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Shang Dynasty

 

Traditionally, the second of China's dynasties, following the Xia dynasty. Until excavations in the 20th century provided archaeological evidence for the Xia, the Shang was the first verifiable Chinese dynasty. Dates for its founding vary; traditionally its rule was said to have spanned 1766 – 1122 BC, but more recently the range has been given as c. 1600 – 1046 BC. Shang society was stratified: it included a king, local governors, nobles, and the masses, who engaged in agriculture. The Shang developed a 12-month, 360-day calendar with intercalary months added as necessary. The Chinese writing system began to develop; numerous records and ceremonial inscriptions survive. Surviving artifacts include musical instruments, superb bronze vessels, pottery for ceremonial and daily use, and jade and ivory ornaments. Cowrie shells were used as currency. See also Erlitou culture; Zhou dynasty.

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Shang Dynasty

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Shang Dynasty
商朝
Kingdom

1600 BC–1046 BC
Remnants of advanced, stratified societies dating back to the Shang period have been found in the Yellow River Valley.
Capital Yin, Zhaoge
Language(s) Chinese
Religion Chinese folk religion
Government Monarchy, Feudalism
Historical era Bronze Age
 - Established 1600 BC
 - Battle of Muye 1046 BC
Area
 - 1122 BC est.[1] 1,250,000 km2 (482,628 sq mi)
Population
 -  est. 13.7 million 
History of China
History of China
ANCIENT
3 Sovereigns and 5 Emperors
Xia Dynasty 2100–1600 BC
Shang Dynasty 1600–1046 BC
Zhou Dynasty 1045–256 BC
 Western Zhou
 Eastern Zhou
   Spring and Autumn Period
   Warring States Period
IMPERIAL
Qin Dynasty 221 BC–206 BC
Han Dynasty 206 BC–220 AD
  Western Han
  Xin Dynasty
  Eastern Han
Three Kingdoms 220–280
  Wei, Shu and Wu
Jin Dynasty 265–420
  Western Jin 16 Kingdoms
304–439
  Eastern Jin
Southern and Northern Dynasties
420–589
Sui Dynasty 581–618
Tang Dynasty 618–907
  (Second Zhou 690–705)
5 Dynasties and
10 Kingdoms

907–960
Liao Dynasty
907–1125
Song Dynasty
960–1279
  Northern Song W. Xia
  Southern Song Jin
Yuan Dynasty 1271–1368
Ming Dynasty 1368–1644
Qing Dynasty 1644–1911
MODERN
Republic of China 1912–1949
People's Republic
of China

1949–present
Republic of
China (Taiwan)

1949–present
Shang Dynasty
Chinese 商朝
Literal meaning Shang Dynasty
Alternative Chinese name
Chinese 殷代
Literal meaning Yin Dynasty

The Shang Dynasty (Chinese: ; pinyin: shāng cháo) or Yin Dynasty (; pinyin: yīn dài), according to traditional historiography, ruled in the Yellow River valley in the second millennium BC, succeeding the Xia Dynasty and followed by the Zhou Dynasty. The classic account of the Shang comes from texts such as the Classic of History, Bamboo Annals and Records of the Grand Historian. According to the traditional chronology based upon calculations by Liu Xin, the Shang ruled between 1766 BC and 1122 BC, but according to the chronology based upon the Bamboo Annals, they ruled between 1556 BC and 1046 BC. The results of the Xia Shang Zhou Chronology Project place them between 1600 BC and 1046 BC.

Archaeological work at the Ruins of Yin (near modern day Anyang), which has been identified as the last Shang capital, uncovered eleven major Yin royal tombs and the foundations of palaces and ritual sites, containing weapons of war and remains from both animal and human sacrifices. Tens of thousands of bronze, jade, stone, bone, and ceramic artifacts have been obtained. The workmanship on the bronzes attests to a high level of civilization.

A few bronze artifacts featured inscriptions, but most direct information comes from oracle bones – turtle shells, cattle scapulae, or other bones, which bear glyphs that form the first significant corpus of recorded Chinese characters. More than 20,000 were discovered in the initial scientific excavations during the 1920s and 1930s, and over four times as many have been found since. The inscriptions on the oracle bones are divinations, and they provide critical insight into many topics from the politics, economy, and religious practices to the art and medicine of this early stage of Chinese civilization.[2]

Contents

Traditional accounts

Several events concerning the Shang dynasty are mentioned in various Chinese classics, including the Classic of History and the Commentary of Zuo. Working from all the available documents, the Han dynasty historian Sima Qian assembled a sequential account of the Shang dynasty as part of his Records of the Grand Historian. His history describes some events in detail, while in other cases only the name of a king is given.[3] A closely related, but slightly different, account is given by the Bamboo Annals. The Annals were interred in 296 BC, but the received versions have a complex history and there are controversy regarding the various versions.[4]

Sima Qian calls both the dynasty and its final capital by the name Yīn (殷), a term that has been synonymous with the Shang throughout history and is a popular term. It is often used specifically to describe the later half of the Shang dynasty. In Japan and Korea, the Shang are still referred to almost exclusively as the Yin (In) dynasty. However the term does not appear in the oracle bones, and seems to have been the Zhou name for the earlier dynasty.[5]

The Rise of Shang

Sima Qian's "Annals of the Yin" begins by describing the predynastic founder of the Shang lineage, Xie 契, as having been miraculously conceived when Jiandi (简狄), a wife of Emperor Ku, swallowed an egg dropped by a black bird. Xie is said to have helped Yu the Great to control the Great Flood and for his service to have been granted a place called Shang as a fief.[6]

Sima Qian relates that the dynasty itself was founded 13 generations later, when Xie's descendent Tang overthrew the impious and cruel final Xia ruler in the Battle of Mingtiao. The Records recount events from the reigns of Tang, Tai Jia, Dai Mou, Pan Geng, Wu Ding, Wu Yi and the final king Xin, but the rest of the Shang rulers are merely mentioned by name. According to the Records, the Shang moved their capital five times, with the final move to Yin in the reign of Pan Geng inaugurating the golden age of the dynasty.[7]

The Fall of Shang

Shang Zhou (商紂), the last Shang king, committed suicide after his army was defeated by the Zhou (周) people. Legends say that his army and his equipped slaves betrayed him by joining the Zhou rebels in the decisive Battle of Muye. According to the lost books of Zhou (逸周書) and Mencius the battle was very bloody. The classic, Ming-era novel Fengshen Yanyi retells the story of the war between Shang and Zhou as a conflict where rival factions of gods supported different sides in the war.

After Shang were defeated, the Zhou king, King Wu of Zhou (周武王), allowed Shang Zhou's son Wugeng Lufu (武庚祿父) to rule the Shang as a vassal kingdom. However, Zhou Wu sent three of his brothers and an army to ensure that Wugeng Lufu would not rebel.[8][9][10] After Zhou Wu's death, the Shang would join the Three Governors' Rebellion (三監之亂) against the Duke of Zhou, but the rebellion collapsed after three years, leaving Zhou in control of Shang territory.

After Shang's collapse, Zhou's rulers forcibly relocated "Yin diehards" (殷頑) and scattered them throughout Zhou territory.[11] Some surviving members of the Shang royal family collectively changed their surname from the ancestral name Zi (子) to the name of their fallen dynasty, Yin (殷). The family retained an aristocratic standing and often provided needed administrative services to the succeeding Zhou Dynasty. The Shiji states that King Cheng of Zhou, with the support of his regent and uncle, the Duke of Zhou, enfeoffed Weiziqi (微子啟), a brother of Shang Zhou, as the ruler of Wei (微).[clarification needed] Shang (商), the eponymous first capital of the former Shang dynasty, would become the capital of Weiziqi's state. In time, this territory would become the state of Song, and the descendants of Shang royalty there would maintain rites honoring the dead Shang kings until 286 BC.[clarification needed]

Guzhu (孤竹國)[clarification needed], located in what is now Tangshan, was formed by another remnant of the Shang, and was destroyed by Duke Huan of Qi.[12][13][14] Many Shang clans that migrated northeast after the dynasty's collapse were integrated into Yan culture during the Western Zhou period. These clans maintained an elite status and continued practicing the sacrificial and burial traditions of the Shang.[15]

Both Korean and Chinese legends state that a disgruntled Shang prince named Jizi (箕子), who had refused to cede power to the Zhou, left China with a small army. According to these legends, he founded a state known as Gija Joseon in Northwest Korea during the Gojoseon period of ancient Korean history. However, the historical accuracy of these legends is widely debated by scholars.

Archeology of the Early Bronze Age in the Yellow River valley

The site of Yin, the capital (1350–1046 BC) of the Shang Dynasty, also called Yin Dynasty.

During the Song Dynasty (961–1284 AD), scholar-bureaucrats and the Chinese gentry became avid antiquarians and collectors of ancient artwork, some claiming to have found Shang Dynasty era bronze vessels with written inscriptions.[16] Despite this, archeologists of the 19th century knew of written records and historical documentations spanning only as far back as the Zhou Dynasty (1046 BC–256 BC).[16] In 1901, it was found that Chinese pharmacists were selling "dragon bones" marked with curious and arithmaticestics characters.[16] These were finally traced back in 1928 to a site near Anyang in the Yellow River valley, modern Henan province, where the Academia Sinica undertook archeological excavation until the Japanese invasion in 1937.[16]

After 1950, remnants of an earlier walled city were discovered near Zhengzhou.[16] It has been determined that the earth walls at Zhengzhou, erected in the 15th century BC, would have been 20 metres (66 ft) wide at the base, rising to a height of 8 metres (26 ft), and formed a roughly rectangular wall 7 kilometres (4 mi) around the ancient city.[17][18] The rammed earth construction of these walls was an inherited tradition, since much older fortifications of this type have been found at Chinese Neolithic sites of the Longshan culture (c. 3000–2000 BC).[17]

In 1959, the site of the Erlitou culture was found in Yanshi, south of the Yellow River near Luoyang.[17] Radiocarbon dating suggests that the Erlitou culture flourished ca. 2100 BC to 1800 BC.[19] They built large palaces, suggesting the existence of a dynastic kingdom preceding the Shang, often identified with the Xia Dynasty of traditional histories.[20]

Late Shang at Anyang

Oracle bones pit at Yin

The oldest extant direct records date from around 1200 BC at Anyang, covering the reigns of the last nine Shang kings. The Shang had a fully developed system of writing, preserved on bronze inscriptions and a small number of other writings on pottery, jade and other stones, horn, etc., but most prolifically on oracle bones.[21] The complexity and sophistication of this writing system indicates an earlier period of development, but direct evidence of that development is still lacking. Other advances included the invention of many musical instruments and observations of Mars and various comets by Shang astronomers.[citation needed]

Their civilization was based on agriculture and augmented by hunting and animal husbandry.[22] In addition to war, the Shang also practiced human sacrifice.[23] Cowry shells were also excavated at Anyang, suggesting trade with coast-dwellers, but there was very limited sea trade in ancient China since China was isolated from other large civilizations during the Shang period.[19] Trade relations and diplomatic ties with other formidable powers via the Silk Road and Chinese voyages to the Indian Ocean did not exist until the reign of Emperor Wu during the Han Dynasty (206 BC–221 AD).[24][25]

Court life

A late Shang, ritual bronze wine vessel (zun) in the unusual shape of an owl with a domed head for its lid

At the excavated royal palace of Yinxu, large stone pillar bases were found along with rammed earth foundations and platforms, which according to Fairbank, were "as hard as cement."[16] These foundations in turn originally supported 53 buildings of wooden post-and-beam construction.[16] In close proximity to the main palatial complex, there were underground pits used for storage, servants' quarters, and housing quarters.[16]

Many Shang royal tombs had been tunneled into and ravaged by grave robbers in ancient times,[26] but in the spring of 1976, the discovery of Tomb 5 at Yinxu revealed a tomb that was not only undisturbed, but one of the most richly lavished Shang tombs that archaeologists had yet come across.[27] With over 200 bronze ritual vessels and 109 inscriptions of Lady Fu Hao's name, archaeologists realized they had stumbled across the tomb of the militant consort to King Wu Ding, as described in 170 to 180 Shang oracle bones.[28] Along with bronze vessels, stoneware and pottery vessels, bronze weapons, jade figures and hair combs, and bone hairpins were found.[29][30][31] Historian Robert L. Thorp states that the large assortment of weapons and ritual vessels in her tomb correlate with the oracle bone accounts of her military career and involvement in Wu Ding's ritual ancestral sacrifices.[32]

The capital was the center of a glittering court life. Over time, court rituals to appease spirits developed, and in addition to his secular duties, the king would serve as the head of the ancestor worship cult. Oftentimes, the king would even perform oracle bone divinations himself, especially near the end of the dynasty. Evidence from excavations of the royal tombs indicates that royalty were buried with articles of value, presumably for use in the afterlife. Perhaps for the same reason, hundreds of commoners, who may have been slaves, were buried alive with the royal corpse.

A line of hereditary Shang kings ruled over much of northern China, and Shang troops fought frequent wars with neighboring settlements and nomadic herdsmen from the inner Asian steppes. The Shang king, in his oracular divinations, repeatedly shows concern about the fang groups, the barbarians living outside of the civilized tu regions, which made up the center of Shang territory[clarification needed]. In particular, the tufang group of the Yanshan region were regularly mentioned as hostile to the Shang.[15]

Apart from their role as the head military commanders, Shang kings also asserted their social supremacy by acting as the high priests of society and leading the divination ceremonies.[33] As the oracle bone texts reveal, the Shang kings were viewed as the best qualified members of society to offer sacrifices to their royal ancestors and to the high god Di, who in their beliefs was responsible for the rain, wind, and thunder.[33]

Kings

Shang kings are conventionally referred to by posthumous names, of which the last character is one of the heavenly stems. The earliest records are the oracle bones inscribed during the reigns of the Shang kings from Wu Ding.[34] The oracle bones do not contain king lists, but they do record the sacrifices to previous kings and the ancestors of the current king, which follow a standard schedule. From this evidence, scholars have assembled the implied king list and genealogy, finding that it is in substantial agreement with the later accounts, especially for later kings in the dynasty. The kings, in the order of succession derived from the oracle bones, are here grouped by generation:[35]

Generation Older brothers of patriarch Line of descent Younger brothers
17 大乙 Dà Yǐ
16 大丁 Dà Dīng[a]
15 大甲 Dà Jiǎ 卜丙 Bǔ Bǐng[b]
14 [c] 大庚 Dà Gēng 小甲 Xiǎo Jiǎ[d]
13 大戊 Dà Wù 呂己 Lǚ Jǐ[e]
12 中丁 Zhōng Dīng[f] 卜壬 Bǔ Rén
11 戔甲 Jiān Jiǎ 祖乙 Zǔ Yǐ
10 祖辛 Zǔ Xīn 羌甲 Qiāng Jiǎ[g]
9 祖丁 Zǔ Dīng 南庚 Nán Gēng[h]
8 象甲 Xiàng Jiǎ 盤庚 Pán Gēng 小辛 Xiǎo Xīn 小乙 Xiǎo Yǐ
7 武丁 Wǔ Dīng
6 [i] 祖庚 Zǔ Gēng 祖甲 Zǔ Jiǎ
5 廩辛 Lǐn Xīn[j] 康丁 Kāng Dīng
4 武乙 Wǔ Yǐ
3 文武丁 Wén Wǔ Dīng
2 帝乙 Dì Yǐ
1 帝辛 Dì Xīn[k]
Notes
  1. ^ According to the Historical Records and the Mencius, Da Ding (also known as Tai Ding) died before he could ascend to the throne. However in the oracle bones he receives rituals like any other king.
  2. ^ According to the Historical Records, Bu Bing (also known as Wai Bing) and 仲壬 Zhong Ren (not mentioned in the oracle bones) were younger brothers of Dai Ting and preceded Da Jia (also known as Dai Jia). However the Mencius, the Commentary of Zuo and the Book of History state that he reigned after Da Jia, as also implied by the oracle bones.
  3. ^ The Historical Records include a king Wo Ding not mentioned in the oracle bones.
  4. ^ The Historical Records have Xiao Jia as the son of Da Geng (known as Tai Geng) in the "Annals of Yin", but as a younger brother (as implied by the oracle bones) in the "Genealogical Table of the Three Ages".
  5. ^ According to the Historical Records, Lü Ji (there called Yong Ji) reigned before Da Wu (there called Tai Wu).
  6. ^ The kings from Zhong Ding to Nan Geng are placed in the same order by the Historical Records and the oracle bones, but there are some differences in genealogy, as described in the articles on individual kings.
  7. ^ The status of Qiang Jia varies over the history of the oracle bones. During the reigns of Wu Ding, Di Yi and Di Xin, he was not included in the main line of descent, a position also held by the Historical Records, but in the intervening reigns he was included as a direct ancestor.
  8. ^ According to the Historical Records, Nan Geng was the son of Qiang Jia (there called Wo Jia).
  9. ^ The oracle bones and the Historical Records include an older brother 祖己 Zǔ Jǐ who did not reign.
  10. ^ Lin Xin is named as a king in the Historical Records and oracle bones of succeeding reigns, but not those of the last two kings.
  11. ^ also referred to as Zhòu (紂), Zhòu Xīn (紂辛) or Zhòu Wáng (紂王) or by adding "Shāng" (商) in front of any of these names.

Bronze working

A late Shang dynasty bronze ding vessel with taotie motif

Chinese bronze casting and pottery advanced during the Shang dynasty, with bronze commonly being used for art rather than weapons.[inconsistent] As far back as c. 1500 BC, the early Shang Dynasty engaged in large-scale production of bronze-ware vessels and weapons.[36] This production required a large labor force that could handle the mining, refining, and transportation of the necessary copper, tin, and lead ores. This in turn created a need for official managers that could oversee both hard-laborers and skilled artisans and craftsmen.[36] The Shang royal court and aristocrats required a vast amount of different bronze vessels for various ceremonial purposes and events of religious divination.[36] Ceremonial rules even decreed how many bronze containers of each type a nobleman or noblewoman of a certain rank could own. With the increased amount of bronze available, the army could also better equip itself with an assortment of bronze weaponry. Bronze was also used for the fittings of spoke-wheeled chariots, which came into widespread use in China by 1200 BC.[33]

Military

A bronze axe of the Shang dynasty

Shang infantry were armed with a variety of stone and bronze weaponry, including máo spears, yuè pole-axes, ge pole-based dagger-axes, composite bows, and bronze or leather helmets (Wang Hongyuan 1993).[37] Their western military frontier was at the Taihang Mountains, where they fought the ma or "horse" barbarians, who might have used chariots. While the Shang themselves likely only used chariots as mobile command vehicles or elite symbols,[38] they reportedly amassed over a thousand chariots to overthrow the Xia Dynasty.

Although the Shang depended upon the military skills of their nobility, Shang rulers could mobilize the masses of town-dwelling and rural commoners as conscript laborers and soldiers for both campaigns of defense and conquest.[39] Aristocrats and other state rulers were obligated to furnish their local garrisons with all necessary equipment, armor, and armaments. The Shang king maintained a force of about a thousand troops at his capital and would personally lead this force into battle.[40] A rudimentary military bureaucracy was also needed in order to muster forces ranging from three to five thousand troops for border campaigns to thirteen thousand troops for suppressing rebellions against Shang authority.

Gallery

Contemporaries of Anyang

Major archaeological sites in north and central China from the second millenium BC

While written records found at Yin, near modern-day Anyang, confirmed the existence of the Shang dynasty, Western scholars are hesitant to ascribe some settlements contemporaneous with Yin to the Shang dynasty.[41] For example, archaeological findings at Sanxingdui suggest the existence of a technologically advanced civilization that was culturally unlike the settlement at Yin. Also unlike the Shang, there is no known evidence that the Sanxingdui culture had a system of writing. The culture at Yin, and the Shang, thus are generally considered the first verifiable civilization in Chinese history.[42]

The geographical extent of Shang control is difficult to determine due to a lack of archaeological exploration. It is accepted among historians that the city of Yin, ruled by the same Shang dynasty of official history, coexisted and traded with other culturally diverse settlements in North China.[43] Chinese historians living in later periods were accustomed to the notion of one dynasty succeeding another, but the actual political situation in early China may have been more complicated. The Xia and the Shang can possibly refer to political entities that existed concurrently, just as the early Zhou, who established the successor state of the Shang, are known to have existed at the same time as the Shang.[15]

Shang influence, though not political control, extended as far northeast as the area of modern Beijing, where early pre-Yan material culture shows evidence of Shang influence.[15] At least one burial in this region during the Early Shang period contained both Shang-style bronzes and local-style gold jewelry.[15] This Shang influence likely made possible the integration of Yan into the later Zhou Dynasty.[15] The discovery of a Chenggu-style ge dagger-axe at Xiaohenan demonstrates that even at this early stage of Chinese history, there were some ties between the distant areas of north China.[15]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Turchin, Peter; Adams, Jonathan M; Hall, Thomas D (December 2006). "East-West Orientation of Historical Empires" (PDF). Journal of world-systems research 12 (2): 219–29. ISSN 1076-156x. http://jwsr.ucr.edu/archive/vol12/number2/pdf/jwsr-v12n2-tah.pdf. Retrieved 12 August 2010. 
  2. ^ Keightley (2000).
  3. ^ Keightley (1999), pp. 233–235.
  4. ^ Keightley (1978b)
  5. ^ Keightley (1999), p. 232.
  6. ^ Keightley (1999), p. 233, with additional details from the Historical Records.
  7. ^ Keightley (1999), p. 233.
  8. ^ 邶、鄘二國考
  9. ^ 周初“三监”与邶、鄘、卫地望研究
  10. ^ “三监”人物疆地及其地望辨析 ——兼论康叔的始封地问题
  11. ^ 一 被剥削者的存在类型
  12. ^ 中国孤竹文化网
  13. ^ 解开神秘古国 ——孤竹之谜
  14. ^ 孤竹析辨
  15. ^ a b c d e f g Sun (2006).
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h Fairbank 33.
  17. ^ a b c Fairbank, 34.
  18. ^ Needham, Volume 4, Part 2, 43.
  19. ^ a b Fairbank, 35.
  20. ^ Fairbank, 34–35.
  21. ^ Qiu 2000, p.60
  22. ^ Beck, Roger B.; Linda Black, Larry S. Krieger, Phillip C. Naylor, Dahia Ibo Shabaka, (1999). World History: Patterns of Interaction. Evanston, IL: McDougal Littell. ISBN 0-395-87274-X. 
  23. ^ Flad, Dr. Rowan (28 Feb. 2010). "Shang Dynasty Human Sacrifice". NGC Presents (National Geographic). http://www.slashcontrol.com/free-tv-shows/ngc-presents/4006945677-shang-dynasty-human-sacrifice. Retrieved 3 Mar. 2010. 
  24. ^ Sun 1989, 161-167.
  25. ^ Chen 2002, 67-71.
  26. ^ Thorp, 239.
  27. ^ Thorp, 240.
  28. ^ Thorp, 240 & 245.
  29. ^ Thorp, 242 & 245.
  30. ^ Li (1980), 393–394.
  31. ^ Valenstein & Hearn, 77.
  32. ^ Thorp, 245.
  33. ^ a b c Ebrey, 14.
  34. ^ Wilkinson, Endymion (2000). Chinese history: a manual (2nd ed.). Harvard Univ Asia Center. p. 397. ISBN 978-0-67400249-4. 
  35. ^ Keightley (1985) 185–187.
  36. ^ a b c Ebrey, 17.
  37. ^ Sawyer, 35.
  38. ^ Shaughnessy, Edward L. (1988). "Historical Perspectives on The Introduction of The Chariot Into China". Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies (Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies, Vol. 48, No. 1) 48 (1): 189–237. doi:10.2307/2719276. JSTOR 2719276. 
  39. ^ Sawyer, 33.
  40. ^ Sawyer, 34.
  41. ^ Bagley (1999), pp. 124–125.
  42. ^ Lin, 2007
  43. ^ 商代社会疆域地理的政治架构与周边地区青铜文化

References

  • Bagley, Robert (1999). "Shang archaeology". In Loewe, Michael; Shaughnessy, Edward L.. The Cambridge History of Ancient China. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 124–231. ISBN 978-0-521-47030-8. 
  • Chang, Kwang-Chih (1980). Shang Civilization. Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-02885-7, ppbk.
  • Chang-Qun, Duan, Xue-Chun, Gan, Wang, Jeanny and Chien, Paul K. (1998). Relocation of Civilization Centers in Ancient China: Environmental Factors. Allen Press on behalf of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.
  • Chen, Yan (2002). Maritime Silk Route and Chinese-Foreign Cultural Exchanges. Beijing: Peking University Press. ISBN 7-301-03029-0.
  • Ebrey, Patricia Buckley, Anne Walthall, James B. Palais (2006). East Asia: A Cultural, Social, and Political History. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company. ISBN 0-618-13384-4.
  • Fairbank, John King and Merle Goldman (1992). China: A New History; Second Enlarged Edition (2006). Cambridge: MA; London: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-01828-1
  • Keightley, David N. (1978). Sources of Shang History: The Oracle-Bone Inscriptions of Bronze Age China. University of California Press, Berkeley. Large format hardcover, ISBN 0-520-02969-0 (out of print); A 1985 paperback 2nd edition is still in print, ISBN 0-520-05455-5.
  • Keightley, David N. (1978b). "The Bamboo Annals and Shang-Chou Chronology". Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 38 (2): 423–438. JSTOR 2718906. 
  • Keightley, David N. (1999). "The Shang: China's first historical dynasty". In Loewe, Michael; Shaughnessy, Edward L.. The Cambridge History of Ancient China. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 232–291. ISBN 978-0-521-47030-8. 
  • Keightley, David N. (2000). The Ancestral Landscape: Time, Space, and Community in Late Shang China (ca. 1200–1045 B.C.). China Research Monograph 53, Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California – Berkeley. ISBN 1-55729-070-9, ppbk.
  • Lee, Yuan-Yuan and Shen, Sin-yan. (1999). Chinese Musical Instruments (Chinese Music Monograph Series). Chinese Music Society of North America Press. ISBN 1-880464039
  • Li, Chu-tsing. "The Great Bronze Age of China," Art Journal (Volume 40, Number 1/2, 1980): 390–395.
  • Lin, Ershen (19 July 2007). A Critical Review on the Rise of Civilization, the Formation of the State, and Early Slavery. draft. The Science & Philosophy Forums (2005–2008). http://www.sciencechatforum.com/bulletin/viewtopic.php?t=7172&sid=f837c13276b97867e490fffc89749352. Retrieved 3 Mar. 2009. 
  • Needham, Joseph (1986). Science and Civilization in China: Volume 4, Part 3. Taipei: Caves Books, Ltd.
  • Sawyer, Ralph D. and Mei-chün Lee Sawyer (1994). Sun Tzu's The Art of War. New York: Barnes and Noble Inc. ISBN 1566192978
  • Shen, Sinyan (1987), Acoustics of Ancient Chinese Bells, Scientific American, 256, 94.
  • Sun, Guangqi (1989). History of Navigation in Ancient China. Beijing: Ocean Press. ISBN 7-5027-0532-5.
  • Sun, Yan (2006). "Colonizing China's Northern Frontier: Yan and Her Neighbors During the Early Western Zhou Period". International Journal of Historical Archaeology 10 (2): 159–177. doi:10.1007/s10761-006-0005-3. 
  • Thorp, Robert L. "The Date of Tomb 5 at Yinxu, Anyang: A Review Article," Artibus Asiae (Volume 43, Number 3, 1981): 239–246.
  • Valenstein, Suzanne G. and Maxwell Hearn. "Asian Art, by Martin Lerner; Alfreda Murck; Barbara B. Ford," Recent Acquisitions (Metropolitan Museum of Art) (Number 1985/1986, 1985): 72–88.
  • Wang, Hongyuan 王宏源 (1993). The Origins of Chinese Characters 漢字字源入門. Sinolingua, Beijing, ISBN 7-80052-243-1, ppbk.

Further reading

  • Timperley, Harold J. The Awakening of China in Archaeology; Further Discoveries in Ho-Nan Province, Royal Tombs of the Shang Dynasty, Dated Traditionally from 1766 to 1122 B.C.. 1936.

External links

Preceded by
Xia Dynasty
Dynasties in Chinese history
ca. 1600–ca. 1047 BC
Succeeded by
Zhou Dynasty


 
 

 

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