The
Song (pronounced Soong) dynasty ranks up there with the
Tang and the Han as one of the great dynasties. Fifty
years after the official end of the Tang, an imperial
army re-unified China and established the Song dynasty.
A time of remarkable advances in technology, culture,
and economics, the Song, despite its political failures,
basically set the stage for the rest of the imperial era.
The most important development during the Song was that
agricultural technology, aided by the importation of a
fast-growing Vietnamese strain of rice and the invention
of the printing press, developed to the point where the
food-supply system was so efficient that, for the most
part, there was no need to develop it further. There was
enough food for everyone, more or less, the system worked,
and it became self-sustaining. Because it worked, there
was no incentive to improve it; the system thus remained
basically unchanged from the Song up until the twentieth
century. In fact, many rice farmers in the Chinese interior
and in less-developed regions of Southeast Asia are, for
the most part, still using Song-era farming techniques.
The
efficiency of the system not only made it economically
self-sustaining, but also re-enforced the existing social
structure. Consequently, society and economics were largely
static from the Song until the collapse of the dynastic
system in the twentieth century.
This
is important because one of the factors behind the Industrial
Revolution in Europe was that they didn't have enough
people to work the fields. There was an incentive to create
better technology in Europe; there was no need in China.
China actually had a surplus of human labor.
While
the Song was a time of great advances, politically and
militarily, the Song was a failure. The northern half
of China was conquered by barbarians, forcing the dynasty
to abandon a northern capital in the early 1100's. Then
a hundred and fifty years later, the Mongols, fresh from
conquering everything between Manchuria and Austria, invaded
and occupied China.
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