The Great Wall was first built by the Qin Dynasty and Han dynasty for protection but however the benefits do not outweigh the cost. For example ,in Document C it state that they lost many citizens so. This shows that how it supports my claim because it talks about how this was worse than the benefit.To add on in Document B it stated how they still have to pay the mongols even though they had the Great Wall.This also shows how the cost did not outweigh the costs because they still were insecure even though they had a Wall for…
Construction - Emperor Qin made a number of improvements to the substructure of China. He had a vast network of roads and canals built throughout the country. This helped to improve trade and travel. He also began the building of the Great Wall of China. He had many of the existing walls throughout the country connected to form a long wall that would protect China from the invaders to the…
The Great Wall of China was originally built by the Qin & Han Dynasty , their reasoning for building the Great Wall were they needed protection from the Xiongnu Mongols . However the Benefits did not outweigh the Cost. According to Document C , it shows that building the wall had a lot of cost instead of benefits some of the cost were soldiers had to work on it for years 300,000 men had to leave there homes and that thousands of soldiers died from hunger , sickness, and extreme heat or cold . This shows that if the Great Wall was not built then all of those men would not have died .…
The article “Who was Shi Huangdi and what area did he rule?”, stated Qin improved China by creating a wall known as The Great Wall of China to protect the civilization. “Shi Huangdi ordered the joining of several earlier walls on China’s northern border to be unified and to be into a single system of walls to protect the empire from attacks from the north.” When he built the Great Wall of China, this made China much safer than it was before because the wall surrounded…
Did you know that soldiers and peasants had to work on the Wall of DBQ in extreme weathers like -20 to -30 degrees, but the peasants and soldiers were doing for the greater good.The Great Wall of DBQ was 13,170 miles long and it took lots and lots of years to complete. The Wall was built with a lot of curves and twists to cover difficult terrain that was the border, like mountains, hills etc. It increased trade and was used for protection from the Xiongnu. Did the benefits of the Great Wall outweigh the human cost. The Great Wall is DBQ of Worth it with some consequence because it increased trade, used for protection from Xiongnu but very harsh conditions and death.…
The Great Wall of Ancient China was built by the two dynasties, the Qin first started to building the Great Wall, then the Han continued to build the wall, but the reason why the two dynasties wanted to build the wall was to protect from the Xiongnu and other invaders invading, but all the benefits of the wall didn't outweigh the cost of building wall. The wall was constructed be thousands of soldiers, slaves, peasants, etc. Many died due to to hunger, dehydration, and extreme whether. In Document C, it states, " ... tens of thousands of soldiers died from hunger, sickness, and extreme heat or cold. No exact numbers of deaths are available. "…
Primarily, the Chinese states emerge 2200 BCE, under the Xia, Shang, and Zhou Dynasties, but fell into the age of warring states. Its unification had vanished and there were endless rivalries among seven competing kingdoms. Qin Shihuangdi(ruled 221-210 BCE) was one of the rulers from the various states that had successfully reunified China. He used his already developed effective bureaucracy and launched military campaigns to defeat the other warring states. He adopted a political philosophy called Legalism that had pessimistic views on human nature and subordinated the aristocrats who disliked his centralized policies, whereas the Han dynasty later had more of a Confucian Theme in their governing philosophy. He was strict and once put 460 scholars to death as a warning for those who oppose him. He led some contributions to innovation by standardizing weights, measurement and currency, equipping his armies with iron weapons and had agricultural systems that enforce growth in populations. He also recruited laborers to construct the Great Wall of China, which was designed to keep the barbarians astray. The Qin dynasty collapse by peasants uprisings who suffered under Qin harsh policies and led to the founding of the Han Dynasty.…
Qin Shihuangdi, born Ying Zheng was one of the most influential rulers of all China. It is believed that Shihuangdi was father by one of two men, Zichu a son of the king of Qin at the time. Zichu was sent as a hostage to the state of Zhao during a dispute between the two kingdoms (Lindesay p. 4). Eventually Zichu was allowed to live freely in Zhao. There he became acquainted with a rich, but conniving merchant named Lu Buwei, who had a concubine. When Zichu became interested in the concubine, Lu Buwei stepped aside and eventually helped them escaped to Qin where Zichu shortly became king (Lindesay p. 4). Shortly after arriving in Qin, Ying Zheng (later to become Shihaungdi) was born. It was never revealed whether Zichu or Lu Buwei was his father. At only thirteen Shihuangdi took control of the Qin Dynasty, which was a start of a great rule for the young emperor. Many accomplishments were accredited to his rule, The Great Wall, a road system throught the kingdom, a written script that unified all of China, and of course his mystifying tomb that contain life-sized soldiers of the Terra Cotta Army.…
The Great Wall was built by the Qin & the Han Dynasty. They built the wall to keep out the Mongols. However, the benefits did not outweigh the cost. According to Document C, soldiers were forced to leave their families. And many of them died from starvation. The cause of the soldiers dying was from the building of the Great Wall and not having enough resources. With the soldiers dying there will be a lower population & less soldiers to defend the people of there village. Next, according to Document B, the Han Dynasty still had to pay tribute to the Mongols even after the wall was built. This shows the benefits did not outweigh the cost because the Han Dynasty was still losing resources and soldiers. In the end the benefits did not…
Wealthy noble families began to gain extreme power as foolish and corrupt emperors led to a decrease in the government’s power. Wang Mang, a reformist official, took the Han court’s power and attempted to establish the Xin dynasty. However, he was killed before he could actually carry out the reforms he had planned. After his death, a strong leadership was established for some time. During this time, the court tried to redistribute land to the free farmers who had been forced to become tenants; and they also tried to decrease land taxes. Also, food production increased. But unease among the peasants continued due to weak and corrupt rules and the wealthy’s power over the land. Nomadic raids by the Xiongnu…
China during the Qin and Han dynasties and the Mediterranean during the Roman Empire were similar socially and politically because they both had patriarchy, hierarchy, and a centralized government. One aspect that differed was artistically. China focused on visuals such as pictures. While Rome dealt with more three-dimensional ideas such as sculpture and architecture.…
Around 200 BC, the Qin emperor, Shi Huangdi, wanted to protect his dynasty so he built the Great Wall of China for protection from invaders. The wall helped Shi Huangdi keep his government strong which brought many costs but many benefits as well. It is important to know the reasons for which the wall was built so we can determine if the benefits how weighed the costs. The benefits in building the wall outweighed the costs because it protected China, it created a better safety system, and it allowed China to grow.…
When discussing China’s physical environment, a few things immediately come to mind, a particular man-made structure and the environment. Arguably, the most well known manmade structure in the world is the Great Wall of China. Constant wars and invasions by barbarian nomads during the Qin Dynasty in 200 B.C. sparked the construction of The Great Wall. Once completed, the wall was to run roughly three thousand miles long. The wall as we know it today runs over thirteen thousand miles long. The majority of the maintenance and continuation…
The Han Empire was one of the strongest classical empires. It prevailed long before many others have fallen. The Han has achieved many things but for many reasons did not last. “all great things must come to an end”, and for the Han being such a great empire its reasons were lack of leadership, rebellions or civil wars, unstable religion, and being unable to protect themselves from outsiders.…
It has been commonly believed that marriage is the point in a woman’s life where who she is as a human is defined and validated. Once she feels that she is ready, she can then define herself once again through marital expectations such as having children, having a home, and living as part of somebody else. Woman had the explicit role to do this in the past. The problem with this traditional belief is that basing a life around marriage was the only role a woman had in the past. Mrs. Mallard does not seem to of gone through the period of discovering herself before her marriage to Mr. Mallard. In “Story of an Hour, Kate Chopin uses irony and repetition to show that the confinements…