Sekundarni povzetek: |
The Han Dynasty ruled China from 202 BC to 220. Its more than four-hundred-year reign is characterized as the golden period of Chinese history. Namely, it represents a period of peace, stability, and general social progress. During this time, the unification of a vast area and the further expansion of the empire towards the west took place. In this way, China, otherwise traditionally isolated from the world, came into contact with the peoples of Central Asia and, indirectly, also with the Roman Empire. The latter was formed at the end of the 1st century BC and, thus, coexisted with China during the Han Dynasty for just under 250 years. A comparison of the administrative and military structures of the two empires reveals that there are certain similarities between them, e.g. in the role of the emperor and the system of public administration. Both empires used an efficient bureaucratic apparatus to exercise control, which, in turn, strengthened imperial power. At the same time, there are significant differences in the fields of government, law, and justice, as well as the military. Most of these differences derive from socially and culturally determined ideological differences that characterize both areas even today. The two empires were connected through trade which took place along the system of trade routes or the so-called Silk Road, which led from China through Central Asia to the Middle East and then to Europe. However, this trade was mostly indirect and did not allow direct contact between the two empires which did not even exist on a diplomatic level until the second half of the second century. |