so Confucianism is like the idealistic way of what a gentlemen and society should act like, in a time where nobles are all powerful and states are all crazy for power, its understandable why his policies are not adopted or appreciated by state rulers. Its a brutal period, being the gentlemen wont benefit you but benefit your enemies. Legalism is a much more practical thought in that time setting, its all about strict law and the need to follow it, especially with Qin state before unification since they are viewed as frontier state / uncivilized, where court and noble culture is less appreciated, military are given high priority, with a strict hierarchal structure, might and wisdom of rulers is everything and shows results. . And that's why dynasties who conquered all of China switch to Confucianism later, because they pretty much conquered all of the the 'civilized' world that they know of, they just have to maintain the peace, which confucianism's talk of head of state patronage and the responsibility of ruler to their subjects, fits perfectly
@eddyr104110 ай бұрын
Typical civilization stories.... Greek Civil was a lucky Flux.... That bring us to modern days😅
@ibnunadzir2233 жыл бұрын
Legalism sounds like much earlier form of Machiavellism, even the biography of Han Fei seems quite similar to Machiavelli
@vitorpereira95152 жыл бұрын
Have you ever thought if Roman Emperors knew about Han Fei's legalism? I bet Caligula and Nero would be even scarier.
@1Invinc2 жыл бұрын
@@vitorpereira9515 Legalism would have reined in Caligula and Nero. One part of Legalism that's often not mentioned is that the Sovereign is too, subjected to the rule of Law.
@vitorpereira95152 жыл бұрын
@@1Invinc Qin Shi Huang was accountable to anyone else besides himself after he became emperor?
@1Invinc2 жыл бұрын
@@vitorpereira9515 The Imperial Court. One thing a lot of people don't realize about Chinese Emperors is that even though technically they're absolute monarchs, the way the Imperial Court is structured keeps the Emperor in check. Whether or not they have the will to do so is besides the point. Qin Shi Huang is still subject to the laws of the Qin state. You may disagree with the laws of the time, over 2500 years ago, but even Qin Shi Huang doesn't just dictate things on a whim. There are many matters where even the Emperor has to get passed through the Lords and Officers of the Imperial Court, before it is processed by the Bureau of Law, where it is then executed or disseminated to the Empire. There's an entire legal structure created through the Legalist school, rather than just a simple "Emperor says, people do". This structure is what set the Qin apart from the other warring states.
@arthas6402 жыл бұрын
@@1Invinc that gets ignored with monarchies in general. Absolute monarchies are fairly rare outside the modern era when governments became far kore centralized. Before that with feudalism monarchs not only had their own form of legalism but they also had to contend with their court and nobles under them. A rather minor example is eating. In medieval Europe leaders were expected to eat with their entire household including many retainers and servants and leaders got mocked or even censured for eating more extravagant meals on their own since the communal eating was meant to reaffirm communal bonds. This sort of legalism fell out of favor ironically enough thanks to the renaissance and enlightenment, and it was after that that we started seeing absolute monarch in the west. Even Roman emperors had rules and customs to abide by similar to Chinese legalism
@m.g.94683 жыл бұрын
Have you ever heard the tragedy of Han Fei the wise? It is a Qin legend.
@lepmuhangpa3 жыл бұрын
The Hans wouldn't tell you, their way is that of dogmatism & ignorance.
@conmane33413 жыл бұрын
So, you are the Qin Lord!?
@doringgray6952 Жыл бұрын
Ye, the poor dude is fabricated and murdered, but his idea never disappeared.
@salamanderred8148 Жыл бұрын
@@lepmuhangpa The next emperors: "Is it possible to learn this power?" Legalists : "not from a Confucianist"
@rui_3K4 жыл бұрын
Why Qin Shihuang has a frog on his shoulder. Because in ancient China, a crow represented the sun, and a toad represented the moon. This toad is actually Chang'e, the Chinese goddess of the Moon.
@CannibaLouiST4 жыл бұрын
There was no such thing as a Chang' e before Han. 嫦者,避漢帝諱也
@HotZetiGer4 жыл бұрын
@@CannibaLouiST is it possible to see such moon frog logos?
@CannibaLouiST4 жыл бұрын
@@HotZetiGer moon frog logos?
@CannibaLouiST4 жыл бұрын
@@HotZetiGer If you meant the moon frog logo on the emperor's clothing, it's on his right shoulder. I was talking to another guy saying that before the second empire, Chang'e had a different name in ancient writings.
@HotZetiGer4 жыл бұрын
@@CannibaLouiST Indeed you were talking to the other guy, I see you are like Han Fei, lol, don`t bother :)
@k0mm4nd3r_k3n3 жыл бұрын
@ 3:10 I'm getting strong vibes that Machiavelli's The Prince is a doctrine in wielding Confucianismishness and Legalism like a double edged sword.
@lyamsky4 жыл бұрын
God I'm so glad I found this account... Chinese history is my jam
@AntiRacistWarrior4 жыл бұрын
Me too man, i am into Three Kingdoms era of Chinese history, i wish i knew Chinese so i'd know more about this ancient and interesting culture
@ucnguyenanh94144 жыл бұрын
Legalism had helped Qin rose to a superpower since the time of Duke Xiao
@whartanto23 жыл бұрын
And then the next Duke executed Shang Yang (Lord Shang) for "treating him equal to a commoner" before the law. Equality before law is a dangerous thing to explain to a feudal warlord :)
@ayami1233 жыл бұрын
@@whartanto2 actually it was the son of the duke that killed him, well he discipline the prince, of course he'll have the revenge when he took the throne
@jackwei223 жыл бұрын
Then Qin Dynasty fell moments after use to mass uprisings.
@1Invinc3 жыл бұрын
Ultimately this really shows the genius of the Han Dynasty. A Legalist system ruled by Confuscisn thought. Aspiring for the goodness that is at the heart of Confuscian thought, but reining in the worst of men with legalist enforcement. The carrot and the whip.
@littledovecitydust3 жыл бұрын
The same idea still strives today: Socialism with Chinese characteristics means Statism with Capitalism elements
@china-ustechnologicalparit30003 жыл бұрын
That's good insight
@johnrockwell58343 жыл бұрын
It's overly bloodthirsty leading to lots of innocent deaths. Just because the person is related to the criminal.
@1Invinc3 жыл бұрын
@@johnrockwell5834 so which "benevolent" system would you advocate?
@johnrockwell58343 жыл бұрын
@@1Invinc Read the Tanakh(Old Testament) and see the penalties there by comparison. And how they treat war. Its far more lenient and humane by comparison even if still brutal by our standards.
@Lily_Selverne4 жыл бұрын
3:37 "revolt by his own brother." Personally, I subscribe to the theory that this didn't happen. The original Chinese text says: "八年,王弟長安君成蟜將軍擊趙,反,死屯留," Translation: "Eighth year, the King's brother General Chengjiao, the Lord of Chang'an, attacked Zhao, revolted, and died in Tunliu," where the character "反" is translated as "revolted". However, 反 can also be translated as "reverse direction" or "return" (though the latter is uncommon these days) and it is the simplified version of the character "返" meaning "to return" or "to go back." So it sould not be discounted as a possibility that the passage could be read as "Eighth year, the King's brother General Chengjiao, the Lord of Chang'an, attacked Zhao, *returned* [to Qin], and died in Tunliu." The fact that there are no contemporary sources referencing the event that we can use to cross-check and find the most likely version of events doesn't help. There is a passage in Shiji 43 which at first glance seems to support the idea that Chengjiao did indeed revolt: "(赵悼襄王)六年,封长安君以饶" Translation: (King Zhao Daoxiang) sixth year, Lord Chang'an was granted Yi Rao. (6th Year of Zhao Daoxiang = 8th Year of Qin Shi Huang = 239 BCE) So to compile what we know is fact: 1. Chengjiao was sent to attack Zhao in 239 BCE 2. In the same year, the King of Zhao gave land to the Lord of Chang'an 3. Chengjiao held the title "Lord of Chang'an" From these facts, the simple assumption can be made that Chengjiao defected to Zhao instead of attacking them and was granted land in Zhao as a reward, this being the revolt mentioned in the Shiji. However, this is doubtful because Chengjiao wouldn't exactly benefit in abandoning his position in Qin for some inconsequential land in Zhao, and also because the passage in Shiji 43 only says "Lord of Chang'an" and doesn't specify Chengjiao's name. This is important because there is in fact another Lord of Chang'an, that being one of Zhao Daoxiang paternal uncles. Which do you think is more likely, that Daoxiang gave land to his uncle, or that he gave it to the prince of an enemy kingdom? This question casts major doubt on whether Chengjiao actually revolted at all. So then, what about Chengjiao's death? Personally, I believe this was purely down to political machinations between the different factions in Qin's court. Chengjiao was part of a faction connected with the state of Han. Queen Dowager Xia, the mother of Zichu, was from Han and would've picked a woman of Han like herself to be Zichu's wife. Therefore, Chengjiao has Han blood from his mother. Queen Dowager Xia passed away in 240 BCE and in 239 BCE Chengjiao was also dead. I doubt that the 2 most important members of a political faction dying in just 1 year is a coincidence. What I believe to have happened is that Lu Buwei (who was running Qin at the time since Zheng wasn't yet of age) saw Dowager Xia's death as a perfect opportunity to rid an opposing faction of all influence and sent the 17 year old (and inexperienced in battle) Chengjiao to fight in Zhao hoping that he would be killed in battle, and when that failed he had him assassinated or forced him to commit suicide at Tunliu.
@andro78623 жыл бұрын
That is a great analysis. Thank for the info
@Hinata09282 жыл бұрын
Well, Zhao Chengjiao was Zheng's half-brother of King Zhuangxiang and his other woman. If we based his biography in Kingdom, he was just as ambitious as Lu Buwei. And later on, softened his stance against Zheng. He died fighting for Qin against conspiracy of Tunliu nobles and Zhao nobility. In history however, he remained ambitious. He aligned himself with Zhao, as seen in Tunliu, conspiring with Tunliu's citizenry. He died fighting for Zhao.
@duhtoolazy67764 жыл бұрын
Qin had legalism for centuries by the time Ying Zhen came in to power. Their rival, Zhao was dealt a crushing blow by his grandfather and even then Li Mu was his biggest obstacle.
@mazadancoseben48184 жыл бұрын
I like the way it was depicted in the Kingdom manga, though I felt like Li Mu/Ri Boku wasn't done justice to his character.
@Hinata09282 жыл бұрын
He was described in history as a defensive tactician, and a distant relative of Li Xin. But in Kingdom, he got powers. He was equal to Lian Po on being an all-rounder, except he did not have any instinctual assets. He got it all. Offense, defense, strategies, strength and most of all, strong minions. And his relationship with Li Xin was not revealed.
@elbertjonathanlee69982 жыл бұрын
Not quite,his grandpa only reigned for 3 days, the real weakener was king zhaoxiang of qin he sent bai qi and wang he and destroyed the entire zhao army in changping in which zhao never recovered. Edit:king zhaoxiang was ying zhengs great grandpa.
@scoutmaster120519933 жыл бұрын
When Wei Yang (later known as Shang Yang) introduced ruling methods to Duke Xiao of Qin, first he told him about Emperor's method of ruling, Duke Xiao said "You talk only of nonsense!", then he told him of King's method, Duke Xiao replied: "I like it, but it takes too long to see the result ", finally Wei Yang introduced Hegemon's method to Duke Xiao, he was so excited that he discussed with Wei Yang for three days and nights long. The Hegemon's method of ruling that Wei Yang introduced to Duke Xiao of Qin was actually Legalism.
@KevinVang1000 Жыл бұрын
He killed a lot of Hmong people who were the rulers of the Chu Dynasty.
@عليياسر-ذ5ب11 ай бұрын
@@KevinVang1000Zhou Empire
@TheYuri642 жыл бұрын
2:42 "Confucius thinks that humans are by nature good." Where is the foundation for that? I don't think Confucius believed that humans are naturally good. The Analects says: "Zigong said: 'Human nature is not a subject that we hear the Master talking about." I know the quote "By nature, people are nearly alike. By practice they get to be wide apart" but besides that, Confucius doesn't really talk about human nature. However, throughout the Analects he makes constant remarks about the difficulty of achieving virtue, as if it's not in our nature to be naturally good.
@heindrich19884 жыл бұрын
As somebody who studied political philosophy in the UK, it's quite interesting that the Confucianism vs Legalism debate in China basically mirrors the Hobbes vs Locke argument in the West. The world should be grateful that for the most part, Confucianism won out in China. All that focus on ritual and morality to maintain the Mandate of Heaven distracted Chinese emperors from some nice opportunities for imperialism and genocide.
@lotsofrainbows3 жыл бұрын
The Qin Dynasty ruled the territories it conquered for only 14 years, and it perished in resistance. The lessons of its destruction were repeatedly mentioned by the participants of later Chinese politics, "Crack and destroy the cruel monarch and destroy its rule." “伐无道,诛暴秦”
@TheRinguDinku54542 жыл бұрын
That's honestly so true, history would be quite different if legalism had won out in ancient china.
@1Invinc2 жыл бұрын
Legalism did win. Legalism as the legal/government structure. Confuscianism as the social structure. They tempered each other's harshness. Supported each other's strengths. Covered each other's shortcomings.
@spacejunk21862 жыл бұрын
Does not stop them now.
@ikmalkamal5830 Жыл бұрын
Nah. It's a shame legalism didn't win out. An actually imperial China expanding everywhere would do good for Asia.
@jtm12834 жыл бұрын
I'm glad that you switched it to being "maybe" with regard to Lü Buwei being Ying Zheng's father, replacing the strong claim in the first video.
@Hinata09282 жыл бұрын
Because Zichu maybe done it with Lady Zhao after their meeting. Remember, he cucked Lu Buwei by taking in Lady Zhao as his plaything.
@kweassa62043 жыл бұрын
I wouldn't say Confucianism 'replaced' Legalism in the years to come. It's more of the fusion of the two, where the efficiency and positive effects of Legalism is generally maintained, but the harsher and brutal aspects of it held back by a Confucian principle of love and compassion.
@ethanstump2 жыл бұрын
but "what" is efficient? resource usage? not really, since much waste is documented. morality is optimized? corruption is clearly documented. is it documentation itself optimized? no, as it's clear that many reports are ignored. effiency is a mystic myth, used to justify it's opposite, used to justify waste, corruption and ignorance. it's as aspirational, idealistic and utopian as the virtues it tried to supplant. bureaucracy itself is inefficient and wasteful. kzbin.info/www/bejne/hprCaIN9aZiibtE
@TheExtraterrestrial992 жыл бұрын
Yes, it is always Legalism in general with Confucian to hold it back, prevent too brutal. One of the ideology of Confucian is about lawless society and apply law only for those had fallen beyond the bound of civilized behaviour. It is about depand and trust on moral values of people.
@ethanstump2 жыл бұрын
@@TheExtraterrestrial99 when the "bounds of civilized behavior" has more to do with your skin color, gender and sexual orientation, things that aren't empirically in your ability to control, you start to understand that "behavior" has more to do with what the desires of the ruler are, and less to do with the actions of the ruled. Confucianism doesn't really empirically create a human face to legalism, as it's standards are based on unempirical traditional rituals that do not empirically increase standards of living nor life expectancy, since it is not based on empiricism. but then again, all attempts at creating this from above are doomed to fail. neither lord, nor subject. Bao Jingyan
@GaussGodden2 жыл бұрын
@@ethanstump that's because legalism isn't fully practiced.. the best example of modern day fusion of legalism and confucianism is Lee Kwan Yews government in Singapore. Paraphrasing what Lee said.. he used Confucius moral education to teach right and wrong and why people should obey the laws and equal treatment of laws. That's 儒表法理(Confucius fusion with legalism) which is commonly practice in han dynasty and specific ideology of Zhuge Liang (諸葛亮).
@MrMakotox3 жыл бұрын
This channel's quality is outstading! How the hell it only has
@ryanthan35954 жыл бұрын
This is basically a merchant in calradia who helped the claimant on a throne and took over the empire
@testtestman23554 жыл бұрын
except when I play calradia, enemies magical dies without me firing an arrow HAHAHAHAHA
@lollertoaster3 жыл бұрын
Mao's academic carrier started with an essey in support of Legalism.
@akinyt35493 жыл бұрын
lol
@lebarondeminuit35803 жыл бұрын
Han Fei and Legalism makes me think of Machiavelli and The Prince, they're kinda similar
@bioinformaticsonline59883 жыл бұрын
Machiavelli is more about the practical aspects of politics. Han Fei is a theorist and before that no one had ever tried to implement Legalism.
@lebarondeminuit35803 жыл бұрын
@@bioinformaticsonline5988 Ooh I see, nice nuance
@SamUncle-w6t3 жыл бұрын
Also Machiavellian support incessant war, HanFei asked ruler to care more about its inner affair
@lebarondeminuit35803 жыл бұрын
@@SamUncle-w6t That's better in a way
@SamUncle-w6t3 жыл бұрын
@@lebarondeminuit3580 yes, HanFeizi I have actually read in ancient text, it is anti the war strategy genre(战国策,纵横家), it believes if implementing such harsh inner rule to win stablity and prosperity, it will make a country strong, and expansion will come naturely(so dont need to pursue specifically), it is opposing to other blind warmonger sects.....
@ifigeneiaalevizou92094 жыл бұрын
Han fei: the og machiavelli
@gilgameschvonuruk49823 жыл бұрын
machiavelli supported freedom of speech and some form of republic
@nationradical3 жыл бұрын
Monarchy and republic can still be despotic
@SamUncle-w6t3 жыл бұрын
However Machiavellian support incessant war, HanFei asked ruler to care more about its inner affair! It’s that much better for common people (outside intellectual sphere, in ancient time,few people are literate
@jemfalor3 жыл бұрын
tyranny is a bit of a one sided description.
@kfcfingerlicker92923 жыл бұрын
But but...human nature is bad and EVIL!- Legalist. Also Legalist, "I am going to severely punish anyone who doesn't adhere to my belief systems, because deep down I'm a sensitive and insecure prick"
@johngraham57554 жыл бұрын
Love these! Keep it up.
@ldl14772 жыл бұрын
"Kingdom" is both an anime & manga set in this time period. Its more focused on military campaign, but politics is a secondary focus. Its less historical, and more like the movie "300," but if you want entertainment set in this time period, its the best I can think of.
@ex0duzz10 ай бұрын
Ravages of time is better. Much much better to see everything from romance of 3 kingdoms.. Kingdom is just a mindless fighting shounen.
@princekrazie2 жыл бұрын
Han Feizi what a madlad literally criticizing his own cousins. His family name was Han which means he was born into Han Kingdom's Aristocracy.
@purplepill20243 жыл бұрын
This is stupid, Legalism by itself isn't tyrannical. Qin Shi Huang and Li Si just took it to an extreme, as Qin Shi Huang was a great conqueror but a terrible ruler. Emperor Xuan of Han made great use of both Legalism and Confucianism to effectively rule his country. As opposed to his son, Emperor Yuan, whose strict adherence to Confucianism eventually led to the downfall of the royal family.
@animalia55544 жыл бұрын
Michaveli is looking at this guy and going... Damn you’re cold.
@vincentchaksanli52614 жыл бұрын
I know right. I freaked out when I read his work but remained chill when reading "The Prince".
@taiyc14 жыл бұрын
learning so much from all these videos! thanks alot!
@CatInTheBoxStudios4 жыл бұрын
First! (To unite China!)
@rohansensei30933 жыл бұрын
Legalism was just like machiavellianism but with much lower ethical bottom line.
@SamUncle-w6t3 жыл бұрын
However Machiavellian support incessant war, HanFei asked ruler to care more about its inner affair
@alexzen7513 жыл бұрын
@@SamUncle-w6t funny mud pee
@GaussGodden2 жыл бұрын
There is no ethical line in legalism. It's about basically treating humans like animals using the most consistent method of punishment and reward (laws) with no bias to maintain control. However, the essence of legalism teaches what an absolute fairness of court can bring to us.
@mottscottison6943 Жыл бұрын
I don't think you understand both Machiavellianlism and legalism at all. Machiavellianlism means to gain control and power by the whatever means, while legalism is strict administration where rules applied to all regardlessly. It's like comparing apple to oranges. But if you must compare 'ethics', Machiavellianlism is bottomless as it's name suggest, to gain power by all means.
@GaussGodden Жыл бұрын
@@mottscottison6943 well legalism is apply the same treatment to everyone .. there is no ethical line in that. That was the reason why legalists were criticized so much. And because of legalists obsessiveness on rule of law and their obsessiveness to apply same treatment to everyone, they believe as long they maintain the above they can cross any ethical barriers like it doesn't exists. It's like a drive for them.
@zuzuzuko39474 жыл бұрын
the reason he managed to conquer China is the same with Alexander conquest, their predecessor is competent
@山青文3 жыл бұрын
Haha for Qin emperor Alexander was a joke, Alexander was made by westerners. Actually Persian empire never falled from him.
@yansakuya13 жыл бұрын
@@山青文 Considering that his general took over his empire after his death. It definitely did fell to him and the west is never unified enough to be able make someone up without conflicting accounts.
@bunnyfreakz Жыл бұрын
It is not. All of those kingdom during warring state are equals hence why Unification at that time sounds really impossible. Chu and Qin Kingdom are equals in term of military power. It is Qin Shi Huang's grandfather that beaten most of smaller kingdom and paved its way for Qin Shi Huang.
@yingqin72563 жыл бұрын
都喜欢讲战国时期的秦,其实西周初年的秦更值得讲
@zhcultivator4 жыл бұрын
Great Video :)
@javiercaramessanchez43822 жыл бұрын
Excelent video.
@ruthiethemagmacube5390 Жыл бұрын
Awesome video! Thanks.
@prastagus33 жыл бұрын
Legalism ruled the Kingdom of Qin since the Reform of Shang Yang 商鞅变法. That happened 3 generations before Qing Shihuang
@colinvandyke90023 жыл бұрын
Yoooo this is so facts so crazy
@sr38213 жыл бұрын
So, basically Han Fei is Chinese Machiavelli, isn't he?
@amidawithanage49104 жыл бұрын
hi 7b (thats me class we are watching this for school)
@tommy-er6hh4 жыл бұрын
I would like a discussion on 100 Schools of thought. I only know of a few, and understand less. For instance Mohism I do not really understand. Or Names - how is that a philosophy? Agriculturalism - is it get back to basics, or think like a farmer, or we need more farmers? Militarism - is it solve all problems with combat, or be military in society order, or we need a stong military as a gov't to defend ourselves?
@kurtmill90804 жыл бұрын
I've been studying Mohism a bit. As far as I understand, it's based on the principle of Utilitarianism. Wherein the goal of the state should be to provide for as many of its people's happiness as possible, and each member of society should behave in ways that help everyone else in the state as well. Mozi proposed the state needed to be run on Universal Love, saying that everyone should treat each other as equals, rather than prioritize certain people like family or the ruler, over others. He promoted harmony through compliance, a bit like socialism. Reward and punishment would be based on whether someone did someone that helped or hindered the whole. The Mohists also upheld scientific innovation over tradition, reasoning that at one point in history all traditions were innovations. So you can bet if they won the warring states period, that China would have likely developed the scientific method, and that would have been exported to Persia and Arabia. From what I'm reading, because Mohism espoused siege warfare, it always wanted to be waging defensive and never offensive wars unless absolutely necessarily. This means you would likely only get Mohism winning the Warring States if China is not unified, and thus tehre are several states that mohist communities can defensively ward off. There were actually Mohists that came to Duke Xiao of Qin before Shang Yang did. I wonder if they had struck a deal with Qin on promoting Mohism as a state philosophy, would it stick and would the whole history of China and humanity be changed or end up pretty much the same as ours.
@tommy-er6hh4 жыл бұрын
@@kurtmill9080 Thanks Kurt for the explaination!
@juanlu39582 жыл бұрын
@@kurtmill9080 The most important three ideas of Mohism maybe 1.Universal value,共義。2 The will of heaven 天志.3.universal care兼愛(shouldnt use word love thats wrong)。Universal value let people to decide what is wrong what is right what kind of value system society should have, what kind of laws they want to make.The will of heaven tells people we are all citizens of heaven all equal below the heaven.and mankind must obey the laws of heaven. Universal cares 兼愛tell people we must taking care each others or we wont have a society which benefit everyone.
@juanlu39582 жыл бұрын
@@kurtmill9080 also Mohism against Monarch,they believed rulers or those who with political powers should be selected,put most capable and moral men on those positions.尚賢。kinda like democrat dont you think?
@9pandas4 жыл бұрын
Great video!
@Now_Roxas10 ай бұрын
All hail this man
@lebarondeminuit35803 жыл бұрын
I would love you to talk about the Three Kingdoms
@Zeus_ww94 жыл бұрын
Anyone watched this because of the anime kingdom?
@anhquantran7124 жыл бұрын
Or the manga
@Cami-wd4rw4 жыл бұрын
@@anhquantran712 Well the manga doesn't say the Chinese name.
@silas2320034 жыл бұрын
@@Cami-wd4rw depends on the translation. Most people reading the manga actually do their research. In-fact there is a huge discord following of which I am part of. The manga even has anecdotes/small notes for names with their actual representation. Keeper of legalism - Li Shi.
@ErlandDevona4 жыл бұрын
So... Han Fei is Chinese Machiavelli?
@Cyberpunker10883 жыл бұрын
Or is Machiavelli an Italian Han Fei X-D. Machiavelli never inspired the creation of an empire; Han Fei did.
@puddintame77944 ай бұрын
There once was an obese ruler of Qin, Though he was fat his people were thin, He declared with lisp, Unlimited power is his, And is spending eternity in Hell to suffer in.
@cheekoandtheman3 жыл бұрын
Its unfortunate that the preaent CCP has gone hardcore legalist, it seems
@detailsimply3564 Жыл бұрын
Thank god we now have rule of Stasis instead of rule of law or rule of humans.
@zainmudassir29642 жыл бұрын
Legalism was tough ideology
@abhishekmathur1148 Жыл бұрын
For establishing Legalism 1)Establish Courts 2)Prisons 3)Police 4)Advocates
@Simonezsm4 жыл бұрын
I respect him very much, his ideas are very advanced, although the people are so poor.
@JoeJohnston-taskboy3 жыл бұрын
Love your videos! Great stuff!
@SuperPRguru3 жыл бұрын
I feel like Cao Cao would like legalism
@jasonmuniz-contreras66303 жыл бұрын
This is what my Latin America needs.
@vitorpereira95152 жыл бұрын
I say we need both.
@homersimpson550110 ай бұрын
Is this what the manga kingdom covers?
@xdrake57554 жыл бұрын
Anyone know rishi?
@china-ustechnologicalparit30004 жыл бұрын
Please..... SHANG yang reformation.
@davideliazarhardy81014 жыл бұрын
Because of Qin Shi Huang, mainland people being called "China"
@CoolHistoryBros4 жыл бұрын
Before Qin Shi Huang conquered the rest of China in 221BCE, the state of Qin had existed since the 9th century BCE. The name may have been coined by the Indians and Persians whose first point of contact to China is through the state of Qin, which is the westernmost state of China during the Zhou dynasty. It is unlikely that the name came from the unified entity that's Qin dynasty China, since it only lasted for 15 years.
@davideliazarhardy81014 жыл бұрын
@@CoolHistoryBros thx for the information.
@theolich43844 жыл бұрын
The First Emperor does take credit for creating the nation that had came to be known as China, the common written Chinese language, and subsequently, the Chinese identity.
@ComradeConfucius3 жыл бұрын
So Ying Zheng discovered the Red Pill through trauma?
@AntiRacistWarrior4 жыл бұрын
Why is Qin called the first Empire of China, weren't Zhou and Shang Empires existed before it?
@CoolHistoryBros4 жыл бұрын
Good question. It really comes down to the invention of the title 皇帝 (Huang Di) by Qin Shi Huang. Which is translated to "emperor". Originally, the Zhou dynasty's ruler's title was 王 (Wang) which is translated as "king". But functionally, they're just like emperors, which commanded the allegiance of various other states which were ruled by the royal family's relatives or loyal ministers. Their title was 侯 (Hou) which is translated as "duke". Though they're supposed to be loyal to the Zhou kings, they had defacto control of their respective states. Since the Spring & Autumn period, the Zhou dynasty's influence gradually waned, and by the Warring States period, various states declared themselves to be kings, which meant that they're on the same level as the Zhou kings, and stopped listening to them. Eventually, the last of the Zhou kings was killed and every states had kings as their ruler. Qin Shi Huang then eventually conquered the other states whose leaders were titled 王 (Kings). He created the title 皇帝 (Huang Di) because he had to differentiate himself from the other kings for having achieved something as monumental of conquering "all under heaven". Which really was just the former vassal states of Zhou. Huang Di 皇帝 is the combination of the titles used by the mythical rulers of pre-dynastic China. The three augusts and five emperors 三皇五帝. After Qin Shi Huang used that title, subsequent dynasties also called their ruler 皇帝 (Huang Di). So that's why QSH is known as the first emperor. Because he invented a cooler name for the ruler of a unified China. 😂
@hygog4 жыл бұрын
instead of zhou, which is feudalism kingdom, it didnt get direct control over the whole china, weak court weak authority king. Qin killed this system off and he is the first one unified and ruled china by absolute power with the highly power concentrated central government, with the nationwide civil servant system and appointed governor to rule the land from his court, this is unheard of before him. so he is the first one actually unified china without feudalismhe , combine with newly conquered north and south land so he thought the existing word of “king” or something was just too lame for him then he made new word for his own. in the english context, king and emperor is not the same, emperor is kind of king of the kings, and rule over difference region with expansion power. so it suits his title hence people use emperor in translation. perfect fit.
@masterkoi293 жыл бұрын
During the Zhou dynasty,China wasn't unified yet. Most Chinese states during the warring state period comes from the royals of the Zhou dynasty. The Zhou dynasty give a land to his relatives, subordinates etc and from then, those land was become different states. Qin state fight all those states to determine who will be the supreme ruler of China, who will unified the warring states??? And the Qin won and unified All the state and declared as a supreme ruler as a unified China. That is why he was known as the first emperor of unified china
@bioinformaticsonline59883 жыл бұрын
Before Qin, China was ruled by feudalism. There was no centralized government. Shang and Zhou kings did not have direct authority in vassal states, so sometimes vassal kings disobeyed Shang/Zhou kings and they had to lead an army to reassert their authority. We should also note that ancient China was not a united kingdom that broke into vassal states, it is the coalescence of vassal states that eventually formed China as we know it today. What unites those ancient China states is a shared general culture and writing system. The genetic makeup, spoken languages and customs varied a lot from state to state.
@wattpad30942 жыл бұрын
Shang and Zhou were feudalism under king. All vasals under the name of duke only pay tribute. The lands belong to them not the king. King has no right to appoint which land belong to which duke. It’s decided among their family. If there’s rebellion, king has army to reassert their dominance. That’s why at the end of Zhou, when the king lost its army, the state broke apart to become Spring and Autumn periods. After unification under Qin, emperor means the whole China belong to 1 state. No land is private. All official position is appointed by the emperor. Not handed down from father to son. Even if the emperor lost an army through war, non one can break apart the lineage aside from coup to appoint a new emperor of Qin. Army can be retrained under Qin banner. Not duke.
@AGS3632 жыл бұрын
At the end, Han Fei got exactly what he wanted, ... I do not think that he liked it.
@yingqin72563 жыл бұрын
从秦非子开始算,到嬴政,历经650余年,艰难的生存,壮大,衰弱,崛起,消灭六国,然后轰然倒塌
@ddgdgdg65093 жыл бұрын
china 20th-21st century is han fei, old china is Confucius
@blaelgore10 ай бұрын
I can't believe I started watching kingdom because of the fights and now I'm wating to learn more chinese history.
@MarcosVinicius-hg4uz3 жыл бұрын
cool
@dr.dinkel56823 жыл бұрын
Ahhhhhhhh fire nation scary
@小齐-k1i Жыл бұрын
讲中文的时候好像方言
@Victoria-yk1zw3 жыл бұрын
Insert comment for algorithm here
@matthewct8167 Жыл бұрын
Legalism is kinda like fascism right?
@Pancasilaist8752 Жыл бұрын
Pretty much a strawman fascism except this is a real ideology.
@johnweber45777 ай бұрын
Fascism in theory anyway is supposed to actualize the national spirit into political form rather than keep human nature in check with a set of objective laws situated beyond them as in Legalism. But of course there are comparisons to be made in practice.
@abhishekmathur1148 Жыл бұрын
Requires A Degree in law
@ceresbane6 ай бұрын
I can kind of understand from this why China as a culture finds the idea of copyright and intellectual property as rather strange. As literature in China is constantly filled with reiteration and plagiarism. Although you can put a name to a certain philosophy or idea or concept. You cannot outright claim (if you want to ever argue in good faith) they invented anything as schools of thought have always been nebulous and shared communally.
@عليياسر-ك9ظ4 ай бұрын
This is a lie and Han's lineage is watching you 😂😂😂😂😂😂
@iorifori913 жыл бұрын
the hundred school of th0t
@yingqin72563 жыл бұрын
没有人会注意到甘肃天水的这一批被贬马奴
@lingbingzheng8127 Жыл бұрын
Spelled Zheng incorrectly, but I guess it isn’t as bad as pronouncing Rou as Yue.
No; one side is Chinese politics, the other is economics.
@EyeLean5280Ай бұрын
NOTE: English does not seem to be the narrator's first language. When the he says, "indiscriminately," he is misusing the word; he is trying to say, "without prejudice or regard to privilege."
@ThinhNguyen-md6hu2 жыл бұрын
Bruh ur voice give out Nas daily vibe which greatly disturb me :)
@Misserbi4 жыл бұрын
Do it white. Overlap. Return to a point. Reveal nothing. Laugh out loud.
@hamzaferoz61622 жыл бұрын
Tyrannical? I think you mean based
@yukaslayer478424 күн бұрын
While this is one of the most entertaining history channels, this video is just misleading. You give too much credit to Han Fei and QSH. The one who was most responsible of turning Qin into a legalist war machine was Shang Yang. The six generations worked to carry the reform. By the end of King Zhaoxiang's reign, unification was unavoidable. At this point, any Qin king who lived long enough and was not an idiot, should be able to unite China. QSH was pretty good and left a lot of cool stuff. It's not that the others failed, it's just that the process took a very long time and they didn't live to see it. The strategy was to not destroy any state before achieving hegemony. Otherwise, the other countries would form a coalition and attack Qin.
@dustinchen2 жыл бұрын
Han fei was based. This is propaganda lol
@刚-o2h3 жыл бұрын
tyrannical? LOL you people have no idea about the ancient world...