The Zhou Dynasty
The Qin Dynasty
The Han Dynasty
Chinese Philosophy
100

This system allowed lords and nobility to control outlying areas but eventually led to a lack of direct central control

The Feudal System/Feudalism

100

This powerful and strong leader became the first emperor of a unified China.

Qin Shi Huang Di.....or just Qin

100

This man founded the Han Dynasty in 206 BCE after leading a rebellion against the Qin.

Liu Bang

100

Founded by Confucius, this philosophy teaches that peace comes from people knowing their place and treating others with respect.

Confucianism

200

This invention and its use in weapons made fighting against the Zhou Dynasty easier for its opponents.

Iron

200

To protect China from northern invaders, the emperor is responsible for building this massive structure.

Qin

200

Under this emperor, who came to power in 141 BCE, China expanded its borders into southern China, Vietnam, and Korea.

Emperor Wudi

200

This philosophy, which Qin Shi Huang Di followed, emphasized strict laws, an efficient government, and harsh punishments.

Legalism

300

These tribes from the north became stronger and repeatedly invaded portions of China in search of resources.

Nomadic Horsemen

300

To maintain control, the emperor forced all powerful families to move here.

The Capital

300

The Han government relied on these types of individuals rather than those of noble birth.  

Skilled officials

300

This philosophy includes "doing by not doing" and suggests letting nature handle problems

Daoism

400

This era of constant internal fighting between the strongest seven states followed the decline of the Zhou

The Warring States Period


400
What did the Emperor do in order to keep his people ignorant?

Burn books

400

This philosophical principle, meaning respect for parental authority, shaped the structure of Han society.

filial piety

400

This symbol represents the Daoist belief in balance, such as light and dark or action and rest.

Yin and Yang

500

This dynasty took over after the Warring States Period.

Qin

500

To eliminate potential threats to his authority and control the flow of information, Qin Shi Huang Di ordered the burning of all books except those dealing with these three specific subjects.

Agriculture, Medicine, History about himself

500

Emperor Wudi took this aggressive action to protect China’s northern borders from the Xiongnu nomadic tribes.

Invading modern day Mongolia

500

This philosopher and key thinker of Legalism argued that because people are naturally selfish, a ruler must maintain total control through clear, written laws and rewards/punishments.

Han Feizi