Peter P. Wan

Asia Past and Present


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only powerful but also sustainable. All succeeding dynasties in the next 20 centuries would adopt the amalgam of the Qin and Han models of imperial government.

      Shang Yang (390–338 BCE) was a Legalist who believed that it is agriculture and war that make a nation rich and strong. As advisor to the king of Qin, he carried out reforms to achieve that goal. He rewarded peasants with exemption from labor service for increasing their crop yields and bringing new lands under cultivation, and he abolished aristocrats’ inherited privileges and ranked men according to their contribution in war. These reforms naturally incurred the hatred of the old‐guard aristocrats. When the old king died, they had Shang Yang executed by quartering: His limbs and neck were tied to five horses, and drawn until his body was torn to pieces.

      Timeline: Qin and Han Dynasties and the Era of Division, 221 BCE–581 CE

221–207 BCE Qin Dynasty.
390–338 BCE Shang Yang: Legalist prime minister to the king of Qin before unification under Qin Shihuang
284–208 BCE Li Si: Legalist prime minister under Qin Shihuang
259–210 BCE Ying Zheng, who becomes Qin Shihuang in 221 BCE as he unifies China, constructs the Great Wall, and gives China its name from the name of the State of Qin
207 BCE–220 CE Han Dynasty: embraces the Qin administrative system but tempers its tyrannical methods by adopting Confucian moral principles, creates the imperial examination system for bureaucratic civil service applicants, and gives the Chinese people their name, Han Ren, or Han people (i.e., Chinese people)
256–195 BCE Commoner Liu Bang becomes Han Gaozu, the founding emperor of the Western or Former Han Dynasty at Chang’an/Xian
179–104 BCE Thinker Dong Zhongshu revises classical Confucianism to enhance the status of the emperor; Confucianism becomes the official ideology of dynastic China
156–87 BCE Liu Che (aka Han Wudi, or the Martial Emperor) launches successive wars against China’s neighboring nomadic tribes
145–86 BCE Sima Qian, founder of China’s traditional historiography and author of Records of the Grand Historian
81 BCE Salt and Iron Debates discuss the role of government in the economy
9–23 CE Xi Dynasty under reformer Wang Mang briefly supplants Han Dynasty
25–220 Eastern or Later Han Dynasty rules from Luoyang
220–581 Period of Disunity begins after the fall of the Han Dynasty
220–265 Three Kingdoms period
265–317 Western Jin
265–420 Eastern Jin
317–581 Northern and Southern Dynasties
581–589 Reunification of China under the Sui Dynasty

An illustration of the drawing of Qin Shi Huangdi (259–210 BCE).

      Qin Shi Huangdi (259–210 BCE).

      Source: Album / Alamy Stock Photo.

      A wealthy and influential merchant class emerged from the agricultural and commercial revolutions of the Warring States period, and they began entering politics. Lu Buwei (?–235 BCE) was one of them, and he was deeply involved in Qin politics. When the Qin king died, Lu became regent to the 13‐year‐old boy king. The able and ambitious boy king grew up in Lu’s shadow, and felt disgraced. He banished Lu as soon as he was officially crowned at age 20. Lu, out of fear, committed suicide in exile.

      Chinese history was plagued by perennial conflict between the Han Chinese and their non‐Han neighbors. The Han Chinese were an agricultural people. They had the propensity of expanding into neighboring territories, but as a sedentary people they were also vulnerable to sudden attack. Their non‐Han neighbors, on the other hand, were nomadic tribal people who were capable of launching lightning‐fast raids either to defend their territories or to loot and kill. The Xiongnu, who roamed the steppes of Mongolia and Russia to the north of China, were the most feared of the nomadic tribes. To put an end to this threat, Qin Shihuang dispatched a force of 300,000 troops to drive them farther north.

      To keep the nomads out, he ordered the building of the Great Wall. It was a project of unprecedented scale. But his absolute power enabled him to muster the human and material resources of the entire nation to drive toward that single goal. The completed Great Wall ran across China’s northern frontier, providing vital protection