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Chinese
History --- Three Kingdoms
Romance
of Three Kingdoms
The collapse of the Han dynasty was followed
by nearly four centuries of rule by warlords. The age of civil wars and
disunity began with the era of the Three Kingdoms (Wei, Shu, and Wu, which
had overlapping reigns during the period A.D. 220-80).
In later times, fiction and drama greatly romanticized
the reputed chivalry of this period. Unity was restored briefly in the
early years of the Jin dynasty (A.D. 265-420), but the Jin could not long
contain the invasions of the nomadic peoples. In A.D. 317 the Jin court
was forced to flee from Luoyang and reestablished itself at Nanjing to
the south.
The transfer of the capital coincided with
China's political fragmentation into a succession of dynasties that was
to last from A.D. 304 to 589. During this period the process of sinicization
accelerated among the non-Chinese arrivals in the north and among the
aboriginal tribesmen in the south. This process was also accompanied by
the increasing popularity of Buddhism (introduced into China in the first
century A.D.) in both north and south China.
Despite the political disunity of the times,
there were notable technological advances. The invention of gunpowder
(at that time for use only in fireworks) and the wheelbarrow is believed
to date from the sixth or seventh century. Advances in medicine, astronomy,
and cartography are also noted by historians.
While there was a great deal of political activity
occurring during this period, most of it, consisting as it was of various
wars between different kingdoms (one of the great novels of China, The
Romance of the Three Kingdoms, is about this period), was not terribly
important to the later development of China. Perhaps its greatest accomplishment
was to reinforce in Chinese thought the importance of having "one Emperor
over China, like one sun in the sky."
Socially, though, there were two important
developments. The first was that the ethnic Han Chinese kept on moving
south, while 'barbarians' moved into the north and assimilated themselves
into Chinese society. The second development was Buddhism, which had had
its start in India sometime in the 6th century BC, when the Buddha probably
lived. It was introduced into China around the middle of the first century
AD (probably about the same time that the early Christians were writing
the Gospels), but really didn't catch on until the fall of the Han dynasty.
Buddhism
competed strongly with Confucianism, and for a long time, pretty much
eclipsed it as a major cultural force. For various reasons -- some political,
some social -- it spread very quickly throughout China. It also changed
somewhat from the Indian original, which, as far as I know, is not practiced
anymore anywhere in the world. From China, Buddhism would spread into
Tibet, Southeast Asia, Korea, and Japan.
Buddhism also merged somewhat with Daoism,
particularly as a popular religion; and while the process may be compared
to Christianity's appropriation of indigenous European beliefs and traditions,
Daoism maintained its own identity and was not subsumed into popular Buddhism.
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