China 2000 BC - The Rise and Fall of Dynasties in Ancient China

201345 min 25 secFilm: Documentary

G

Direction: Wally LongulTakayoshi AizawaNobuhide AbeYoshihiro Watanabe

Production: Wally LongulFumito KondouRyota Urabayashi

Script: Gary LangTakayoshi AizawaNobuhide AbeYoshihiro Watanabe

Produced by NHK in co-production with Gedeon Programmes/F5 and the National Film Board of Canada.

China has many different peoples with widely different cultural backgrounds. In fact its populace is comprised of 56 ethnic groups. Why could these peoples have united as One China? The key to this miracle was the Idea of Zhong-hua, what is often translated as Sinocentrism. The program explores how this idea was forged in ancient China and finally utilized by the First Emperor of Qin to bind many different people under one flag. Many years of civil strife came to end in 221 BC with the first unification of China by the First Emperor. New discoveries are making clearer his extraordinary ambition towards the supreme power, which gave China the last impetus to its unification. His famous terracotta warriors, a symbol of his power were proven to have originally been brightly colored. And these colors provide important clues to the First Emperor's firm determination to place himself at the center of China.

In fact, Qing was one of remote tribes who were disdained as barbarians by the states in the Central Plains. Qing gained power through drastic military and political reforms and went on conquering other tribes, but they met tenacious rejections from the people in the conquered states. To conciliate them, the Qing started to claim that they were the Xia. By calling themselves the successor to the Xia they tried to legitimize their rule over China.

The First Emperor, however, did not content with the earthly power. Archaeologists took clues from items and remnants excavated from Qin's old capital to prove what grandiose plan he introduced in construction of his capital city. What the First Emperor desired to build was in fact a Celestial Empire. The latest archeological evidence shed new light on the last step to the unified China, the foundations that made China, and Asia, what it is today.

Subject categories


  • Archaeology > Archaeological Sites
  • Developing Countries > China
  • History > World History
  • History and Citizenship Education > Neolithic Civilization to the Renaissance

Credits


narrator
Diana Tso
editor
Lawrence Jackman
narration recording
Kitchen Sync Digital Audio
mix
Geoffrey Mitchell
sound editing
Daniel Toussaint
graphics
Mélanie Bouchard
Gaspard Gaudreau
titles
Mélanie Bouchard
Gaspard Gaudreau
online editor
Denis Pilon
post-production supervisor
Mireille Potvin
Louise McLean
post-production coordinator
Mira Mailhot
Pierre Ferlatte
writer
Gary Lang
Takayoshi Aizawa
Nobuhide Abe
Yoshihiro Watanabe
producer
Wally Longul
director
Wally Longul
Takayoshi Aizawa
Nobuhide Abe
Yoshihiro Watanabe
advisor
Hidenori Okamura
Tetsuji Atsuji
Takao Hirase
Kazuyuki Tsuruma
theme music
Suguru Matsutani
Aoi Teshima
animation
Hin Gan
Daisuke Takasaki
illustrations
Hin Gan
Daisuke Takasaki
camera
Ichiro Horiuchi
Daisuke Hasegawa
sound
Shinichiro Ogata
video engineering
Hirotsugu Ogi
computer graphics
Makoto Ikeda
Terabe Akira
VFX
Nozomu Sato
sound effects
Jyunko Fukui
editing
Tomoki Kitamori
Nobuo Suzuki
Masaharu Yoshioka
co-ordination
Quan Wan Shi
Hideki Murayama
Miwa Yamamoto
executive producer
Fumito Kondou
Ryota Urabayashi