Medieval China: Crash Course History of Science #8

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  • čas přidán 20. 05. 2018
  • Like Egypt, Sumer, and Mesoamerica, ancient China represents a hydraulic civilization-one that maintained its population by diverting rivers to aid in irrigation-and one that developed writing thousands of years ago. Today, we’re going to focus on the time of the Northern and Southern Song Dynasties, a time of great technical innovation. But, before we get to the Song, let’s take a tour through the ages and explore key elements of Chinese scientific culture.
    ***
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Komentáře • 939

  • @briangonigal3974
    @briangonigal3974 Před 6 lety +757

    The Mongols. I REALLY should have seen that coming in an episode about China.

    • @angelesse7342
      @angelesse7342 Před 6 lety +59

      The Mongol montage(Mongol-tage) started in Crash Course World History, as their civilization comes up in world history quite often, usually being an exception to a lot of situations compared to other civilizations. During and after that series, it just became an amazing run on joke.

    • @robertjarman3703
      @robertjarman3703 Před 6 lety +8

      Evan Kurniawan They also had merit systems for promoting military leadership, so that was very useful for having effective generals who were harder to corrupt.

    • @Shenzhou.
      @Shenzhou. Před 6 lety +26

      The Mongolian merit systems were actually copied from China. Even the Mongols made use of Chinese gunpowder weapons in their conquests of other states.

    • @robertjarman3703
      @robertjarman3703 Před 6 lety +7

      It's not like they developed it in a vacuum. Temujin just decided to implement it.

    • @Nemoticon
      @Nemoticon Před 6 lety +5

      +神州 Shenzhou
      Stop preaching

  • @archcast9282
    @archcast9282 Před 6 lety +142

    "From the country that brought you Taoism, porcelain, and noodles... we now bring you: The Standarized Test!"

  • @stevenzheng5459
    @stevenzheng5459 Před 5 lety +96

    Song China did industrialize using coal and hydraulic automation. I've read from somewhere that the iron production of the Song dynasty was not to be surpassed until the early 19th century by the British. There were many reasons why Song China didn't reach the level scientific sophistication found in 17th - 19th century Europe. Most of the problems could be explained by the timing and the amount of time.
    One, the scale of innovation was a lot slower during the Medieval world. This is a significant factor that should not be overlooked. The reason why Medieval China produced more science than the world combined at the time was probably due to the population being larger. The population of technologically gifted people is proportional to the number of people! Song' China's population was roughly 40-50% of the world population, which gave them a numerical advantage of raw brainpower.
    Two, mentioned briefly near the end of this video was the Mongols. However, they were not the only ones to blame! Before the Mongol invasion, there were the Jurchens who conquered the Northern half of the Song empire. They destroyed a lot of impressive machines and hydraulic infrastructure, including Su Song's "Cosmic Engine" in Kaifeng.
    Three, they were too early to have developed the necessary mathematics to develop science more quantitatively. Chinese math during the Song was centuries ahead of its time (especially with algebra and number theory), but the math problems were still largely written with words instead of symbols. It took Europe about 2-3 centuries to develop a coherent set of math symbols. Song China ran out of time.
    Four, although Song China had many technical experts, they did not have many specialists who devoted all their time to one area of research. Most "scientists" did their science more like a hobby for they were scholar-officials of the imperial court. They were more occupied with more mundane work with government administration. Also, the Neo-Confucian cosmology was not objectively true, but hey, Newton's cosmology wasn't either, just more closer to the truth.

  • @GaysianAmerican
    @GaysianAmerican Před 6 lety +113

    Damn Hank's passion is so infectious.

    • @lucaspincerato
      @lucaspincerato Před 6 lety +7

      Gaysian_american all-time high passion is a Crash Course trademark, they all rock!

  • @cesiumbob7278
    @cesiumbob7278 Před 6 lety +126

    The Chinese had amazing art during the Tang Dynasty. I am glad that I got learn about the Tang Dynasty because it was an amazing period in human history. I am not Chinese but I love Chinese history it is so amazing. I love American history (my country’s history) and China’s history the most. I can name all the Chinese Dynasties just like I can name all the U.S. Presidents! I know most of the emperor’s names, but I am working on it. Right now, I am reading about the Ming Emperors.

    • @joannesmith1175
      @joannesmith1175 Před 5 lety

      How can you know most of the emperor's name's, there's literally hundreds of emperors since the qin dynasty

    • @cadhlaohanlon4443
      @cadhlaohanlon4443 Před 5 lety +3

      Joanne Smith I managed to memorize about 70% of their names and short intro back in senior high, so I wouldn’t be surprised if anyone who love the Chinese history as much as I do telling me that they could do even better. It’s insanely difficult but still doable if you want it hard.🤩world of the nerds huh😂😂😂

    • @joannesmith1175
      @joannesmith1175 Před 5 lety +1

      @@cadhlaohanlon4443 Would you say xi jinping is the modern day Chinese emperor

    • @cadhlaohanlon4443
      @cadhlaohanlon4443 Před 5 lety +2

      Joanne Smith in some level yes, I get confused often by this but I think that’s somehow what the Chinese ppl wished for.

    • @joannesmith1175
      @joannesmith1175 Před 5 lety

      @@cadhlaohanlon4443 What do you get confused by?

  • @thesuperproify
    @thesuperproify Před 6 lety +290

    MAJOR Correction !
    The Imperial Examination is NOT and NEVER about rote-memorisation and recitation of old books !
    first of all, It includes curriculums in music, arithmetic, writing, military strategy, civil law, revenue and taxation, agriculture and geography, and the Confucian classics.
    The questions are written to demonstrate knowledge and mastery of the facts related to these topics, extract the political, economic, legal, and social logic and thinking behind it, and apply these thinking on some of the current events. It is the application of your understanding of the Classical Texts to solve the present problems rather than just a test of memory.
    lets see some example of surviving Imperial Test questions !
    Part 1, History.
    Question 1, The Zhou dynasty (~ 1000 BC) and the Tang dynasty (~ 600 AD) had relatively strong regional governments and relatively weak central government. The Qin dynasty (~ 200 BC) and the Wei dynasty (~ 400 AD) had relatively weak regional governments and relatively strong central government. Discuss the pros and cons of each.
    Part 2, Policies
    Question 1, There are three goals of universal education: first, to make our citizens nice people, second, to make our citizens patriotic, third, to help our citizens acquire the knowledge and skills so that they can make their own living independently. Discuss which one of these is the most important.
    Part 3. Confucius Classics. (These are quotes from either Confucius or other scholars around ~ 5 centuries BC)
    Question 1, write a discussion essay on the following Confucius quote, “the essence of governing a nation is in promoting transparency and morality, respect and stay close to the common people, until we reach the ultimate state of kindness and humanity”.
    The Palace Examination ( held every three years in the Imperial palace and often supervised by the emperor himself)
    Question 1. In ancient dynasties (Xia, Shang, Zhou) servicemen came from peasants. After the Well-field system and the GouXu system ended, conscription started. Was it because the situation has changed?
    (*Examples from Han, Tang, Song military systems)
    Compare the military systems of Han, Tang and Song dynasties. What can we learn from them?
    The Power of the military comes from knowledge, and knowledge comes from education. Countries became powerful through acknowledging the importance of military. Many of their officers know military, and physical education starts from children. Since we are learning from them, shouldn't we find the deeper reason?
    This example is just for 4 parts, and 1 question per part. In reality there are a lot more parts and questions.
    As you can see, these are not “yes” or “no” question, but you are basically asked to demonstrate your knowledge and mastery of the fact related to these topics, extract the political, economic, legal, and social logic and thinking behind it, and apply these thinking on some of the current events. It is the application of your understanding of the Classical Texts to solve the present problems rather than just a test of memory.

    • @Shenzhou.
      @Shenzhou. Před 6 lety +42

      Fascinating. Its really quite similar to some modern exam paper questions, describing certain topics or events in history and getting candidates to write essays about them.

    • @TheGreatWaveoffRideauCanal
      @TheGreatWaveoffRideauCanal Před 5 lety +17

      And modern Chinese civil servants need to pass similar exams for their positions......

    • @benjaminfacouchere2395
      @benjaminfacouchere2395 Před 5 lety +5

      The question is: Could you pass the exam by just rote-learning the answers from i.e. a question-collection ?

    • @lololman
      @lololman Před 5 lety +7

      It's really cool to have exam scripts 100s or 1000s of years old that you can refer back... wait... what am I saying?

    • @andyxyz01
      @andyxyz01 Před 5 lety +16

      It is true that many questions were open ended and in essay form, which allowed for freedom and flexibility in responses; however, rote memorization did certainly play a part in the Imperial Exams. For example, the “8 legged essay” required exact quotes from the Classics, and misquoting even a single character could lead to failure.

  • @Luboman411
    @Luboman411 Před 6 lety +99

    The Huang He (the big northern river) is called the "Sorrow of China" because it's a crazy river that floods very frequently and at times changes course completely, destroying hundreds of thousands of acres of farmland and leaving millions without homes. Dealing with that monster of a river requires farmers and bureaucracies that have to be sophisticated and hugely adaptable to keep the irrigation and levee system going. Otherwise the Huang He would make mincemeat out of their societies.

    • @robertjarman3703
      @robertjarman3703 Před 6 lety +9

      Luboman411 Is that story related to the legend of Yu the Engineer?

    • @Kus519
      @Kus519 Před 6 lety +1

      Robert Jarman any rivers in china has a dead engineer in it lmao

    • @zollyz
      @zollyz Před 6 lety

      if only they didnt over cultivate the flood plains along that river...

    • @wei06zhen18
      @wei06zhen18 Před 6 lety +1

      There's no electric pump... so along the river is the only place to get sustainable water from, which includes underground water nets.

    • @missauburn8781
      @missauburn8781 Před 5 lety

      It’s also the mother river.

  • @charlesphilips2045
    @charlesphilips2045 Před 6 lety +582

    Great respect to the Chinese and to their contribution to Science. This episode was awesome!

    • @andrewsun222
      @andrewsun222 Před 6 lety +11

      thank you good sir

    • @user-wb7ez9ud4p
      @user-wb7ez9ud4p Před 6 lety +12

      Respects received, sending "thank you" card ;)

    • @operationstratos1013
      @operationstratos1013 Před 6 lety +3

      Charles Uwakwe
      Thank you.
      In addition to this, there may be some hypotheses that the early concept of "blood transfusion" was discovered (safe to operate is another matter entirely) back in the Warring States period (right before the Qin Dynasty).
      But mostly due to the "burning text and burying scholars" incident, the details and texts on the subject were lost.
      Of course, these were just indirect guesswork based from ancient Chinese text recordings

    • @djdjdjshhsuss3941
      @djdjdjshhsuss3941 Před 6 lety +2

      Operation Stratos101 yeah it's sad that they love to burn those, and then during the ming, burning zheng hes fleet, and then during the cultural revolution.. countless times..

    • @user-wb7ez9ud4p
      @user-wb7ez9ud4p Před 6 lety

      "Love" to burn? Then why aren't you a pile of ash right now? Offering baseless non-consensual claims that attack an entire civilization as you do, you should be grateful that you're allowed to speak.

  • @UteChewb
    @UteChewb Před 6 lety +32

    Many, many years ago I was looking randomly through my university library, as I often did, and came across Joseph Needham's "Science and Civilisation in China," a multi-volume work. Absolutely mind blowing. Just skimming through it will amaze.

  • @Disco0x
    @Disco0x Před 6 lety +18

    I spent 4 years getting a degree in Chinese Studies and I learned something in this video! Well done, as always, Crash Course team.

  • @leto1963
    @leto1963 Před 6 lety +501

    Europe: The sun revolves around the Earth
    China: Nah the sun revolves around *us*

    • @byc6230
      @byc6230 Před 6 lety +16

      LOL, good one.

    • @zollyz
      @zollyz Před 6 lety +19

      I think in this case the 'us' just refers to the world according to the chinese. aka earth in modern term

    • @Chigou
      @Chigou Před 6 lety +78

      Emperor: Nah. Sun revolves around me.

    • @Carewolf
      @Carewolf Před 6 lety +19

      No they believed China was the world, and the emperor ruled over everything worth ruling over.

    • @j.3785
      @j.3785 Před 6 lety +36

      I'd say many believed they were the centre of the "civilised" world, not the world itself. It may come off as a bit arrogant, but when we compare the overall advancement of technology, medicine, economic size, etc with the surrounding tributary states, it'd take great humility to not be so self absorbed :)

  • @CtrlAltDlt68
    @CtrlAltDlt68 Před 6 lety +15

    Probably your best series so far. This one has been awesome. Keep it coming!

  • @polaris528
    @polaris528 Před 6 lety +412

    I’m here after failing my Medieval China test

    • @Shenzhou.
      @Shenzhou. Před 6 lety +35

      Chinese people invented the concept of examinations, so that schoolkids all over the world and people like you today take tests.

    • @ShenGe
      @ShenGe Před 6 lety

      完全没错!哈哈

    • @abdulwaduod11
      @abdulwaduod11 Před 5 lety +1

      中国历史很长

    • @yueqiwang8860
      @yueqiwang8860 Před 5 lety +1

      Haha

    • @apostolispouliakis7401
      @apostolispouliakis7401 Před 5 lety +5

      At least you have Medieval China test here in Greece the majority of history is about Greece so much that it actually gets boring and nobody cares about the important things of Greek history the only reason history lessons during my last year of high school wasn't bad was because our teacher let me do the lesson and told the class about world history.

  • @GuilhermeVieiraSechat
    @GuilhermeVieiraSechat Před 6 lety +191

    You could have used "the mongols" to talk about the House of Wisdom too, because they were the ones who took it when they destroyed Baghdad

    • @GuilhermeVieiraSechat
      @GuilhermeVieiraSechat Před 6 lety +16

      Exactly, but I think that Genghis at least disapproved it and punished the one responsible for this tragedy, not that this would fix something

    • @Shenzhou.
      @Shenzhou. Před 6 lety +19

      The Mongols were all about conquering territories and destroying other country's priceless works. After conquering China, these nomadic horsemen know nothing about growing food to feed a population (they're nomads, so they simply move on to greener pastures) so it was Chinese farmers that grew food to feed the empire. The Mongols lived in temporary houses (yurts) so it was Chinese builders who built houses, infrastructure, and so on. The Mongols know nothing about governing an empire, so Chinese bureaucrats were left in charge of running the country.
      In my opinion, Song dynasty China would be better off, left to our own innovation and industry, if it weren't for the Mongols conquering China during that time.

    • @tams805
      @tams805 Před 6 lety +2

      The problem with defending those who were conquered, is that they were conquered.
      They may have been great at lots of other things, but they weren't good enough at defending themselves.

    • @ayymen
      @ayymen Před 6 lety +4

      +Guilherme Vieira - Sechat Genghis died 31 years before the sack of Baghdad.

    • @VoidOfDarkness9
      @VoidOfDarkness9 Před 6 lety

      Guilherme Vieira - Sechat
      So? It's not like Ancient's used to store book only in 1 city. Heck Burning of baghdad is over exacrated in term of loss of advancement. Muslim's have been burning lots of Great library's from syria to india and yet we find books.

  • @Eldred15
    @Eldred15 Před 6 lety +6

    When Hank asked why the Song didn't have a scientific revolution I said to myself "because of the Mongols!" I was not disappointed to see the Mongoltage 30 seconds later. Of course that was hardly the only contributing factor.

  • @TechMagnet
    @TechMagnet Před 5 lety +24

    Good knowledge on the topic, keep going !

  • @lucaspincerato
    @lucaspincerato Před 6 lety +31

    Wait for it.... The mongols!
    (Simply the best catch phrase ever!)

    • @rejvaik00
      @rejvaik00 Před 6 lety

      Lucas Pincerato so good it's become a running joke

  • @quinius173
    @quinius173 Před 6 lety +6

    Great job, CrashCourse!

  • @sergiosergiyenko
    @sergiosergiyenko Před 4 lety

    One of the only channels on CZcams with a huge auditorium and no commercials or sponsors... How pleasant :)))

  • @Kaasschilfertje
    @Kaasschilfertje Před 6 lety +1

    Gotta love that Mongols montage! One of the best parts of the good old world history crash course!

  • @tristanholderness4223
    @tristanholderness4223 Před 6 lety +159

    You got the etymology of Mandarin the wrong way round. It referred to the bureaucrats first (coming from a Sanskrit word for a "minister" or "councillor" via Malay and Portuguese, but notably not any Chinese language, and related to the word "mantra"), and then was only later extended to the Lingua Franca used by those bureaucrats.
    Mandarin itself calls mandarins guān, Cantonese calls them gun1, Hakka calls them kôn, Min Dong calls them guǎng, Mine Nan calls them koan, and Wu calls them kuoe.

    • @iryisa
      @iryisa Před 6 lety +2

      In Portuguese it relates to the word "mandar", to command, although this is a deprecated etymology

    • @gnomebodyknows
      @gnomebodyknows Před 6 lety

      I was just going to bring this up! Thanks for such a detailed explanation!

    • @Shenzhou.
      @Shenzhou. Před 6 lety +15

      The irony is that the Mandarin dialect is referred to as Pǔtōnghuà 普通话 by modern Chinese, which translates to "ordinary speech" despite the English word "Mandarin" supposedly referring to imperial court speech.

    • @tristanholderness4223
      @tristanholderness4223 Před 6 lety +3

      Javier Gil-Ruiz yeah, that's just a coincidence/folk etymology and cannot explain the "in" ("im" in Portuguese) at the end, something a Sanskrit etymon ("mantrin") does much better.

    • @tristanholderness4223
      @tristanholderness4223 Před 6 lety +7

      神州 Shenzhou it being the ordinary speech of most people's pretty recent though and only really happened due to post-imperial linguistic (bringing official Mandarin closer to the northern vernacular it was originally based on) and educational (teaching this new Mandarin to all kids across the country from the very start of school, even in areas where Mandarin had only ever been the language of the bureaucracy and the populace spoke various local varieties) reforms.
      Even today, the fact Modern Standard Mandarin is called putonghua isn't really accurate across much of the south where you're much more likely to hear Cantonese or Wu in ordinary everyday speech

  • @sexboy8960
    @sexboy8960 Před 6 lety +6

    I love learning

  • @sueardington1676
    @sueardington1676 Před 6 lety

    Perfect! Thank you for this valuable addition.

  • @iancain7844
    @iancain7844 Před 6 lety

    a very awesome course. Thanks, CrashCourse!

  • @citiesskyscrapers4561
    @citiesskyscrapers4561 Před 6 lety +193

    Great video! Your channel is one of the best!

    • @stza16
      @stza16 Před 6 lety +1

      I agree. This is the best channel after Logan Paul.

    • @uncleelias
      @uncleelias Před 6 lety

      Now, to tweak the audio/echo in the studio.

  • @Mr2squids
    @Mr2squids Před 6 lety +17

    Oh Mongol-tage, how I have missed you! What fun we will have together!

  • @MsLindsayBoo
    @MsLindsayBoo Před 11 měsíci +1

    Another great episode. I’d love to hear more about the movable type printing press.

  • @jalepezo
    @jalepezo Před 6 lety

    I love that Giancoli textbook from the Physics series, it used myself in college

  • @heavenwatcher100
    @heavenwatcher100 Před 5 lety +24

    As a Chinese, I definitely hate the Mongol conquest that ruined many civilizations including ours. But it's not objective enough to give all the blame to Mongolian atrocities. There are more subtle reasons for the fall of China, the Muslim world, and many others who suffered in that period.
    To me, isolation, self-complacency, lack of ambition as well as low motivation to develop a sophisticated logic and reasoning system(e.g hypothesis and proving) are more crucial reasons. China was a great civilization especially famed for engineering achievements that occasionally/ haphazardly bring technological breakthroughs including very crucial ones like paper-making, printing press, and gunpowder/cannons. Yet the rigidity of Chinese characters, conciseness but lack of variation of words and grammar, unification and centralization of the feudal empire under the mandate of heaven all give rise to a tendency of stagnation or less variation of ideas, and
    an absence of effort to develop a more systematic summary of knowledge like Euclidean geometry and algorithm that can further induce
    more breakthroughs, at least in the field of natural science. Even in the field of philosophy or social science, much effort was devoted to better governing the realm with lower stability cost instead of boosting and supporting real-life technologies.
    Similar issues also happen in the last few decades of the Abbasids, the grand library of Baghdad became a huge collection of existing knowledge and center of Islamic art and philosophy. But the local monarchs and religious heads were obsessed with interpreting religious canons/contexts or enjoying the wealth instead of retrospection, exploration, and initiate the renaissance. In other words, these once great civilizations in the old world all fall to traps created by themselves, becoming stagnant and eventually surpassed by European explorers. The devastation caused by the Mongols and other nomads just accelerated their declines. But without major breakthroughs from contacts or even shocks with other civilizations, it's really hard for them to escape from the trap.

    • @tobiasit2190
      @tobiasit2190 Před 5 lety

      Yeah, I hate China's conquests too

    • @iddomargalit-friedman3897
      @iddomargalit-friedman3897 Před 5 lety +4

      I can relate to that point.
      In the end, it's all about competition.
      While the ME and china have been ruled by empires, the many european cities and kindoms had to constantly compete.
      In war, trade, prestigous art, and even religion.
      In china, it was either an empirial fleet of 300 ships - or non.
      In europe you had countless monarch, each could finance a fleet of like, three.
      But if you were rejected by one, you could go to the next.
      Yes, it was cheotic and bloody - but it made them constantely improve, and finally surpass everyone else.
      In the long term fight between order and competition, competition won, big time.

  • @karabatakpoezie
    @karabatakpoezie Před 6 lety +10

    Just like the last, elucidating (Islamicate engineering had thought of a robot musician raft, wow!). Sidenote: I have been undeniably addicted to Crash Course, this and that (your Theatre department, and Yorick too, rocks). So yeah, this Belgian student would like to whisper a quick "thanks, guys".

  • @patrickshaw8368
    @patrickshaw8368 Před 6 lety

    Always love these man, keep up the great work.

  • @roryokane5907
    @roryokane5907 Před 6 lety

    Excellent video! The Mongoltage was the icing on the cake! :D

  • @supremereader7614
    @supremereader7614 Před 6 lety +5

    🤣🤣I almost commented ‘all that and no Mongol Montage?’ But you didn’t disappoint, keep it coming. I’ll never get sick of the Mongol Montage! 😉👍

    • @jtmacro
      @jtmacro Před 5 lety +1

      i hope you mean mongoltage, like it calls in when you have closed caption on!

  • @goldogwolly
    @goldogwolly Před 6 lety +53

    I'm Taiwanese but we learned a lot of Chinese history in school, they never emphasized how amazing the technology was though, we just memorized like wars and where dynasties ended. This is much more interesting!

    • @byc6230
      @byc6230 Před 6 lety +12

      Of Course you do, because you are Republic of China. I know the history, although China insist there's only one China, but in reality there are two China(s).

    • @Shenzhou.
      @Shenzhou. Před 6 lety +14

      It's because the government of Taiwan wants to break away from China and to dissociate itself from mainland. But by doing so, it can no longer claim Chinese history as its own.
      As for One China, most major countries in the world recognise the One-China Policy that Taiwan is part of China. Even President Trump, the most powerful man in the world, recognise the One-China Policy, after a phone call from President Xi.

    • @Lin-tm2kz
      @Lin-tm2kz Před 6 lety

      Really?
      If this is in text books, it will still be super boring.

    • @Shenzhou.
      @Shenzhou. Před 6 lety +2

      +Goodle Chinese metallurgists were the first to discover pig iron, cast iron and wrought iron, inventing the blast furnace, the cupola furnace, and the double action bellows to achieve the necessary temperatures needed to smelt iron ores, and Chinese were the first to employ chromium in our alloys. Ancient Chinese even drilled for brine, oil and natural gas, using iron drill bits and constructing bamboo derricks, with specially designed bamboo pipes to siphon off the gas for use as heating.

    • @4473021
      @4473021 Před 6 lety +5

      神州 Shenzhou of course they would claim the history of China as the history of their people; it's where the majority of the population is from. Not being allowed to claim that history as their own would be like white Americans not being allowed to talk about parts of medieval Europe where their ancestors are from, or African Americans not being allowed to claim African history as theirs.
      And it shouldn't really be surprising that the rest of the world recognizes China under the one China policy when China has a million guns pointed at their heads and a bunch of trade deals at their mercy lol

  • @ihorabsent1280
    @ihorabsent1280 Před 5 lety

    The first interesting history of science, thank you very much for your work!

  • @DavidBadilloMusic
    @DavidBadilloMusic Před 4 lety

    That WALL-E on the desk is so cool!! I love it!!

  • @rabbitbobo4131
    @rabbitbobo4131 Před 6 lety +36

    Um... wanted to comment here..
    1.China has the earliest astro physics and the mapping of planet and stars, they know the precise distance of the earth from the sun and calculated the seasonal cycle. The whole middle kingdom thing and the son of god is political for the common people.
    2. Buddism was about religion, Confucius is about social consciousness such as washing your hand before a meal, giving priority to the elderly and young, being kind while contributing the social constructed of the country( those could be seen in Japan more now then in China which is a shame).. that is why his literature was appointed as one of the main text book for scholars and any one who wants to join the kingdom.
    3.The language thing are also in dispute as the official Mandarin(1967-1977) is not established until the Mao revolution, Language was divided similar to early English, written language was standard. the literacy of the people that can write the name is about 5-10% people who can really write is about 1%. Education was privilege at that age and time.
    4. Another huge project is the irrigation of the Great Yellow River, that was one of the first and still the biggest water irrigation project in the world, the river we see today on the map? some of those are actually man made. Just another fact,
    5.Not that the person are unknown but the records were burn during the revolution in China, Chinese has a great respect for those who invented those technology that is why a lot of bright mind contributed to the system, if there were no credit system then scientific progress would not advance as fast.
    6. China has one of the first University and debate schools since the First Kingdom, philosophy was one of the most important subject that is why "old'' China things that wisdom are as important as intelligence.
    7. Technology was one of the tightest guarded secret by the Chinese empire, that is also the reason why the West has to buy China for decades from China. If you think a piece of clay was that much a secrete you can imagine the intensity they have over gun powder and other mechanical invention, that was also why China's techno advance wave so much from dynasty to dynasty.
    Any way this was a great video, as the history of China are still not very well known in the west, I just wanted to clarify the reasoning behind some of the points.

  • @thecker99
    @thecker99 Před 6 lety +33

    Can you imagine what the world would be like had China not insulated itself. All this knowledge being spread globally could have really improved our world even faster.

    • @btdpro752
      @btdpro752 Před 6 lety +1

      Timothy Hecker the thing is it is true for many empires and the knowledge from many cultures is what makes the world more connected then just knowledge from one

    • @alifkazeryu8228
      @alifkazeryu8228 Před 6 lety +19

      +Timothy Hecker I guess that would be really difficult. you see, the main reason why China decide to insulate itself back then is because they feel they have no need for "Barbarian" stuff. I mean, with all this awesome stuff you had, why would you need someone else anyway? remember what happen around 18th century? British have to import addictive drugs to make China want to trade with them (without bankrupting British empire). before then, Spain have to trade so much silver to China because that's the only thing that China accept from "Outsider" to the point that Spanish king have to restrict pacific trade to only 2 ship per year (which lead to creation of massive Galleon to tip toe this rule)
      well, all that didn't stop black market to start spreading China awesome stuff around the world though.

    • @MorbidEel
      @MorbidEel Před 6 lety

      Hmm the flip side of "we don't need other people's stuff" is "I think we should make everyone learn our stuff". Things certainly could have been very different if they decided on the other viewpoint.

    • @alifkazeryu8228
      @alifkazeryu8228 Před 6 lety +5

      +Morbid Eel ok.... why would you want people to learn your stuff? what would you gain for that? isn't it more beneficial if you keep anyone beside your people less advanced than you are?

    • @MorbidEel
      @MorbidEel Před 6 lety +2

      I was looking it from the perspective of imposing your views/ideology/culture/etc on others because you think it is superior. That would naturally require them to learn your stuff to properly assimilate. It's not a nice reason but it seems like a plausible "what if".

  • @idanzamir7540
    @idanzamir7540 Před 6 lety

    Such an amazing world we live in...
    I want to learn everything about everything ever

  • @zachfox7771
    @zachfox7771 Před 6 lety

    thank you, great video, very relevant to today

  • @ericconnor8251
    @ericconnor8251 Před 5 lety +3

    Great video, although I have a minor quibble. While the Tang dynasty Chinese did invent woodblock printing in the 8th century and the Song dynasty Chinese artisan Bi Sheng invented movable type in the 11th century, neither of these were actually a "printing press" proper. The printing press is a term that should be exclusively applied to the screw press mechanism invented by Johannes Gutenberg for movable type printing in late medieval Europe during the 15th century.

  • @coffeecaesar1443
    @coffeecaesar1443 Před 6 lety +35

    Chinese history is something we don't learn much about here in the states.

    • @ashleyteece4237
      @ashleyteece4237 Před 6 lety +11

      Starman or in the west as a whole as far as I know.

    • @robertjarman3703
      @robertjarman3703 Před 6 lety +20

      I got so frustrated when my social studies teacher kept calling the Middle Ages as the Dark Ages. It just makes me feel so tense when I know about Bagdhad, China, the Christian Roman Empire, Mali, Ghana, Teotihuacan, Khosrau Anushiruwan and the Sassanians, Indian Ocean Trade, Great Zimbabwe, Swahili City States, the Carolingian Renaissance. And so many more.

    • @dontlookatmyprofilepicxp2532
      @dontlookatmyprofilepicxp2532 Před 6 lety +4

      Robert Jarman The Christian Roman Empire was one of the reasons for the dark ages but indeed the rest of the world was flourishing.

    • @robertjarman3703
      @robertjarman3703 Před 6 lety

      bibi ozera I meant what others call the Byzantine Empire.

    • @dontlookatmyprofilepicxp2532
      @dontlookatmyprofilepicxp2532 Před 6 lety

      Robert Jarman
      Byzantine empire ( greek orthodox) and holy roman empire (catholics) were enemies. The biggest reason the byzantine empire got weak and fall was because of the cursades conducted by the Pope and Holy Roman Church. So they are very different.
      P.s.The emperor of Constantinopolis even asked for help from the Ottomans to kick the Cursaders who pillaged, plundered and raped out of the City.
      So you see how much they hated the Holy Roman Empire who wasn't very "holy" or "roman" to begin with.

  • @wanderlustlovelace
    @wanderlustlovelace Před 6 lety

    This is the Course I always wanted and never knew it!

  • @dontebellamy5043
    @dontebellamy5043 Před 6 lety

    great vid!!!!!!!! your channel is one of the best like(1000x)

  • @adriennegormley9358
    @adriennegormley9358 Před 6 lety +4

    Not sure when the spinning wheel was invented but every source I've seen has it developed in China first and only appeared in Europe as an import originally.
    The spinning wheel revolutionized cloth production wherever it was used; prior to its development, all thread for cloth making was done with hand spindles.
    Several years back I made the effort to learn spinning. We had to learn hand spindle first before we could graduate to the wheel. Let me tell you, it makes a major difference. Sorta like digging a pool in your back 40, Hank, but using a spade versus a backhoe to do the job.

    • @Shenzhou.
      @Shenzhou. Před 6 lety +5

      Other than the spinning wheel, ancient Chinese people literally invented the gear and the world's earliest gears dating from the 4th century BC in China have been preserved at the Luoyang Museum of Henan Province, China. Like what the uploader said, the list of Chinese "firsts" or true technical inventions is so long that it deserves its own episode.

  • @Rosella0706
    @Rosella0706 Před 6 lety +227

    :D CHINA YAY
    P.S I’m Chinese so whenever you make a video on China it makes me rlly happy hehe

    • @Drip-Soup373
      @Drip-Soup373 Před 6 lety +4

      VampBecca me tooo

    • @2ossy
      @2ossy Před 6 lety +2

      Can you watch youtube in China?

    • @griffdog8233
      @griffdog8233 Před 6 lety +4

      2ossy they most likely live in western nations , but are chiense ?

    • @Shenzhou.
      @Shenzhou. Před 6 lety +16

      People in China can use VPN to access Western websites like Facebook and CZcams.

    • @ChowPunk
      @ChowPunk Před 6 lety +6

      A Non I still can. I'm in China right now

  • @atzenbollen91
    @atzenbollen91 Před 6 lety

    Great editing!

  • @stevenforman3044
    @stevenforman3044 Před 5 lety +1

    I enjoyed watching it.

  • @justindie7543
    @justindie7543 Před 6 lety +13

    What I find most fascinating about China is that it used to be a fragmented mess of different kingdoms and peoples and tribes that somehow united and is still united today. It's like if the Roman Empire were to still be around today larger than ever.

    • @satriakurniawanndjaenal1223
      @satriakurniawanndjaenal1223 Před 6 lety +1

      Hyrum Diesen
      Well, they did go through many dynasties and was actually conquered by the Mongols at one point.

    • @nagisaindaegu784
      @nagisaindaegu784 Před 6 lety +3

      Hyrum Diesen qin the first dynasty made a big contribution for that. The first emperor had the whole country use the same money, the same language and all kinds of things standardized and universal. Most importantly, through many different dynasties the governments always recognized and emphasized the same believes and culture they inherited from the shared ancestor through many means.

    • @kckdude913
      @kckdude913 Před 5 lety

      @@nagisaindaegu784 The Romans tried the same. In fact, that's why you have the Romance languages. But they've diverged from each other quite a bit over the centuries.

    • @alanwake433
      @alanwake433 Před 5 lety

      Its not technically united. The Communist party has many camps, for now Xi's camp appear the strongest but a little trade war can go a long way in giving other camps opportunity.

  • @Alverant
    @Alverant Před 6 lety +7

    This is a great episode. I wish during CC Philosophy you included Eastern philosophy instead of only focusing on Western thinkers.
    Nice to see the Mongoltage again.

  • @donaldwhittaker7987
    @donaldwhittaker7987 Před 5 měsíci

    Always good stuff

  • @christianlindberg4608
    @christianlindberg4608 Před 4 lety

    bro this is amazing i love it

  • @imgooley
    @imgooley Před 6 lety +10

    Some notes on China: Buddhism didn't come to prominence China until the Sui (pronounced like "sway) dynasty at the earliest, and really took off during the Tang (pronounced with a long "a" tahng) dynasty. Second, "competition" between the 100 schools of thought was a Spring and Autumn event: it was mainly during the late Zhou (pr like "Joe"), prior to the unification of China under the Qin (cheen).
    Also, Chinese though is syncretic. A lot of that syncretism was formed by Daoist thought in taking a utilitarian world view overall (oversimplification). So while the official state structure was based on Confucian order, it's not really accurate to say it was the state ideology per se.
    Also, "Mandarin" is a Western word. The Chinese didn't call themselves Mandarins. The mandarins were 君子, or gentlemen/scholar officials. The social order was informed by "the four occupations," or Warrior/Farmer/Craftsman/Merchant. Warrior transitioned into scholar by the Song dynsasty. Within these categories, there were sages of each of these classes that had somewhat of a cult like status. Lu Ban is an example of that.

  • @Dragons_Armory
    @Dragons_Armory Před 6 lety +12

    [ LIKED!!! ]

  • @dojokonojo
    @dojokonojo Před 5 lety

    There's a Giancoli physics textbook on the shelf. I used a Giancoli physics textbook in my 1st year physics course!

  • @nicholasmathiassen6188
    @nicholasmathiassen6188 Před 5 lety +1

    Hey, I like your videos. Could you make a video about the history of Swiss pikemen and Genoese crossbowmen? They were both mercenary companies.

  • @thomasnorton4015
    @thomasnorton4015 Před 5 lety +7

    Why when I open this video do I see “the video is unavailable on this device” while other videos on this playlist work fine??

    • @Payhellbay
      @Payhellbay Před 4 lety

      Same. Wouldn't work on ipad but fine on my samsung phone...

  • @superduperfreakyDj
    @superduperfreakyDj Před 6 lety +71

    The mongols are back!

    • @kallistiX1
      @kallistiX1 Před 6 lety +19

      You foolish fool! The Mongols have never left!

    • @ethanpet113
      @ethanpet113 Před 6 lety +18

      MONGOLTAGE!

    • @martytu20
      @martytu20 Před 6 lety +4

      We’re the exception!

  • @kieranmcgarvey6792
    @kieranmcgarvey6792 Před 6 lety

    this video is really GOOD.

  • @flamedragon07
    @flamedragon07 Před 4 lety +1

    He had to use "wait for it...the Mongols." I loved they way he used the brief clip of the mongols invading the land.

  • @griffdog8233
    @griffdog8233 Před 6 lety +58

    Wow it sounds like China could have been the nation that started the industrial revoultion ,not the UK. I mean they even used coal! But I guess they were too isolationist to start colonies.

    • @mxn1948
      @mxn1948 Před 6 lety +14

      Griffdog82 the song was very close, however one theory goes, unlike Europe, there was more Chinese and thus manual labor was cheaper than early machines so machines never got mainstream

    • @varana
      @varana Před 6 lety +8

      The Industrial Revolution is a complex issue where many factors played a part, not just a singular or even a few technological advances, and many of those factors were social and economic. Like a rather large middle class, the appreciation of private economic success, comparatively easy social mobility, an emphasis on private venture and market forces, the large role and prestige of scientific research and invention in society, and so on.
      As for manual labour, that also goes both ways - at the beginning, the relative shortage of manual labour played a role; but once industrialisation started, the availability of large amounts of cheap labour due to changes in agriculture driving people off their land was important to sustain mines and factories.
      So while China or other societies may have come close to the necessary technologies, they lacked many other ingredients in how the Industrial Revolution started in Britain. We'll never know whether they eventually would've developed their own version but that would've been markedly different from the one we got.

    • @griffdog8233
      @griffdog8233 Před 6 lety

      varana312 Maybe if they had started colonising ( not saying that was good or anything) they could have the resources needed to colonise . But yeah probably too early for anything to happen.

    • @iminformedbecauseisawabunc9402
      @iminformedbecauseisawabunc9402 Před 6 lety +1

      I have read somewhere that there was a point in history where china could hhave easily overtaken europe if it wasn't for it's sudden change of priorities.

    • @2012sweetdreams
      @2012sweetdreams Před 6 lety +5

      That would not be possible since Chinese culture considers businessman as the lowest class of people

  • @coolguywithahat0127
    @coolguywithahat0127 Před 5 lety +4

    So good, but you got a fact mixed up. The Grand Canal that went from Hangzhou to Beijing was not the same distance that New York is to Florida. If New York was located in Beijing than Florida would be located just north of Guangzhou. A much larger distance than Beijing to Hangzhou. Again, your video is great. But that fact there is not true. The distance is more like New York to North Carolina.

  • @sophiasapp5656
    @sophiasapp5656 Před 6 lety

    I never realized how much I needed another Momgaltage.

  • @luixialee3499
    @luixialee3499 Před 6 lety

    Love this video!

  • @aperson22222
    @aperson22222 Před 6 lety +5

    Ah, the Mongols. Good to see them back.

  • @bryanwan6169
    @bryanwan6169 Před 6 lety +17

    My ancestors were from Southern China. Represent!

    • @ArawnOfAnnwn
      @ArawnOfAnnwn Před 6 lety +3

      Congratulations! You're a tiny part of the largest ethnic group on Earth. You must feel so special! :p

    • @Shenzhou.
      @Shenzhou. Před 6 lety +4

      Well, he's part of the world's majority, just like me.

    • @bryanwan6169
      @bryanwan6169 Před 6 lety +4

      Let's go Han Chinese

  • @camiloiribarren1450
    @camiloiribarren1450 Před 6 lety

    Yes! The creators of the abacus, Confucianism, standardized tests and plenty of great inventions

  • @anirudhvinod944
    @anirudhvinod944 Před 6 lety

    I love it!!

  • @day2148
    @day2148 Před 6 lety +22

    I'm a bit surprised considering this series that you never mentioned the Chinese ver of Aristocracy: the 'Scholar-Bureacrats', aka the nobility were expected to study, innovate, and administer to maintain their position in the social hierarchy. As a result many of China's most famous scientists and engineers were also public servants.
    It's interesting that western media usually showcases the Song dynasty as China in its hayday (due to Song's economic strength), but in China the Song dynasty is infamous for its weak government, incompetent rulers, and constantly being invaded. Meanwhile, it's the Tang dynasty - known for its cosmopolitan culture, its military strength, and its multiculturalism that China upholds as its Golden Age.

    • @2012sweetdreams
      @2012sweetdreams Před 6 lety +6

      You cannot blame the Song for that. They are facing the strongest adversaries at the time, multiple of them at once and with limited land resources compare to other dynasties. Plus they had fought the mongols for 45 years which was the longest lasting time for any other country they've ever invaded. This certainly shows the Songs' economic and military might.

    • @day2148
      @day2148 Před 6 lety +6

      China has always faced strong adversaries in the north. The rest of the world just doesn't hear about it most of the time because previous Chinese dynasties successfully contain them (see Han-Xiongnu Wars and Tang Campaigns vs Eastern Turkic Khanagate). The Mongols only spilled into the rest of the world after they successfully conquered northern China. The Song dynasty is also infamous for having several of the most brilliant chinese generals in history who mostly fell to internal treachery (due to the Emperor's incompetence in managing his subjects) rather than outside enemies.

    • @ruedelta
      @ruedelta Před 6 lety +2

      Edmond K. You can definitely blame the Song. They disregarded the military, deeming it the source of troubles as it was what ruined the Tang in the An Lushan Rebellion. This allowed for a strong Jin state in the north, an enemy of their own making. They even had to permit the existence of the Western Xia, which was by all means a Tang-loyal state. In the end they deserved their demise, because they failed to keep balance between the civil and the military sides of governance.

    • @futebolarte3
      @futebolarte3 Před 6 lety

      Tang = 289 years.
      Song = 319 years.
      Song is arguably more prosperous and stable.

    • @day2148
      @day2148 Před 6 lety +6

      If every answer is that straightforward all historians would be out of a job lol!
      The Song collapsed slowly, bit by bit, while the Tang collapsed almost overnight in the fires of a civil war.

  • @user-vs7uz4ro8e
    @user-vs7uz4ro8e Před 6 lety +6

    What about the Tang? They were part of the Golden Age of China! And they had railroads later!
    (coming here after taking AP World exam)

    • @Shenzhou.
      @Shenzhou. Před 6 lety +5

      Tang dynasty was more of a renascence period, not a scientific revolution period like Song dynasty (and perhaps Ming dynasty). Tang dynasty was famous for the explosion in arts, culture, poems, literature, religion, etc, rather than scientific inventions (although there were continued inventions during this period)

    • @user-vs7uz4ro8e
      @user-vs7uz4ro8e Před 6 lety

      was joking

    • @ruedelta
      @ruedelta Před 6 lety +1

      Hey! Give some credit to the Sui - they truly brought about the merit-based civil service exam! Be grateful that your AP World exam isn't predicated on schmoozing lots of aristocrats.

    • @6principlesforcartography61
      @6principlesforcartography61 Před 5 lety

      Printing and gun powder were actually invented by Tang.

  • @davidvidmar3736
    @davidvidmar3736 Před 6 lety

    Love the MONGOLS reference! Throwback to CrashCourse History

  • @mehrajuddin5551
    @mehrajuddin5551 Před 6 lety

    Great video!! Only Channel to make videos on history of science!!

  • @porpoisepork
    @porpoisepork Před 6 lety +5

    Guys, I'm pretty sure there's no year zero. And Buddhism wasn't the competing ideology, it was Taoism.

    • @daniellayton2290
      @daniellayton2290 Před 6 lety

      Albinotron Both were competing. The Song Dynasty was one of Chinese Buddhism's most prolific periods

  • @oldcowbb
    @oldcowbb Před 6 lety +28

    you know, song dynasty are famous for their lyrics

    • @sandercohen5445
      @sandercohen5445 Před 6 lety +4

      oldcowbb get out

    • @AkumaShinigami
      @AkumaShinigami Před 6 lety +7

      This is a great pun 😂 because the Song dynasty IS actually well known for their lyric poetry called ci 😂😂😂

    • @user-nq9ir7jp2z
      @user-nq9ir7jp2z Před 6 lety +1

      lol the song dynasty really is known for its lyric writers in chinese literary history, the 'lyrics' were indeed beautiful and poetic and now we Chinese kids have to memorize them to pass standardized tests we've invented haha

    • @rencechannel2240
      @rencechannel2240 Před 4 lety

      😆😆😆

    • @malachiseducationalcorner8838
      @malachiseducationalcorner8838 Před 4 lety

      Malachi

  • @TeachingandLearningOnline

    Terrific!

  • @Avocadomolotov
    @Avocadomolotov Před 6 lety

    Awesome!

  • @zhubajie6940
    @zhubajie6940 Před 6 lety +17

    One of the best videos of the series. The Song is my fav dynasty. I just wish people would try a little harder to pronounce foreign words a little better. e.g. Hangzhou is more like Hahng-Joe Also don't state the Xia (pron.: shyah) like it was more than legend. Not one bit of writing identify them until 1500 years after their reputed fall.

    • @Shenzhou.
      @Shenzhou. Před 6 lety +5

      The original poster said "I just wish people would try a little harder to pronounce foreign words a little better" so at least he demonstrated some understanding of learning to pronounce foreign words a little better. I wish people would stop getting all defensive, because some made such remark, over what's considered a minor issue.

    • @adriennegormley9358
      @adriennegormley9358 Před 6 lety

      puckay In addition, my experience with the varieties of Chinese spokem in the Bay Area, the Chinese dialects are tonal. Had that drummed into my head when I was 17 and needed to know how to ask "do you want a spanking?" in Cantonese (baby talk) when i was babysitting my sister's 3 toddlers who knew no English. 😜 Quite a learning experience from someone fresh out of Bozeman MT

    • @aczbdk
      @aczbdk Před 6 lety

      Sung was an independent country. China is just a region name, it is NOT a country.

    • @Shenzhou.
      @Shenzhou. Před 6 lety

      The name "China" was actually derived from the first imperial dynasty of China, the Qin Dynasty, in which Emperor Qin Shihuangdi unified all the states and proclaimed himself emperor of China.

    • @martytu20
      @martytu20 Před 6 lety

      Most of the writing back then were burned when Xiang Yu had the QIn Capital burned, along with the imperial library that stored most of the books (including historical text).

  • @Cowaco
    @Cowaco Před 4 lety +3

    Chinese state: 10:13
    Mr Beast: Am I a joke to you?

  • @gamereditor59ner22
    @gamereditor59ner22 Před 6 lety +2

    Nice!😀👍

  • @swiftpain9463
    @swiftpain9463 Před 6 lety

    that new intro music, got me!

  • @Shenzhou.
    @Shenzhou. Před 6 lety +16

    China has 5000 years of history and is among the world's oldest 'continuous' civilization still alive today, whereas other great ancient civilizations like Mesopotamia, Rome and Egypt have since faded to history.

    • @anantasheshanaga3666
      @anantasheshanaga3666 Před 6 lety +3

      Indian civilization is also very old, but Indian civilization 500 years ago was very different from what it was 1000 years ago, which was bery different from what it was 2000 years ago, which was very different from what it was 3000 years ago, which was very different from what it was 5000 years ago, which was very different from what it was 8000 years ago.
      It's strange how Chinese values, culture and ideologies have remained without much change for 4000 years.

    • @lovelylalalala
      @lovelylalalala Před 5 lety +2

      China is the longest standing civilization. India was colonized by the British Empire - whereas China has remained under its own rule. That probably explains the upholding of Chinese values, whereas India was influenced greatly by British colonizers.

    • @andrewforte3852
      @andrewforte3852 Před 5 lety

      They kept mainly to themselves. That may have been the key.

    • @nickrobinson9289
      @nickrobinson9289 Před 5 lety +1

      @@lovelylalalala China was ruled by Mongols and Chinese women raped by Mongols. So I guess you learned to conquer Tibet from the mongols?

    • @miajia3188
      @miajia3188 Před 5 lety

      It's 3000 scientifically speaking, we say 5000 when you include the mythological and unproven piece of history.

  • @gurtrudeskyhopper261
    @gurtrudeskyhopper261 Před 6 lety +3

    Oh this was just uploaded XD

  • @supremekhmer6596
    @supremekhmer6596 Před 5 lety +1

    During the 12th-13th century A.D. should be an important history to teach the world. It was a time of when both the Khmer Empire and Song Dynasty was at it's height. Both empires had strong relations with each other and produced bronze, iron, steel, gold, metal, military technology, urban cities, massive population, geo-engineering, massive hydraulic works, and such on a industrial level. There was a lot more going on in the far east during the middle age periods than the rest of the world. The Khmer Empire already produced hand cannons in the 1100's already and can be seen in the wall carvings of Angkor Wat King Suryavarman II military troop campaign.

  • @penguiKnIGHT
    @penguiKnIGHT Před 6 lety +2

    Another great episode as usual guys! Just one note, the audio on this episode seems a little off. Hank sounds really 'tinny', like there's no bass in his voice. Hope it's a one-off issue, and thanks for making great educational content free on youtube.

  • @KedoXO
    @KedoXO Před 6 lety +4

    "It was whole again...Then it broke again."

  • @user-jh6vt8vx4v
    @user-jh6vt8vx4v Před 6 lety +3

    China... infrastructure.... hmmm, so we are not only obsessed with infrastructure building recently, it is through our history... I should've seen this coming...

    • @BicyclesMayUseFullLane
      @BicyclesMayUseFullLane Před 6 lety

      Well, when you are dealing with hilariously huge amount of people, infrastructure is kinda important.

  • @geoffreywinn4031
    @geoffreywinn4031 Před 6 lety

    Educational!

  • @user-gl6su3xi6s
    @user-gl6su3xi6s Před 6 lety

    Song China has always been my favorite China.

  • @davidsweeney111
    @davidsweeney111 Před 6 lety +7

    Sounds like the Chinese had a good system working, say 9th century? I wonder what the situation was like in medieval England or America?

    • @satriakurniawanndjaenal1223
      @satriakurniawanndjaenal1223 Před 6 lety +10

      David
      Was America even America as we know it in the 9th century?

    • @davidsweeney111
      @davidsweeney111 Před 6 lety +1

      Its a good point, maybe it was just the natives living in wig-wams who knows ....

    • @satriakurniawanndjaenal1223
      @satriakurniawanndjaenal1223 Před 6 lety

      That's probably the case, though I read somewhere that Native Americans had a pretty good woodworking industry and trade prior to the arrival of the colonists.

    • @datapatch7319
      @datapatch7319 Před 6 lety +1

      Satria Kurniawann Djaenal we also had some cool bath tubs

    • @Lin-tm2kz
      @Lin-tm2kz Před 6 lety +3

      If medieval America means Maya, that will be an interesting comparison. Mayan civilization was thriving in 9th century. They were city states so it was very different from Chinese system at that time. And somehow Mayans couldn't maintain the system and finally collapsed around 10th century. I think it is a topic worth looking into it.

  • @bosworthdk
    @bosworthdk Před 4 lety +6

    “This video is unavailable on this device.” ... iPhone 6s , CZcams app

  • @theoriginaljohn
    @theoriginaljohn Před 6 lety +2

    THE MONGOLS!!!!! I WANTED JOHN GREEN TO JUMP ON THE SCREEN AND SAY "WAIT FOR IT, THE MONGOLS" it would have been nice cameo :P

  • @andreimoga7813
    @andreimoga7813 Před 6 lety +2

    Oooooh! The Mongols! I missed those guys!

  • @Croc1513
    @Croc1513 Před 6 lety +5

    Tests! China you historical nerds!

  • @divinesteel3518
    @divinesteel3518 Před 6 lety +25

    Do one for africa

  • @bestplayer4670
    @bestplayer4670 Před 6 lety

    Good teacher

  • @kieranmcgarvey6792
    @kieranmcgarvey6792 Před 6 lety

    there was really cool stuff is this vid

  • @thierryc3025
    @thierryc3025 Před 6 lety +6

    Why our friend taiwan is not on the map?

    • @chronikhiles
      @chronikhiles Před 5 lety +1

      The People's Republic of China doesn't administer Taiwan, last time I checked.

    • @mrtey7283
      @mrtey7283 Před 5 lety

      Because they are not your friends.

    • @My-nl6sg
      @My-nl6sg Před 5 lety

      ​@@chronikhiles It's a geographical map, it's insulting to the credibility of the video as well as the intelligence of the audience to just make the largest island in the region to disappear for the sake of 'who is in charge'

  • @bohemianwindjammer2602
    @bohemianwindjammer2602 Před 6 lety +8

    Hey guys, how soon can we get mathematics rolling on here?

    • @GLPentAxel
      @GLPentAxel Před 6 lety +3

      Akram Elkouraichi Statistics is still going, maybe something like algebra or calc shows up later on?

    • @btdpro752
      @btdpro752 Před 6 lety

      Aesop's Fables calc evevolved in 17th century Europe algebra was in india so China is the best

    • @btdpro752
      @btdpro752 Před 6 lety

      Wow nevermind

    • @RedRogue
      @RedRogue Před 6 lety

      Btd Pro Actually I recall that the Babylonians were using a rudimentary form of calculus to find the areas under the curve with regard to positions of planets (can't remember what the use of that was though)

    • @ArawnOfAnnwn
      @ArawnOfAnnwn Před 6 lety

      Well, PBS just shut down Infinite Series recently, so... :/

  • @user-vx2yq6ly1u
    @user-vx2yq6ly1u Před 5 lety

    great guy!!! good

  • @ArunGoyal2007
    @ArunGoyal2007 Před 6 lety

    great!