Rise and Rule of the Qin Dynasty in Ancient China

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Qin Dynasty
Part of the Classical China’s History
 
Regarded as restoration
Xia, Shang, and Zhou dynasties had created a
Chinese state
Fell apart by 500 BCE
Age of warring states
Seven competing kingdoms
Multiple states were thought to be unnatural
 
Emerges out of end
of Zhou
Dynasty/Period of
Warring States
Founder: Shi Huangdi
(“First Emperor”)
Goals:
Unify and expand
China
Restore order
 
Ruler of Qin, 221-210 BCE
Adopted legalism as political philosophy
Clear rules and harsh punishments to enforce
state authority
 
Practical, political reaction to Confucianism
Han Feizi - 3rd century BCE
 
Powerful and efficient government is key to
restoring order
Laws will end civil war and restore harmony
Rewards to good subjects and punish disobedient
Rulers must control ideas and actions of people
Favored by Shi Huangdi during Qin dyansty
 
Social
Primogeniture eliminated (practice of having eldest
son inherit all property and land)
Nobles must leave land and live in Emperor’s court
Political
Emperor had complete control over all aspects of
society
Use of brutality and force to accomplish goals (Great
Wall)
Bureaucracy (not of the nobility) expanded to help
control all regions
National census
Single law code
Interactions
Army expanded to crush rivals and regional rebellions
Expanded territory of China, including Hong Kong
Influenced parts of Vietnam through conquest
Expanded infrastructure to increase interactions
 
Cultural
Confucianism looked down upon and followers persecuted
Legalism promoted
Architectural: Initiates construction of Great Wall; Terracotta
Soldiers/Tomb of Shi Huangdi
Uniform written language
Banned books
Economic
Introduced standard weights and measures
Eliminated the very rare practice of slavery
Forced labor necessary for construction projects
Extremely high taxes
Sponsored agricultural projects (irrigation) and manufacturing of silk
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Standardized weights, measurements
Currency
Written chinese
Axle lengths for carts
 
Shi Huangdi
Extremely paranoid; killed off suspected enemies (nobles,
intellectuals, warlords)
Desire to control EVERYTHING
High taxes, forced labor
Shi Huangdi dies in 210 BCE; followed by 8 years of
peasant revolts to determine successor - winner
establishes Han Dynasty
 
Collapses 206 BCE
Han dynasty 206 BCE-220 CE
Kept Qin centralization
Less harsh
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The Qin Dynasty emerged from the chaos of the Warring States period with the goal of unifying and expanding China under the leadership of Shi Huangdi. The dynasty implemented legalism as a political philosophy, emphasizing clear rules and harsh punishments to enforce state authority. Shi Huangdi exercised complete control over society, introducing reforms such as eliminating primogeniture, expanding the army, and constructing the Great Wall. Despite achievements in infrastructure and governance, the Qin Dynasty's use of brutality and force led to societal unrest and eventual downfall.

  • Qin Dynasty
  • Ancient China
  • Legalism
  • Warring States
  • Shi Huangdi

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  1. CHINA: WARRING STATES TO EMPIRE Qin Dynasty Part of the Classical China s History

  2. CREATION OF THE EMPIRE Regarded as restoration Xia, Shang, and Zhou dynasties had created a Chinese state Fell apart by 500 BCE Age of warring states Seven competing kingdoms Multiple states were thought to be unnatural

  3. QIN DYNASTY Emerges out of end of Zhou Dynasty/Period of Warring States Founder: Shi Huangdi ( First Emperor ) Goals: Unify and expand China Restore order

  4. UNIFICATION BY SHI HUANGDI Ruler of Qin, 221-210 BCE Adopted legalism as political philosophy Clear rules and harsh punishments to enforce state authority

  5. LEGALISM Practical, political reaction to Confucianism Han Feizi - 3rd century BCE Powerful and efficient government is key to restoring order Laws will end civil war and restore harmony Rewards to good subjects and punish disobedient Rulers must control ideas and actions of people Favored by Shi Huangdi during Qin dyansty

  6. LIFE IN THE QIN DYNASTY Social Primogeniture eliminated (practice of having eldest son inherit all property and land) Nobles must leave land and live in Emperor s court Political Emperor had complete control over all aspects of society Use of brutality and force to accomplish goals (Great Wall) Bureaucracy (not of the nobility) expanded to help control all regions National census Single law code Interactions Army expanded to crush rivals and regional rebellions Expanded territory of China, including Hong Kong Influenced parts of Vietnam through conquest Expanded infrastructure to increase interactions

  7. Cultural Confucianism looked down upon and followers persecuted Legalism promoted Architectural: Initiates construction of Great Wall; Terracotta Soldiers/Tomb of Shi Huangdi Uniform written language Banned books Economic Introduced standard weights and measures Eliminated the very rare practice of slavery Forced labor necessary for construction projects Extremely high taxes Sponsored agricultural projects (irrigation) and manufacturing of silk

  8. TERRACOTTA SOLDIERS/TOMB OF SHI HUANGDI

  9. POSITIVE CREATION Standardized weights, measurements Currency Written chinese Axle lengths for carts

  10. QIN DYNASTY COLLAPSES Shi Huangdi Extremely paranoid; killed off suspected enemies (nobles, intellectuals, warlords) Desire to control EVERYTHING High taxes, forced labor Shi Huangdi dies in 210 BCE; followed by 8 years of peasant revolts to determine successor - winner establishes Han Dynasty Collapses 206 BCE Han dynasty 206 BCE-220 CE Kept Qin centralization Less harsh

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