It is difficult to overstate the influence that Chinese culture had on its Asian neighbours. This influence was significant in many different areas, in particular, government, art, writing and philosophy.
- Chinese government was famous because of its bureaucratic efficiency. This was adopted by Korea and Japan in different amounts. Korea was home to Chinese military colonies during the Han dynasty, and the kingdom of Goguryeo was heavily influenced by the Chinese way of governing. In the case of Japan, one of the most significant contributions of China was the idea of "divine rule," which changed the role of the emperor.
- In terms of art, Korean and Japanese poetry were heavily influenced by the literary forms of China. Chinese architecture also left a significant mark in the architecture of Japan and Burma.
- Most Asia countries used the Chinese system of writing in order to write their own language. Eventually, they all changed slightly, with only Japanese retaining many Chinese characters in their writing system.
- Perhaps the greatest contribution of China to the culture of these countries is in the introduction of Buddhism and Confusianism. Japan introduced some native Japanese ideas to Buddhism in order to create Zen Buddhism. Burma, on the other hand, embraced Buddhism to such an extent that it now has the largest number of monks as a percentage of the general population of any country.
Answer:
Christianity, Buddhism, and Islam.
Explanation:
these three religions are universalizing religions meaning they try to convert as many people as possible globally. Hinduism, and Confucianism and ethnic meaning they tend to stick to a specific area or group of people and don't usually convert as large a scale as a universalizing religion.
Many former salves expected the federal government to give them a certain amount of land as compensation for all the work they had done during the slave era. During Reconstruction, however, the conflict over labor resulted in the sharecropping system, in which black families would rent small plots of land in return for a portion of their crop, to be given to the landowner at the end of each year.