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

The Song Dynasty's Lost Dike: The Yellow River Flood of 1048

7 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio The Song Dynasty's Lost Dike: The Yellow River Flood of 1048

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In 1048, the Yellow River tore through a dike at Shanghu, near what is now Puyang, Henan, and shifted its course northward for the first time in nearly a thousand years. The flood devastated millions, triggered a decades-long policy war at the Song court, and reshaped the dynasty's relationship with its northern neighbors. This episode follows the disaster from the breach to the political fallout—Emperor Renzong's agonized edicts, the bitter rivalry between Ouyang Xiu and his opponents, and the failed attempt to force the river back south in 1056. We explore the engineering limits of Song-era flood control, the environmental toll, and how the river's new path eventually stranded the Grand Canal and hastened the fall of the northern Song. Featuring the dike engineer Guo Yao, the official Li Zhongchang who led the disastrous re-diversion, and the river itself as an agent of history. #History #FexingoHistory #SongDynasty #YellowRiver #Flood1048 #EmperorRenzong #OuyangXiu #GuoYao #LiZhongchang #GrandCanal #HydraulicEngineering #Shanghu #Puyang #Henan #NorthernSong #EnvironmentalHistory #Disaster #China Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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134 episodios

episode The Song Dynasty's Lost Dike: The Yellow River Flood of 1048 artwork

The Song Dynasty's Lost Dike: The Yellow River Flood of 1048

In 1048, the Yellow River tore through a dike at Shanghu, near what is now Puyang, Henan, and shifted its course northward for the first time in nearly a thousand years. The flood devastated millions, triggered a decades-long policy war at the Song court, and reshaped the dynasty's relationship with its northern neighbors. This episode follows the disaster from the breach to the political fallout—Emperor Renzong's agonized edicts, the bitter rivalry between Ouyang Xiu and his opponents, and the failed attempt to force the river back south in 1056. We explore the engineering limits of Song-era flood control, the environmental toll, and how the river's new path eventually stranded the Grand Canal and hastened the fall of the northern Song. Featuring the dike engineer Guo Yao, the official Li Zhongchang who led the disastrous re-diversion, and the river itself as an agent of history. #History #FexingoHistory #SongDynasty #YellowRiver #Flood1048 #EmperorRenzong #OuyangXiu #GuoYao #LiZhongchang #GrandCanal #HydraulicEngineering #Shanghu #Puyang #Henan #NorthernSong #EnvironmentalHistory #Disaster #China Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer7 min
episode The Song Dynasty’s Lost Silk Road: The Xi Xia Problem artwork

The Song Dynasty’s Lost Silk Road: The Xi Xia Problem

When you think of the Song Dynasty, you think of gunpowder, paper money, and landscape painting. But behind these achievements was a constant, grinding problem: the Song had lost control of the Silk Road. The Tang Dynasty's old overland routes to Central Asia were blocked by a powerful, enigmatic kingdom called Xi Xia — a state founded by the Tangut people, who created their own script, built a formidable military machine, and forced the Song to pay them off in silk and silver for decades. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the Xi Xia problem: how a small, sophisticated kingdom in the Gansu Corridor became the Song's worst nightmare, how the Song tried to fight, trade, and bribe their way through, and how the Xi Xia later vanished so completely that their language was forgotten for centuries. We look at the military stalemate, the tribute system, the Tangut script (one of the most complex ever devised), and the eventual destruction of the Xi Xia by the Mongols. A story of a lost civilization that shaped the Song world. #SongDynasty #XiXia #Tangut #SilkRoad #GansuCorridor #TangutScript #LiYuanhao #BattleOfHaoshui #Mongols #GenghisKhan #TributeSystem #CentralAsia #LostCivilizations #MedievalChina #FexingoHistory #History #EastAsia #Empire Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer5 min
episode Song Dynasty Movable Type Printing and the Print Revolution artwork

Song Dynasty Movable Type Printing and the Print Revolution

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the revolutionary impact of movable type printing during the Song Dynasty, focusing on the pioneering work of Bi Sheng in the 11th century. They discuss how Bi Sheng's invention of ceramic movable type in the 1040s predated Gutenberg by four centuries, yet didn't spark a similar print revolution in China. The conversation examines the reasons: the complexity of the Chinese writing system with thousands of characters, the dominance of woodblock printing for illustrations and religious texts, and economic factors that made movable type less efficient for certain genres. Lucas explains how later developments like Wang Zhen's wooden movable type in the 13th century improved the technology, and how the Ming and Qing dynasties saw further refinements. They also touch on the broader context of Song print culture, including the rise of commercial publishing, the civil service examination market, and the spread of knowledge through printed books. Luna asks about the transition from scrolls to books and the preservation of early printed works. The episode also includes a brief, organic donation segment where Lucas mentions that listener support at buy me a coffee dot com slash fexingo helps keep the show ad-free and independent. #SongDynasty #MovableType #BiSheng #PrintingRevolution #WangZhen #WoodblockPrinting #ChineseInventions #HistoryOfPrinting #Gutenberg #CivilServiceExams #BookCulture #CeramicType #Kaifeng #PrintTechnology #EastAsianHistory #FexingoHistory #Innovation #AncientTechnology Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

30 de jun de 202610 min
episode Song Dynasty's Lost Navigator: The Maritime Trade Revolution artwork

Song Dynasty's Lost Navigator: The Maritime Trade Revolution

The Song Dynasty wasn't just an age of paper money and gunpowder—it was also a maritime superpower. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how Song China transformed into the world's greatest seafaring economy, decades before the Ming treasure fleets. We follow the rise of Quanzhou, the bustling port city that rivaled Alexandria, and meet the shadowy merchants and shipbuilders who braved the South China Sea. Discover the Song invention of the magnetic compass for navigation, the construction of massive seagoing junks with watertight compartments, and the state-backed trade networks that reached as far as East Africa. We also uncover the dramatic 1277 Battle of the Sea—a desperate last stand against the Mongols—and the forgotten admiral Zhang Shijie, who tried to save the dynasty with a fleet of over a thousand ships. This is the story of a lost maritime revolution that reshaped the world. #SongDynasty #MaritimeTrade #Quanzhou #ZhangShijie #Compass #Trade #IndianOcean #ChineseHistory #MedievalTrade #Shipbuilding #Junks #BattleOfTheSea #1277 #Mongols #MaritimeSilkRoad #Navigation #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

30 de jun de 20264 min
episode Zhu Xi and the Making of Neo-Confucian Orthodoxy artwork

Zhu Xi and the Making of Neo-Confucian Orthodoxy

Lucas and Luna explore the life and legacy of Zhu Xi, the 12th-century philosopher who synthesized Confucian thought into a comprehensive system that would dominate East Asian intellectual life for centuries. They discuss his development of the 'investigation of things' (gewu) as a spiritual practice, his compilation of the Four Books as the core curriculum for civil service exams, and his controversial role in shaping orthodoxy. The episode touches on his exile under political persecution, his influence on later thinkers like Wang Yangming, and the paradox of a man who championed rigorous inquiry while his teachings were used to enforce conformity. Specifics include the White Deer Grotto Academy, the concept of li (principle) and qi (material force), and Zhu Xi's commentaries on the Great Learning. The conversation also considers critiques of Neo-Confucianism from modern scholars and its enduring impact on education and governance in China, Korea, Japan, and Vietnam. #ZhuXi #NeoConfucianism #SouthernSong #WhiteDeerGrotto #FourBooks #Gewu #LiandQi #Daoxue #SongDynasty #CivilServiceExams #WangYangming #ChinesePhilosophy #EastAsianHistory #FexingoHistory #History #Philosophy #Education #IntellectualHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

29 de jun de 20265 min