Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Song Dynasty
Episode Date: February 11, 2026Chinese civilization has endured for more than 3,500 years, driven by a succession of kings, emperors, and sophisticated bureaucracies. This enduring culture has produced a legacy of profound intelle...ctual and cultural achievements. Among these eras, the Song Dynasty stands out for overseeing a commercial and urban revolution that produced a stunning array of innovations and technologies and defined China’s golden age.Learn more about the greatness of Song China on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Mint Mobile Get your 3-month Unlimited wireless plan for just 15 bucks a month at mintmobile.com/eed Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Disce aliquid novi cotidie Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The Chinese civilization has endured for more than 3,500 years, driven by a succession of kings,
emperors, and sophisticated bureaucracies.
This enduring culture has produced a legacy of profound intellectual and cultural achievements.
But among these eras, the Song Dynasty stands out for overseeing a commercial and urban
revolution that produced a stunning array of innovations and technologies that define China's
golden age.
Learn more about the greatness of Song China on this episode.
episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
The Song Dynasty ruled China from 960 to 1279.
It was a period widely regarded by many historians as the golden age of Chinese history.
Explosive population growth was a defining characteristic of the Song Dynasty,
acting as the foundation for many of the period's other hallmarks.
Notably, China's population saw a doubling from the close of the Tang Dynasty to the midpoint of Song rule.
And this was mostly due to the introduction of Chomper Rice.
Chomper rice revolutionized Song China. Because this drought-resistant strain matured in only 60 days,
it enabled three harvests per year, thereby driving the population to an estimated 100 million people by the year 1100.
This medieval green revolution had a substantial impact on China's urbanization.
Chomper rice cultivation required few people to produce a surplus of rice. Generating food surpluses on the same amount of land reduced
the number of people required for farming. This specialization of labor shifted millions of people
from rural to urban environments into non-agricultural employment. This increase in non-agricultural labor
led to an increase in artisans, craftsmen, and inventors. These classes were the engines of
innovation in Song China. Song China, much like its contemporary Middle Eastern Empire, the Abbasid Caliphate,
successfully managed a rapidly expanding urban population.
This success led to the development of a vibrant urban culture.
The great Song City of Hongzhou became the world's largest, with the population estimated at one million people.
The city presented a sprawling urban landscape, which was possible due to urban planning.
The Venetian traveler Marco Polo described the city as having 10 marketplaces capable of accommodating up to 50,000 people each.
Song China abandoned the rigid grid-like structure of earlier Chinese metropolises,
in favor of an open market-based layout.
The city would take full advantage of its location on the Chin Tang River
and turned it into a hub of maritime commerce.
Marco Polo also described a city of 12,000 bridges,
many of which allowed massive fleets of ships to sail beneath their spans.
Chinese scrolls from the period depict large bridges lined with markets and restaurants.
The city of Hongzhou was located at the southern end of the Grand Canal,
a remarkable engineering feat that spanned more than 1,000 miles or 1,700 kilometers,
and linked China's northern and southern halves through an artificial waterway.
Chinese paintings of the time depict massive boat fleets flowing into the city.
Marco Polo estimated seeing 15,000 vessels on the river.
As is typical of Marco Polo's accounts, that may have been an exaggeration, but we can safely
say that Hongzhou was a major center of commercial activity.
Song Dynasty cities were home to the world's most sophisticated commercial society.
Their use of paper currency accelerated the economic revolution that was taking place in China's urban centers.
Traditional Chinese currency had been copper coins. As the commercial activity in China increased,
so did the demand for coins. Coin production was starting to tax the system, and continued coin
production was not sustainable. Conducting large-scale transaction and copper coinage was also becoming cumbersome.
To improve the system's efficiency, the Song government issued paper currency called the Zhao
Z, which actually survived the Mongol invasion and persisted for over 300 years before
counterfeiting and debasement finally brought about its demise.
The Zhe became the world's first government-issued paper currency.
The currency was built on earlier regional Chinese paper currencies that functioned like
checks.
The currency was backed by the government and holders could exchange it for copper coins of
equivalent value.
This type of innovation would not have been possible without earlier Chinese innovations and
paper making and printing.
technologies that did not diffuse to Europe until the 1450s.
There's a little debate that this was an economic golden age in Chinese history.
The Song Dynasty continued to experience high international demand for its products among Silk Road
traders, a trend inherited from earlier eras. Silk, which remained the global standard fabric
in the 11th century, was highly valued across the vast region stretching from Europe all the way to East Asia.
The Eurasian trade in silk remained robust, even as the overland silk trade routes declined,
with activity shifting to maritime routes in the Indian Ocean.
Chinese porcelain, a new expert, was also sweeping across Asia in the Indian Ocean,
becoming a highly sought-after luxury good.
Long before the famed Ming period, the Song Dynasty sparked the global fascination with
fine China, complementing the existing demand for silk.
China during the Song Dynasty also became a center of technological innovation.
While woodblock printing was common throughout East Asia for centuries,
the Song Dynasty introduced a truly revolutionary shift, movable type.
Though this invention is often credited to Johannes Gutenberg in the 15th century,
the true pioneer was B. Sheng, a song inventor who developed the technology 400 years earlier.
Perhaps the most consequential song technological development was the practical application of gunpowder.
While gunpowder had been discovered centuries beforehand, the song standardized its manufacture and began expanding its use for weapons of war.
The song paved the way for the Islamic gunpowder empires and for Europe's subsequent expansion of gunpowder use.
The Song Dynasty was able to withstand the intense Mongol invasions for more than four decades, largely,
due to its use of gunpowder weapons.
The song pioneered a suite of weapons that revolutionized modern warfare.
Song engineers turned gunpowder into early forms of grenades, catapults, firearms, cannons,
and even landmines.
In one of their greatest technological breakthroughs, song engineers built on earlier compass
technology which was based on a magnetic iron ore spoon.
In the 11th century, a scientist named Shen Kuh invented the first navigational compass,
featuring a circular dial marked with degrees of direction.
The compass was a sensation,
particularly among East Asian merchants who used it to navigate the Indian Ocean.
The Chinese compass became the standard in the Eurasian world,
influencing later technologies that promoted trade networks in the Indian Ocean,
the Islamic Hage, and the Age of Exploration in Europe.
As their Islamic counterparts in Baghdad did,
Song engineers and scientists developed a wide-ranging and impressive body of knowledge and machines,
Song engineers fascinated by gears develop giant clock towers powered by water.
These devices announce the time with assorted figures and thundering gongs.
Chinese scientists focused intently on astronomy, producing precise celestial maps
and explaining the mechanisms behind the world's title systems.
One of the most intriguing debates among historians on Song China centers around industrialization.
Late 18th century Britain is commonly regarded as the birthplace of the Industrial Revolution,
but the song were remarkably close to having their own industrial revolution in the 13th century.
Historians often refer to the process of song industrialization as proto-industrialization,
a nod to how close they were to becoming industrialized, but just falling short.
This proto-industrialization was largely driven by the song's massive scale production of iron and steel.
The Song Dynasty developed an early form of steel by combining cast and wrought iron during the smelting process.
Some estimates suggest that China's steel production may have been approximately a thousand years ahead of Europe's.
China's iron production reached 125,000 tons per year by the middle of the 11th century.
An incredible amount for the time.
The Chinese used iron and steel to manufacture many other products, including nails for houses.
One of the major drivers of the iron and steel industry in Song China was the construction
of the numerous bridges that Marco Polo described seeing in China.
Coal was the fuel of industrialization.
Song China abandoned the use of wood and charcoal due to the massive deforestation they caused,
and they became heavily reliant on coal.
The use of coal and steel illustrates the similarities between the industrialization in both
England and China.
The conditions that led to industrialization in England centuries later,
were developing in China under the Song.
Industrial growth required significant urbanization,
which in turn depended on an agricultural revolution for support.
Thanks to the adoption of the aforementioned Champorice,
the Song Dynasty achieved substantial increases in agricultural production,
thereby enabling this proto-industrialization to occur.
The Song Dynasty could have achieved an industrial revolution
centuries earlier than Europe,
but its efforts were destroyed by the Mongol invasion of the 13th century.
Had the Mongol invasions not occurred,
it's quite possible that industrialization would have originated in China rather than in England.
The Song experienced a renaissance in learning and education,
thanks to the extensive use of paper and printing.
These developments dramatically expanded the volume of books in Song China
and also improved literacy across the Chinese world.
Living in the urban centers of the commercially active,
Song Dynasty, required basic literacy skills. Perhaps the greatest influence of paper and printing
in China was felt in its merit-based political system, which was centered around the Chinese
civil service exam. The Chinese had long embraced a system that trained scholars in the moral
and ethical principles of Confucian philosophy. Preparing for the Confucian exams demanded decades
of study from students. This extensive process involved memorizing texts, applying their
principles to solve moral dilemmas, and even deciphering and interpreting scrambled passages.
The civil service exam had been a keystone of Chinese political and social life for centuries,
but the song perfected it. The system had originated in the Han Dynasty, where it produced
an educated class of government officials. The system changed over time. During the song period,
the entire governmental bureaucracy was staffed by scholar elites who had passed the exam.
The song age exam was formalized. The song age exam was formalized.
into a three-tiered exam process. The exam was available to candidates at the local,
regional, and imperial levels. The exams grew progressively more challenging as one advanced
through the system, simultaneously offering greater earning potential and recognition upon success.
Perhaps the most important evolution in this examination system was the Song Dynasty's belief
that the examination should be administered solely on the basis of student's merit.
The Song Dynasty's expansion of the examination system marked a significant shift towards meritocracy.
This contrasts with the late Tang Dynasty, where the system was largely restricted to the Chinese elite,
characterized by a much smaller pool of eligible candidates and an extremely low pass rate.
The first Song Emperor, Tai Zhu, issued an edict to reform the imperial examination system,
prohibiting court officials from submitting letters of recommendation on behalf of candidates.
This action aimed to counteract a bias that had previously benefited candidates,
primarily from elite families, with strong connections within the Imperial Court.
The song's focus was on increasing the availability of examination slots to accommodate more
examines, while also addressing the challenges of governing an ever-expanding Chinese population.
More people meant greater political responsibility.
The long-standing practice of having 3,000 bureaucrats govern more than 1,000,
provinces and localities had become unsustainable.
The Song Dynasty pushed the idea of a fair, universally accessible examination system
to remarkable extremes.
To prevent the examining bureaucracy from recognizing well-known names, the exam admission
took the extraordinary measure of replacing students' names with numbers.
And if this wasn't enough, they actually had scribes on hand to recopy exams so that a
candidate's calligraphy was unrecognizable.
Song China was arguably the golden age of China.
When we think of the things that made China great, most of them occurred during the Song Dynasty.
Sadly, it all came to an end with the invasion of the Mongols who established the Yuan Dynasty.
Imperial China would endure for centuries after the Mongols, but it would never again reach the heights that it had under the Song.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Austin Otkin and Cameron Kiefer.
Research in writing for this episode was provided by Joel Hermanson.
My big thanks go to everyone who supports the show over on Patreon.
Your support helps make this podcast possible.
I also want to remind everyone about the community groups on Facebook and Discord,
as this is where everything happens outside of the podcast.
As always, if you leave a review on any of the major podcast apps,
you too can have it run in the show.
