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HISTORY
Dynasties
| Introduction |
Early History
Introduction:
China is one of the areas where civilization developed earliest. It has a
recorded history of nearly 5,000 years. More than a million years ago, primitive
human beings lived on the land now called China. About 400,000 to 500,000 years
ago, the Peking Man, a primitive man that lived in Zhoukoudian southwest of
Beijing, was able to walk with the body erect, to make and use simple tools, and
use fire. Six to seven thousand years ago, the people living in the Yellow River
valley supported themselves primarily with agriculture, while also raising
livestock. More than 3,000 years ago these people began smelting bronze and
using ironware. In China, slave society began around the 21st Century BC. Over
the next 1,700 years, agriculture and animal husbandry developed greatly and the
skills of silkworm raising, raw-silk reeling and silk weaving spread widely.
Bronze smelting and casting skills reached a relatively high level, and iron
smelting became increasingly sophisticated. The Chinese culture flourished, as a
great number of thinkers and philosophers emerged, most famously
Confusius. In
221 BC, Qin Shi Huang, the first emperor of the Qin Dynasty, established a
centralized, unified, multi-national feudal state. This period of feudal society
continued until after the Opium War in 1840. During these 2,000 years, China's
economy and culture continued to develop, bequeathing a rich heritage of science
and technology, literature and the arts. The four great inventions of ancient
China - paper-making, printing, the compass and gunpowder - have proved an
enormous contribution to world civilization. Chinese civilization peaked at
Tang Dynasty (618-907 AD) when Tang people traded with people all over the world. This
is why Chinese residing overseas often call themselves Tang Ren, or the People
of Tang. In 1840, anxious to continue its opium trade in China, Britain started
the Opium War against China. After the war, the big foreign powers forcibly
occupied "concessions" and divided China into "spheres of influence"; thus,
China was transformed into a semi-colonial, semi-feudal society. The dynastic
system was overturned in 1911, and a weak republican form of government existed
until 1949. In that year, after a long civil war, the
Peoples Republic of China (1949 to date), with a Communist government, was proclaimed. This government and the
ruling Communist party have controlled China ever since. Although the dynastic
system has disappeared, the People's Republic occupies essentially the same
territory and governs the same people. If anything, the culture and power of
China seem stronger in the late 20th Century than at almost any other period in
history. Under the People's Republic, China's role in world economic and
political affairs has grown increasingly more important.
Early History:
Archaeological evidence suggests that China is one of the cradles of the
human race. The earliest known human in China, whose fossilized skull was
unearthed in Shanxi Province in 1963, is believed to date back to 600,000 BC.
The remains of Sinanthropus pekinensis, known as Peking Man and dating back to
400,000 BC, were excavated in 1923 at Zhoukoudianzhen near Peking. Peking Man
was closely related to Pithecanthropus of Java and lived during the Old Stone
Age. In the upper caves of Zhoukoudianzhen are found artifacts of a late Old
Stone Age man (50,000 - 35,000 BC), who ranks in age with the Cro-Magnon of
Europe. This was an early form of Homo sapiens, or modern man, who made tools
out of bones as well as stones, made clothes out of animal hides, and knew how
to make fire. Around the 4th or 3rd millennium BC, in the New Stone Age, great
changes occurred in the lives of the ancient Chinese. Larger numbers of people
began living together at settled places, cultivating land, and domesticating
animals. These people made polished stone tools and built shelters in pit
dwellings and beehive huts that were covered with reed roofs. Such villages were
found mostly in the area of the great bend of the Huang He on the North China
Plain. Despite its severe winters, this area was well suited to agriculture. In
fact, it closely resembled the other cradles of ancient civilizations, such as
the valley of the Nile in Egypt. The people of this period (3,000-2,000 BC) also
developed the art of making pottery for storing food and drink. Two distinct
types have been discovered: red clay pots with swirling black designs in the
northwest near Yangshao village, and smooth black pottery in northeast China
near Lungshan, a site in Shandong Province.
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