welcome! find the vocabulary windows assignment on your desk. please begin working on this...

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Welcome! Find the vocabulary windows assignment on your desk. Please begin working on this assignment BEFORE the bell rings!

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Welcome! Find the vocabulary windows assignment on your desk. Please begin working on this assignment BEFORE the bell rings!

Essential Question:

How can ethnocentrism affect your views about China?

What inventions did Europeans/Americans come up with several hundred years ago?

What inventions have the Chinese come up with?

Dig deep….why did the Europeans originally want to explore the world?

They were trying to get to the luxuries of India and China!

1. Row Planting Feudal Period – 6

Century BC

The Chinese started planting crops in rows sometime in the 6th century BC. This technique allows the crops to grow faster and stronger. It facilitates more efficient planting, watering, weeding and harvesting.

2. Compass Feudal period – 4th

Cent BC

The Chinese developed a lodestone compass to indicate direction sometime in the 4th century BC. These compasses were south pointing and were primarily used on land as divination tools and direct finders.

3. Seed Drill The Seed Drill is used to

plant seeds into the soil at a uniform depth and covers it. Without this tool seeds are tossed by hand over the ground resulting in waste and inefficient, uneven growth. Chinese farmers were using seed drills as early as the 2nd Century BC. The first known European instance was a patent issued to Camillo Torello in 1566, but was not adopted by Europeans into general use until the mid 1800’s.

4. Iron Plow One of the major

developments of the ancient Chinese agriculture was the use of the iron plows. Probably first developed in the 4th century BC, they were popular and common by the Han Dynasty. This technology was not instituted into England and Holland until the 17th century, sparking an abundance of food which some experts say was a necessary prerequisite for the industrial revolution.

5. Gunpowder Gunpowder was invented in China, probably during the

1000's. The Chinese used gunpowder to make fireworks and for signal flares. Soon after its invention, the Chinese used gunpowder for weapons (which they called fire arrows). Fire rockets were made by filling capped bamboo tubes with gunpowder and iron bits (shrapnel). These lethal weapons were attached to an arrow, lit, and shot from a bow. These were the first solid-fuel rockets. The Chinese used them to fight the invading Mongol hordes.

6. Rudder Technology for Boats

The first recorded use of rudder technology in the West was in 1180. Chinese pottery dating from the 1st century have been found show sophisticated rudders. Early rudder technology (c 100 AD) also included the easier to use balanced rudder (where part of the blade was in front of the steering post), first adopted by England in 1843 – some 1700 years later.

7. Harnesses Throat harnesses have been used throughout

the world to harness horses to carts and sleds. These harnesses press back on the neck of the horse thus limiting the full strength of the animal. This critical invention was introduced into Europe approximately by 970 and became widespread within 200 years. Because of the greater speed of horses over oxen, as well as greater endurance, agricultural output throughout Europe increased significantly.

8. Porcelain

Porcelain is a very specific kind of ceramic produced by the extreme temperatures of a kiln. The materials fuse and form a glass and mineral compound known for its strength, translucence and beauty. Chinese porcelain was highly prized throughout the world.

9. Toilet Paper!!!

As noted above, paper was an early invention of China. One of the first recorded accounts of using hygienic paper was during the Sui Dynasty in 589. In 851 an Arab traveler reported (with some amazement) that the Chinese used paper in place of water to cleanse themselves. By the late 1300’s, approximately 720,000 sheets per year was produced in packages of 1,000 to 10,000 sheets. In colonial times in America (late 1700’s) it was still common to use corn-cobs or leaves.

10. Printing & Paper That paper was invented

by the Chinese is well known (by Cai Lun c 50-121 AD), and it is one of the great Chinese inventions. The recipe for this paper still exists and can be followed by today’s artisans. In 868 the first printed book, using full page woodcuts, was produced. By contrast, Gutenberg’s bibles – the first European book printed with movable type – were printed in the 1450’s.

WOW!!! Where would we be without these accomplishments?!