The Great Wall.
The Ming Dynasty (1368–1644) was the last ethnic Chinese dynasty, sandwiched between two foreign ones: the Mongol-led Yuan Dynasty and the Manchurian Qing Dynasty. It was the fourth longest Chinese dynasty, lasting for 276 years.
It began with a decline in the Mongol Empire and uniting of ethnic Chinese resistance; flourished with a growth in foreign trade, art, and literature; and ended with natural disasters, war, and internal rebellion, which weakened the Chinese ready for defeat by the united Manchurian forces.
Ming Dynasty Key Events
1368: The Ming Dynasty began with a rebellion, which defeated the Mongol-led Yuan Dynasty (1271–1368).
1402–1424: Emperor Yongle ushered in a period of prosperity, including trade with Europeans. This continued until the late 1500s, when it was forbidden due to armed smugglers and Japanese pirates.
1420: The Ming capital was moved to Beijing after the Forbidden City was completed. Before that, the capital was Nanjing.
Traditional culture flourished during the Ming Dynasty. Three of the Four Great Classical Novels of Chinese Literature were written.
The Great Wall was more crucial than ever in protecting China from northern invasion during the Ming era.
1644: The dynasty ended when peasant rebellion from the south led to the Great Wall gates being opened to the Manchurians, who initiated the Qing Dynasty (1644–1912).
The Yuan Dynasty in Terminal Decline (1328–68)
During the final 40 years of the Yuan Dynasty era there were famines, drought, flooding of the Yellow River, a bubonic plague pandemic, and other natural disasters. Tens of millions of people died or became homeless.
The Rise of the Peasant Rebellion (1358–68)
Mausoleum of Zhu Yuanzhang in Nanjing
Born in 1328, Zhu Yuanzhang was an ordinary boy among tens of thousands of poor peasants. When he was 16, the Yellow River flooded his home and his entire family died from catching a disease. He took shelter in a Buddhist monastery and then joined the peasant rebellion after the monastery was destroyed by the Mongol army.
With decades of effort, Zhu Yuanzhang became the leader of a strong army.
In 1358, Zhu's army conquered Nanjing. He made Nanjing his capital.
Over the next 10 years, he defeated all other powerful rival armies. In 1368, he attacked the Yuan empire capital of Dadu (Beijing) and gained control of Beijing. The Yuan court fled northwards.
Emperor Hongwu (Ruled 1368–1398) — Ming Dynasty Establishment
Zhu Yuanzhang claimed the Mandate of Heaven in 1368 and established the Ming Dynasty. Hongwu Emperor was his title. His name meant "Vast Magnificent Military".
New Government Structure
Imperial Examinations.
Eunuch demoted: In earlier dynasties, eunuchs had been involved in internal politics and were responsible for a lot of the court's decadence. To limit their power and ensure the centralization of authority, eunuchs were not allowed to engage in official affairs and had to be illiterate.
Emperor Hongwu staffed his bureaucracy with officials who passed the Neo-Confucian Imperial Examinations. These officials were dependent on the court for their position, so that they might prove to be more loyal. They were generally very intelligent and well educated.
Pro Peasant Policy
Hongwu grew up as a peasant, and maybe he championed their plight since he knew firsthand that they were often reduced to slavery and starvation by the rich and the officials.
He instituted public work projects, and he tried to distribute land to the peasants. During the middle part of his reign, Hongwu made an edict that those who brought fallow land under cultivation could keep it as their property without being taxed.
By the end of his reign, cultivated land had increased substantially. The peasants prospered because they sold their produce to the growing cities. During his reign, the population increased quickly.
Anti Merchant Policy
Emperor Hongwu grew up as a peasant and he knew only too well that peasants were often reduced to slavery and exploitation by the rich and officials.
The Forbidden City.
He tried to weaken the merchant class and to force them to pay high taxes, and he even relocated a large number of them. In 1371, Emperor Hongwu issued a sea ban policy.
Emperor Jianwen (Ruled 1399–1402)
In 1398, Emperor Hongwu died. According to his will, Hongwu's grandson Zhu Yunwen became the new ruler as Hongwu's eldest son had died. Zhu Yunwen was known as Emperor Jianwen.
Emperor Yongle (Ruled 1402–1433) — The Ming Golden Age Began
Zhen He's Voyages to the West.
In 1402, Emperor Jianwen's uncle, Zhu Di, led an insurrection against him. Zhu Di was the fourth son of Hongwu and he became the third emperor of the Ming Dynasty — Emperor Yongle.
The Forbidden City and the Grand Canal (1407–1415)
In 1402, Zhu Di burned down the palace built by Hongwu in Nanjing. Then he moved the capital to Beijing and construction of a new capital city – the Forbidden City – lasted from 1406 to 1420.
In order to provide quick transportation to his capital city, he rebuilt the Grand Canal from 1411 to 1415. This increased commerce in the north.
Maritime Trade and the Zheng He's Voyage to the West (1405–1433)
Emperor Yongle built a big fleet, and he made Zheng He (1371–1433), who was a Muslim eunuch, the leader of it. The fleet was sent on expeditions to gather tributes and to go to the West to trade.
The fleet sailed as far as Arabia. Zheng He and his Muslim sailors made the Hajj at Mecca. He may have also reached Africa. It is said that seven missions were sent out and that 2,000 ships were constructed for these missions.
Emperor Xuande (Ruled 1425–1435) — Prosperity Continued
The 13 Ming Tomb.
As the fifth emperor of the Ming Dynasty, he ruled over a peaceful and prosperous period.
In 1432, Emperor Xuande issued a sea ban policy. In 1433, the court canceled sponsored sailing missions after Zheng He died.
He set up schools in court for eunuchs. The eunuchs started to become involved in politics.
Although the Ming court stopped sending out fleets to the West, Western Europeans came to them to trade and to teach Christianity. There was a high demand for manufactured products, such as porcelain and silk, in the West and Japan.
Emperor Ying (Ruled 1435–1449 and 1457–1464) — Mongol Invasion Ousted
In 1449, a Mongol leader led an invasion and captured Emperor Ying. This was called the Tumu Crisis. His brother became Emperor Dai with the support of the court. Emperor Ying was released by the Mongols — he was under house arrest for 7 years and retook the throne after Emperor Dai died in 1457.
Emperor Wu (Ruled 1505–1521) — Europeans Repelled
In the early 1500s, the Europeans arrived to trade. Rafael Perestrello, who was a cousin of the wife of Christopher Columbus, arrived in Guangzhou in 1516 to trade.
Then a large Portuguese expedition arrived in Guangzhou in 1517, but the landing party was put in jail. After this, there were naval battles that the Portuguese generally lost.
Emperor Shi (Ruled 1521–1566) — Deadly Earthquake, Macau Conceded
In 1556, a serious earthquake happened in Shanxi that is thought to have been the deadliest earthquake in history. About 800,000 people, 30 percent of the people in Xi'an, were killed.
In 1557, the Portuguese convinced the Ming court to agree to a treaty that made Macau a legal trading port of the Portuguese.
Emperor Shen (Ruled 1572–1620)
Emperor Shen was the longest reigning emperor of the Ming Dynasty.
In the late 1500s, the merchants prospered greatly from foreign trade. The fortunes of the empire became heavily reliant on trade.
Japan Repelled from Korea (1592–98)
Then in the 1590s, the Ming managed to help their Korean allies defeat two Japanese campaigns, but it was at great cost to the empire. 26 million ounces of silver was paid.
Wangfujing catholic church.
Jesuits Influence Limited in the Ming Court (from 1601)
In 1582, a Jesuit named Ricci landed in Macau. He and his fellow Jesuits highly appreciated the philosophy and the culture of the Ming people and they studied the teachings of Confucianism and Daoism deeply.
By 1615, there were 10,000 converts. Some Jesuits were welcomed as court officials after 1601. Some of the Jesuits in the Ming court were very good scientists. They tried to introduce Western science and philosophy to the rulers and officials, but were largely unsuccessful.
Emperor Tianqi (Ruled 1620–1627) — Earthquakes and Famine
During the early 1600s, there were an unusually large number of earthquakes. From 1621 to 1627, there were two earthquakes above 7 on the Richter scale.
In the first half of the 1600s, famines became common in northern China because of unusually dry and cold weather that shortened the growing season. The change of climate occurred throughout the world and is called the Little Ice Age.
Emperor Chongzhen (Ruled 1627–1644) — Poverty, Rebellion, Invasion
Monetary Crisis
Banknotes.
In 1639, a Japanese shogun limited foreign imports as part of his isolationist policy. This further limited the empire's trade and contributed to the Ming empire's monetary crisis. The value of silver jumped markedly.
Because of the inflation of the price of silver and natural disasters, the farmers had more difficulty paying their taxes in silver as they were required to do. This damaged Ming court revenues, and the farmers found that paying their taxes in silver was a great burden.
There were great deficits, and soldiers deserted in large numbers because they were not paid.
Civil Rebellion
The Ming troops were dispirited and perhaps underfed. A peasant soldier named Li Zicheng (1606–1645) mutinied with his fellow soldiers in western Shaanxi in the early 1630s after the government failed to ship supplies there. His rebel troops had a base of power in Hubei.
In 1641, a great epidemic started. It isn't known how many died from the plague, but it is said that 90% of the people in one area died from it.
In the 1640s, another ex-soldier named Zhang Xianzhong (1606–1647) created a rival rebel base in Chengdu, Sichuan Province.
In 1644, Li Zicheng's troops were allowed into Beijing when someone opened the gates for him to enter. The last Ming emperor hanged himself on a tree. But the rebel troops didn't enjoy this victory.
Invasion by the Manchurians
Li Zicheng sent an army to attack a Ming general named Wu Sangui and his army who were guarding the Great Wall against the Manchus at Shanhaiguan Pass. The general sided with the Manchus and let them through the gate of the Great Wall. Then the Manchus conquered Beijing in 1644.
Ming Dynasty Sights and Tours
Most of the Ming Dynasty cultural sites are in Beijing and Nanjing. These two cities served as the capitals of the dynasty. Beijing was the capital for the final 262 years.
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