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Chapter 13 JAPAN, KOREA, & VIETNAM

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Page 1: Chapter 13 JAPAN, KOREA, & VIETNAM. Overarching Themes Buddhism serves as vehicle for spread of Chinese culture Chinese culture is selectively adopted,

Chapter 13

JAPAN, KOREA, & VIETNAM

Page 2: Chapter 13 JAPAN, KOREA, & VIETNAM. Overarching Themes Buddhism serves as vehicle for spread of Chinese culture Chinese culture is selectively adopted,

Overarching Themes

Buddhism serves as vehicle for spread of Chinese culture

Chinese culture is selectively adopted, and often modified to meet local needsCreates distant connection w/ India (origins of

Buddhism)Reoccurring question – “how much do we really

need/want Chinese culture?”Creates cultural link between these centers of

civilization

Page 3: Chapter 13 JAPAN, KOREA, & VIETNAM. Overarching Themes Buddhism serves as vehicle for spread of Chinese culture Chinese culture is selectively adopted,

Japan’s Contact with China

Early contact tempered by faithfulness to traditional valuesShinto views on supernatural/natural world

Taika reforms (646 CE)Revamps political system

Adoption of Confucian education (scholar class)Adoption of Chinese written language (very different)Adoption of Chinese political etiquetteTransformation of Japanese monarch

Become an absolutist divine emperor – “Son of Heaven”Creation of professional bureaucracy

Adoption of Buddhism as religion of the eliteLower classes fuse Buddhism & Shinto

Page 4: Chapter 13 JAPAN, KOREA, & VIETNAM. Overarching Themes Buddhism serves as vehicle for spread of Chinese culture Chinese culture is selectively adopted,

Japan’s Contact with ChinaFailure of Taika reforms (mid-8th century)

Japanese aristocratic families & Buddhist monks had too much powerWould not allow creation of an absolute emperorBuddhists were trying to gain control of gov’t

for themselvesEmperor abandons Taika reforms,

reinstates aristocratsHopes that alliance will weaken Buddhist power

Japan abandons Chinese merit-system of advancementRevert to standard social classes based on birth

Page 5: Chapter 13 JAPAN, KOREA, & VIETNAM. Overarching Themes Buddhism serves as vehicle for spread of Chinese culture Chinese culture is selectively adopted,

Japan’s Contact with ChinaSuccess of Chinese Cultural Adoption

Elites create a world based on reputation and social statusEmphasis on physical appearance, material wealth – shallow &

fakeAchievements in poetic and literary works – focus on

sentimentalityImpact on women

Successful poets, artists, musiciansBecome involved in political and social intrigues (form of

power)Still relegated to secondary statusLower class women able to engage in commercial activity

Guilds, merchant activitiesWarrior class women ultimately minimized (training, marriage,

inheritance)

Page 6: Chapter 13 JAPAN, KOREA, & VIETNAM. Overarching Themes Buddhism serves as vehicle for spread of Chinese culture Chinese culture is selectively adopted,

Japan’s Growth & DevelopmentCompetition for Political Power

4 groups vie for control of governmentAristocrats

Increase land holdings to build power base Accumulate wealth and peasants/artisans

Buddhist monastic orders Increase land holdings to build power base Accumulate wealth and peasants/artisans

Local provincial lords (Bushi) Increase land holdings to build power base Control production in the countryside (labor and product) Create fortresses to defend their land (self-sufficient) Build up their own armies samurai

Samurai serve as police force for gov’t

Emperor Claim to divine power is weakened Bureaucracy replaced by aristocrats

Page 7: Chapter 13 JAPAN, KOREA, & VIETNAM. Overarching Themes Buddhism serves as vehicle for spread of Chinese culture Chinese culture is selectively adopted,

Japan’s Growth & DevelopmentResults in several periods of warfare and

rebellionCreation of Bakufu – military governmentCreation of Shogun – military leaders of the BakufuNoble families compete for real control of

government, but appoint emperors as figureheadProvincial land owners destroy aristocracy (could

not defend themselves)Ultimately results in collapse of Japan’s political

structure Creation of small kingdoms, ruled by daimyos (bushi)

Abandonment of Chinese imitation (coincides with decline of China)

Page 8: Chapter 13 JAPAN, KOREA, & VIETNAM. Overarching Themes Buddhism serves as vehicle for spread of Chinese culture Chinese culture is selectively adopted,

Overview of KoreaKorea has the longest “cultural exchange”

relationship with ChinaMost content with relationship

Question: Is it possible for Korea to develop a unique culture, given its proximity to China?”

Page 9: Chapter 13 JAPAN, KOREA, & VIETNAM. Overarching Themes Buddhism serves as vehicle for spread of Chinese culture Chinese culture is selectively adopted,

Early Korea: 4th century BCE Early Koreans were of Siberian/Manchurian

decent, rather than Mongol/Turkic/HanAcquire early traits of civilization (agriculture,

metalworking, etc) from ChinaKorea conquered by Han China in 109 BCE

Chinese colonists remain until fall of Classical period

As China weakens, native kingdoms developKoguryo, Silla, Paekche

Page 10: Chapter 13 JAPAN, KOREA, & VIETNAM. Overarching Themes Buddhism serves as vehicle for spread of Chinese culture Chinese culture is selectively adopted,

Development of KoreaMuch cultural borrowing from China

(Sinification)Buddhism, art, architecture

(temples), Confucian learningAttempted bureaucracy fails

without support from Korean noblesKorea almost re-conquered by Tang

take advantage of internal divisionsEstablish a tribute system instead

with new Silla kingdom (668 CE)Boundaries of Korea effectively

unchanged from this point forward

Page 11: Chapter 13 JAPAN, KOREA, & VIETNAM. Overarching Themes Buddhism serves as vehicle for spread of Chinese culture Chinese culture is selectively adopted,

Korean Independence…sort of (668 – 1392 CE)Conscious effort to model Tang court

Korea was most dedicated tribute statePlacation of Tang emperor “kowtowing”Almost total adoption of Chinese culture (except

bureaucracy) Improvement on Chinese pottery (one of finest EVER)Class structure

Aristocrats  Government workers  Commoners (peasants) Low-born (nearly slaves)

Cultural adoption mostly limited to elites Other classes receive little/no benefits

Creation of Yi dynasty Reigns from 1392 – 1910 CEMaintains relationship with China

Page 12: Chapter 13 JAPAN, KOREA, & VIETNAM. Overarching Themes Buddhism serves as vehicle for spread of Chinese culture Chinese culture is selectively adopted,

Overview of VietnamMost removed (geographically) from

China’s influenceIn possession of a sophisticated culture

prior to Chinese contact

Page 13: Chapter 13 JAPAN, KOREA, & VIETNAM. Overarching Themes Buddhism serves as vehicle for spread of Chinese culture Chinese culture is selectively adopted,

Early Vietnam: 220 BCE Conflicted between benefits of Chinese culture & loss of

national identityEarly military conflicts resulted in cultural exchange, but

no political controlHave a closer connection to SE Asian groups

(Cambodians, Khmers & Tais)Language bore no resemblance to ChinesePreference for nuclear family vs. Chinese extended

familyGreater freedom held by Viet women Distinct art & literature

Conquest by Han China (111 BCE)Viet cooperate with Chinese in order to learn and adaptAdoption of political /military forms control of

neighborsAdoption of farming techniques population explosion

Page 14: Chapter 13 JAPAN, KOREA, & VIETNAM. Overarching Themes Buddhism serves as vehicle for spread of Chinese culture Chinese culture is selectively adopted,

Vietnamese Fight for Independence

Failure of adoptions to impact lives of Viet peasants results in resistance

Chinese contempt for traditional Viet culture affects relationship

Development of open hostilityCooperation between lords and peasants

to revoltMost famous revolt led by women:

Trung sisters (39 – 43 CE)Resentment by women to Confucian codes

Helped by geography (too far from China)

Independence won from Tang (939 CE)Maintain it against Mongols and Ming China

“… My intestines hurt me incessantly, as if they had been cut off,

and tears flow abundantly

from my eyes. My only grief is that I have not yet succeeded

in hacking apart the

enemy’s body, peeling off his

skin, swallowing his liver, drinking

his blood.”

Page 16: Chapter 13 JAPAN, KOREA, & VIETNAM. Overarching Themes Buddhism serves as vehicle for spread of Chinese culture Chinese culture is selectively adopted,

Development of Vietnamese Dynasties

Despite political independence, cultural adoption continuesFinally establish small-scale bureaucracy

Less powerful than China’sRelate with peasants more than elites interests

and revoltsCreation of civil-service exam (Confucian

base)Construction of Chinese-style capital cities

Successful conquest of neighbors result of learned Chinese techniques

Fragmentation development of cultural conflict between North and South (US?)