History of China: Bronze Age to the Last Dynasties
XSeries Program
Join Harvard Online in this five-part series taught by renowned Harvard faculty to explore the development of this great civilization from the Neolithic to the last dynasty.
What You'll Learn
History of China: Bronze Age to the Last Dynasties explores the development of this great civilization from the Neolithic to the last dynasty. We see the formation of political structures and social practices that have lasted into the present; we learn to appreciate artistic and literary traditions of sophistication and refinement; we inquire into its philosophical and religious legacies and their significance for our own lives; and we trace the creation of the largest economy in world history.
Explore the development of Chinese civilization with this comprehensive series on the history, geography, and culture of the country. From the Neolithic to the creation of the largest global economy in world history, this course will help you gain a critical appreciation of China's literary, philosophical, political, and cultural resources.
The political and moral ideas of ancient China are an ever more important part of the country’s modern identity. This series will show how China’s civilization developed and how it became the world’s first centralized bureaucratic state governing the largest population in the world. We will learn why the family is so important in Chinese culture, how Buddhism became part of everyday life, and how the high culture of the literati came to include not only the refined arts of calligraphy and classical Chinese poetry but also dramas and novels. All in the context of a constantly shifting political landscape as empires, dynasties, and economies rose and fell.
Join us to gain an appreciation for the artistic, literary, philosophical, religious, and political traditions of the people who created the largest economy in world history.
After completing History of China: Bronze Age to the Last Dynasties, learners will understand:
- China’s origins and how early concepts in Chinese culture still matter in the 21st century
- How the relationship to the self evolved with the spread of aristocratic culture and Buddhism
- Classical Chinese poetry and the ancient art of calligraphy
- How a shifting social and political elite ultimately brings unity to China, ushering in an age of global empire
- How the economic and political realities of today’s China originated in the region centuries ago