The first T'ang emperor, Li Yüan, known by his temple name Kao-tsu, began as a contender for the rule of the Sui dynasty, of which he had been an official. He overcame various rivals and rebels, and by 621 he controlled China's eastern plain; in 624 he added the North and South, although some rebels remained in the North throughout the dynasty. He directed many complex military operations in his tenure and established the basic institutions of the T'ang state. He emulated the first Sui emperor in establishing a highly competent bureaucracy, and he adopted the same pattern of local administration.
Because the state was bankrupt, the administration was kept small, simple, and cheap. The land-distribution system of the Sui was adopted to give every taxable male a plot and to minimize the number of large estates, and Li Yüan also took on the Sui system of taxation. He created mints and established a copper coinage that lasted throughout the dynasty. He recodified the laws with stated penalties for specific acts and provided for their review every 20 years.
The second emperor, Li Shih-min, known as T'ai-tsung, succeeded to the throne in 626 by murdering two brothers and forcing the abdication of his father, but he became one of the greatest emperors China has known. He adjusted the balance of the court aristocracy to equalize regional influences and expanded both the Sui use of examinations in literature and culture for hiring civil servants and the Sui system of high-quality schools at the capital. He further enshrined the classics and published a standard edition. He defeated his eastern Turkish enemies and spread disunity among those in the west, expanding China farther westward than ever before.
One of the most remarkable women in Chinese history, Wu-hou, intrigued her way into the role of empress during the reign of Kao-tsung (649-683). She took up residence in Lo-yang (the western capital) and ruthlessly aggrandized her role by inflating the bureaucracy during Kao-tsung's illness. Despite her excesses, she maintained a steady grip on the government until she was in her 80s, when she was forced to abdicate.
The dynasty reached the peak of its wealth and power during the early 8th century, which was a golden age for its arts. The aristocracy, scattered, murdered, and incarcerated under the empress Wu-hou, was restored and oversaw an era of reform. In the second half of the 8th century, however, rebellion broke out in the northeast and spread rapidly, forcing the emperor Hsüan-tsung to flee west to Szechwan. Although the rebellion was finally suppressed, in its wake came a period of provincial separation and later rebellion. By 818 the emperor Hsien-tsung had restored the authority of the empire throughout most of the country. In the second half of the 9th century, the government grew weaker, and rebellions recurred; the dynasty declined until 907, when it collapsed into a scattering of independent kingdoms that withstood unification for more than 50 years.
2007-04-06 10:34:03
·
answer #1
·
answered by Retired 7
·
1⤊
0⤋
B. The great Reform. Chinese Tang Dynasy = (618 - 907) <1> Japanese Soga Family, Shotoku Taishi, Great Reform = (552-710) <2>
2016-05-18 21:57:13
·
answer #2
·
answered by marietta 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
Orangeisu, Instantshi and Dissolvetze
2007-04-06 07:02:54
·
answer #3
·
answered by Tor Hershman 3
·
0⤊
1⤋