Age of Empires: Rome & Han China 753 B.C.E – 600 C.E Rome: The Republic 507-31 B.C.E • Senate & Consul(s) = – 2 major branches of govt. – Provincial Governors = Corrupt • Early Expansion – Motives = Greed, aggressiveness, Consul generalship – Methods = Citizen armies, Roman citizenship to conquered – Ex: Carthage 200-30 BCE / Hellenistic 59-51 BCE / Gaul (Julius Caesar) • FAIL = Rome’s Republic – Latifundia Estates / $ Crops – Poor urban population – Swaying loyalty of soldiers Rome: The Empire 31 B.C.E-600 C.E. • Octavian (Augustus Caesar) = Emperor of Rome – Increased power of Emperor – Reformed govt. / civil service / added land – Succession determined by army • Pax Romana 27 BCE – 180 CE – Manufacture & Trade Flourished – Imports (Grain, Silk, Spices) – Exports (glass, metalwork, pottery) • Romanization = – Adaptation of Roman culture by conquered peoples • Western Empire Crumbling while Eastern Empire Flourishing – Constantinople new capital 324CE (Preserved Roman traditions) Rome: The Culture • Religions – Mythology -> Christianity – Adopted by Emperor Constantine – Council of Nicea • Rural Rome – 80% of empire = farmers – Hard life of farming • Urban Empire – Rome, Alexandria, Carthage, Antioch • Paterfamilias = – Roman hierarchical family structure – Status of women depended on social class and husband Qin China 221-207 B.C.E • Shi Huangdi (Emperor) – ‘Unification’ of Central and Northern China – Created strong bureaucracy – Suppressed Confucianism in favor of Legalism – Secured Borders: Forced conscription & freed peasantry from slavery – Death in 210 BCE Terracotta Army – Qin Rule over by 206 B.C.E Han China: 206 B.C.E.-220 C.E. • Family = Basic Unit of Society – Unbroken chain of ancestors – Hierarchy of elder male – Women’s status also depended on social class • Confucianism = Major Ideology • Major Leaders – Gaozu (Liu Bang) =Transition from Qin to Han – Wu = Stronger military, adoption of Confucianism, Expansion of empire 141-87 BCE • Decline & Fall 220 CE – Undermined by weak leadership, less tax revenue, mercenary armies, corruption, nomadic attacks Comparison Rome & Han China • Similarities – Agriculture = Main Economic Activity – Empires encompassed diverse cultures – Built roads (Military & Commercial Use) – Majority of population lived in rural areas – Undermined by military spending – Overrun by peoples that continued their culture • Differences – Imperial model survived continuously in China – Concept of the individual (Rome) – Economic mobility of middle class (Rome) – Structure of Military (professional soldiers V. draftees) – Major Religions Continuities/Patterns in Chinese History • • • • • • Ethnocentrism Xenophobia Importance of Family Low Status of Women Conflict with Nature Hard Lives of Peasants • • • • • Authoritarian Govt. Dynastic Cycle Cultural Conservatism Education Valued Creativity & Innovation