China PERSIAN Chart Key

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Shang China PERSIAN Chart Key

POLITICAL

Leaders/groups
Forms of government
Empires
State
building/expansion
Political structures
Courts/laws
Nationalism/nations
Revolts/revolutions

ECONOMIC

Agricultural, pastoral
Economic systems
Labor systems/
organizations
Industrialization
Technology/industry
Capital/money
Business organizations

RELIGIOUS

Belief systems/
teachings
Philosophy
Holy books
Conversion
Key figures
Deities

SOCIAL

Family/ kinship
Gender roles/relations
Social and economic
classes
Racial/ ethnic factors
Entertainment

Shang established kingdom that would lay the foundations of


Chinese civilization with a centralized government needing to
rule feuding villagers
Hereditary rulers or dynasties with power based on the ancestors
and gods
Ruled by strong kings seen as an intermediary between the
supreme being and ordinary mortals (Shangdi; Shang = leader; di
= high god of the rain cycles)
Rulers directed the affairs of the state and bore ritual
responsibilities for the fertility of their kingdom and the wellbeing of their subjects
Sizeable bureaucracy
Peasant and artisan population governed by vassals who served
the lords or kings bound to them by personal ties; introduced the
system of feudalism
Not well-defined by fixed and clearly established boundaries
Shang collected tributes from agricultural areas; from the elites
they got warriors, laborers, horses, and cattle; from the allies,
they got food, soldiers, workers and help with state projects in
return for protection; commoners sent tributes to elites, who held
land as fiefs from the king (made payments with surplus crops)
Mining required large labor force
Shang kings controlled access to copper and tin and the
production of bronze (limited access to potential enemies)
Commoners made labor payments or corvee; workers to royal
workshops with bronze; others labored to clear and drain fields,
build palaces, excavate tombs, or construct walls to protect towns
Polytheistic
Special ceremonies were performed
Priests served as oracles sacred people who foretold the future
through interpretations of animal bones cracked by heat
Reliance on shamans (priests) strongly influenced beliefs and
behavior in Shang Era

Kings, lords, vassals, peasants


No independent priesthood to challenge power
Patriarchal society
Lords were recruited from ruling families and aristocratic classes
Vassals depended on the produce and labor of commoners
In return for grants of control over peasants, warrior aristocrats
collected tribute which went to the monarch and his court
Vassals supplied soldiers for kings army and kept peace among

Lifestyles
Haves & have nots

INTERACTIONS

War/conflict
Diplomacy/treaties
Alliances
Exchanges between
individuals, groups, &
empires/nations
Trade/commerce
Globalization

ARTS

Art
Music
Writing/literature
Philosophy
Math
Science
Education
Architecture
Technology
Innovations
Transportation

ENVIRONMENTAL

Location
Physical
Human/environment
Migration/movement
Region
Demography
Neighborhood
Urbanization
Settlement patterns
Disease
Cities (2 major ones)

the peasants
Did not construct monumental architecture; lived in simple
houses built of mud and wood
Developed in considerable isolation but had some land trade
contacts with India and the Middle East
Copied chariots the Shang encountered along with horsed
imported from central Asia
Temporary decline in civilization when invasion disrupted Shang
society
Less of a break between river valley society and full development
of classical civilization than other early civilizations

Pottery making
Silk-making
Writing developed from scratches on bones to ideographic
symbols (pictographic characters grouped together to create new
concepts) writing came from oracle bones
Writing became the key to Chinese identity
Art- delicate designs with jade, stone, and ivory
Astronomy developed a calendar
Metallurgy and copper casting technology for weaponry, ritual
objects, drinking vessels, etc

Located in East Asia


Along the Yellow River or the Huang He River in the north and
the Yangzi River in the south
Irrigation
Fertile land, but prone to flooding
Annual floods and extensive flood plains were suitable for
agriculture and the support of large populations
Capital moved as the frontier expanded and contracted; moved 6x
before ending up in Anyang

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