However, as the empire split into four the scholars were split to different nations and culture which effectively affected the method of political power because Golden Horde was severely influenced by the Islamic teachings and the Khan of Golden Horde was converted to Islam. Yuan dynasty had completely different methods of political power because they were usig Confucius methods of life style. One continuity from 1200 to 1500 CE was tribute from defeated nations to Chinggis Khan than to four khanates. When Chinggis Khan conquered different empires, he demanded tributes from each defeated town or city leading to a tribute system. This lead to many cities and towns paying because of the retribution for not paying was too high.
Mongol Rule in China vs. Russia Due to the Mongols ultimate desire for economic power, the Mongols highly affected both Russia and China in both political and economic aspects. When the Mongols invaded both territories, they destroyed a lot and the key differences and similarities come from how it became reconstructed. Many similarities in politics and economics arose such as the way the facilitated trade, and how their economies dropped. However, many differences occurred like the way they ran the governments, their centers of power, and how the Mongols fell from both states. In many ways, both states were extremely similar in the way Mongols ruled them.
Comparative Essay Both Classical India and Classical China were organized societies with strong centralized governments and complex institutions. Although there were some similarities in their political structure, there were also many differences because of the belief systems which shaped the social and political order of each society. Those belief systems differed in both India and China, they also changed over time due to the creation of new religions or laws. While all of the beliefs affected the political and social structure, some like Legalism and Confucianism were providing big impact on it, while others like Hinduism, Buddhism and Daoism were purely the religions of salvation and harmony with nature. Classical China (1029
The Dehumanizing Effects of the Chinese Army in the Seventeenth-Century If the conditions within a seventeenth-century Chinese army were to be summed up into various categories, a vast majority of those categories would include almost unbearable qualities to the average human. These soldiers would have to constantly endure the elements of the outside world, fight the feeling of being hungry as food grew scarce throughout their campaign, and would have to regularly deal with being far away from home. In The Dairy of a Manchu Soldier in Seventeenth-Century China: My service in the army, by a seventeenth-century Chinese soldier named Dzengseo, a daily log for two years of service is provided for readers to get a firsthand insight on just how harsh these conditions were in the daily lives for a Manchu soldier in his time period. Through the diary entries, the depletion of both the soldiers’ physical and psychological strength becomes evident, and as a result also unknowingly dehumanizes them, thus transforming them into mere pawns for the Chinese military and inflicts a loss of one’s self. Dzengseo first begins to describe the physical toll the soldiers had to deal with while frequently changing camps.
Canada had a very high lack of employment in which the Chinese had good opportunities to get jobs to be able to buy land, grow their own crops to feed their families. In 1858 gold was discovered along the Fraser River in British Columbia. There was a high demand for minors so that encouraged even more Chinese immigrants to come to Canada. To conclude the loyalists had a harder immigration than the Chinese because of the war and the complications of them being exiled from their own
Throughout history, civilizations and empires have faced many of the same challenges. These challenges could have been problems with communication, external threats, internal instabilities, overextension of territory, and so on. These empires also have another thing in common. This is the fact that they all try to deal with these problems in the best way possible, or so they think. King Zheng of Qin succeeded in defeating the remaining Warring States between 230 and 221 BCE, ending one of the most violent periods in Chinese history.
With the Anti-Asian movements, racial prejudice, and economic recessions, the federal government passed the Chinese Exclusion Act on July 1st, 1923, shutting down all Chinese immigration. To the Chinese-Canadian community, this day was known as “Humiliation Day” and shop owners refused to open their businesses that day. This was an impossible hurdle for the men’s goal of family reunion, and they entered a period called “bachelor’s society” (“Indepth China: Chinese Immigration”, CBC). The female population in China was left to fend for themselves and contributed to much of the poverty of the lower class (CCNC). From 1923 on, the community thrived on the expansion of small businesses (.
Yick Wo, a Chinese American laundry owner who was arrested for not having a permit for his laundry mat, even though he was refused a permit. Chinese Americans had owned many of the neighborhoods laundry mats and other local businesses, but they needed permits. One of the owners in the neighborhood, Yick Wo, didn’t receive a permit and continued to run his business. He was eventually arrested. This injustice took place in 1866; after a decade of injustice behaviors that the Chinese Americans received in all places such as being banned from certain jobs and the Anti – Chinese law in the state constitution of 1877, which took place after this case.
Bureau of the Census. I then related to the population and how it affected the lack of jobs in America. This interested me because after the gold rush and the foreign miners tax, Chinese workers began to get other job to make money, making the Americans have no jobs cause them to have hatred over the Chinese immigrants. Exclusion Act (Didn’t allow immigrants into the United states for 10 years.) http://ic.galegroup.com/ic/uhic/ReferenceDetailsPage/ReferenceDetailsWindow?failOverType=&query=&prodId=UHIC&windowstate=normal&contentModules=&mode=view&displayGroupName=Reference&limiter=&currPage=&disableHighlighting=false&source=&sortBy=&displayGroups=&search_within_results=&action=e&catId=&activityType=&scanId=&documentId=GALE%7CEJ1667500114 Lastly, I found the Exclusion Act, in which it didn’t allow any more immigrants into the United States.
To make the situation even worse for the Chinese, California amended its constitution in the late 1870s, which restricted Chinese immigrants from citizenship; in-turn prohibiting anyone from hiring them legally. The discrimination and resentment of Chinese immigrants swelled up and continued throughout the nineteenth century, ultimately leading to the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, which limited the number of Chinese immigrants to only 105 per year. The Chinese population in California faced strict housing laws which forced them to live in segregated neighborhoods. Because of the heavy discrimination against Chinese, the men who worked on the railroad moved eastward into Louisiana