Much of
what came to constitute China Proper was unified for the
first time in 221 B.C. In that year the western frontier
state of Qin, the most aggressive of the Warring States,
subjugated the last of its rival states. (Qin in
Wade-Giles romanization is Ch'in, from which the
English China probably derived.) Once the king of
Qin consolidated his power, he took the title Shi
Huangdi (First Emperor), a formulation previously
reserved for deities and the mythological sage-emperors, and
imposed Qin's centralized, nonhereditary bureaucratic system
on his new empire. In subjugating the six other major states
of Eastern Zhou, the Qin kings had relied heavily on
Legalist scholaradvisers . Centralization, achieved by
ruthless methods, was focused on standardizing legal codes
and bureaucratic procedures, the forms of writing and
coinage, and the pattern of thought and scholarship. To
silence criticism of imperial rule, the kings banished or
put to death many dissenting Confucian scholars and
confiscated and burned their books. Qin aggrandizement was
aided by frequent military expeditions pushing forward the
frontiers in the north and south. To fend off barbarian
intrusion, the fortification walls built by the various
warring states were connected to make a 5,000-
kilometer-long great wall. (What is commonly referred to as
the Great Wall is actually four great walls rebuilt or
extended during the Western Han, Sui, Jin, and Ming periods,
rather than a single, continuous wall. At its extremities,
the Great Wall reaches from northeastern Heilongjiang
Province to northwestern Gansu. A number of public works
projects were also undertaken to consolidate and strengthen
imperial rule. These activities required enormous levies of
manpower and resources, not to mention repressive measures.
Revolts broke out as soon as the first Qin emperor died in
210 B.C. His dynasty was extinguished less than twenty years
after its triumph. The imperial system initiated during the
Qin dynasty, however, set a pattern that was developed over
the next two millennia. After a
short civil war, a new dynasty, called Han (206 B.C.- A.D.
220), emerged with its capital at Chang'an. The new empire
retained much of the Qin administrative structure but
retreated a bit from centralized rule by establishing vassal
principalities in some areas for the sake of political
convenience. The Han rulers modified some of the harsher
aspects of the previous dynasty; Confucian ideals of
government, out of favor during the Qin period, were adopted
as the creed of the Han empire, and Confucian scholars
gained prominent status as the core of the civil service. A
civil service examination system also was initiated.
Intellectual, literary, and artistic endeavors revived and
flourished. The Han period produced China's most famous
historian, Sima Qian (145-87 B.C.?), whose Shiji
(Historical Records) provides a detailed chronicle from the
time of a legendary Xia emperor to that of the Han emperor
Wu Di(141-87 B.C.). Technological advances also marked this
period. Two of the great Chinese inventions, paper and
porcelain, date from Han times. The Han
dynasty, after which the members of the ethnic majority in
China, the "people of Han," are named, was notable also for
its military prowess. The empire expanded westward as far as
the rim of the Tarim Basin (in modern Xinjiang-Uyghur
Autonomous Region), making possible relatively secure
caravan traffic across Central Asia to Antioch, Baghdad, and
Alexandria. The paths of caravan traffic are often called
the "silk route" because the route was used to export
Chinese silk to the Roman Empire. Chinese armies also
invaded and annexed parts of northern Vietnam and northern
Korea toward the end of the second century B.C. Han control
of peripheral regions was generally insecure, however. To
ensure peace with non-Chinese local powers, the Han court
developed a mutually beneficial "tributary system."
Non-Chinese states were allowed to remain autonomous in
exchange for symbolic acceptance of Han overlordship.
Tributary ties were confirmed and strengthened through
intermarriages at the ruling level and periodic exchanges of
gifts and goods. After 200
years, Han rule was interrupted briefly (in A.D. 9-24 by
Wang Mang, a reformer), and then restored for another 200
years. The Han rulers, however, were unable to adjust to
what centralization had wrought: a growing population,
increasing wealth and resultant financial difficulties and
rivalries, and ever-more complex political institutions.
Riddled with the corruption characteristic of the dynastic
cycle, by A.D. 220 the Han empire collapsed.
Library of Congress Country Study
Library of Congress Country Study
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