Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - What are the marks of China culture from pre-Qin to Qin and Han dynasties?

What are the marks of China culture from pre-Qin to Qin and Han dynasties?

The cultural imprint of China from pre-Qin to Qin and Han Dynasties includes: the spread of painted pottery culture to the west, gunpowder to the west, jade articles to the east and silk to the west.

During the Qin and Han Dynasties, China culture occupied an important position in the history of China and the world civilization, which was manifested in: it began to become the center of oriental culture, began to absorb foreign cultural achievements, and began to export cultural achievements, and its scientific and technological level was at the forefront of the world.

Extended data:

In 22 1 year BC, the Qin dynasty destroyed six countries and established the first unified multi-ethnic feudal centralized country in Chinese history. Using the power of state power, feudal land ownership was finally established, which laid the economic foundation for the political structure and cultural development of feudal countries. Fifteen years later, the Han Dynasty established, inherited and developed various systems of the Qin Dynasty, and maintained and consolidated feudal land ownership.

The feudal land ownership established in Qin and Han Dynasties became the fundamental economic system of feudal society for more than two thousand years. On this basis, the rulers of Qin and Han dynasties also established bureaucratic political system, ideological and cultural system and ethical norms to serve the centralized and unified country. The political pattern of great unification in Qin and Han dynasties provided a realistic basis for intellectuals to think, summarize and perfect the theory of great unification. Therefore, the Qin and Han Dynasties were also the period of shaping China culture.