A New Dynasty Comes to Power
The Qin (Cheen) came to power after the Zhou Dynasty. The last 242 years of the Zhou Dynasty is called the “Warring States Period” because there were so many large and small wars between the hundreds of states that the Zhou ruled. Some states grew larger as they defeated and took over others. Some states got larger and more powerful by agreeing to join together. Eventually, the territory had united into seven main states that continued to compete for control. The Qin was one of those states.
The political ideas, geography, and resources during the Warring States Period played important parts in establishing the Qin Dynasty. Because the Qin believed in Legalism, a very strict way of running their territory, it helped them to concentrate on developing a highly disciplined and powerful military to use when the Zhou states began to fight. During the wars between the states, the Qin state operated from a protected and hard to reach position in the Qin Mountains (Guang-zhong) in today’s Shaanxi. This remote position in the mountains was an advantage as other states fought and weakened one another. The Qin were able not attacked as frequently and remained a strong state.
The Qin, however, were not content to remain isolated. They wanted to again land and power to rule all of China and establish a new dynasty. The strong Qin military then extended their territory to the south far beyond that of the earlier Zhou because that area had better land and weather for farming. By gaining control of resources that provided more food, they grew even stronger. From 230 to 211 BCE (just nineteen years!) the Qin conquered its rival states, one after the other. The Qin king, Zheng, brought the groups that had been fighting for power together under his rule- and China had a new ruling dynasty.
When he came to power, Zheng declared himself the “First Emperor” of the land that was later to be known as China. He took the name Emperor Qin Shihuangdi (Cheen She hwang dee). His title was a message about the political system that he planned to establish. An emperor rules an empire. The word empire describes a political system with one supreme ruler, the emperor, who has power over a group of territories, states, or countries. The important idea is that the one ruler is “supreme.” Qin was sending the message that he would have supreme power and because of that political change, the Qin Dynasty is considered to be the beginning of China’s “Imperial” or empire period.
Political System
Changes
Emperor Qin Shihaungdi reorganized the government. First, he changed the way people got land. Kings before him had given large sections of land to nobles or lords who controlled it. Once the land was given to a lord, control of it was passed on through his family. So when the lord died, the land passed on to his son. Emperor Qin changed that. He divided the land into 36 sections called provinces and each province was divided into smaller areas called districts. The new rulers or governors he appointed did not get power just because their father had passed it on to them. This made the governors serve him more loyally because there was a chance they could lose the job if they didn’t.
Qin set up a system where qualified people were appointed to the jobs and were trained to do them as he wanted them done. The appointed rulers got a salary from Qin and so depended entirely on him for their income. He appointed two people to each province, one to govern and one responsible for defense. These two were given other workers to supervise, and those workers had yet more people under them. By making each layer of people responsible for the things that went on under them and by having serious punishments for those that failed, the Emperor kept himself as the center of all power.
Legalism: Uniting China
Emperor Qin Shihuangdi’s idea of how to run the government was based on the Legalist school of thinking that had developed during the Zhou dynasty. Legalists believed that people would not naturally listen and that they needed to be ruled by strict laws with harsh punishments to make them be good. They believed in a political system with firm government control. The emperor ruled with strict laws, standards, and expectations and made sure that each person in this system knew they were under another person’s eye. Each level reported on the people below them and each was responsible if things went wrong. People were encouraged to report errors or misconduct of others, like a spy system, with harsh punishments for those who did not do their jobs.
The First Emperor also wanted all people to agree on what thoughts and ideas were correct. To do this, he burned all books except those that agreed with his Legalist thinking and those that were about medicine or agriculture. Those who disagreed with the emperor were executed , some were buried alive! Emperor Qin Shihuangdi must have known that with such strict policies, people might want to overturn him because he ordered all metal weapons within the empire to be under government control and ordinary people were no longer allowed to have metal weapons.