Sunday, September 30, 2012
CHINA
HISTORY
The earliest recorded human
settlements in what is today called China were discovered in the Huang He basin
and date from about 5000 B.C. During the Shang dynasty (1500–1000 B.C. ), the
precursor of modern China's ideographic writing system developed, allowing the
emerging feudal states of the era to achieve an advanced stage of civilization,
rivaling in sophistication any society found at the time in Europe, the Middle
East, or the Americas. It was following this initial flourishing of
civilization, in a period known as the Chou dynasty (1122–249 B.C. ), that
Lao-tse, Confucius, Mo Ti, and Mencius laid the foundation of Chinese
philosophical thought.
The feudal states, often at war with
one another, were first united under Emperor Ch'in Shih Huang Ti, during whose
reign (246–210 B.C. ) work was begun on the Great Wall of China, a monumental
bulwark against invasion from the West. Although the Great Wall symbolized
China's desire to protect itself from the outside world, under the Han dynasty
(206 B.C.–A.D. 220), the civilization conducted extensive commercial trading
with the West.
In the T'ang dynasty (618–907)—often
called the golden age of Chinese history—painting, sculpture, and poetry
flourished, and woodblock printing, which enabled the mass production of books,
made its earliest known appearance. The Mings, last of the native rulers
(1368–1644), overthrew the Mongol, or Yuan, dynasty (1271–1368) established by
Kublai Khan. The Mings in turn were overthrown in 1644 by invaders from the
north, the Manchus.
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