The Song Dynasty: Innovation Before the Modern World
Fexingo History · East Asia
The Song Dynasty: Innovation Before the Modern World
The Song Dynasty (960–1279) was a period of profound transformation, when China pioneered technologies that would reshape the world—movable type, gunpowder, paper money, and the magnetic compass—yet remained overshadowed in global memory by the Tang and Ming. In this show, Lucas and Luna guide listeners through the dynasty’s two halves: the Northern Song, centered on the glittering capital Kaifeng, and the Southern Song, which retreated south of the Yangtze after the Jurchen invasion of 1127. They explore the rise of a meritocratic civil service, the philosophical flowering of Neo-Confucianism under Zhu Xi, and the economic revolution that made China the most urbanized society on earth. But innovation came with fragility: the Song military never matched its commercial power, leading to the humiliating ‘Treaty of Shanyuan’ with the Liao and eventual conquest by the Mongols under Kublai Khan. Along the way, they discuss the poetry of Su Shi, the ink-wash landscapes of Fan Kuan, and the world’s first paper-printed books. How did a dynasty so creative fall to steppe invaders—and what does its legacy of invention without empire mean for our own age of technological upheaval?