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![[Map of Song]](song.jpg) Chinese
History --- Song Dynasty
In 960 a new power, Song (960-1279), reunified
most of China Proper. The Song period divides into two phases: Northern
Song (960-1127) and Southern Song (1127-1279). The division was caused
by the forced abandonment of north China in 1127 by the Song court, which
could not push back the nomadic invaders.
The founders of the Song dynasty built an effective
centralized bureaucracy staffed with civilian scholar-officials. Regional
military governors and their supporters were replaced by centrally appointed
officials. This system of civilian rule led to a greater concentration
of power in the emperor and his palace bureaucracy than had been achieved
in the previous dynasties.
The Song dynasty is notable for the development
of cities not only for administrative purposes but also as centers of
trade, industry, and maritime commerce. The landed scholar-officials,
sometimes collectively referred to as the gentry, lived in the provincial
centers alongside the shopkeepers, artisans, and merchants. A new group
of wealthy commoners--the mercantile class--arose as printing and education
spread, private trade grew, and a market economy began to link the coastal
provinces and the interior. Landholding and government employment were
no longer the only means of gaining wealth and prestige.
Culturally, the Song refined many of the developments
of the previous centuries. Included in these refinements were not only
the Tang ideal of the universal man, who combined the qualities of scholar,
poet, painter, and statesman, but also historical writings, painting,
calligraphy, and hard-glazed porcelain. Song intellectuals sought answers
to all philosophical and political questions in the Confucian Classics.
This renewed interest in the Confucian ideals and society of ancient times
coincided with the decline of Buddhism, which the Chinese regarded as
foreign and offering few practical guidelines for the solution of political
and other mundane problems.
While the Song was a time of great advances,
politically and militarily, the Song was a failure. The northern half
of China was conquered by barbarians, forcing the dynasty to abandon a
northern capital in the early 1100's. Then a hundred and fifty years later,
the Mongols, fresh from conquering everything between Manchuria and Austria,
invaded and occupied China.
The Song Neo-Confucian philosophers, finding
a certain purity in the originality of the ancient classical texts, wrote
commentaries on them. The most influential of these philosophers was Zhu
Xi ( b1130-1200), whose synthesis of Confucian thought
and Buddhist, Taoist, and other ideas became the official imperial ideology
from late Song times to the late nineteenth century. As incorporated into
the examination system, Zhu Xi's philosophy evolved into a rigid official
creed, which stressed the one-sided obligations of obedience and compliance
of subject to ruler, child to father, wife to husband, and younger brother
to elder brother. The effect was to inhibit the societal development of
premodern China, resulting both in many generations of political, social,
and spiritual stability and in a slowness of cultural and institutional
change up to the nineteenth century. Neo-Confucian doctrines also came
to play the dominant role in the intellectual life of Korea, Vietnam,
and Japan.
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