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A HISTORY OF CHINACHAPTER IV.THE CONTENDING STATES(481-256 BC)DISSOLUTION OF THE FEUDAL SYSTEM1
Social and military changes
The period following that of the Chou dictatorships is
known as that of the Contending States. Out of over a
thousand states, fourteen remained, of which, in the period that now followed,
one after another disappeared, until only one remained. This period is the
fullest, or one of the fullest, of strife in all Chinese history. The various
feudal states had lost all sense of allegiance to the ruler, and acted in
entire independence. It is a pure fiction to speak of a Chinese State in this
period; the emperor had no more power than the ruler of the Holy Roman Empire
in the late medieval period of Europe, and the so-called "feudal
states" of China can be directly compared with the developing national
states of Europe. A comparison of this period with late medieval Europe is,
indeed, of highest interest. If we adopt a political system of periodization, we might say that around 500 BC the unified
feudal state of the first period of Antiquity came to an end and the second, a
period of the national states began, although formally, the feudal system
continued and the national states still retained many feudal traits.
As none of these states was
strong enough to control and subjugate the rest, alliances were formed. The
most favored union was the north-south axis; it struggled against an east-west
league. The alliances were not stable but broke up again and again through
bribery or intrigue, which produced new combinations. We must confine ourselves
to mentioning the most important of the events that took place behind this
military façade.
Through the continual
struggles more and more feudal lords lost their lands; and not only they, but
the families of the nobles dependent on them, who had received so-called
sub-fiefs. Some of the landless nobles perished; some offered their services to
the remaining feudal lords as soldiers or advisers. Thus in this period we meet
with a large number of migratory politicians who became competitors of the
wandering scholars. Both these groups recommended to their lord ways and means
of gaining victory over the other feudal lords, so as to become sole ruler. In
order to carry out their plans the advisers claimed the rank of a Minister or
Chancellor.
Realistic though these
advisers and their lords were in their thinking, they did not dare to trample
openly on the old tradition. The emperor might in practice be a completely
powerless figurehead, but he belonged nevertheless, according to tradition, to
a family of divine origin, which had obtained its office not merely by the
exercise of force but through a "divine mandate". Accordingly, if one
of the feudal lords thought of putting forward a claim to the imperial throne,
he felt compelled to demonstrate that his family was just as much of divine
origin as the emperor's, and perhaps of remoter origin. In this matter the
travelling "scholars" rendered valuable service as manufacturers of
genealogical trees. Each of the old noble families already had its family tree,
as an indispensable requisite for the sacrifices to ancestors. But in some
cases this tree began as a branch of that of the imperial family: this was the
case of the feudal lords who were of imperial descent and whose ancestors had
been granted fiefs after the conquest of the country. Others, however, had for
their first ancestor a local deity long worshipped in the family's home
country, such as the ancient agrarian god Huang Ti, or the bovine god Shen Nung. Here the
"scholars" stepped in, turning the local deities into human beings
and "emperors". This suddenly gave the noble family concerned an
imperial origin. Finally, order was brought into this collection of ancient
emperors. They were arranged and connected with each other in
"dynasties" or in some other "historical" form. Thus at a stroke
Huang Ti, who about 450 BC had been a local god in the region of southern
Shansi, became the forefather of almost all the noble families, including that
of the imperial house of the Chou. Needless to say, there would be
discrepancies between the family trees constructed by the various scholars for
their lords, and later, when this problem had lost its political importance,
the commentators labored for centuries on the elaboration of an impeccable
system of "ancient emperors"—and to this day there are sinologists
who continue to present these humanized gods as historical personalities.
In the earlier wars fought
between the nobles they were themselves the actual combatants, accompanied only
by their retinue. As the struggles for power grew in severity, each noble hired
such mercenaries as he could, for instance the landless nobles just mentioned.
Very soon it became the custom to arm peasants and send them to the wars. This
substantially increased the armies. The numbers of soldiers who were killed in
particular battles may have been greatly exaggerated (in a single battle in 260
BC, for instance, the number who lost their lives was put at 450,000, a quite
impossible figure); but there must have been armies of several thousand men,
perhaps as many as 10,000. The population had grown considerably by that time.
The armies of the earlier
period consisted mainly of the nobles in their war chariots; each chariot
surrounded by the retinue of the nobleman. Now came large troops of commoners
as infantry as well, drawn from the peasant population. To these, cavalry were
first added in the fifth century BC, by the northern state of Chao (in the
present Shansi), following the example of its Turkish and Mongol neighbors. The
general theory among ethnologists is that the horse was first harnessed to a
chariot, and that riding came much later; but it is my opinion that riders were
known earlier, but could not be efficiently employed in war because the
practice had not begun of fighting in disciplined troops of horsemen, and the
art had not been learnt of shooting accurately with the bow from the back of a
galloping horse, especially shooting to the rear. In any case, its cavalry gave
the feudal state of Chao a military advantage for a short time. Soon the other
northern states copied it one after another—especially Ch'in, in north-west
China. The introduction of cavalry brought a change in clothing all over China,
for the former long skirt-like garb could not be worn on horseback. Trousers
and the riding-cap were introduced from the north.
The new technique of war made
it important for every state to possess as many soldiers as possible, and where
it could to reduce the enemy's numbers. One result of this was that wars became
much more sanguinary; another was that men in other countries were induced to
immigrate and settle as peasants, so that the taxes they paid should provide
the means for further recruitment of soldiers. In the state of Ch'in,
especially, the practice soon started of using the whole of the peasantry
simultaneously as a rough soldiery. Hence that state was particularly anxious
to attract peasants in large numbers.
2.
Economic changes
In the course of the wars much
land of former noblemen had become free. Often the former serfs had then
silently become landowners. Others had started to cultivate empty land in the
area inhabited by the indigenous population and regarded this land, which they
themselves had made fertile, as their private family property. There was, in
spite of the growth of the population, still much cultivable land available.
Victorious feudal lords induced farmers to come to their territory and to
cultivate the wasteland. This is a period of great migrations, internal and
external. It seems that from this period on not only merchants but also farmers
began to migrate southwards into the area of the present provinces of Kwangtung
and Kwangsi and as far as Tonking.
As long as the idea that all
land belonged to the great clans of the Chou prevailed, sale of land was
inconceivable; but when individual family heads acquired land or cultivated new
land, they regarded it as their natural right to dispose of the land as they
wished. From now on until the end of the medieval period, the family head as
representative of the family could sell or buy land. However, the land belonged
to the family and not to him as a person. This development was favored by the
spread of money. In time land in general became an asset with a market value
and could be bought and sold.
Another important change can
be seen from this time on. Under the feudal system of the Chou strict
primogeniture among the nobility existed: the fief went to the oldest son by
the main wife. The younger sons were given independent pieces of land with its
inhabitants as new, secondary fiefs. With the increase in population there was
no more such land that could be set up as a new fief. From now on,
primogeniture was retained in the field of ritual and religion down to the
present time: only the oldest son of the main wife represents the family in the
ancestor worship ceremonies; only the oldest son of the emperor could become
his successor. But the landed property from now on was equally divided among
all sons. Occasionally the oldest son was given some extra land to enable him
to pay the expenses for the family ancestral worship. Mobile property, on the
other side, was not so strictly regulated and often the oldest son was given
preferential treatment in the inheritance.
The technique of cultivation
underwent some significant changes. The animal-drawn plough seems to have been
invented during this period, and from now on, some metal agricultural
implements like iron sickles and iron plough-shares became more common. A
fallow system was introduced so that cultivation became more intensive. Manuring of fields was already known in Shang time. It
seems that the consumption of meat decreased from this period on: less mutton
and beef were eaten. Pig and dog became the main sources of meat, and higher
consumption of beans made up for the loss of proteins. All this indicates a
strong population increase. We have no statistics for this period, but by 400
BC it is conceivable that the population under the control of the various
individual states comprised something around twenty-five millions. The eastern
plains emerge more and more as centres of production.
The increased use of metal and
the invention of coins greatly stimulated trade. Iron which now became quite
common, was produced mainly in Shansi, other metals in South China. But what
were the traders to do with their profits? Even later in China, and almost down
to recent times, it was never possible to hoard large quantities of money.
Normally the money was of copper, and a considerable capital in the form of
copper coin took up a good deal of room and was not easy to conceal. If anyone
had much money, everyone in his village knew it. No one dared to hoard to any
extent for fear of attracting bandits and creating lasting insecurity. On the
other hand the merchants wanted to attain the standard of living which the
nobles, the landowners, used to have. Thus they began to invest their money in
land. This was all the easier for them since it often happened that one of the
lesser nobles or a peasant fell deeply into debt to a merchant and found
himself compelled to give up his land in payment of the debt.
Soon the merchants took over
another function. So long as there had been many small feudal states, and the
feudal lords had created lesser lords with small fiefs, it had been a simple
matter for the taxes to be collected, in the form of grain, from the peasants
through the agents of the lesser lords. Now that there were only a few great
states in existence, the old system was no longer effectual. This gave the
merchants their opportunity. The rulers of the various states entrusted the
merchants with the collection of taxes, and this had great advantages for the
ruler: he could obtain part of the taxes at once, as the merchant usually had
grain in stock, or was himself a landowner and could make advances at any time.
Through having to pay the taxes to the merchant, the village population became
dependent on him. Thus the merchants developed into the first administrative
officials in the provinces.
In connection with the growth
of business, the cities kept on growing. It is estimated that at the beginning
of the third century, the city of Lin-chin, near the present Chi-nan in Shantung, had a population of 210,000 persons. Each
of its walls had a length of 4,000 metres; thus, it
was even somewhat larger than the famous city of Lo-yang, capital of China
during the Later Han dynasty, in the second century A.D. Several other cities
of this period have been recently excavated and must have had populations far
above 10,000 persons. There were two types of cities: the rectangular, planned
city of the Chou conquerors, a seat of administration; and the irregularly
shaped city which grew out of a market place and became only later an
administrative centre. We do not know much about the organization and
administration of these cities, but they seem to have had considerable independence
because some of them issued their own city coins.
When these cities grew, the food produced in the neighborhood
of the towns no longer sufficed for their inhabitants. This led to the building
of roads, which also facilitated the transport of supplies for great armies.
These roads mainly radiated from the centre of consumption into the surrounding
country, and they were less in use for communication between one administrative
centre and another. For long journeys the rivers were of more importance, since
transport by wagon was always expensive owing to the shortage of draught
animals. Thus we see in this period the first important construction of canals
and a development of communications. With the canal construction was connected
the construction of irrigation and drainage systems, which further promoted
agricultural production. The cities were places in which often great luxury
developed; music, dance, and other refinements were cultivated; but the cities
also seem to have harbored considerable industries. Expensive and technically
superior silks were woven; painters decorated the walls of temples and palaces;
blacksmiths and bronze-smiths produced beautiful vessels and implements. It
seems certain that the art of casting iron and the beginnings of the production
of steel were already known at this time. The life of the commoners in these
cities was regulated by laws; the first codes are mentioned in 536 B.C. By the
end of the fourth century B.C. a large body of criminal law existed, supposedly
collected by Li K'uei, which became the foundation of
all later Chinese law. It seems that in this period the states of China moved
quickly towards a money economy, and an observer to whom the later Chinese
history was not known could have predicted the eventual development of a
capitalistic society out of the apparent tendencies.
So far nothing has been said
in these chapters about China's foreign policy. Since the central ruling house
was completely powerless, and the feudal lords were virtually independent
rulers, little can be said, of course, about any "Chinese" foreign
policy. There is less than ever to be said about it for this period of the
"Contending States". Chinese merchants penetrated southwards, and
soon settlers moved in increasing numbers into the plains of the south-east. In
the north, there were continual struggles with Turkish and Mongol tribes, and
about 300 B.C. the name of the Hsiung-nu (who are
often described as "The Huns of the Far East") makes its first
appearance. It is known that these northern peoples had mastered the technique
of horseback warfare and were far ahead of the Chinese, although the Chinese
imitated their methods. The peasants of China, as they penetrated farther and
farther north, had to be protected by their rulers against the northern
peoples, and since the rulers needed their armed forces for their struggles
within China, a beginning was made with the building of frontier walls, to
prevent sudden raids of the northern peoples against the peasant settlements.
Thus came into existence the early forms of the "Great Wall of
China". This provided for the first time a visible frontier between
Chinese and non-Chinese. Along this frontier, just as by the walls of towns,
great markets were held at which Chinese peasants bartered their produce to
non-Chinese nomads. Both partners in this trade became accustomed to it and
drew very substantial profits from it. We even know the names of several great
horse-dealers who bought horses from the nomads and sold them within China.
3.
Cultural changes
Together with the economic and
social changes in this period, there came cultural changes. New ideas sprang up
in exuberance, as would seem entirely natural, because in times of change and
crisis men always come forward to offer solutions for pressing problems. We
shall refer here only briefly to the principal philosophers of the period.
Mencius (c. 372-289 BC) and Hsün Tzŭ (c. 298-238 BC)
were both followers of Confucianism. Both belonged to the so-called
"scholars", and both lived in the present Shantung, that is to say,
in eastern China. Both elaborated the ideas of Confucius, but neither of them
achieved personal success. Mencius (Meng Tzŭ) recognized that the removal of the ruling house
of the Chou no longer presented any difficulty. The difficult question for him
was when a change of ruler would be justified. And how could it be ascertained
whom Heaven had destined as successor if the existing dynasty was brought down?
Mencius replied that the voice of the "people", that is to say of the
upper class and its following, would declare the right man, and that this man
would then be Heaven's nominee. This theory persisted throughout the history of
China. Hsün Tzŭ's chief importance lies in the fact that he recognized that the "laws"
of nature are unchanging but that man's fate is determined not by nature alone
but, in addition, by his own activities. Man's nature is basically bad, but by
working on himself within the framework of society, he can change his nature
and can develop. Thus, Hsün Tzŭ's philosophy contains a dynamic element, fit for a dynamic period of history.
In the strongest contrast to
these thinkers was the school of Mo Ti (at some time between 479 and 381 BC).
The Confucian school held fast to the old feudal order of society, and was only
ready to agree to a few superficial changes. The school of Mo Ti proposed to
alter the fundamental principles of society. Family ethics must no longer be
retained; the principles of family love must be extended to the whole upper
class, which Mo Ti called the "people". One must love another member
of the upper class just as much as one's own father. Then the friction between
individuals and between states would cease. Instead of families, large groups
of people friendly to one another must be created. Further one should live
frugally and not expend endless money on effete rites, as the Confucianists demanded. The expenditure on weddings and
funerals under the Confucianist ritual consumed so
much money that many families fell into debt and, if they were unable to pay
off the debt, sank from the upper into the lower class. In order to maintain
the upper class, therefore, there must be more frugality. Mo Ti's teaching won great influence. He and his successors
surrounded themselves with a private army of supporters which was rigidly
organized and which could be brought into action at any time as its leader
wished. Thus the Mohists came forward everywhere with
an approach entirely different from that of the isolated Confucians. When the Mohists offered their assistance to a ruler, they brought
with them a group of technical and military experts who had been trained on the
same principles. In consequence of its great influence this teaching was
naturally hotly opposed by the Confucianists.
We see clearly in Mo Ti's and his followers' ideas the influence of the changed
times. His principle of "universal love" reflects the breakdown of
the clans and the general weakening of family bonds which had taken place. His
ideal of social organization resembles organizations of merchants and craftsmen
which we know only of later periods. His stress upon frugality, too, reflects a
line of thought which is typical of businessmen. The rationality which can also
be seen in his metaphysical ideas and which has induced modern Chinese scholars
to call him an early materialist is fitting to an age in which a developing
money economy and expanding trade required a cool, logical approach to the
affairs of this world.
A similar mentality can be
seen in another school which appeared from the fifth century B.C. on, the
"dialecticians". Here are a number of names to mention: the most
important are Kung-sun Lung and Hui Tzŭ, who are comparable with the ancient Greek
dialecticians and Sophists. They saw their main task in the development of
logic. Since, as we have mentioned, many "scholars" journeyed from
one princely court to another, and other people came forward, each recommending
his own method to the prince for the increase of his power, it was of great
importance to be able to talk convincingly, so as to defeat a rival in a duel
of words on logical grounds.
Unquestionably, however, the
most important school of this period was that of the so-called Legalists, whose
most famous representative was Shang Yang (or Shang Tzŭ,
died 338 B.C.). The supporters of this school came principally from old
princely families that had lost their feudal possessions, and not from among
the so-called scholars. They were people belonging to the upper class who
possessed political experience and now offered their knowledge to other princes
who still reigned. These men had entirely given up the old conservative
traditions of Confucianism; they were the first to make their peace with the
new social order. They recognized that little or nothing remained of the old
upper class of feudal lords and their following. The last of the feudal lords
collected around the heads of the last remaining princely courts, or lived
quietly on the estates that still remained to them. Such a class, with its
moral and economic strength broken, could no longer lead. The Legalists
recognized, therefore, only the ruler and next to him, as the really active and
responsible man, the chancellor; under these there were to be only the common
people, consisting of the richer and poorer peasants; the people's duty was to
live and work for the ruler, and to carry out without question whatever orders
they received. They were not to discuss or think, but to obey. The chancellor
was to draft laws which came automatically into operation. The ruler himself
was to have nothing to do with the government or with the application of the
laws. He was only a symbol, a representative of the equally inactive Heaven.
Clearly these theories were much the best suited to the conditions of the
break-up of feudalism about 300 B.C. Thus they were first adopted by the state
in which the old idea of the feudal state had been least developed, the state
of Ch'in, in which alien peoples were most strongly represented. Shang Yang
became the actual organizer of the state of Ch'in. His ideas were further
developed by Han Fei Tzŭ (died 233 B.C.). The mentality which speaks out of his writings has closest
similarity to the famous Indian Arthashastra which
originated slightly earlier; both books exhibit a "Macchiavellian"
spirit. It must be observed that these theories had little or nothing to do
with the ideas of the old cult of Heaven or with family allegiance; on the
other hand, the soldierly element, with the notion of obedience, was well
suited to the militarized peoples of the west. The population of Ch'in,
organized throughout on these principles, was then in a position to remove one
opponent after another. In the middle of the third century B.C. the greater
part of the China of that time was already in the hands of Ch'in, and in 256 BC
the last emperor of the Chou dynasty was compelled, in his complete impotence,
to abdicate in favor of the ruler of Ch'in.
Apart from these more or less
political speculations, there came into existence in this period, by no mere
chance, a school of thought which never succeeded in fully developing in China,
concerned with natural science and comparable with the Greek natural
philosophy. We have already several times pointed to parallels between Chinese
and Indian thoughts. Such similarities may be the result of mere coincidence.
But recent findings in Central Asia indicate that direct connections between
India, Persia, and China may have started at a time much earlier than we had
formerly thought. Sogdian merchants who later played
a great role in commercial contacts might have been active already from 350 or
400 BC on and might have been the transmitters of new ideas. The most important
philosopher of this school was Tsou Yen (flourished
between 320 and 295 BC); he, as so many other Chinese philosophers of this
time, was a native of Shantung, and the ports of the Shantung coast may well
have been ports of entrance of new ideas from Western Asia as were the roads
through the Turkestan basin into Western China. Tsou Yen's basic ideas had their root in earlier Chinese speculations: the doctrine
that all that exists is to be explained by the positive, creative, or the
negative, passive action (Yang and Yin) of the five elements, wood, fire,
earth, metal, and water (Wu hsing). But Tsou Yen also considered the form of the world, and was the
first to put forward the theory that the world consists not of a single
continent with China in the middle of it, but of nine continents. The names of
these continents sound like Indian names, and his idea of a central
world-mountain may well have come from India. The "scholars" of his
time were quite unable to appreciate this beginning of science, which actually
led to the contention of this school, in the first century B.C., that the earth
was of spherical shape. Tsou Yen himself was
ridiculed as a dreamer; but very soon, when the idea of the reciprocal
destruction of the elements was applied, perhaps by Tsou Yen himself, to politics, namely when, in connection with the astronomical
calculations much cultivated by this school and through the identification of
dynasties with the five elements, the attempt was made to explain and to
calculate the duration and the supersession of dynasties, strong pressure began
to be brought to bear against this school. For hundreds of years its books were
distributed and read only in secret, and many of its members were executed as
revolutionaries. Thus, this school, instead of becoming the nucleus of a school
of natural science, was driven underground. The secret societies which started
to arise clearly from the first century B.C. on, but which may have been in
existence earlier, adopted the politico-scientific ideas of Tsou Yen's school. Such secret societies have existed in China down to the present
time. They all contained a strong religious, but heterodox element which can
often be traced back to influences from a foreign religion. In times of peace
they were centres of a true, emotional religiosity.
In times of stress, a "messianic" element tended to become prominent:
the world is bad and degenerating; morality and a just social order have
decayed, but the coming of a savior is close; the saviour will bring a new, fair order and destroy those who are wicked. Tsou Yen's philosophy seemed to allow them to calculate
when this new order would start; later secret societies contained ideas from
Iranian Mazdaism, Manichaeism and Buddhism, mixed
with traits from the popular religions and often couched in terms taken from the
Taoists. The members of such societies were, typically, ordinary farmers who
here found an emotional outlet for their frustrations in daily life. In times
of stress, members of the leading élite often but not always established
contacts with these societies, took over their leadership and led them to open
rebellion.
The fate of Tsou Yen's school
did not mean that the Chinese did not develop in the field of sciences. At
about Tsou Yen's lifetime, the first mathematical handbook was written. From
these books it is obvious that the interest of the government in calculating
the exact size of fields, the content of measures for grain, and other fiscal
problems stimulated work in this field, just as astronomy developed from the
interest of the government in the fixation of the calendar. Science kept on
developing in other fields, too, but mainly as a hobby of scholars and in the
shops of craftsmen, if it did not have importance for the administration and
especially taxation and budget calculations.
CHAPTER V.THE CH'IN DYNASTY(256-207 B.C.)
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