over new doctrines.
Those who accepted them belonged to the Mahayana sect.
Those who held to the Buddha’s stricter, original teachings belonged to the Theravada sect.
The new trends in Buddhism inspired Indian art.
Artists carved huge statues of the Buddha for people to worship.
Wealthy Buddhist merchants who were eager to do good deeds paid for the construction of stupas.
Stupas: mounded stone structures built over holy relics.
Merchants also commissioned the carving of cave temples out of solid rock.
Artists then adorned these temples with beautiful sculptures and paintings.
By the time of the Mauryan Empire, Hinduism had developed a complex set of sacrifices that could be performed only by the priests.
People who weren’t priests had less and less direct connection with the religion.
The three most important Hindu gods were Brahma, the creator of the world, Vishnu, the preserver of the world, and Shiva, the destroyer of the world.
Vishnu and Shiva were the favorites.
Many Indians devoted themselves to these gods.
India entered a highly productive period in literature, art, science, and mathematics that continued until roughly A.D. 500.
One of India’s greatest writers was Kalidasa.
He may have been the court poet for chandra Gupta II.
His most famous play is Shakuntala.
It tells the story of a girl who falls in love and marries a middle age king.
In the second century A.D. the city of Madurai in southern India became a site of writing academies.
More than 2000 Tamil poems from this period still exist.
Drama was also very popular.
In Southern India traveling troupes of actress put on performances in cities across the region.
Women as well as men took part in these shows, which combined drama and dance.
The expansion of trade spurred the advance of science.
They began to use a calendar based on the cycles of the sun rather than the moon.
Indian mathematics was among the most advanced in the world.
Modern numerals, the zero and the decimal system were invented in India.
Around A.D. 500 an indian named Aryabhata calculated the value of Pi to four decimal places.
He also calculated the length of the solar year as 365.358 days.
This was very close to modern calculations made with an atomic clock.
India has always been rich in precious resources.
Spices, diamonds, sapphires, gold ,pearls, and beautiful woods have been valuable items of exchange.
Trade between India and regions as distant as Africa began more than 4000 years ago.
Groups who invaded India after Mauryan rule ended helped to expand India’s trade to new regions.
Central Asian nomads told Indians about a vast network of caravan routes known as Silk Roads.
Sea trade also increased.
Traders used coastal routes around the rim of the Arabian Sea and up the Persain Gulf to bring goods from India to Rome.
Increase in trade led to the rise of banking in India.
Commerce was quite profitable.
Bankers were willing to lend money to merchants and charge them interest on the loans.
Interest rates varied, depending on how risky business was.
Chapter 7.3: Han Emperors in China
Rumblings of discontent during the Qin Dynasty grew to roars in the years after Shi Huangdi’s death.
Peasants were bitter over years of high taxes, harsh labor quotas, and a severe penal system.
They rebelled.
Two powerful leaders emerged.
Xiang Yu was an aristocratic general who was willing to allow the warlords to keep their territories if they would acknowledge him as their feudal lord.
Liu Bang was one of Xiang Yu’s generals.
He eventually turned against Xiang Yu.
They fought each other and Liu Bang won and declared himself the first emperor of the Han Dynasty.
The Han Dynasty ruled China for more than 400 years, and is divided into two periods.
The former Han ruled for about two centuries, until the Later Han ruled for almost another two centuries.
Liu Bang's first goal was to destroy the rival kings’ power.
His first goal was to destroy the rival kings’ power.
He established a centralized government.
Centralized government: in which a central authority controls the running of a state.
To win popular support, Liu Bang departed from Shi Huangdi’s strict legalism.
He lowered taxes and softened harsh punishments.
When Liu Bang died in 195 B.C., his son became emperor, but in name only.
The real ruler was his mother, Empress Lu.
The empress outlived her son and retained control of the throne ebay naming first one infant and then another as emperor.
Because the infants were too young to rule, she remained in control.
When empress Lu died in 180 B.C. people who remained loyal to Liu Bang’s family, rather than to Lu’s family, came back into power.
They rid the palace of the old empress’s relatives by executing them.
Traditionally, the emperor chose the favorite among his wives as the empress and appointed one of her sons as successor.
The palace women and their families competed fiercely for the emperor’s notice
The families would make alliances with influential people in the court.
When Liu Bang’s great-grandson took the throne, he continued Liu Bang’s centralizing policies.
Wudi who reigned from 141 to 87 B.C. held the throne longer than any other Han emperor.
He is called the “Martial Emperor” because he adopted the policy of expanding the Chinese empire through war.
His first set of enemies were the Xiongnu, fierce nomads known for their deadly archery skills from horseback.
They roamed the steppes to the north and west of China. They made raids into china's settled farmland.
They took hostages and stole grain, livestock, and other valuable items.
The early Han emperors tried to buy off the Xiongnu by sending them thousands of pounds of silk, rice, alcohol, and money.
Normally they accepted these gifts and continued their raids.
Wudi realized that the bribes were making the Xiongnu stronger, so he sent more than 100,000 soldiers to fight them.
After his army forced the nomads to retreat into Central Asia, Wudi attempted to make his northwest border safe by settling his troops on Xiongnu's former pastures.
He also colonized areas to the northeast, now known as Manchuria and Korea.
He sent his armies south, where they conquered mountain tribes and set up Chinese colonies all the way into what is now Vietnam
By the end of his reign, the empire had expanded nearly to the bounds of present-day China.
Chinese society under the Han dynasty was highly structured.
The Chinese believed their emperor to have divine authority, they accepted his exercise of power.
He was the link between heaven and earth.
If the emperor did his job well, China would have had peace and prosperity.
If he failed, the heavens showed their displeasure with earthquakes, flood, and famines.
The Chinese emperor relied on a complex bureaucracy to help him rule.
Running the bureaucracy and maintaining the imperial army were expensive.
To raise money, the government levied taxes.
Chinese peasants owed part of their yearly crops to the government .
Merchants also paid taxes.
Besides taxes, the peasants owed the government a month’s worth of labo or military service every year.
With this labor the Han emperors built roads and dug canals and irrigation ditches.
Wudi’s government employed more than 130,000 people.
The bureaucracy included 18 different ranks of civil service jobs, which were government jobs that civilians obtained by taking examinations.
Chinese emperors rewarded loyal followers with government posts.
The early Han emperors had employed some Confucian scholars as court advisers, but it was Wudi who began actively to favor them.
Confucius had taught that gentlemen should practice “reverence, generosity, truthfulness, diligence, and kindness
These were the qualities he wanted his government officials to have. Wudi set up a school where hopeful job applicants from all over China could come to study Confucius’s works.
After their studies, job applicants took formal examinations in history, law, literature, and Confucianism.
Only sons of wealthy landowners had a chance at a government career.
The civil service system begun by Wudi worked so efficiently that it continued in China until 1912.’
Advances in technology influenced all aspects of Chinese life.
Paper was invented in A.D. 105.
Before that. Books were usually written on silk.
Paper was cheaper, so books became more readily available.
This helped spread education in China.
Paper was much more useful for record keeping.
Another technological advancement was the collar harness for horses.
This allowed horses to pull much heavier loads than did the harness being used in Europe at the time.
The chinese perfected a plow that was more efficient because it had two blades.
They also improved iron tools, invented the wheelbarrow, and began to use water mills to grind grain.
During the Han dynasty, the population of China swelled to 60 million.
With all of the mouths to feed, Chinese people considered agriculture the most important and honored occupation.
The same decree dismissed commerce as the least important occupation, manufacturing and commerce was very important to the Han Empire.
The government established monopolies on the mining of salt, the forging of iron, the minting of coins, and the brewing of alcohol.
Monopoly: occurs when a group has exclusive control over the production and distribution of certain goods.
The techniques of silk production became a closely guarded state secret.
The Chinese began to learn about the foods and fashions common in foreign lands.
To unify the empire, the chinese government encouraged assimilation.
Assimilation: the process of making conquered peoples part of Chinese culture.
To promote it, the government sent Chinese farmers to settle newly colonized areas.
It encouraged them to intermarry with local peoples.
Government officials set up schools to train local people in the Confucian philosophy and then appointed local scholars to government posts.
Several writers also helped unify Chinese culture by recording China’s history.
Sima Qian is called the Grand Historian for his work in compiling a history of China from the ancient dynasties to Wudi.
He visited historical sites, interviewed eyewitnesses, researched official records, and examined artifacts./
His book is called Records of the Grand Historian.
Another famous book was the history of the Former Han Dynasty.
Ban Zhao gained fame as a historian, however, most women made important contributions to their family’s economic life through duties in the home and work in the fields of the family’s farm.
Some upper class women lived much different lives.
Daoist and later Buddhist nunes were able to gain an education and lead lives apart from their families.
The Han emperors faced grave problems.
One of the main problems was an economic imbalance caused by customs that allowed the rich to gain more wealth at the expense of the poor.
A family’s land was divided equally among all of the father’s male heirs.
With such small plots of land, farmers had a hard time raising enough crops to sell or even feed their family.
They often went into debt and the landowner took possession of the farmer’s land.
Large landowners were not required to pay taxes, so when their land holdings increased, the amount of land that was left for the government to tax decreased.
The government then pressed harder to collect money from small farmers.
The gap between rich and poor increased.
With economic change came political instability.
Court advisers, palace servants, and rival influential families wove complex plots to influence the emperor’s choice of who would succeed him as ruler.
Chaos reigned in the palace, and with peasant revolts, unrest spread across the land as well.
Wang Mang decided that a strong ruler was needed to restore order.
For 6 years he had been acting as regent for the infant who had been crowned emperor.
In A.D. 9 Wang took the imperial title for himself and overthrew the Han, thus ending the Former Han, the first half of the Han Dynasty.
He tried to bring the country under control ,and relieve the money shortage.
He took away large landholdings from the rich and planned to redistribute the land to farmers who lost their land.
This plan angered large landowners.
Peace was restored to China in the first decades of the Later Han Dynasty and was quite prosperous.
Chapter 7: India and China Establish Empires, 400 B.C.- A.D. 550
Chapter 7.1: India’s First Empires
Chandragupta Maura may have been born in the powerful kingdom of Magadha.
He gathered an army, killed the unpopular Nanda king, and in about 321 B.C. claimed the throne.
This began the Mauryan Empire.
Chandragupta moved northwest, seizing all the land from Magadha to the Indus.
Around 305 B.C. Chandragupta began to battle Seleucus I, one of Alexander the Great’s generals.
Seleucus inherited part of Alexander’s empire.
He wanted to establish Meacedonian control over the Indus valley.
After several years of fighting Chandragupta defeated Seleucus.
By 303 B.C. the Mauryan Empire stretched more than 2000 miles uniting north India politically for the first time.
He relied on an adviser named Kautilya, a member of the priestly caste.
Kautilya wrote a ruler’s handbook called the Arthasastra.
This book proposed tough minded policies to hold an empire together, including spying on people and employing political assassination.
Chandragupta created a highly bureaucratic government.
He divided the empire into four provinces, each headed by a royal prince.
Each province was then divided into local districts, whose officials assessed taxes and enforced the law.
In 301 B.C. Chandragupta’s son assumed the throne.
He ruled for 32 years.
Chandragupta’s grandson, Asoka, brought the Mauryan empire to its height.
He became the king in 269 B.C.
He at first followed in this grandfather’s footsteps, waging war to expand his empire.
During a bloody war against the neighboring states of Kalinga, 100,000 soldiers were slain, and even more civilians perished.
Asoka felt sorrow over the slaughter at Kalinga.
He studied Buddhism and decided to rule by the Buddha’s teaching of “peace to all beings”
Religious toleration: acceptance of people who held different religious beliefs.
Asoka had extensive roads built so he could reach all parts of India.
This improved travel and communication.
Asoka’s death left a power vacuum.
In northern and central India, regional kings challenged the imperial government.
The kingdoms of central India which had only been loosely held in the Mauryan Empire, soon regained their independence. ]
The Andhra Dynasty arose and dominated the region for hundreds of years.
The Andhra profited from the extensive trade between north and south India and also with Rome, Sri Lanka, and Southeast Asia.
Southern India also experienced turmoil.
It was home to three kingdoms that had never been conquered by the Mauryan.
The people who worked in these regions spoke the Tamil language and are called the Tamil people.
These three kingdoms were often at war with each other and other states.
After 500 years of invasions and turmoil, a strong leader again arose in the northern state of Magadha.
His name was Chandra Gupta.
This was part of India’s second empire, the Gupta Empire.
It oversaw a great flowering of Indian civilization, especially Hindu culture.
The Gupta era is the first period for which historians have much information about daily life in India.
Most Indians lived in small villages.
The majority were farmers, who walked daily from their homes to outlying fields.
Craftspeople had shops on the street level and lived in the rooms above.
Most Indian families were patriarchal.
Patriarchal: headed by the eldest male.
parents , grandparents, uncles, aunts, and children all worked together to raise their crops.
Farmers often had to irrigate their crops.
There was a tax on water, and every month, people had to give a day’s worth of labor to maintain wells, irrigation ditches, reservoirs, and dams.
Southern India followed a different cultural pattern.
Some groups were matriarchal, headed by the mother rather than the father.
Property, and sometimes the throne, was passed through the female line.
The empire ended about 535 due to them being overrun by the Huns or other Central Asian nomads.
Chapter 7.2: Trade spreads Indian Religions and Culture
By 250 B.C. Hinduism and Buddhism were India’s two main faiths.
Hinduism: a complex polytheistic religion that blended Aryan belief with the many gods and cults of the diverse peoples who preceded them.
Buddhism: teaches that desire causes suffering and that humans should overcome desire by following the Eightfold Path.
Over the centuries, both religions had become increasingly removed from the people
Hinduism became dominated by priests, while the Buddhist ideal of self-denial proved difficult for many to follow.
The Buddha had stressed that each person could reach a state of nirvana.
Nirvana was achieved by rejecting the sensory world and embracing spiritual discipline.
The Buddha had forbidden people to worship him.
By the first century A.D. Buddhists had divided over new doctrines.
Those who accepted them belonged to the Mahayana sect.
Those who held to the Buddha’s stricter, original teachings belonged to the Theravada sect.
The new trends in Buddhism inspired Indian art.
Artists carved huge statues of the Buddha for people to worship.
Wealthy Buddhist merchants who were eager to do good deeds paid for the construction of stupas.
Stupas: mounded stone structures built over holy relics.
Merchants also commissioned the carving of cave temples out of solid rock.
Artists then adorned these temples with beautiful sculptures and paintings.
By the time of the Mauryan Empire, Hinduism had developed a complex set of sacrifices that could be performed only by the priests.
People who weren’t priests had less and less direct connection with the religion.
The three most important Hindu gods were Brahma, the creator of the world, Vishnu, the preserver of the world, and Shiva, the destroyer of the world.
Vishnu and Shiva were the favorites.
Many Indians devoted themselves to these gods.
India entered a highly productive period in literature, art, science, and mathematics that continued until roughly A.D. 500.
One of India’s greatest writers was Kalidasa.
He may have been the court poet for chandra Gupta II.
His most famous play is Shakuntala.
It tells the story of a girl who falls in love and marries a middle age king.
In the second century A.D. the city of Madurai in southern India became a site of writing academies.
More than 2000 Tamil poems from this period still exist.
Drama was also very popular.
In Southern India traveling troupes of actress put on performances in cities across the region.
Women as well as men took part in these shows, which combined drama and dance.
The expansion of trade spurred the advance of science.
They began to use a calendar based on the cycles of the sun rather than the moon.
Indian mathematics was among the most advanced in the world.
Modern numerals, the zero and the decimal system were invented in India.
Around A.D. 500 an indian named Aryabhata calculated the value of Pi to four decimal places.
He also calculated the length of the solar year as 365.358 days.
This was very close to modern calculations made with an atomic clock.
India has always been rich in precious resources.
Spices, diamonds, sapphires, gold ,pearls, and beautiful woods have been valuable items of exchange.
Trade between India and regions as distant as Africa began more than 4000 years ago.
Groups who invaded India after Mauryan rule ended helped to expand India’s trade to new regions.
Central Asian nomads told Indians about a vast network of caravan routes known as Silk Roads.
Sea trade also increased.
Traders used coastal routes around the rim of the Arabian Sea and up the Persain Gulf to bring goods from India to Rome.
Increase in trade led to the rise of banking in India.
Commerce was quite profitable.
Bankers were willing to lend money to merchants and charge them interest on the loans.
Interest rates varied, depending on how risky business was.
Chapter 7.3: Han Emperors in China
Rumblings of discontent during the Qin Dynasty grew to roars in the years after Shi Huangdi’s death.
Peasants were bitter over years of high taxes, harsh labor quotas, and a severe penal system.
They rebelled.
Two powerful leaders emerged.
Xiang Yu was an aristocratic general who was willing to allow the warlords to keep their territories if they would acknowledge him as their feudal lord.
Liu Bang was one of Xiang Yu’s generals.
He eventually turned against Xiang Yu.
They fought each other and Liu Bang won and declared himself the first emperor of the Han Dynasty.
The Han Dynasty ruled China for more than 400 years, and is divided into two periods.
The former Han ruled for about two centuries, until the Later Han ruled for almost another two centuries.
Liu Bang's first goal was to destroy the rival kings’ power.
His first goal was to destroy the rival kings’ power.
He established a centralized government.
Centralized government: in which a central authority controls the running of a state.
To win popular support, Liu Bang departed from Shi Huangdi’s strict legalism.
He lowered taxes and softened harsh punishments.
When Liu Bang died in 195 B.C., his son became emperor, but in name only.
The real ruler was his mother, Empress Lu.
The empress outlived her son and retained control of the throne ebay naming first one infant and then another as emperor.
Because the infants were too young to rule, she remained in control.
When empress Lu died in 180 B.C. people who remained loyal to Liu Bang’s family, rather than to Lu’s family, came back into power.
They rid the palace of the old empress’s relatives by executing them.
Traditionally, the emperor chose the favorite among his wives as the empress and appointed one of her sons as successor.
The palace women and their families competed fiercely for the emperor’s notice
The families would make alliances with influential people in the court.
When Liu Bang’s great-grandson took the throne, he continued Liu Bang’s centralizing policies.
Wudi who reigned from 141 to 87 B.C. held the throne longer than any other Han emperor.
He is called the “Martial Emperor” because he adopted the policy of expanding the Chinese empire through war.
His first set of enemies were the Xiongnu, fierce nomads known for their deadly archery skills from horseback.
They roamed the steppes to the north and west of China. They made raids into china's settled farmland.
They took hostages and stole grain, livestock, and other valuable items.
The early Han emperors tried to buy off the Xiongnu by sending them thousands of pounds of silk, rice, alcohol, and money.
Normally they accepted these gifts and continued their raids.
Wudi realized that the bribes were making the Xiongnu stronger, so he sent more than 100,000 soldiers to fight them.
After his army forced the nomads to retreat into Central Asia, Wudi attempted to make his northwest border safe by settling his troops on Xiongnu's former pastures.
He also colonized areas to the northeast, now known as Manchuria and Korea.
He sent his armies south, where they conquered mountain tribes and set up Chinese colonies all the way into what is now Vietnam
By the end of his reign, the empire had expanded nearly to the bounds of present-day China.
Chinese society under the Han dynasty was highly structured.
The Chinese believed their emperor to have divine authority, they accepted his exercise of power.
He was the link between heaven and earth.
If the emperor did his job well, China would have had peace and prosperity.
If he failed, the heavens showed their displeasure with earthquakes, flood, and famines.
The Chinese emperor relied on a complex bureaucracy to help him rule.
Running the bureaucracy and maintaining the imperial army were expensive.
To raise money, the government levied taxes.
Chinese peasants owed part of their yearly crops to the government .
Merchants also paid taxes.
Besides taxes, the peasants owed the government a month’s worth of labo or military service every year.
With this labor the Han emperors built roads and dug canals and irrigation ditches.
Wudi’s government employed more than 130,000 people.
The bureaucracy included 18 different ranks of civil service jobs, which were government jobs that civilians obtained by taking examinations.
Chinese emperors rewarded loyal followers with government posts.
The early Han emperors had employed some Confucian scholars as court advisers, but it was Wudi who began actively to favor them.
Confucius had taught that gentlemen should practice “reverence, generosity, truthfulness, diligence, and kindness
These were the qualities he wanted his government officials to have. Wudi set up a school where hopeful job applicants from all over China could come to study Confucius’s works.
After their studies, job applicants took formal examinations in history, law, literature, and Confucianism.
Only sons of wealthy landowners had a chance at a government career.
The civil service system begun by Wudi worked so efficiently that it continued in China until 1912.’
Advances in technology influenced all aspects of Chinese life.
Paper was invented in A.D. 105.
Before that. Books were usually written on silk.
Paper was cheaper, so books became more readily available.
This helped spread education in China.
Paper was much more useful for record keeping.
Another technological advancement was the collar harness for horses.
This allowed horses to pull much heavier loads than did the harness being used in Europe at the time.
The chinese perfected a plow that was more efficient because it had two blades.
They also improved iron tools, invented the wheelbarrow, and began to use water mills to grind grain.
During the Han dynasty, the population of China swelled to 60 million.
With all of the mouths to feed, Chinese people considered agriculture the most important and honored occupation.
The same decree dismissed commerce as the least important occupation, manufacturing and commerce was very important to the Han Empire.
The government established monopolies on the mining of salt, the forging of iron, the minting of coins, and the brewing of alcohol.
Monopoly: occurs when a group has exclusive control over the production and distribution of certain goods.
The techniques of silk production became a closely guarded state secret.
The Chinese began to learn about the foods and fashions common in foreign lands.
To unify the empire, the chinese government encouraged assimilation.
Assimilation: the process of making conquered peoples part of Chinese culture.
To promote it, the government sent Chinese farmers to settle newly colonized areas.
It encouraged them to intermarry with local peoples.
Government officials set up schools to train local people in the Confucian philosophy and then appointed local scholars to government posts.
Several writers also helped unify Chinese culture by recording China’s history.
Sima Qian is called the Grand Historian for his work in compiling a history of China from the ancient dynasties to Wudi.
He visited historical sites, interviewed eyewitnesses, researched official records, and examined artifacts./
His book is called Records of the Grand Historian.
Another famous book was the history of the Former Han Dynasty.
Ban Zhao gained fame as a historian, however, most women made important contributions to their family’s economic life through duties in the home and work in the fields of the family’s farm.
Some upper class women lived much different lives.
Daoist and later Buddhist nunes were able to gain an education and lead lives apart from their families.
The Han emperors faced grave problems.
One of the main problems was an economic imbalance caused by customs that allowed the rich to gain more wealth at the expense of the poor.
A family’s land was divided equally among all of the father’s male heirs.
With such small plots of land, farmers had a hard time raising enough crops to sell or even feed their family.
They often went into debt and the landowner took possession of the farmer’s land.
Large landowners were not required to pay taxes, so when their land holdings increased, the amount of land that was left for the government to tax decreased.
The government then pressed harder to collect money from small farmers.
The gap between rich and poor increased.
With economic change came political instability.
Court advisers, palace servants, and rival influential families wove complex plots to influence the emperor’s choice of who would succeed him as ruler.
Chaos reigned in the palace, and with peasant revolts, unrest spread across the land as well.
Wang Mang decided that a strong ruler was needed to restore order.
For 6 years he had been acting as regent for the infant who had been crowned emperor.
In A.D. 9 Wang took the imperial title for himself and overthrew the Han, thus ending the Former Han, the first half of the Han Dynasty.
He tried to bring the country under control ,and relieve the money shortage.
He took away large landholdings from the rich and planned to redistribute the land to farmers who lost their land.
This plan angered large landowners.
Peace was restored to China in the first decades of the Later Han Dynasty and was quite prosperous.