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CENTRAL AND EAST ASIA BY: MATTHEW KATZ, AIDAN HART, AND ANDREW WALLEN.

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Presentation on theme: "CENTRAL AND EAST ASIA BY: MATTHEW KATZ, AIDAN HART, AND ANDREW WALLEN."— Presentation transcript:

1 CENTRAL AND EAST ASIA BY: MATTHEW KATZ, AIDAN HART, AND ANDREW WALLEN

2 PERIOD 1 PREHISTORY TO 600 CE

3 THEME 1: INTERACTION BETWEEN HUMANS AND THE ENVIRONMENT

4 THEME 2: DEVELOPMENT AND INTERACTION OF CULTURES

5 THEME 3: STATE-BUILDING, EXPANSION, AND CONFLICT

6 THEME 4: CREATION, EXPANSION, AND INTERACTION OF ECONOMIC SYSTEMS Agricultural Society Trade – Luxury items – Foodstuffs – Copper Merchants – Important – Confucian dislike Technological Advancement – Exceeded Europe Japan – Strong Agriculture

7 THEME 5: DEVELOPMENT AND TRANSFORMATION OF SOCIAL STRUCTURES

8 PERIOD 2 600 CE – 1450 CE

9 THEME 1- INTERACTIONS BETWEEN HUMANS AND THE ENVIRONMENT Cities Boom! Golden Age Scholar-Gentry Art Buddhism and Art

10 THEME 2- DEVELOPMENT AND INTERACTION OF CULTURES China  Religion  Buddhism suppressed  Junks  Inventions Japan  Buddhism  Heian Court Korea  Sinification  Buddhism over Hinduism Vietnam  Nuclear Family Mongols  Take over the World  Left culture in place

11 THEME 3- STATE BUILDING, EXPANSION, CONFLICT China Dynasty Zhou Centralized Qin Han Bureaucracy Grand Canal Mongol intervention No more bureaucracy Stopped expansion Japan Cultural unity Gempei Wars Korea Allied with Tang Aristocrats Vietnam Drive South

12 THEME 4 - INTERACTION OF ECONOMIC SYSTEMS China Granaries Rice Paper money Grand Canal Japan Daimyos Guilds Korea Aristocrats Mongols Economic policy towards peasants Rising taxes

13 THEME 5 - DEVELOPMENT AND CHANGE OF SOCIAL STRUCTURES CHINA Aristocrats power reduced Military subordinate to scholar gentry. Neo-Confucian male dominance Men versatility valued JAPAN Court Life Imperial Power Warrior Elite Commercial class Barbarism Korea Aristocratic power Mongols Mongols and Muslim allies on top Artisan classes

14 PERIOD 3 (1450-1750)

15 THEME 1- INTERACTION BETWEEN HUMANS AND THE ENVIORNMENT Bubonic Plague Guns and gun powder New Ships Compass

16 THEME 2 DEVELOPMENT AND INTERACTION OF CULTURES European tribute systems in Europe Spreadng faith Maritime Asia Chinese Retreat

17 THEME 3- STATE BUILDING, EXPANSION, CONQUEST Ming Dynasty Scholar-Gentry Revival Hongwu’s reforms Ming Decline Japan Reunification Isolation

18 THEME 4 – INTERACTION OF ECONOMIC SYSTEMS Asian Trading world Asian sea trading network Economic Growth Zheng He expeditions

19 THEME 5- DEVELOPMENT AND TRANSFORMATION OF SOCIAL STRUCTURES. Scholar Gentry Returns To dominance Men and elders flourish Women confined Imperial women influential

20 PERIOD 4 (1750-1900)

21 GROWING INDUSTRIALIZATION BRINGS NEW INVENTIONS Increase in steel production. Industrialization leads to modern inventions

22 THEME 2- INTERACTION OF CULTURES Japan Western Superiority Copy cat west Dependent on West China Trade

23 THEME 3- STATE BUILDING, CONFLICT, EXPANSION JAPAN Shogunate declines not all bad 1868 Meiji China Rise and fall of Qing Bureaucracy breaks down Opium wars Rebellions

24 THEME 4- ECONOMIC SYSTEMS Japan Industrialization China Trade with the West Manchu

25 THEME 5- SOCIAL ORDER Japan Samurai class abolished West adopted Family life Population growth China Qing keep Ming Social Order Compradors

26 PERIOD 5- 1900 CE- PRESENT

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28 Shintoism in Japan Abolished Western elements added to culture Art for protest Taiwan more western

29 Political parties in Japan Japanese nationalism China Guomindang Japan militarization Nuclear bombs WWII After WWII – People’s Democratic Republic of Korea – Republic of Korea – China communist – Taiwan nationalist – Japan selective westernization – Cultural Revolution

30 Japan – Zaibatsus – Labor Unions – “Japan Incorporated” Korean textiles Taiwan education Pacific Rim – Western industrial model China – Mass Line – Great Leap Forward – Capitalism

31 Japan  Woman vote  Increased social groups  Population growth slowed  Group loyalty China  Technocrat class  Women’s rights


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