Sunday, November 14, 2010

Great Schism

A sit down with Pope Leo IX

Q: What lead to the Great Schism (1054 C.E.)?
A: There were too many differences between East and West?

Q: What were those differences?
A: There was claims of authority, the patriarch versus the pope, the use of icons, marriage, and Greek versus Latin.

Q: What happened as a result of the Great Schism?
A: The Byzantine Church became known as the Eastern Church and the western branch became known as the Roman Catholic church.


Q: What did you do?
A: The patriarch and I excommunicated each other.

Q: What else happened?
A: Contacts between the two churches were very distant. We treat each other like rivals rather than branches of the same faith.

Columbus leaves Spain

A sit down with Christopher Columbus

Q: Why did you leave Spain?
A: I set forth to the East Indies in search of wealth and prestige.

Q: Were you worried when you couldn't find land?
A: I was very worried. Thoughts of a useless voyage crossed my mind but land was spotted on October 12, 1492.

Q: What were the Tainos and the West Indies like?
A: The Tainos were very friendly and open toward my people. The West Indies were not what we were searching for, but it was nice.

Q: How did you treat the Tainos?
A: We treated them rather harshly. We assaulted, killed and seized the Tainos. I required them to pay gold; if they refused, they were tortured or killed.

Q: What was it like when you returned to Spain?
A: They showered me with love and thanks. I had brought back great knowledge and was a hero.

Q: What did you do after this voyage?
A: I went on three other voyages and discovered previously unknown continents.

Charlemagne

A sit down with Charlemagne (768 C.E.)

Q: How did you get the throne?
A: Well, I am the grandson of Charles Martel. But my brother and I shared the throne for a while until he died which is when I claimed the entire throne.

Q: What do you want to accomplish?
A: I would like to create a unified Christian Europe. I will work closely with the Church and spread Christianity throughout the empire.

Q: How will you keep order in your kingdom?
A: I have appointed powerful nobles to rule local regions. I have also sent out missi dominici to check on roads, listen to grievances, and see that justice was done.

Q: Are you going to do anything about education?
A: I regard education as a way to unify my kingdom. I have set out to revive Latin learning throughout the empire and encourage the creation of local schools. I also want to revive the glory of Rome at my court at Aachen. I have brought many of the best scholars of Europe to the Palace school here.

Q: What do you want your legacy to be?
A: I want to be known for extending Christian civilization and blend it with other traditions. I also want to be known for setting up strong, efficient government. I want others to look at what I did and put it into their kingdom.

Crusades

A sit down with Pope Urban II (1095 C.E.)

Q: How many Crusades were there and what was the purpose of them?
A: There were 9 Crusades, the first one ordered by myself, and the purpose was to reclaim the Holy Land of Jerusalem.

Q: Why were the Crusades called for?
A: I hoped to increase power in Europe and maybe heal the schism between the Roman and Byzantine churches. I also hoped that the Crusades would set Christian knights to fight Muslims instead of one another.

Q: Were the Crusades successful?
A: Yes and no. We returned with knowledge and many great things, but we were also captured and killed by the Muslims in the 3rd and 4th Crusade..

Q: What were the affects?
A: The Crusades did have a significant effect on life in Europe. European economies expanded, the power of monarchs increased, increased papal power, and a wider view on the world was shown. The Crusades also ended the Dark Ages.

Magna Carta

A sit down with King John (1215 C.E.)

Q: How did you end up signing the Magna Carta?
A: The Barons rebelled against me and were complaining about taxes and how I violated their rights.

Q: What did the Magna Carta state?
A: It stated the states rights of the Barons and that I, the King, must obey the law.

Q: What did this lead to?
A: This lead to Due Process of Law.

Q: What is that exactly?
A: It states the rules the government must follow for fair and impartial trial.

Q: This also lead to the development of Parliament. What is that?
A: Parliament is the House of Commons, House of Lords, and they have the Power of the Purse. I agreed to not raise new taxes without consulting the Parliament.

Q: Do you believe the Magna Carta will affect future government?
A: Most definitely. The Magna Carta has ideas that will carry on throughout the future.

Battle of Tours

A sit down with Charles "The Hammer" Martel

Q: What happened at the Battle of Tours and what were its effects?
A: I lead my men, the Franks, against the Muslims. We triumphed at the battle and to us it was a sign that God was on our side. Muslims would no advance no further into Western Europe.

Q: What is the significance of the Battle of Tours?
A: It shows that any kind of people can walk into Europe. They must fight the best to take over, which will not happen under my watch.

Q: Where do you go from here?
A: The only way is up. I plan to set the table for my kin in the expansion of the Roman Empire.

William the Conqueror

A sit down with William the Conqueror (1066 C.E.)

Q: How did you go from William of Normandy to the King of England known as William the Conqueror?
A: I raised an army and won the backing of the pope. I then defeated Harold of England at the Battle of Hastings. I was then crowned King of England.

Q: How will you get control of new land?
A: I will: grant fiefs to Norman lords and the church, keep land for the crown, monitor castles, and all vassels will swear allegiance to me.

Q: How will you learn about your kingdom?
A: I have created the Domesday Book. This is a census of my entire kingdom. This will eventually help create an efficient system of tax collection.

Q: What is the purpose of all this?
A: I am setting the table for future kings to develop an efficient way to rule a kingdom.

Rome sacked/Falls to Barbarians

A sit down with Attila (434 C.E.)

Q: What are you trying to accomplish?
A: I plan to embark on a savage campaign to conquer Europe.

Q: Are you aware there are Barbarian groups trying to capture Rome?
A: Yes, in 410 C.E. Alaric of the Visigoths plundered into Rome as well as other Barbarian groups who were conquering parts around Rome. This helps me by weakening Rome so I can get the final blow.This conquest by Alaric was the sacking of Rome.

Q: What do the Christians call you?
A: The "scourge of God" because they believe I am punishing them for the sins of humankind. I strike fear into everyone of their eyes. Rome is no match for me.

Q: How will the Hun invasion affect other Barbarian groups?
A: They do not want to be killed by me, so they flee to the Roman empire which destroys more and more of Rome before the Hun can take over.

A sit down with a Germanic leader (476 C.E.)

Q: Have you done the unthinkable, conquer Rome?
A: Yes I have ousted the emperor in Rome. This is the official "fall of Rome."

Q: How will your conquering affect Rome?
A: There will be military attacks, political turmoil, economic weakness, and social decay. Rome has entered a dark time.

Constantine the Great


A sit down with Constantine (313 C.E.)

Q: What did the Edict of Milan do?
A: It granted freedom of worship to all citizens of the Roman Empire. This ended the persecution of Christians.

Q: How will legalizing Christianity play out?
A: It will thrive in the empire. It will also underlie social and cultural developments for many centuries.

Q: What will you reform?
A: I will continue Diocletian's reforms, but I will also grant freedom of worship and establish a new capital, Constantinople.

Q: How will Constantinople affect the empire?
A: Constantinople will make the eastern empire the center of power.

Q: What were the results of your reforms?
A: They revived the economy and by the increasing power of government, it will help hold the empire together. But on the down side the reforms failed to stop the longterm decline.

Julius Caesar/Fall of the Roman Republic


A sit down with Julius Caesar (58 B.C.E)

Q: How did you become a significant leader?
A: The Fall of the Roman Republic allowed me to emerge a leader for the Roman people. I plan on dominating Europe.

Q: How would you describe yourself?
A: A ruthless and ambitious military commander. I am also a tremendous leader.

Q: Why did you cross the Rubicon River, which no one had taken an army with before?
A: I was showing Pompey that I am all business, you cannot just tell me what to do and expect me to do it. I am the leader and I take orders from no one.

Q: Why did you make reforms?
A: Here in Rome we have tons of problems. I made a reform to employ the jobless and give land to the poor. I reorganized the government of provinces and granted Roman citizenship to more people. I also reformed the calendar based on that of the Egyptians.

Q: Why were you killed?
A: The Senate was worried I was going to make myself King of Rome so they assassinated me.

Q: Do you think a war will result after your death?
A: There were most likely be a power struggle so there will most likely be a war to gain the throne.

Alexander the Great


A sit down with Alexander the Great (331 B.C.E.)

Q: How did you gain the throne?
A: After the beloved King Philip II was assassinated, my mother Olympias put me onto the throne.

Q: What was your first victory like?
A: When I defeated the Persians at the Granicus River, I was ecstatic and I knew my father would be proud of what I had accomplished; his dream of conquering the Persians.

Q: What did you do after your first victory?
A: I went through Asia Minor into Palestine and south to Egypt before turning east again to take Babylon in 331 B.C.E. My army and I destroyed everyone in our path to total domination.

Q: Why did you pull out of India?
A: We had never lost a battle, but my soldiers were exhausted from our long campaign. Reluctantly, I also turned back to Babylon where I began planning a new campaign.

Q: What do you want your legacy to be?
A: I want to have cultures combine and have Alexandria as the cultural capital. My Hellenistic lifestyle will give new roles for women and they will love me for what I have done.

Friday, November 12, 2010

Axis Age/ Golden Age in Greece

A sitdown with Pericles (429 B.C.E.-after Persian wars)

Q:   What type of government are you using?
A:    A direct democracy

Q:   What exactly is a direct democracy?
A:    Well, under this system the citizens take part directly in the day-to-day affairs of government.

Q:   What is your opinion on the people's involvement with government?
A:    I believe that all citizens, regardless of wealth or social class, should take part in government.

Q:   What are you going to do to allow poor people to get into government?
A:    Athens is going to start to pay a stipend, which is fixed salary.

Q:   I hear you want to do some rebuilding, what is that about?
A:   Yes, I would like to rebuild Acropolis, which those dang Persians destroyed.

Q:   What is your main mission?
A:    I am going to turn Athens into the cultural center of Greece. I strongly support the arts, science and mathematics.

Q:   How are you gonna make your mark on history?
A:   I will go down as one of the greatest rulers in Greek history for everything I have accomplished.

Thanks for your time Pericles

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Zheng He



Zheng He was a sick nasty explorer who started in 1405 C.E. by commanding the first of seven expeditions. He departed a with a huge fleet of ships, larger than ever before, to explore Southeast Asia and India.

In 1435, the year he died, the Ming emperor suddenly banned the building of seagoing ships. Later, ships with more than two masts were banned. Confucian scholars had little interest in overseas adventure and commerce. Rigid loyalty to tradition would eventually weaken China and leave it prey to foreign invasion. All of Zheng He's ships and travel logs were destroyed.

60 years later Christopher Columbus would discover the New World. Regretful much?

Song Dynasty



Zhao Kuangyin reunited much of China and founded the Song Dynasty (960 C.E.).

The Song was the Golden Age of China. Just about everything possible flourished: trade, fast growing rice, and the creation of paper money. There was surpluses which allowed people to pursue commerce, learning, and the arts.

The Grand Canal was built under the Song. Food was grown in the south and sent up the canal to the North. The Grand Canal reached its peak under the Song.

China was an ordered an ordered society. It had an emperor, aristocratic families, and a huge bureaucracy.

China had two main social classes: the Gentry and the peasantry. The Gentry was the wealthy land owning class. The Song scholar-gentry valued learning more than physical labor. Social order was based on duty, rank, and proper behavior. The ideal Confucian was a wise, virtuous scholar who knew how to ensure harmony in society. The merchants were on the lowest part of the social scale. Their riches came from the labor of others. An ambitious merchant might buy land and educate one son to enter the ranks of the scholar-gentry.

There was an abundance of rich culture. Artists painted harmony, architecture and porcelain were dominated by Buddhist themes, and Chinese writing had poetry, scholars producing philosophy, history and religion. There were short stories that blended fantasy, adventure and romance. They also invented gunpowder, the mechanical clock, block printing and the movable print.

The Song Dynasty was the greatest dynasty in China and perhaps even the world.

In the late 1200's the Mongols invaded and overthrew the Song Dynasty.

Tang Dynasty



The Tang Dynasty (618 C.E.-907 C.E.) followed the brief Sui Dynasty. The Tang Dynasty reunifies China. The first Tang emperor, Li Yuan, was a general under the Sui Dynasty. Him and his son, Li Shimin, crushed all rivals and established the Tang Dynasty. 8 years later, Li Shimin forced his aging father to step down and took the throne himself, taking the name Tang Taizong. He was a brilliant general, government reformer, historian, and master of the calligraphy brush. He would become China's most admired emperor.

Chinese armies forced the neighboring lands of Vietnam, Tibet, and Korea to become tributary states. That is, while these states remained self-governing, their rulers had to acknowledge Chinese supremacy and send regular tribute to the Tang emperor. At the same time, students from Korea and Japan traveled to the Tang capital to learn about Chinese government, law and arts.

Tang rulers helped restore the Han system of uniform government throughout China. They rebuilt bureaucracy and enlarged the civil service system to recruit talented officials trained in Confucian philosophy. They also set up schools to prepare male students for the exams and developed a flexible new law code. Tang emperors instituted a system of land reform in which they broke up large agricultural holdings and redistributed the land to peasants. This policy strengthened the central government by weakening the power of large landowners. It also increased government revenues, since the peasants who farmed their own land would be able to pay taxes.

The Tang Dynasty was the Golden Age of Poetry thanks to Li-Po and his bro Du Fu.

The Tang Dynasty eventually weakened due to corruption, high taxes, drought, famine, rebellions, and they lost territories to Arab invaders (907 C.E.).

Mongols take China




It's 1200 B.C.E. and us Mongols have a sick leader by the name of Genghis Khan. He is going to take over everyone in his path to the Pacific Ocean.

Genghis Khan did not live to complete the siege of China, but over a 150 year period his heirs dominated much of Asia. Of his heirs was his grandson Kublai Khan. Kublai Khan tried to prevent the Mongols from being absorbed into Chinese civilization. When he was ruling in China he reserved the highest government jobs for the Mongols if they did not serve in the army.

The Mongols were not mean to you, as long as you regularly paid tribute to them. Genghis Khan had set up an example for his successors by ruling conquered lands with toleration and justice. He had no use for city life, but he did respect scholars, artists, and artisans. He also listened to the ideas of other religions such as Confucianism, Buddhism, Christianity, Islam, Judaism, and Zoroastrianism. The sons and grandsons of Genghis Khan established peace and order within their domains. Political stability paved the path for economic growth. Cultural exchanged increased substantially. Under Mongol rule, an uneasy mix of Chinese and foreign customs developed. Kublai Khan had named his dynasty the Yuan Dynasty.

Marco Polo, a Venician merchant, traveled to China and spent some 17 years in Kublai Khan's service. His writings of his time in China were extremely detailed and left a vivid account of the wealth and splendor of China. He described the royal palace of Kublai Khan and also described China's efficient mail system. His also told of how cities were 10 times larger than that of Venice. In the next centuries Polo's writings sparked European interest in the riches of Asia.

The Yuan Dynasty declined after the death of Kublai Khan in 1294.

Han Dynasty



The Han Dynasty has now taken the place of the Qin Dynasty here in the year of 206 B.C.E. Liu Bang has expressed his plan of extending the Great Wall. The population is booming up to about 50 million people. Peace has been restored to China. Also, the Han Dynasty has adopted Confucianism. They rely on well-educated scholars to run a bureaucratic government. A scholar-official is expected to match the Confucian ideal of a gentleman. Emperors have adopted the idea of civil servants should win their position by merit, rather than through family ties.

Year 141 B.C.E.
Emperor Wudi has strengthened the government and economy. He is also making improvements to canals and roads. He has begun reorganizing finances and is imposing a government monopoly on salt and iron. His policy is expansionism, which is expanding China's territory by increasing the amount of land. He has also opened up a major trade route, the Silk Road.

Year 184 C.E.
Burdened by heavy taxes and enormous debt, the peasants have revolted. Many peasants have left their villages and fled to the mountains. I hear they have been forming secret groups, but who knows what that is about.

Year 220 C.E.
The Han Dynasty has aged and signs of decay are appearing. Emperors can no longer control military rules. The weak emperors in the past have let canals and roads fall into disrepair. Warlords have overthrown the last Han emperor. After 400 years of unity, China is now broken up into several kingdoms. Due to the disorder, many invaders have gotten over the Great Wall and set up their own states. So much for a "Great" Wall.

Buddhism comes to China



Here in the year 100, I have been hearing a lot about Mahayana Buddhism. Apparently missionaries and merchants have spread this religion from India to here in China. It seems a lot of people are having trouble with this new faith. Chinese tradition and Buddhism seem too different to be in the same area. But many people are accepting Buddhism and following its guidelines. I have noticed a lot of new Buddhist when China is in distress. Mahayana Buddhism offers the hope of eternal happiness and presents the Buddha as a compassionate, merciful god. Through prayer, good works, and devotion, anyone could hope to gain salvation, which neither Daoism or Confucianism emphasizes. Maybe Buddhism isn't so bad.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Great Wall

So I'm hanging out with my buddies at poker night and the table talk is that Shi Huangdi is rounding up the citizens of China to build something he calls the "Great Wall." Everyone is saying that although it would be a great construction to keep invaders out of China and the people of China in, it would have huge consequences. Shi Huangdi is forcing all the men to help him consruct this wall. Large groups of men have died builidng the Great Wall. I don't know if Shi Huangdi's architectural idea will pay off. But he does say that the Great Wall will become an important symbol to the Chinese people, dividing and protecting their civilized world from the nodmadic bands north of the wall. We'll see.



Taoism or Daoism


Taoism is the basic fundamental of "The Way." Taoism is an philosophy of China, that has come with Confucius' philosophy (around 500).  I was chilling with Lao Tzu, the founder of Taoism, and he slapped me in the face with some knowledge. He was telling about his philosophy, Taoism. Knowing Lao Tzu, I knew he was all business. He was a wandering teacher just trying to find his way in the hard streets of China. He was just going around telling people to attain harmony with the Tao and the Three Senses of Tao. Lao Tzu wrote the Dao De Jing (The Way of Virtue), and this book has had enormous influence on Chinese life. Many Daoists have turned from the "unnatural" ways of society. Some of those people have become hermits, artists, or poes. Daoists view government as unnatural, therefore is the cause of many problems. But I have noticed that people are taking views from Daoism and Confucianism and sort of blending these things together. I know Lao Tzu and Confucius were both righteous dudes, so we will see what becomes of this.

Monday, October 18, 2010

Confucius

Confucius was my father. He lived from 551-479. I wish he could have been around longer to spread his great philosophy. At an early age he decided he would dedicate himself to education and public service. He felt that educated people had a responsibility to serve in government so they could turn their good ideas into action. He spread education to both the rich and the poor, money did not matter to him. He inspired thousands of people with his guidelines about the right way to live. He did not serve well as a public servant, though. His high standards of conduct often brought him into conflict with corrupt officials. My father said, "The superior man understands righteousness. The inferior man understands profit." He also taught that harmony resulted when people accepted their place in sociey. He stessed 5 key relationships: ruler to subject, parent to child, husband to wife, elder brother to younger brother, and friend to friend. He believed that, except for friendship, none of these relationships were equal. He also believed that it was a ruler's responsibility to provide good government. In return, the people would be respectful and loyal subjects. He said, "The best ruler is a virtuous one who leads poeple by good example." He also believed that governments leaders and officials should be well educated.

My father was a great man and will be missed by thousands.

Unification of China


It's the period of warring states as the localists here in China call it. My grandfather said that this period began in 475 and it's still going on now in 221. China has been fighting for these years within our nation trying to unify the nation but all attempts have been unsuccessful. But the Qin are very close to conquering all of China. They have done this with large amounts of horses and foot soldiers.

Next week...

The Qin have done it. They have unified all 7 kingdom of China. Their ruthless leader, Qin Sin Huangdi, has done the unthikable by leading a group to unify China. They have begun what they call the "Silk Road". They have also begun mass weapon construction. Qin Sin Huangdi has called this the official start of the Qin Dynasty.