English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Also, how did geography affect the development of China and Japan?

2007-03-13 10:06:22 · 5 answers · asked by yani891 2 in Arts & Humanities History

5 answers

China was always a large country comparable in size to the U.S. It has vast differences in topography and climate. It has always suffered from natural disasters like flood and famine as well as earthquakes. The Yellow and Yang's Rivers define the land. These Rivers have often flooded causing untold misery. Japan also suffers from natural disasters like earthquakes and tsunamis. Japan is a smaller land being smaller than California. It consists of 4 main islands with a limited area that can be farmed. Japan is made up of rivers and mountains. So the Japanese have been more prone to colonies other countries, like their expedition in Korea in the 17th century. The fact that they are an island people encourages them to look to the sea. Most of their diet is made up of fish and shellfish. And their land is suited for the cultivation of rice and tea. Also because they are separated from the mainland of Asia by the treacherous Sea of Japan their country was easier to defend. This was a very different situation from China which was always open to foreign invasion. It was inevitable that Japan would one day become a naval power especially since Japan had few natural resources. I hope this will help you

2007-03-15 10:05:05 · answer #1 · answered by harveymac1336 6 · 0 0

China is an extremely huge area of land, but with a strong cultural nationalistic feeling. Thus China was mainly ruled with extremely centralized empires with emperors and little peasant political action. Japan can be said to be the opposite. The Japanese are very warlike in nature (at least in history) and the mountainous terrain encouraged individual shogunates to take power much like landlords in European feudalism. These are some basic ideas, I'm no Asia expert.

2007-03-13 11:33:41 · answer #2 · answered by willbakerman60 3 · 0 1

Japan... Island united states of america that replaced into able to effectively seal off its borders to the exterior on each occasion it needed, and for that reason the jap continually had political administration over their very very own united states of america, and administration what they observed (chinese language script/Kanji and rice and Buddhism) and what they did no longer opt for (Western domination and Christianity). Korea... peninsula that's comparatively hassle-free to invade and has many organic harbors on its west edge for that reason permitting chinese language cultural contacts to surely diffuse in, bringing Buddhism, architectural types, and different such products China... massive flat plains with the Yangtze and Yellow rivers. Allowed for elementary political administration over large stretches of territory quite interior the northern portion of the rustic. Southern section is mountainous and has dense jungles, slower progression of states there wish this facilitates

2016-10-02 01:46:04 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Japan = Britain

China = France + Russia

Yes...I know it isnt a good way to describe Chinese and Japanese culture since they have many unique factors of their own...but basically, quotes above are quite useful to understand those two asian countries

2007-03-16 00:41:39 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

There not use to it,my guess.kristskoda@aol.com

2007-03-13 10:21:35 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers