The Song Dynasty: Innovation Before the Modern World — Fexingo History

Song Dynasty's Star Clock: Su Song and the Water-Powered Armillary Sphere

8 min · 8. heinä 2026
jakson Song Dynasty's Star Clock: Su Song and the Water-Powered Armillary Sphere kansikuva

Kuvaus

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the remarkable astronomical clock tower built by Su Song in 11th-century Kaifeng. Su Song's creation was a 40-foot-tall water-driven mechanism that combined an armillary sphere, a celestial globe, and a time-announcing jackwork — a feat of engineering that wouldn't be matched in Europe for centuries. They discuss the political context under Emperor Zhezong, the technical innovations like the escapement mechanism, and the tower's tragic destruction during the Jurchen invasion in 1127. The conversation also touches on Su Song's other achievements as a pharmacologist and cartographer, and the broader Song Dynasty culture of scientific inquiry. This episode offers a vivid window into a lost marvel of pre-modern technology. #SongDynasty #SuSong #ArmillarySphere #AstronomicalClock #Kaifeng #Zhezong #ChineseAstronomy #Horology #EscapementMechanism #HistoryOfScience #SongDynastyTechnology #XinYiXiangFaYao #Jurchen #JingkangIncident #MedievalChina #ScienceAndTechnology #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Kommentit

0

Ole ensimmäinen kommentoija

Rekisteröidy nyt ja liity The Song Dynasty: Innovation Before the Modern World — Fexingo History-yhteisöön!

Aloita maksutta

14 vrk ilmainen kokeilu

Kokeilun jälkeen 7,99 € / kuukausi. · Peru milloin tahansa.

  • Podimon podcastit
  • 20 kuunteluaikaa / kuukausi
  • Lataa offline-käyttöön

Kaikki jaksot

169 jaksot

jakson Song Dynasty's Salt Monopoly: The Fiscal Spine of Empire kansikuva

Song Dynasty's Salt Monopoly: The Fiscal Spine of Empire

This episode dives into the Song Dynasty's remarkable salt monopoly, a revenue system that funded everything from astronomical clocks to naval fleets. Lucas and Luna trace the origins of state-controlled salt production and distribution from the Tang dynasty through the Song, focusing on the key figures like Fan Xiang and the bureaucratic machinery that made it work. They explore the ingenious 'salt vouchers' (yan yin) that acted as a precursor to paper money, the brutal crackdown on private salt smugglers (yan zei), and the economic debates between reformers like Wang Anshi and conservatives like Sima Guang over state vs. private control. The episode also covers the social impact: how the salt tax weighed on commoners, how coastal communities along the Huai River and Liangzhe circuit became industrial salt-producing zones, and how the monopoly helped the Song recover after the Jingkang Incident. Expect specific details on the production process, the salt administration hierarchy, and the role of eunuch officials like Tong Guan in overseeing salt revenues. A fresh angle on a topic that underpinned all the innovation discussed in earlier episodes. #SongDynasty #SaltMonopoly #FanXiang #WangAnshi #SimaGuang #YanYin #HuaiSalt #Liangzhe #JingkangIncident #TangDynasty #SongFiscalPolicy #SaltSmugglers #TongGuan #ChampaRice #History #FexingoHistory #EastAsianHistory #EconomicHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

19. heinä 20267 min
jakson Song Dynasty's Iron Industry and the Coal Revolution kansikuva

Song Dynasty's Iron Industry and the Coal Revolution

Long before the Industrial Revolution in England, the Song Dynasty underwent a profound energy transition that powered an industrial boom. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how Northern Song China shifted from charcoal to coal — or 'stone charcoal' — to fuel its massive iron and steel industry. By the 11th century, the Song was producing an estimated 125,000 tons of iron annually, a figure that would not be matched in Europe for over 700 years. They discuss the key figure of Shen Kuo, whose 11th-century 'Dream Pool Essays' predicted that coal would be essential for future industry and accurately described how petroleum could be used. They also examine the role of state policy under Emperor Shenzong and Wang Anshi, who encouraged mining and smelting to produce weapons, tools, and coinage. The episode covers the opening of large coal mines in northern provinces like Shaanxi and Henan, the environmental toll of deforestation, and how the Song's reliance on coal foreshadowed modern fossil fuel dependence. A look at the lost blast furnace technology of the time and why this early industrial revolution ultimately faltered with the fall of the Northern Song in 1127. #SongDynasty #IronIndustry #CoalRevolution #ShenKuo #WangAnshi #IndustrialHistory #HistoryOfTechnology #FexingoHistory #NorthernSong #BlastFurnace #Deforestation #Shenzong #DreamPoolEssays #Mining #Metallurgy #ChineseHistory #EastAsianHistory #HistoryPodcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Eilen6 min
jakson The Rebellion of Fang La: Song Dynasty's Bloodiest Uprising kansikuva

The Rebellion of Fang La: Song Dynasty's Bloodiest Uprising

In 1120, a secret religious sect sparked the most devastating rebellion of the Northern Song dynasty. Fang La, a lacquer farmer from Qianshan in modern Zhejiang, led tens of thousands of peasants and craftsmen against the corrupt regime of Emperor Huizong. The uprising, rooted in the brutal exactions of the Huai'an tax bureau and the forced collection of 'flower and stone' tributes, spread across six prefectures before imperial troops crushed it with staggering violence. This episode examines the rebellion's causes, its suppression by the general Tong Guan, and its lasting toll: over two million dead, the weakening of Song defenses, and a direct link to the Jurchen invasion that toppled the dynasty just six years later. Lucas and Luna also discuss the historical memory of Fang La in Water Margin legend versus the grim reality of a rebellion that accelerated the end of an era. #FangLa #SongDynasty #NorthernSong #PeasantRebellion #EmperorHuizong #TongGuan #WaterMargin #Huai'an #Qianshan #Zhejiang #FlowerAndStoneTribute #JingkangIncident #JurchenJin #Manichaeism #ChineseHistory #MedievalChina #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Eilen8 min
jakson The Song Dynasty's Astronomical Clock: Su Song's Cosmic Engine kansikuva

The Song Dynasty's Astronomical Clock: Su Song's Cosmic Engine

In 1090, Su Song completed the construction of a towering astronomical clock tower in Kaifeng—a water-powered marvel that combined an armillary sphere, a celestial globe, and a system of jackwork figures that rang bells and struck drums to mark the hours. This episode explores the clock's intricate mechanics, its place in Song dynasty science, and the political and cultural context that made such an ambitious project possible. Lucas and Luna discuss how Su Song's design integrated earlier advances in escapement technology—sometimes credited as the first of its kind—and how the clock survived only a few decades before the Jurchen invasion of 1127 scattered its components. They also reflect on the broader meaning of such a device: what it says about Song dynasty attitudes toward time, precision, and the cosmos. Drawing on the detailed descriptions in Su Song's own treatise, the Xin Yi Xiang Fa Yao, they piece together how this machine might have worked and why it failed to spark a continuous tradition of mechanical clockmaking in China. #SongDynasty #SuSong #AstronomicalClock #XinYiXiangFaYao #Kaifeng #Escapement #ArmillarySphere #CelestialGlobe #SongScience #ChineseAstronomy #WaterClock #JingkangIncident #HistoryOfTechnology #MechanicalClock #SongDynastyInventions #EastAsianHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

17. heinä 202611 min
jakson The Song Dynasty's Privateers: Li Bao and the Pirate War of 1161 kansikuva

The Song Dynasty's Privateers: Li Bao and the Pirate War of 1161

In 1161, as the Jurchen Jin army marched south to crush the Southern Song, a fleet of pirate ships under the command of a former smuggler named Li Bao sailed into battle on the side of the empire. This is the story of the Song dynasty's unlikely alliance with a pirate king — a man who went from outlaw to admiral in a single year. Lucas and Luna explore how Li Bao's private fleet of over 300 vessels disrupted Jin supply lines, forced the Jin emperor to flee, and turned the tide of a war that threatened to erase the Song. They examine the politics of the pirate amnesty, the brutal realities of naval combat in the 12th century, and the forgotten role of maritime power in defending the dynasty. Along the way, they discuss the battle of Tangdao, the sack of Haizhou, and the thin line between pirate and patriot in medieval China. #SongDynasty #LiBao #PirateWar #NavalHistory #SouthernSong #JurchenJin #BattleOfTangdao #Haizhou #MaritimeHistory #Privateers #Gaozong #ChinaHistory #MedievalChina #EastAsia #Piracy #History #FexingoHistory #MaritimeAsia Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

17. heinä 20267 min