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World > Asia > China > China Historty



 

History of China

Ancient times (from antiquity to A.D. 1840)
From archaeological findings we know that about 500,000-1,000,000 years
ago, there were primitive human beings such as Yuanmous Man, Lantian
Man and Peking Man in the wide expanse know today as China. After the
long perod of primitive existence, the Xia Dynasty, the first in
Chinese history, was established in the 21st century B.C., heralding
the beginning of a slave society in China. The following shang and
Western Zhou dynasties saw further development of the slave society.
They came the Spring and Autumn and Warring States periods (i.e., the
Eastern Zhou Dynasty), periods of transition from slave to feudal
society.

In 221 B.C., Qin Shi Huang, the First Emperor of the Qin Dynasty, ended
the rivalry among the independent principalities in the Warring States
Period and established the first centralized, unified, multi-national
state in Chinese history - the Qin Dynasty. Subsequently, one dynasty
replaced another. They included the Han, Wei, Jin, Southern and
Northern Dynasties, Sui, Tang, Five Dynasties, Song, Yuan, Ming and
Qing. China remained a feudal society until the Opium War in 1840.

Ancient China was fairly well developed in both economy and culture.
During the apex of the Chinese feudal society - the Han and Tang
dynasties - agriculture, handicrafts, weaving and shipbuilding were
advanced. Transportation both by land and water was convenient;
extensive economic and cultural relations were established with Japan,
Korea, India, Persia and Arabia. Papermaking, printing, gunpowder and
the compass, four major creations of ancient Chinese science and
technology, are embodiments of the wisdom and power of the Chinese
peole which have exerted an enormously profound influence on the
history of mankind.

Meanwhile, famous thinkers in ancient China such as Lao Zi and
Confucius were influencing the traditional Chinese culture and even the
world civilizations. Sun Zi's Art of War remains an invaluable
reference for people of the military and economic circles; Cao Xueqin's
Dream of Red Mansions is considered the representative work of Chinese
classical literature and continues to inspire research and study both
at home and abroad. Great achievements were also made in the fields of
astronomy, mathematics, geography and medicines. The Gan Shi Xing Jing
(Gan Shi Catalogues of Stars) of the Warring States Period is the
earliest catalogue of fixed stars in the world. Zhang Heng of the Han
Dynasty invented the armillary sphere and seismograph. During the
Southern and Northern Dynasties Zu Chongzhi calculated the Northern
Dynsties Zu Chongzhi calculated the value of (?) to be between
3.1415926 and 3.1415927. He was the first person in the world to have
accurately calculated the value of (?)to seven decimal places. The Ben
Cao Guang Mu ( Compendium of Materia Medica) by Li Shizhen fo the 16the
century, records more than 1,800 kinds of herbal medicines and over
10,000 prescriptions.

Modern Period (1840-1919)
The Opium War, which started in 1840, was a turning point in Chinese
history. In the 17 th and 18 th centuries the major countries of Europe
were looking around for markets for their merchandise and colonies. To
protect its opium in trade, Britain launched the war of aggression
against China in 1840. In 1842 the corrupt Qing court signed the
humiliating Treaty of Nanking with Britain, bartering away China's
national sovereignty. This marked the reduction of China to a
semicolonial, semifeudal country.

The Revolution of 1911, a bourgeois democratic revolution led by Dr.
Sun Yat-sen, ended the rule of the Qing Dynasty. Thus, the monarchy
that had existed in China for 2,000years came to an end, and the
provisional government fo the Republic of China was founded.

New Democratic Revolution ( 1919-1949)
In 1919 the May 4th Movement against imperialism and feudalism took
place. In this moment, the Chinese working class for the first time
appeared on the political scene. In 1921, at its first National
Congress, delepgates representing Communist groups from all parts of
China including Mao Zedong, Dongbiwu, Chen Tanqiu, He Shuheng, Wang
Jinmei, Deng Enming and Li Da, met in Shanghai and founded the
Communist Party of China. The Chinese people was led by the Communist
Party participated in a bitter struggle for many years, which included
four periods: the Northern Expedition ( 1924-27), Agrarian
Revolutionary War(1927-37), War of Resistance Against Japan (1937-45),
and the National Liberation War (1945-49). In 1949 the Chinese people
finally ended the rule of the Kuomintang headed by Chiang Kai-shek,
achieving the victory of the New Democratic Revolution.

The People's Republic of China (1949- )
On October 1, 1949, 300,00 people gathered at Tiananmen Square in
Beijing for the ceremony formally declaring the new state. Mao Zedong,
chairman of the Central People's Government, solemnly proclaimed the
founding of the People's Republic of China.

After a period economic recovery in the first three years (1950-1952)
following the founding of the People's Republic, and then the basic
realization of agriculture, the handicrafts industry, and capitalist
industry and commerce between 1953 and 1956, the leading role of public
ownership of the means of production had been defined, and the
transition from new democracy to socialism realized. During the then
years from 1957 to 1966 China began large-scale socialist construction.
Overall, great achievements were made in the national economy during
this decade in spite of some serious mistakes in the economic
construction. The nation's total industrial fixed assets quadrupled
between 1956 and 1966, and the national income increased by 58 percent
in constant prices. The output of essential industrial products, such
as steel, coal, crude oil, generated electricity and metal cutting
machine tolls increased by several or, in some cases, even a dozen
times, and some new and developing industries such as electronics and
petrochemicals were established; work in science and technology,
particularly in atomic energy, jet technology, computers,
semiconductors and automatic control, progressed rapidly. The "cultural
revolution, "which lasted for then year from May 1966 to Oct. 1976,
brought great calamity to the country and the people, causing the most
serious setbacks and most damaging losses to both since the founding of
the People's Republic of China.

Drawing on the support of the broad masses of the Chinese people, the
communist party of China smashed the Jiang Qiang counter-revolutionary
clique in Oct. 1976 The end of the disastrous "cultural revolution"
marked the beginning of a new era in Chinese history. Since the Third
Plenary Session of the CPC Eleventh Central Committee at the end of
1978, China has instituted a policy of reform and opening to the
outside world. The errors of the " Cultural revolution" and the
earlier" Leftist" deviations were rectified. The focus was shifted to
modernization centered around the economy; a socialist modernization
road with Chinese characteristics was defined.

 

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