China: Sui dynasty (AD 589-618)
During the Sui dynasty, northern and southern China were
reunified after centuries of division, and political, educational
and economic foundations were laid on which the great Tang and
later dynasties were to build. Yang Jian, the Northern Zhou general
who established himself as the Sui emperor Wendi, improved many
aspects of internal administration. He also instigated a program of
public works which included the complex canal system that links the
Yellow, Huai and Yangzi Rivers.
An exam system was implemented by the second emperor, Yangdi (AD
568-618), which was based on the study of Confucian classics. This
was designed to attract scholars from the southern and
north-eastern élites into the bureaucracy. Yangdi was extrememly
ambitious and energetic, pursuing an active foreign policy and
extending the trade routes into Central Asia and the West.
The failure of military campaigns in Korea in 612 and 614 and
against the Turks however, financially ruined the dynasty. Yangdi
fled south, leaving the north to be run by various rebel regimes.
Floods and peasant uprisings ensued, adding to the disastrous
events of the previous few years. When Yangdi was eventually
murdered by members of his entourage, a general who had been
responsible for defending China against the nomads, Li Yuan (known
posthumously as Emperor Gaozu), rebelled, and marched on the
captial Chang'an, where he founded the Tang dynasty in 618.