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

Song Dynasty's Lost Women: The Legal Rights of Wives in Imperial China

8 min · 28 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Song Dynasty's Lost Women: The Legal Rights of Wives in Imperial China

Descripción

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the surprisingly robust legal and economic rights of women during the Song Dynasty — a period often overshadowed by narratives of Confucian patriarchy. Drawing on the Song legal code, the Song Xingtong, and records of dowry disputes from Fujian and Kaifeng, they discuss how married women retained control over their own property, could initiate divorce under certain conditions, and even appear in court. They examine the tension between Neo-Confucian ideals, which grew more restrictive over time, and the practical realities of a commercial society where women managed businesses and estates. The conversation touches on the lives of women like the poet Li Qingzhao, who fought in court to recover her dowry, and the widows who ran printing houses in the capitol. Lucas explains how the Song state's need for tax revenue from female-run enterprises created a surprising legal buffer against full patriarchal control. The episode reveals a nuanced picture: women in Song China had more agency than in many later dynasties, but their rights were fragile and eroded as Neo-Confucianism became orthodoxy. A fresh angle on Song social history that challenges common assumptions about women in pre-modern China. #SongDynasty #WomenInHistory #LiQingzhao #SongXingtong #Dowry #ChineseLaw #NeoConfucianism #Fujian #Kaifeng #Divorce #PropertyRights #GenderHistory #ImperialChina #LegalHistory #SocialHistory #EastAsia #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The Song Dynasty: Innovation Before the Modern World — Fexingo History!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

151 episodios

episode Song Dynasty's Porcelain Revolution: The Rise of Longquan Celadon artwork

Song Dynasty's Porcelain Revolution: The Rise of Longquan Celadon

Longquan celadon was the Song Dynasty's great ceramic innovation—a jade-green glaze that became a global luxury, traded from East Africa to Scandinavia. This episode traces its origins in Zhejiang's Dayao kilns, the technical mastery of iron-oxide reduction, and the rise of the Zhang family workshops that dominated production for centuries. We explore how Longquan ware displaced earlier Yue and Ru wares, its role in the Maritime Silk Road trade, and the devastating impact of the Yuan conquest on the kiln sites. Along the way, we consider the aesthetic philosophy behind celadon: why Song connoisseurs prized a muted, crackled glaze over flashy polychrome, and how that taste shaped East Asian ceramics forever. Plus, a look at the 14th-century Sinan shipwreck, which carried thousands of Longquan pieces to Japan, and the mystery of the kilns' sudden decline in the Ming period. Names and places: Longquan, Zhejiang, Dayao, Zhang family, Yue ware, Ru ware, Sinan, Maritime Silk Road, Yuan dynasty. #Longquan #Celadon #SongDynasty #ChineseCeramics #Porcelain #MaritimeSilkRoad #Zhejiang #Dayao #ZhangFamily #YueWare #RuWare #SinanShipwreck #YuanDynasty #TradeHistory #ArtHistory #CeramicEngineering #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

10 de jul de 20268 min
episode Su Shi's Dike: The Yellow River Taming of 1077 artwork

Su Shi's Dike: The Yellow River Taming of 1077

Before he built the Su Causeway at West Lake, Su Shi was sent to a muddy, flood-ravaged frontier: Xuzhou, on the Yellow River. In 1077, the river broke its banks, overwhelming the city walls and threatening tens of thousands. Su Shi — poet, governor, and reluctant engineer — mobilized soldiers, laborers, and volunteers to build a makeshift dike in a matter of days. This episode traces the flood, Su Shi's improvised hydraulic response, and his later memorials that reveal the tensions between local resilience and imperial infrastructure policy. We explore the limits of Song water control, the role of the state vs. local initiative, and how a poet came to be remembered as a savior of a city. Based on Su Shi's own writings from the period. #History #FexingoHistory #SongDynasty #SuShi #YellowRiver #Xuzhou #HydraulicEngineering #FloodControl #1077 #Shenzong #WangAnshi #Qingli #Dongpo #ChineseHistory #EastAsia #WaterManagement #DisasterResponse #PoetGovernor Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer5 min
episode Su Song's Cosmic Engine: The Lost Water-Powered Clock artwork

Su Song's Cosmic Engine: The Lost Water-Powered Clock

In 1094, the Song Dynasty scholar-official Su Song completed a towering water-powered astronomical clock tower in Kaifeng — a twelve-meter-high mechanism that drove an armillary sphere, a celestial globe, and a procession of time-announcing jackwork figures with a precision that would not be seen in Europe for three centuries. This episode explores how Su Song's 'Xin Yi Xiang Fa Yao' (New Design for an Armillary Clock) documented every gear, escapement, and waterwheel, only for the tower to be dismantled by Jurchen invaders in 1127. We trace the lost technology of the escapement mechanism, the debate over whether Su Song's invention influenced later European clocks, and what his clock reveals about Song Dynasty science, bureaucracy, and the fragility of technological knowledge. Featuring the escapement, Han Gonglian, Kaifeng, and the Bishu Ge library. #History #FexingoHistory #SongDynasty #SuSong #AstronomicalClock #ArmillarySphere #Escapement #WaterClock #Kaifeng #XinYiXiangFaYao #BishuGe #JingkangIncident #Horology #AncientScience #ChineseInventions #HistoryOfTechnology #LostKnowledge #EastAsia Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer8 min
episode Song Dynasty Lost Cities: The Sunken Capital of Liyang artwork

Song Dynasty Lost Cities: The Sunken Capital of Liyang

When Emperor Taizu founded the Song Dynasty, he chose Kaifeng as his capital. But hidden beneath the waters of modern Hongze Lake lies another lost city: Liyang, a prosperous county seat that was deliberately flooded during the Song-Jin wars. This episode explores the rise and fall of Liyang, from its role as a wealthy trading hub on the Grand Canal to its dramatic end in 1194 when the Yellow River changed course and the Song government sacrificed the city to halt the Jin advance. We discuss the strategic importance of the Grand Canal, the engineering challenges of controlling the Yellow River, the human cost of total war, and recent underwater archaeological discoveries that have revealed well-preserved Song-era structures. The story of Liyang is a microcosm of Song dynasty resilience and the harsh choices imposed by conflict. #SongDynasty #Liyang #HongzeLake #GrandCanal #YellowRiver #UnderwaterArchaeology #SongJinWars #LostCity #ChineseHistory #Flooding #Shaobo #Kaifeng #EmperorTaizu #Zhenjiang #Yangzhou #History #FexingoHistory #MedievalChina Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

8 de jul de 202613 min
episode Song Dynasty's Star Clock: Su Song and the Water-Powered Armillary Sphere artwork

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

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]

8 de jul de 20268 min