From A+ Club Lesson Planner & Study Guide
Goal of this article is to help students identify context and historical recollection via definitions of historical names and terms
- for example, to remember information about the Qing Dynasty, a student would have to memorize the dates and events.
- however, knowing the meaning of "Qing" and "Dynasty" greatly enhances that recollection
- Dynasty = a series of related rulers, generally passed down generationally
- thus the Qing represented a new power
- "Qing" = the Chinese characters for "water" and "blue"
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- opposed to the "Ming"
- the Chinese characters of which represented the sun and the moon
- the idea being that the new rulers who started the Qing Dynasty chose
Name
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Name definition
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Dates
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Region
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Notes
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Notes on names of Chinese empires
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Dynastic name have several origins:
- geographic origins (Qin, Han dynasties)
- capital cities (Sui and Tang dynasties)
- material properties (Liao for iron)
- word meanings (Ming, Qing dynasties)
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Sources
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- Ming is from the Chinese characters for sun and moon; it also means "luminescent"
- the name was taken by Han Shantong who led early rebellions against the Yuan Dynasty; Han Shantong took on the name "King Ming" for "King of Light"
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1368-1644
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- followed the collapse of Mongol rule under the Yuan Dynasty
- the "Red Turban Rebellions" weakened the Yuan (named for red banners and hats)
- Red Turban movement was started by a Chinese monk (associated w/ the Bhuddist White Lotus secret society that believed in fight of good v. evil, influencd by Manichaeism from ancient Persia, called in China "Mingjiao")
- represented a Han Chinese ethnic rebellion against Mongol rule
- reinstituted Confucian culture, which was largely Han
- Ming emperors used court eunuchs (couldn't have children so posed no dynastic threat) to balance power w/ Confucian administrator
- Sources:
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- Qing means, "blue, aqua, clear, transparent"
- Qing character contains 3 strokes of the water symbol
- the 1st Qing emperor renamed "the Great Jin" empire ("Jin" signifies "metal and fire") to "Great Qing"
- Jin was understood to represent the fiery tempers of the Manchu royalty
- Qing for "transparent" and "water" indicated an end to feuds in the royal family
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1644–1911
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Manchuria, China
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- Arose from the "Later Jin Dynasty" from Manchuria (northeast region of China
- thus is also known as the "Manchu Dynasty
- "Manchu" = people from Manchuria
- Jin dynasty ruler Hong Taiji, renamed the "Great Jin" to "Great Qung" in 1636
- he renamed the "Jurchen" people to "Manchu"
- "Manchu" may come from the word for "brave"
- the renaming reflects his conquest of all of Manchuria
- key Hong Tajji's rise was adoption of artillery, which the Ming had used to defeat him before
- he conquered the Ming capital in Beijing in 1644
- as ruler, he accepted ethnic Han into his military and government, and even married 10000 Manchu women to Han men
- sources:
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