Examples of Joseon Dynasty in the following topics:
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- The Joseon Dynasty (1392–1910) has left a substantial legacy on modern Korea.
- Buddhist art was encouraged not by the imperial centers of art or the accepted taste of the Joseon Dynasty publicly, but in private homes and in the summer palaces of the Joseon Dynasty kings.
- Chinese Ming ideals and imported techniques continued to influence early Joseon Dynasty works.
- The mid-to-late Joseon Dynasty is considered the golden age of Korean painting.
- Owon was the pen name for Jang Seung-eop (1843–1897), a painter of the late Joseon Dynasty in Korea.
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- Korea's Joseon Dynasty (1392–1910) is considered the golden age of Korean pottery.
- The influence of the Chinese Ming Dynasty (1368–1644) in blue and white wares using cobalt blue glazes could be seen in Joseon pottery, but Joseon work tended to lack the phthalo blue range and the three-dimensional glassine color depth of Ming Dynasty Chinese works.
- Simplified designs emerged early on during the Joseon Dynasty.
- This blue and white porcelain jar with pine and bamboo designs was made in 1489 during the early Joseon Dynasty.
- Identify the Ming, Confucian, and Buddhist influences on pottery created during Korea's Joseon Dynasty
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- The Shang Dynasty (also
called the Yin Dynasty) succeeded the Xia Dynasty, and was followed by the Zhou
Dynasty.
- Jie, the last king of the Xia Dynasty (the first Chinese dynasty), was overthrown c. 1760 BCE by Cheng Tang.
- While scholars still debate whether the Xia Dynasty actually existed, there is little doubt that the Shang Dynasty existed.
- The Shang Dynasty is, therefore, generally considered China's first historical dynasty.
- The Shang Dynasty is the oldest
Chinese dynasty supported by archaeological finds.
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- The Second Intermediate Period (c. 1650-1550 BCE) spanned the Fourteenth to Seventeenth Dynasties, and was a period in which decentralized rule split Egypt between the Theban-based Seventeenth Dynasty in Upper Egypt and the Sixteenth Dynasty under the Hyksos in the north.
- The capital of this dynasty was likely Avaris.
- They would also conquer the Sixteenth Dynasty in Thebes and a local dynasty in Abydos (see below).
- The Abydos Dynasty was a short-lived local dynasty that ruled over part of Upper Egypt and was contemporaneous with the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Dynasties c. 1650-1600 BCE.
- Thebes was the capital of many of the Sixteenth Dynasty pharaohs.
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- The Qin Dynasty (221-206 BCE), though short-lived, is known for its military strength and its unification of China.
- The Qin Dynasty was the first imperial dynasty of China, lasting only 15 years from 221 to 206 BCE.
- Despite its military strength, however, the Dynasty did not last long.
- Picture of Qin Dynasty Arcuballista Bolts shown with Regular Handheld Crossbow Bolts, 5th- 3rd century B.C.
- Describe the establishment of the first imperial dynasty of China, and the architecture, literature, weaponry and sculpture it produced.
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- After the final ruler became corrupt, he was overthrown by Cheng Tang, who founded the Shang Dynasty.
- According to this history, the last of the great Five Emperors, Emperor Shun, left his throne to Yu the Great, who founded China's First Dynasty, the Xia Dynasty.
- This led to his overthrow in c. 1760 BCE by Cheng Tang, who founded a new dynasty, the Shang Dynasty, in the Huang River Valley.
- Many argue that the Zhou Dynasty, which ruled China much later, invented the idea of the Xia Dynasty to support their claim that China could only be, and had always been, ruled by one ruler.
- This hanging scroll shows Yu the Great, as imagined by Song Dynasty painter Ma Lin.
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- The Tang dynasty (Chinese: 唐朝) was an imperial dynasty of China preceded by the Sui dynasty and followed by the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period.
- Decline of the Sui Dynasty and the Founding of the Tang
- The Sui dynasty was a short-lived imperial dynasty of pivotal significance.
- The Sui dynasty was succeeded by the Tang dynasty, which largely inherited its foundation.
- Wu's rule was actually a short break in the Tang dynasty, as she established the short-lived Zhou dynasty; the Tang dynasty was restored after her rule.
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- The Qin Dynasty was the first imperial dynasty of China, lasting from 221 to 206 BCE.
- The Dynasty followed the Warring States Period and resulted in the unification of China, ending 15 years later at the introduction of the Han Dynasty.
- Architecture from the previous Warring States Period had several definitive aspects which carried into the Qin Dynasty.
- These walls would be expanded and rebuilt multiple times by later dynasties, also in response to threats from the north.
- The initial construction of what would become the Great Wall of China began under Qin Shihuang during the Qin Dynasty.