Money, Root of all evil? Or luxury? This document states the uses of currency that Emperor Qin introduced during his rule. These coins are usually made up of stone and rock. However the coins had many differentials from papyrus and normal everyday coin, These coins had small-sized square holes in the middle of the coin, and sometimes had designs and symbols on the rung of the coin. Its unknown why this is, but it is speculated to be of just design ratio and/or tradition..
Matthew Collins-Qin China Dynasty Blog
Friday, February 3, 2012
Monday, January 23, 2012
Emperor Qin Interview (Role-play Involved)!
January 23, 2012.
Qin interview
By: Matthew James Collins
(Red Text=Role-play/Scene as Black=Dialogue/ Etc.)
(Red Text=Role-play/Scene as Black=Dialogue/ Etc.)
Paragraphs 4.
Characters (No Space) 2,801.
Characters (W/ Space) 3,416.
Lines 55.
Words 618.
Pages 3.
As Qin enters the tent that inside, dawns a wooden square table with a dim lit lamp on the side, One chair on either side, On the far side sits the questioner, Qin pulls out the chair closest to him and takes a seat, eyeing me coldly. “Ah, Mister Qin, an honor to meet you, I would like to ask you a few questions, my name is Matthew.” Says Matthew, “Mmhm, yes, fine, quick it up.” Matthew takes out a pencil and a notepad, the size a little bigger than his own hand. “So, big stone walls you have here, Qin, how did you build it?” Asks Matthew. “It took around twenty to forty years.” He answers. “Mmhmmmmmm... I see… and what drove you to build such a monument? How much did it cost?” Asks Matthew“. “It took over four hundred THOUSAND men and laborers, most fell ill, even more died, it was a necessary cost, the wall was to defend against invaders and attacks, it worked beautifully.” Matthews reply was; “But it took so many innocent lives, was it really worth them all?” Qin replies in a somewhat annoyed tone; “All of their lives were necessary, they were doing the dynasty a great deed with their lives, and for that I feel no remorse, Legalism is what must be follows as strict rules and laws to keep people in line! I am forever a legalist!” Matthews eyes shift from Qin to the lamp on the table, then back at Qin, "You mentioned you are legalistic, who are they? What do they believe?" Qin seemingly cracks a smile at this question, He replies in a tone drowned in pride, "Legalism is the belief where all humans are born Evil and Sinners, which in fact, they are. We need leaders, rulers, and strict laws to keep them in line and to not be defiant; breaking these laws must be dealt with, with extreme consequences, to set an example to the others. Laws must NOT be broken, as laws retain order and simplicity, disobeying or rebelling against these rules shall not be tolerated, and will be dealt with accordingly." Matthew nods, and writes down some notes on his notepad, before raising his glace back to Qin, and asks; "You burned books on Confucianism, many nowadays rule against book burnings." "BAH!" Yells Qin, as he slams one fist down on the wooden table. "Those books were sin! They spread propaganda and rebellion across MY land! All my people needed to know were herbs, cooking, and the like! Not some petty lies spread by foolish men to derive others against me!" Qin breaths deeply and sighs, before sitting back down in his seat, calm. "Those books driven others against my rule and my laws, I wouldn't let that happen, all of my attempt to bar the books went unattended, people started to read in secret, plot deviously against me, I WASN'T GOING TO DIE BEFORE I WAS IMMORTAL! So, I burned them, as an example.... AND As a warning... We are on a mountain that’s rumored to have such an elixir to make me immortal, Let me leave and nap.” The next day Emperor Qin died in his sleep, he died searching for his dream, yet ironically he died pursuing immortality, its obvious it was not a part of destiny, his loyal servants and ambassadors buried him in his tomb afterward, albeit afterwards, Matthew escaped the Chinese army pursuing him, as he had valuable information, Matthew escaped back to the United States. His body was buried on a cliff overlooking the sunset, died at 93, WITH His notepad…. Information shared with the world.
Thursday, January 19, 2012
Qin Dynasty News Article; The Book Burning(s).
Finished: Friday, January 27, 2012.
By: Matthew James Collins.
Extra Extra! Read all about it! Emperor Qin burns books on Confucianism! Scholars furious! Rebellion growing! Emperor Qin, Leader, doer, tyrant. The latter title he earned on his own accord. The burn of paper wafts and dawns the air in the sky. A Bonfire in the center of town, raging like the fires of hell alone. Emperor Qin, Emperor of China at that time, was a tyrant of sorts. A legalist tyrant. Qin thought some books on Confucianism went against his declarations and rule. With many attempts of banning the books in vain, Qin decided to take drastic measures, fire. Fire is said to cleanse and cure all sin. Which Qin was Legalist. Ergo it was just a matter of time before he tried to push the "sin" away. As Qin saw these writings as sin and spreading lies and propaganda, He decided to eliminate the threat. During this time and age, like stated Prior, Was during the rule of Emperor Qin, Unknown at what exact time, however it defiantly happened during his rule, As Qin ordered the burnings. The place they burned the books exactly is unknown. The estimated area was outside (for obvious reasons), Qin ordered all the books and literature to be incinerated at once. Due to Emperor Qin, and his knack for being an extremist legalist of sorts, anything he deemed that put a damper on his rule, laws, himself directly, or mostly against him at any given time and moment, Qin would try to "remove from the picture." per-se. What lead to this is pretty much straight forward, Qin wanted all competition out of his way, and those books/literature were in the wrong place at the wrong time and was caught by the WRONG Person. Any other information regarding this event was that afterwards, Scholars were furious with him, them and other citizens started rewriting the books from pure MEMORY and such. Burning the books made the citizens of China, intimidated by Qin even more, but at the same time, infuriated them, which bathed the flames of rebellion with hot coals.
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Qin Dynasty Map, 221-207 B.C.
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjFcjDYcUXjKSjh9I75YkTYZ5-vc-t3CuhdoBHVy5XMb55-AKbc4NND71QWWvutZCD0xZYS2b4g3oL9f2Bj0WU4nJydn5oIHLmhlMeJUzx1jmXKBD3vpv0Q5Ag4zEQZ9pPeFfdW6_9y6d8/s1600/Qin+dynasty+map..JPG
(This map was not drawn or created by me, Credit to its rightful owner in full is essential due to copyright laws.)
"The date, obviously dates from 221 to 207 B.C. Back in those times, life was hard. As stated, Qin had a large empire, the great wall ranging around nearly half of China, and it was no easy task to build. (Northern spike-like elements VIA Outline of lighter shaded map within the Qin dynasty.) Hundreds of thousands of workers became injured, ill, and/or died in the attempt which is why the Great Wall is unofficially called The Worlds Biggest Graveyard due to the amount of deaths prior to its completion. Compared to the modern day version of the Chinese map, this map relates to a small portion (Lightly shaded area inside the red outlined map.) As Qin stole from nobles, and there were very few with resource to fuel his thirst for land. The point of this map is to show how much land of China the Qin Dynasty took up. Not as much as how big China rages now (Unknown if size difference was took into contact back then.) But it still is a big chunk of it. (roughly 23% of overall China.)
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)