East Asia In early modern times, the major nations of East Asia attempted to pursue a course of
isolationism from the outside world but this policy was not always enforced uniformly or successfully. However, by the end of the early modern period, China, Korea and Japan were mostly closed and uninterested in Europeans, even while trading relationships grew in port cities such as
Guangzhou and
Dejima.
Chinese dynasties Around the beginning of the
ethnically Han Ming dynasty (1368–1644), China was leading the world in mathematics as well as science. However, Europe soon caught up to China's scientific and mathematical achievements and surpassed them. Many scholars have speculated about the reason behind China's lag in advancement. A historian named Colin Ronan claims that though there is no one specific answer, there must be a connection between China's urgency for new discoveries being weaker than Europe's and China's inability to capitalize on its early advantages. Ronan believes that China's Confucian bureaucracy and traditions led to China not having a scientific revolution, which led China to have fewer scientists to break the existing orthodoxies, like Galileo Galilei. Despite inventing gunpowder in the 9th century, it was in Europe that the classic handheld firearms, matchlocks, were invented, with evidence of use around the 1480s. China was using the matchlocks by 1540, after the Portuguese brought their matchlocks to Japan in the early 1500s. China during the Ming dynasty established a bureau to maintain its calendar. The bureau was necessary because the calendars were linked to celestial phenomena and that needs regular maintenance because twelve lunar months have 344 or 355 days, so occasional leap months have to be added in order to maintain 365 days per year. , built in 1576: the Chinese believed that building pagodas on certain sites according to
geomantic principles brought about auspicious events; merchant-funding for such projects was needed by the late Ming period. In the early Ming dynasty, urbanization increased as the population grew and as the division of labor grew more complex. Large urban centers, such as
Nanjing and
Beijing, also contributed to the growth of private industry. In particular, small-scale industries grew up, often specializing in paper, silk, cotton, and porcelain goods. For the most part, however, relatively small urban centers with markets proliferated around the country. Town markets mainly traded food, with some necessary manufactures such as pins or oil. In the 16th century the Ming dynasty flourished over maritime trade with the Portuguese, Spanish and Dutch Empires. The trade brought in a massive amount of silver, which China at the time needed desperately. Prior to China's global trade, its economy ran on paper money. However, in the 14th century, China's paper money system suffered a crisis, and by the mid-15th century, crashed. The silver imports helped fill the void left by the broken paper money system, which helps explain why the value of silver in China was twice as high as the value of silver in Spain during the end of the 16th century. China under the later Ming dynasty became isolated, prohibiting the construction of ocean going sea vessels. Despite isolationist policies the Ming economy still suffered from an inflation due to an overabundance of
Spanish New World silver entering its economy through new European colonies such as
Macau. Ming China was further strained by victorious but costly wars to protect
Korea from
Japanese invasion. The European trade depression of the 1620s also hurt the Chinese economy, which sunk to the point where all of China's trading partners cut ties with them:
Philip IV restricted shipments of exports from
Acapulco, the Japanese cut off all trade with
Macau, and the Dutch severed connections between
Goa and Macau. in
Taiwan. This work was a collaboration between Chinese and European painters. The damage to the economy was compounded by the effects on agriculture of the incipient
Little Ice Age, natural calamities, crop failure and sudden epidemics. The ensuing breakdown of authority and people's livelihoods allowed rebel leaders, such as
Li Zicheng, to challenge Ming authority. The Ming dynasty fell around 1644 to the
ethnically Manchu Qing dynasty, which would be the last
dynasty of China. The Qing ruled from 1644 to 1912, with a brief,
abortive restoration in 1917. During its reign, the Qing dynasty adopted many of the outward features of
Chinese culture in establishing its rule, but did not necessarily "assimilate", instead adopting a more universalist style of governance. The Manchus were formerly known as the
Jurchens. When Beijing was captured by
Li Zicheng's peasant rebels in 1644, the
Chongzhen Emperor, the last Ming emperor, committed suicide. The Manchus then allied with former Ming general
Wu Sangui and seized control of
Beijing, which became the new capital of the Qing dynasty. The Manchus adopted the Confucian norms of traditional Chinese government in their rule of
China proper. Schoppa, the editor of
The Columbia Guide to Modern Chinese History argues, "A date around 1780 as the beginning of modern China is thus closer to what we know today as historical 'reality'. It also allows us to have a better baseline to understand the precipitous decline of the Chinese polity in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries."
Japanese shogunates The
Sengoku period that began around 1467 and lasted around a century consisted of several continually "warring states". Following contact with the
Portuguese on
Tanegashima Isle in 1543, the Japanese adopted several of the technologies and cultural practices of their visitors, whether in the military area (the
arquebus, European-style cuirasses, European ships), religion (
Christianity), decorative art, language (integration to Japanese of a
Western vocabulary) and culinary: the Portuguese introduced
tempura and valuable refined sugar. '', 1830 by
Hokusai, an example of art flourishing in the Edo period Central government was largely reestablished by
Oda Nobunaga and
Toyotomi Hideyoshi during the
Azuchi–Momoyama period. Although a start date of 1573 is often given, in more broad terms, the period begins with
Oda Nobunaga's entry into Kyoto in 1568, when he led his army to the imperial capital in order to install
Ashikaga Yoshiaki as the 15th, and ultimately final, shōgun of the
Ashikaga shogunate, and it lasts until the coming to power of
Tokugawa Ieyasu after his victory over supporters of the Toyotomi clan at the
Battle of Sekigahara in 1600. Tokugawa received the title of
shōgun in 1603, establishing the
Tokugawa shogunate. The
Edo period from 1600 to 1868 characterized early modern Japan. The Tokugawa shogunate was a
feudalist regime of Japan established by
Tokugawa Ieyasu and ruled by the
shōguns of the
Tokugawa clan. The period gets its name from the capital city,
Edo, now called Tokyo. The Tokugawa shogunate ruled from
Edo Castle from 1603 until 1868, when it was abolished during the
Meiji Restoration in the late
Edo period (often called the
Late Tokugawa shogunate). Society in the Japanese "
Tokugawa period" (
Edo society), unlike the shogunates before it, was based on the strict class
hierarchy originally established by
Toyotomi Hideyoshi. The
daimyōs (feudal lords) were at the top, followed by the
warrior-caste of
samurai, with the
farmers,
artisans, and
traders ranking below. The country was strictly closed to foreigners with few exceptions with the
Sakoku policy. Literacy among the Japanese people rose in the two centuries of isolation.
Korean dynasty In 1392, General
Yi Seong-gye established the
Joseon dynasty (1392–1910) with a largely bloodless coup. Yi Seong-gye moved the capital of Korea to the location of modern-day Seoul. The dynasty was heavily influenced by Confucianism, which also played a large role to shaping Korea's strong cultural identity.
King Sejong the Great (1418–1450), one of the only two kings in Korea's history to earn the title of great in their posthumous titles, reclaimed Korean territory to the north and created the
Korean alphabet. During the end of the 16th century, Korea was invaded twice by Japan, first in 1592 and again in 1597. Japan failed both times due to Admiral
Yi Sun-sin, Korea's revered naval genius, who led the Korean Navy using advanced metal clad ships called
turtle ships. Because the ships were armed with cannons, Admiral Yi's navy was able to demolish the Japanese invading fleets, destroying hundreds of ships in Japan's second invasion.
South Asia Indian empires , with the
Mughal Empire in orange ambassador Khan'Alam in 1618 negotiating with
Shah Abbas the Great of
Iran The rise of the
Mughal Empire is usually dated from 1526, around the end of the Middle Ages. It was an
Islamic Persianate imperial power that ruled most of the area as
Hindustan by the late 17th and the early 18th centuries. The empire dominated
South Asia, with a nominal GDP valued at a quarter of the global economy, superior than the combined GDP of Europe. The empire, prior to the death of the last prominent emperor
Aurangzeb, was marked by a highly centralized administration connecting its different
provinces. All the significant monuments of the Mughals, their most visible legacy, date to this period which was characterized by the expansion of Persian cultural influence in the Indian subcontinent, with brilliant literary, artistic, and architectural results. The
Maratha Confederacy, founded in the southwest of present-day India, surpassed the Mughals as the dominant power in India from 1740 and rapidly expanded until the
Third Battle of Panipat halted their expansion in 1761.
British and Dutch colonization The development of
New Imperialism saw the conquest of nearly all eastern hemisphere territories by colonial powers. The
commercial colonization of India commenced in 1757, after the
Battle of Plassey, when the
Nawab of Bengal surrendered his dominions to the British East India Company, in 1765, when the company was granted the
diwani, or the right to collect revenue, in
Bengal and
Bihar, or in 1772, when the company established a capital in
Calcutta, appointed its first
Governor-General,
Warren Hastings, and became directly involved in governance. and
Mir Jafar after the
Battle of Plassey, 1757, by Francis Hayman The Maratha Confederacy, following the
Anglo-Maratha wars, eventually lost to the
British East India Company in 1818 with the
Third Anglo-Maratha War. Rule by the Company lasted until 1858, when, after the
Indian rebellion of 1857 and following the
Government of India Act 1858, the
British government assumed the task of directly administering India in the new
British Raj. In 1819,
Stamford Raffles established
Singapore as a key trading post for Britain in its rivalry with the Dutch. However, the rivalry cooled in 1824 when an
Anglo-Dutch treaty demarcated their respective interests in Southeast Asia. From the 1850s onwards, the pace of colonization shifted to a significantly higher gear.
Southeast Asia At the start of the modern era, the
Spice Route between India and China crossed
Majapahit, an archipelagic empire based on the island of
Java. It was the last of the major
Hindu empires of
Maritime Southeast Asia and is considered one of the greatest states in Indonesian history. Its influence extended to
Sumatra, the
Malay Peninsula,
Borneo, and eastern Indonesia, though the effectiveness of this influence remains debated. Majapahit struggled to control the rising
Sultanate of Malacca, which dominated Muslim Malay settlements in Phuket, Satun, Pattani, and Sumatra. The Portuguese invaded Malacca's capital in 1511, and by 1528, the
Sultanate of Johor was established by a Malaccan prince to succeed Malacca. While in Borneo, Brunei began their golden age during the reign of Sultan
Bolkiah when he defeated the
Kingdom of Tondo in the
Tondo War however but was paused when it fought the Spanish in the
Castilian War in 1578. It was later restarted again with the reign of Sultan
Muhammad Hassan, later in 1660,
Brunei's first civil war started and in the aftermath of said war it paused Brunei's golden age once again until the reign of
Omar Ali Saifuddien I and the
sultans that came after him defeated the
Sulu in the
Lanun War in 1790.
West Asia and North Africa Ottoman Empire During the early modern era, the
Ottoman Empire enjoyed an
expansion and consolidation of power, leading to a
Pax Ottomana. This was perhaps the golden age of the empire. The Ottomans expanded southwest into North Africa while battling with the re-emergent
Persian Shi'a
Safavid Empire to the east.
North Africa In the Ottoman sphere, the Turks seized Egypt in 1517 and established the regencies of
Algeria,
Tunisia, and
Tripolitania (between 1519 and 1551),
Morocco remaining an independent
Arabized Berber state under the
Sharifan dynasty.
Safavid Iran The
Safavid Empire was a great Shia
Persianate empire after the Islamic conquest of Persia and the establishment of Islam, marking an important point in the history of Islam in the east. The Safavid dynasty was founded about 1501. From their base in
Ardabil, the Safavids established control over all of Persia and reasserted the Iranian identity of the region, thus becoming the first native dynasty since the
Sassanids to establish a unified Iranian state. Problematic for the Safavids was the powerful Ottoman Empire. The Ottomans, a Sunni dynasty, fought several
campaigns against the Safavids. What fueled the growth of Safavid economy was its position between the burgeoning civilizations of Europe to its west and Islamic Central Asia to its east and north. The
Silk Road, which led from Europe to East Asia, revived in the 16th century. Leaders also supported direct sea trade with Europe, particularly England and The Netherlands, which sought Persian carpet, silk, and textiles. Other exports were horses, goat hair, pearls, and an inedible bitter almond hadam-talka used as a spice in India. The main imports were spice, textiles (woolens from Europe, cotton from Gujarat), metals, coffee, and sugar. Despite their demise in 1722, the Safavids left their mark by establishing and spreading Shi'a Islam in major parts of the Caucasus and West Asia.
Uzbeks and Afghan Pashtuns In the 16th to early 18th centuries,
Central Asia was under the rule of
Uzbeks, and the far eastern portions were ruled by the local
Pashtuns. Between the 15th and 16th centuries, various nomadic tribes arrived from the steppes, including the
Kipchaks,
Naimans,
Kangly,
Khongirad, and
Manghuds. These groups were led by
Muhammad Shaybani, who was the
Khan of the Uzbeks. The lineage of the
Afghan Pashtuns stretches back to the
Hotaki dynasty. Following Muslim Arab and Turkic conquests, Pashtun
ghazis (warriors for the faith) invaded and conquered much of northern India during the
Lodhi dynasty and
Suri dynasty. Pashtun forces also invaded Persia, and the opposing forces were defeated in the
Battle of Gulnabad. The Pashtuns later formed the
Durrani Empire.
Sub-Saharan Africa The
Songhai Empire took control of the
trans-Saharan trade at the beginning of the modern era. It seized
Timbuktu in 1468 and
Jenne in 1473, building the regime on trade revenues and the cooperation of Muslim merchants. The empire eventually made Islam the official religion, built mosques, and brought Muslim scholars to
Gao. == Europe ==