Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Asian Transitions in an Age of Global Change Stearns, Chapter 22 or 28 Janet R. Martin W.T. Woodson HS

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Asian Transitions in an Age of Global Change Stearns, Chapter 22 or 28 Janet R. Martin W.T. Woodson HS"— Presentation transcript:

1 Asian Transitions in an Age of Global Change Stearns, Chapter 22 or 28 Janet R. Martin W.T. Woodson HS Janet.Martin@fcps.edu

2 1500s Europeans arrive in East & Southeast Asia Asia not much affected at first  China & Japan strong enough to resist http://home.planet.nl/~eljee/J.htm

3 Vasco da Gama 1498 voyage to India  Opened the way east for Europeans Europe had little to trade Asians not interested in Christianity http://college.hmco.com/history/west/mosaic/chapter9/images/vasco_da_gama.jpg

4 Limits to European success Sea power allowed:  Control of spice exports  Regulation of some areas in Asian trade network  Europe participation, not control  Tribute regimes http://www.thegutsygourmet.net/post-spice.jpg

5 Portuguese empire http://geography.ucdavis.edu/njrallan/class/geo10/slides/images/Geo10-124_jpg.jpg

6 Dutch trading empire, 1650 http://occawlonline.pearsoned.com/bookbind/pubbooks/brummett_awl/chapter20/medialib/thumbs/ch20_378.html

7 Overall, South & Southeast Asia  Europeans stronger,  But most Asians kept control East Asia  Ming China & Tokugawa Japan dominant

8 Japan Governed since 1100s by shogunates  Military governments 1300-early 1400s  Order breaking down  Independent feudal states in conflict

9 Nobunaga (1534-1582) One of first daimyos  Innovative & fierce  Extensive use of firearms After his defeat, his generals gained control of Japan Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1536-1598) http://www.wicknet.org/history/togden/Chapters/Chapter%208%20and%209/Chapters%208%20and%209%20Pictures/hideyoshi.jpg

10 Toyotomi Hideyoshi Attacks Korea 1592, 1597 Defeated by Admiral Yi Sun- Sin “Turtle Boats”  First ironclad warships http://www.pennfamily.org/KSS-USA/690428-621.htm

11 Tokugawa Ieyasu (1543-1616) 1 st of 15 Tokugawa shoguns 1603  Capital at Edo (Tokyo)  Brought all daimyos under his authority  Civil wars ended http://samourais.free.fr/S_HistoireJapon.html

12 “The nightingale does not sing!” Nobunaga  “We will kill it.” Toyotomi Hideyoshi  “We will wait.” Tokugawa Ieyasu  “We will teach it.” http://www.uccash.com/graphics.htm

13 Edo castle http://dougukan.jp/B24.html

14 Tokugawa years Great Peace through dictatorship Monopoly on gunpowder technology Rigid class system http://www.hogaku.it/storia/azuchi_momoyama/map2.gif

15 Restricted Europeans’ access to Japan 1500s: Portuguese, Spanish Dutch arrived Traders & missionaries  Francis Xavier By 1614, up to 300,000 converts  10% of population  http://www.frontpagemag.com/articles/Printable.asp?ID=3993 http://www.kostecki.de/en/chegada.htm “Portuguese arrive in Japan” Thomas Kostecki

16 Shoguns distrusted Christianity Restrictions began 1580s  Missionaries ordered to leave  1590s persecution began  Banned 1614 http://cue.stanford.edu/journal/entry.cgi?index=382 Monument to Nagasaki martyrs

17 1649 Japan closed to foreigners By 1630s, Japanese ships forbidden to sail overseas Only Nagasaki open to foreign merchants  Dutch post on Deshima Island Western books banned http://www.hendrick-hamel.henny-savenije.pe.kr/images/deshima.jpg

18 Shogunate’s accomplishments Peace restored Population grew Roads, canals, internal economy grew Tokugawas dynamic through mid-1700s  Inflexibility  Mid-1800s: Japan forced open by foreign powers (U.S. Commodore Perry)  Tokugawa rule ended 1868

19 Ming Dynasty 1368-1644 Ruled world’s most populous state Restored ethnic Chinese rule after 400 years’ foreign domination http://acc6.its.brooklyn.cuny.edu/~phalsall/

20 Founder Zhu Yuanzhang  Peasant origins  Buddhist monk Military commander in revolt against Mongols Became Hongwu emperor  Laws favorable to peasants http://www.paulnoll.com/China/Dynasty/history-Ming-emperors.html

21 Hall of Harmony http://www.historywiz.com/forbiddencity.htm

22 Dragon throne http://www.historywiz.com/qing.htm

23 Peak of cultural grandeur & elegance Confucianism revived Civil service exams reinstated, expanded Return to scholar-gentry dominance Kaifeng Zhuxi (Neoconfucian)

24 Foreign relations: Most dynamic dynasty 1300s-1400s: active in conquering neighbors Population growth based on new American crops  Corn  Potato  Sweet potato  (Cotton) Ming peasant with wheelbarrow

25 Great Wall Final & lasting reconstruction Built last 1000 kilometers http://www.free-beauty-tips.com/bw3.html

26 Culture Principal strength in 1500s-1600s Art & literature  Novels Silk Porcelain http://www.jozan.net/Artikelbilleder/MTA2003/Textile17ct-Ming-noah1_gr.jpg

27 Ming porcelain Emperors were biggest customers Prized by wealthy across Eurasia Rougher, more durable pieces sold to foreigners  For silver  American silver gave Europeans much greater access to Chinese markets

28 Europeans began arriving Portuguese, then Spanish China was too big to conquer  Established trading houses Chinese image of 18 th -century European sailor

29 Matteo Ricci Jesuit priest & scholar  Respected by Chinese Traveled in China  1583-1610  Adopted Chinese dress  Learned language Appointed court mathematician & astronomer Little success in spreading Christianity

30 Voyages of discovery Zheng He Mongol, eunuch 7 naval voyages, 1405-1433

31 7 Voyages of Zheng He http://www1.cs.columbia.edu/~tliu/chinese/zhenghe.html

32 Zhenghe’s fleet 1 st expedition:  62 large ships  200 smaller ships  28000 men

33 Compared to Europeans Zheng He’s ships 400 feet long Santa Maria 85 feet

34 Why did they stop? Interesting but not practical  Giraffes, zebras Glamorous but expensive Analogy: US cut back space program

35 Chinese/European point of view Chinese:  Emperor: curious, ambitious  Merchants opposed—China is rich already  Scholar gentry opposed waste of money threat to their power Confucian bias against merchants & trade Europeans: wide support  Increase national & personal wealth, power  Spread Christianity

36 Fall of Ming Poor leadership Internal corruption Peasant revolts Manchu (Northern nomads) invaded  Founded Qing dynasty http://www.regenttour.com/china/history/qing.htm

37 Qing Dynasty 1644-1912 Last dynasty  Kangxi Emperor 1654-1722


Download ppt "Asian Transitions in an Age of Global Change Stearns, Chapter 22 or 28 Janet R. Martin W.T. Woodson HS"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google