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Sinification - Coggle Diagram
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- Sinification 
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- Korea 
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- attempted to replicate the chinese bureaucracy,
 failed to overcome the aristocrats
 
 
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- han china conquested them for a short time,
 tried again under the sui
 
 
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- Tang emperor finally struck a deal with the Silla kingdom of Korea to make regular tribute payments - much to their benefit   
 
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- innovations, fashions, styles and etiquette 
 
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- besides Buddhism—which became popular among the Korean masses—cultural Sinification occurred primarily among the aristocratic classes 
 
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- tributary relationship, Tang, Sui, Han China, Silla Kingdom 
 
 
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- Vietnam 
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- women had a better position in vietnam already, so they didn't like the gendered social roles in confucianism 
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- Buddhism became a powerful feature of Vietnam, irrigation and agricultural practices were taken from the Chinese were a benefit, military technology and practices they learned from the Chinese helped them extend their control over Cambodia. 
 
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- Japan 
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- was never conquered, intentionally
 emulated the chinese way of life
 
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- the taika reforms  
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- Sinification became so popular that the Buddhists hatched a plan to overthrow the emperor and take over Japan. They failed and the emperor moved the japanese/buddhist capital (Nara) to miles away in Heian 
 
 
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- eventually Japan fell to the aristocratic families and then disarray, they then disregarded the Tang system