Bentley Chapter 14 Study Guide: The Resurgence of Empire in East Asia

Similar documents
Chapter 14. The Resurgence of Empire in East Asia. 2011, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Brief overview of Postclassical China: Sui/Tang/Song Dynasties Postclassical China Adventures

East Asia. China, Korea, Vietnam and Japan

AP World History Study Guide Unit 3B Name China & the Mongols (Ch 15, 18) Score / Hour November 2, 2012

Post-Classical East Asia 500 CE-1300 CE

Name: Period 3: 500 C.E C.E. Chapter 13: The Resurgence of Empire in East Asia Chapter 14: The Expansive Realm of Islam

Two Golden Ages of China The Mongol and Ming Empires Korea and Its Traditions The Emergence of Japan Japan s Feudal Age

Four major accomplishments of the Tang account for their long-lasting power:

Technology. Naval Technology

CHAPTER TWELVE Reunification and Renaissance in Chinese Civilization: The Era of the Tang and Song Dynasties

2. This dynasty reunified China in 589 C.E. after centuries of political fragmentation. a. a) Tang b. b) Song c. d) Sui d. c) Han

RESURGENCE OF EMPIRE IN EAST ASIA CHINA UNDER THE SUI, TANG, AND SONG

C H

THE SUI AND TANG DYNASTY

Chapter 14 Section 1-3 China Reunifies & Tang and Song Achievements

8. Which of the following statements best describes the relationship between China and the northern nomads in the period ?

Ch. 14. Chinese civilization spreads to: Japan, Korea, and Vietnam

The Sui, Tang, and Song dynasties restored peace to China in between periods of chaos, civil war, and disorder.

APWH chapter 10.notebook October 10, 2013

China and the World: Additional Notes from Traditions & Encounters. The Resurgence of Empire in East Asia

China. Chapter 7 Test. Student Signature

Dates: [Established / Collapse and reason] Territory / Geography / Capital Major Events (dates and significance)

East Asia. China, Korea, and Japan 500 to 1000 CE

1. What Ottoman palace complex serves as a useful comparison with the Forbidden City? Describe one way that the Hongwu emperor sought to

Chapter 9 Learning Guide China and the World: East Asian Connections

SY 2017/ nd Final Term Revision. Student s Name: Grade: 11 B & C. Subject: SOCIAL STUDIES. Teacher Signature

CHAPTER 15 THE RESURGENCE OF EMPIRE IN EASll ASIA

AP World History Mid-Term Exam

CHAPTER 7 EXAM. Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Chapter Introduction Section 1: China Reunified Section 2: The Mongols and China Section 3: Early Japan and Korea Section 4: India After the Guptas

China s Middle Ages ( AD) Three Kingdoms period. Buddhism gained adherents. Barbarism and religion accompanied breakup

World History Unit 3 Contd. Post Classical Asia and Beyond

2. The scholarly Buddhist emperor who reunited northern India in the seventh century was a. Shankara. b. Harihara. c. Mahmud of Ghazni. d. Harsha.

Required Textbooks: (available at UCSB bookstore or online stores, and on reserve)

REGIONAL AND TRANSREGIONAL INTERACTIONS C

Unit Overview C.E.

Where in the world? When did it happen? Imperial China Lesson 1 China Reunites ESSENTIAL QUESTION. Terms to Know GUIDING QUESTIONS

EAST ASIA: THE GREAT TRADITION EARLY HISTORY, SOCIETY, AND CULTURES OF CHINA, KOREA, AND JAPAN

Unit 4: Ancient River Valley Civilizations - China

Reunification and Renaissance in Chinese Civilization: The Era of the Tang and Song Dynasties

East and South Asia. H.3b.G

Part 1: Use each map to answer the multiple choice questions ( / 16) Map A:

A.D. 600 A.D Wendi founds Sui dynasty. Chinese print world s first book. Genghis Khan unites the Mongols. Zheng He begins.

The Classical Period: Directions, Diversities, and Declines by 500 C.E.

CHAPTER 12. Reunification and Renaissance in Chinese Civilization: The Era of the Tang and Song Dynasties CHAPTER SUMMARY

World Civilizations Grade 3

12. Chinese references to western barbarians in the Tang dynasty included which group of people? a. Portuguese b. Indians c. Vietnamese d.

Final Exam: January 23rd and January 24 th. Final Exam Review Guide. Day One: January 23rd - Subjective Final Exam

NEW TRADING CITIES. Illustrative Examples CAHOKIA TIMBUKTU HANGZHOU CALICUT BAGHDAD MALAKA VENICE NOVOROGOD TENOCHTITLAN

I. Together Again: The Reemergence of a Unified China A. A Golden Age of Chinese Achievement

World Civilizations The Global Experience, AP* Edition, 6 th Edition 2011

Use the 7 th Grade Reading Review packet provided by your teacher to complete pages 5-7 ½ of your survivor workbook.

PACKET C. New Religions Emerge and Spread. 6 Topic Workshop #16. Module

The Prosperity of the Han

APWH chapter 12.notebook October 31, 2012

Geography 3 rd Quarter Test Asia, North America, and South America

A. The junk had internal bulkheads. B. China was not trading with anyone during this time.

Add today notes to Yesterday s Note Page

Unit III: Regional and Trans-Regional Interactions c. 600 C.E. to c. 1450

Name: Date: Pd: World History Fall Semester Final Review

Assessment: The Influence of Neighboring Cultures on Japan

Early and Classical Japan

Section 3. Empires of China and India. The Mauryan Empire

Civilizations of East Asia. The Influence of Neighboring Cultures on Japan

WHAP - Chapter 9 Outline I. Opening Vignette II. The Reemergence of a Unified China

HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE ESSAY

Chapter 9 1. Explain why Islam is considered more than a religion, but rather a way of life?

An Introduction to the Song dynasty ( )

Chapter 12. Cross-Cultural Exchanges on the Silk Roads. 2011, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Class time will use lectures, video and internet resources to explore various aspects of Chinese history.

Chapter 18 The Mongols Unify Eurasia

The Resurgence of Empire in East Asia

Review Unit Packet (page 1-37)

2. One way in which the African kingdoms of Ghana, Mali and Songhai were similar was that they.

World Civilizations. The Global Experience. Chapter. Reunification and Renaissance in Chinese Civilizations: The Era of the Tang and Song Dynasties

The Resurgence of Empire in East Asia

India s First Empires

Q in Dynasty 秦 朝. Inventions. Achievements. Other Information

H.I.P.P Sourcing Documents

Commerce and Culture AP World History Notes Chapter 7

MMW 13 Lecture 7, April 23

The Mongols. Background and effects

Dynastic Rule of China. 7 th Chapter 7

Q in Dynasty. Inventions. Achievements. Other Information. Q in. Years: BC (14 years) Founder: Q in Shi Huang

Chapter 5 Civilizations of East Asia Chapter 4 Vocabulary Chapter 4 Vocabulary Chapter 4 Vocabulary Chapter 4 Vocabulary Chapter 4 Vocabulary

Key Concept 2.1. Define DIASPORIC COMMUNITY.

CHAPTER FIVE The Classical Period: Directions, Diversities and Declines by 500 C.E.

Bentley Chapter 16 Study Guide: The Two Worlds of Christendom

1. Which culture is credited with the development of gunpowder, the abacus, and the compass? A) Chinese B) Persian C) Indian D) Japanese 2.

Physical Geography of China

China During The Middle Ages ( C.E.)

Ancient China & Japan

The spread of Buddhism In Central Asia

Bentley Chapter 17 Study Guide: Nomadic Empires and Eurasian Integration

The Big Thematic picture

1. What is the term for what the Hindus believe is the single God in the universe?

Cross-Cultural Exchange on the Silk Roads

History 1618: Introduction to Chines History to 1644

Section I: The Question:

Mongol Eurasia and its Aftermath, Chapter 12

Transcription:

Name Date Period Bentley Chapter 14 Study Guide: The Resurgence of Empire in East Asia Eyewitness: Xuanzang: A Young Monk Hits the Road (p. 281-282) 1. Who was Xuanzang, what was the purpose of his travels, and what was the impact of his travels? The Restoration of Centralized Imperial Rule in China The Sui Dynasty: Establishment of the Dynasty (p. 282) 2. How were the Sui rulers similar to the Qin dynasty? Give examples of what Sui rulers did. The Sui Dynasty: The Grand Canal (p. 282-283) 3. What was the purpose of building the Grand Canal? 4. What were the two cities the Grand Canal connected? 5. What was the impact of the Grand Canal on China? 6. How did the Construction of the Grand Canal contribute to the fall of the Sui Dynasty? The Tang Dynasty: Tang Taizong (p. 283-284) 7. What three policies helped to explain the success of the early Tang Dynasty? The Tang Dynasty: Transportation and Communications (p. 284) 8. Besides the Grand Canal, how else did Tang officials maintain extensive communications networks? The Tang Dynasty: The Equal-Field System (p. 284) 9. What was the purpose of the equal-field system, and how did it weaken? The Tang Dynasty: Bureaucracy of Merit (p. 284-285) 10. Describe the merit based bureaucracy under the Tang dynasty and its impact on China. - 1 -

The Tang Dynasty: Military Expansion (p. 285) 11. What territories did the Tang dynasty extend its influence? The Tang Dynasty: Tang Foreign Relations (p. 285) 12. Describe Tang China s political theory. The Tang Dynasty: Tang Decline (p. 285-286) 13. What reasons did the Tang Dynasty decline? The Song Dynasty: Song Taizu (p. 286-287) 14. How did Song rulers vastly expand the bureaucracy based on merit? The Song Dynasty: Song Weaknesses (p. 287) 15. Describe the two major problems that weakened the Song Dynasty. 16. Where did the Song Dynasty move their capital after the establishment of the Jin empire? 17. Who overthrows the Song dynasty in 1279? The Economic Development of Tang and Song China Agricultural Development: Fast-Ripening Rice (p. 288) 18. Describe the surge in agricultural production during the Tang and Song era. Agricultural Development: New Agricultural Techniques (p. 288) 19. What were the new agricultural techniques to increase productivity? Agricultural Development: Population Growth (p. 288-289) 20. What accounts for the population growth from 45 million to 115 million between 600 CE to 1200? - 2 -

Name Date Period Agricultural Development: Urbanization (p. 289-290) 21. What two cities were the most populous in China? Agricultural Development: Patriarchal Social Structures (p. 290) 22. What accounts for the increasing patriarchy in China? Agricultural Development: Foot Binding (p. 290) 23. What impact did foot binding have on women in China? Technological and Industrial Development (p. 290-292) 24. Read the following sections: Porcelain, Metallurgy, Gunpowder, Printing, and Naval Technology. What were the technological and industrial developments during the Tang and Song dynasties? 25. What was the impact of printing? 26. What was the impact of naval technology? The Emergence of a Market Economy: Financial Instruments (p. 292) 27. What was flying cash or money and its impact? The Emergence of a Market Economy: Paper Money (p. 292-293) 28. Describe the impact and effects of paper money. The Emergence of a Market Economy: A cosmopolitan Society (p. 293) 29. Describe interactions in China as it become cosmopolitan. The Emergence of a Market Economy: China and the Hemispheric Economy (p. 293) 30. Describe the exchanges, as a result from increased trade during the Tang and Song dynasties. - 3 -

Cultural Change in Tang and Song China The Establishment of Buddhism (p. 294) 31. What happened to Confucianism after the fall of the Han dynasty? The Establishment of Buddhism: Foreign Religions in China (p. 294-295) 32. What foreign religions entered China throughout the post-classical period? The Establishment of Buddhism: Dunhuang (p. 295) 33. How did Buddhism enter China and establish a foothold in China? The Establishment of Buddhism: Buddhism in China (p. 295-296) 34. Why did Buddhism attract Chinese interests? 35. How did Buddhist monasteries become important elements in the local economies of Chinese communities? 36. How did Buddhism pose challenges to Chinese cultural and social traditions? The Establishment of Buddhism: Buddhism and Daoism (p. 296) 37. Summarize how Buddhist missionaries sought to tailor their message to Chinese audiences? The Establishment of Buddhism: Pilgrimage to India (p. 296) 38. Who was Xuanzang? The Establishment of Buddhism: Schools of Buddhism (p. 296) 39. How did the lady emperor Wu Zhao encourage Buddhism? - 4 -

Name Date Period The Establishment of Buddhism: Hostility to Buddhism (p. 297) 40. Why did Buddhism meet resistance from Daoists and Confucians? The Establishment of Buddhism: Persecution (p. 297) 41. What happened beginning in the 840s and why? Neo-Confucianism: Confucians and Buddhism (p. 297-298) 42. Describe the changes and reason for changes to Confucianism during the Song Dynasty. Neo-Confucianism: Zhu Xi (p. 298) 43. Summarize the Neo-Confucian teachings of Zhu Xi? Neo-Confucianism: Neo-Confucian Influence (p. 298) 44. Why was Neo-Confucianism an important cultural development? Chinese Influence in East Asia Korea and Vietnam: The Silla Dynasty (p. 299) 45. Describe relations between China and Korea during the Silla Dynasty. Korea and Vietnam: Chinese Influence in Korea (p. 298-299) 46. What influences of Chinese political and cultural aspects did Korea adopt? 47. How did China and Korea differ? Korea and Vietnam: China and Vietnam (p. 299) 48. Describe relations between China and Vietnam? - 5 -

49. How did Vietnam differ from China? Korea and Vietnam: Chinese Influence in Vietnam (p. 299) 50. What Chinese traditions found its way into Vietnam? Early Japan: Nara Japan (p. 300) 51. How did Chinese tradition influence Japan? 52. What religion did the Japanese practice, despite the introduction of Confucianism and Buddhism? Early Japan: Heian Japan (p. 300) 53. What accounts for the longevity of the Japanese imperial house? 54. How did cultural development of Heian Japan reflect both the influence of Chinese tradition and Japanese ways? Early Japan: The Tale of Genji (p. 300) 55. What is significant about the Tale of Gengi. Early Japan: Decline of Heian Japan (p. 301) 56. Describe the changes brought about by the Minamoto clan. Medieval Japan: Political Decentralization (p. 301) 57. Describe the political atmosphere in Japan from 1185-1573. Medieval Japan: The Samurai (p. 301-302) 58. Describe the role of the samurai in Japanese society. - 6 -