Xia Dynasty as Manifest at Erlitou - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 25
About This Presentation
Title:

Xia Dynasty as Manifest at Erlitou

Description:

... support for the king and his large entourage when it passed through their area. ... lineage founder), and host the royal entourage on visits (hunting, etc. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:125
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 26
Provided by: jeana6
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Xia Dynasty as Manifest at Erlitou


1
Xia Dynasty as Manifest at Erlitou
  • Barnes 118 bronze vessel is backdrop to this
    slide
  • Early finds at Erlitou belong to the Xias last
    capital 3800 y.a.
  • Xia was recognized by the Shang, Zhou and later
    Chinese as the first dynasty to rule the central
    China plain (Huang Wei rivers eastward).
  • Xia became the first dynasty at the point it
    converted its rivals to participate in Xia
    rituals and Xia ancestor worshipit was a
    strategic coup detat that Xias rivals,
    including the contemporary Shang, recognized.
  • The bronze tradition and culture of Xia are
    closely related to Shang and later Zhoufor our
    purposes, all three may be seen as sub-cultures
    of the same culture though their ethnicity was
    not identical.
  • At the late Xia capital at Erlitou, we see a
    bronze making tradition using piece molds to
    create elaborate pouring and drinking vessels
    known Xia bronze decorations include bossing
    however, Xia jades have incised masks and faces
    that foreshadow later metal art. The
    contemporary pre-dynastic Shang bronzes are more
    elaborately decorated, including with masks next
    slide). The production of bronze appears to be a
    local outgrowth of the regions highly evolved
    local ceramic production systems and kilns.
  • Xia was a class society based on clan and ranked
    lineages.
  • Scapulamancy, ancestor worship, elaborate graves
    and constructions distinguish its ruling lineage,
    as do palatial and ancestral temple structures on
    raised, stamped earth platforms. By Xia, town
    walls were massive undertakings (35 thick 20
    tall) with gates and guard houses.
  • Animal and human sacrifices commemorated the
    important structuresreiterating the kings power
    over human life, the association of sacrifice
    with beliefs regarding his right to rule, and the
    kings demand for order.
  • Xia written records to date elude us at this
    time.
  • Too little work has been done on Xia sites to be
    able to say more.

2
Xia Dynasty
  • While information from Xia sites is very limited,
    preceding neolithic sites demonstrate the
    continuity in construction and decorative motifs
    that may be found in the Three Dynasties.
  • Barnes 114-115 Masks
  • Barnes 117 Walled town
  • Barnes 121 clay piece mold

3
Shang Dynasty at Erligang Anyang
  • Bronze
  • Erligang gives us a glimpse of Shang 3500-3400
    y.a.
  • Bronzes elaborate in form and decoration, borrow
    long-standing motifs from jades, bone and
    probably wood.
  • Incised designs inside the piece mold created
    finely and boldly raised decoration patterns
    carved on the clay model created concave designs
    on the bronze.
  • At Anyang, the final capital of 12 Shang kings,
    bronze animal art adds more delineation between
    major motifs and background design other Shang
    towns made their own ritual vessels using the
    same vessel shapes and decorative styles (they
    werent traded from Anyang).
  • Other, non-Shang, states cast bronzes using Shang
    shapes but local motifsdifferent spirit
    mediums--also for elites and ancestor worship.
  • All producing towns and states evidently had
    their own mines, miners, smelters, transportation
    to the foundries, and specialist artisans engaged
    full-time in the production of bronze weapons and
    ritual vessels.
  • Elites had access to bronze commoners and
    peasants did not.

4
Shang Dynasty at Erligang Anyang
  • Regional bronze making Barnes 122
  • The mask Barnes 123
  • Shang bronze vessel shapes 125

5
Shang Supernatural Beliefs and Art 1
  • Religion was linked to the origin and the
    legitimizing of the Shang State.
  • The high god, Ti, gave fruitful harvest and
    assistance in battle.
  • The kings ancestors could interact with Ti.
  • The king could communicate with his ancestors.
  • The kings ability to influence the ancestors,
    through prayer, divination and ritual sacrifice,
    was powerful in sanctifying his ruleheres
    what he asked about and influenced--
  • Rain and fair weather,
  • His own good fortune,
  • The outcome of a contemplated action (war, hunt,
    journey, etc.),
  • Interpretation of an event (dream, birth,
    calamity, etc.).
  • Mythical, legendary and historic precedents were
    important in the responses (knowledge obtained
    from heaven) and their interpretation also,
  • Founding a new town involved passing down
    appropriate paraphernalia with religious as well
    as political content--bronze bells, jades, flags,
    the bonze art itself, etc.
  • Paraphernalia was not newly madeeach item had
    past associations with authority, deeds merit.

6
Shang Supernatural Beliefs and Art 2
  • Background is Wheatley 422
  • Ancestor worship and venerating the ancestors was
    deeply embedded in ritual of each lineage, great
    and small.
  • Sacrifices of humans, animals and food, feasting
    and drinking were associated with divination,
    founding towns, palaces temples.
  • Sacrifices, huge public works (tombs), etc.
    reflected the deceaseds status in life and,
    perhaps, provided support for the afterlife.
  • There were also many popular superstitions and
    beliefs related to the spirit world (ghosts, good
    and bad naturalistic spirits, etc.)
  • There was an elaborate cosmology associated with
    the very morphology location of Shang cities
    and towns
  • This included the cardinal location of gates and
    doors and cardinality of siting buildings,
  • Colors were associated with direction (as were
    certain animals) and there was a fifth
    directionthe center.
  • Symbol of the center was where divine power
    entered the world and diffused though the
    kingdom).
  • Choosing town sites, laying out town walls,
    orienting platforms for buildings all called upon
    knowledge of astronomy, geomancy magic.

7
Shang Cities and Towns 1
  • Background is Barnes 127 town walls graphic
  • Urbanism on a modest scale developed when the
    king granted new territory (benefices) to elites.
    They were charged with opening new areas, taking
    with them craft specialists and farmers and their
    families. These elites were often the kings
    relatives who, in return, support him in defense,
    divination and rule.
  • These benefices were largely self-sufficient in
    terms of agriculture, bronze manufacture,
    production of wine, stone, bone and metal tools,
    construction, armed force, etc. They also
    provided support for the king and his large
    entourage when it passed through their area.
  • Walled enclosures around palaces and elite
    precincts sustain the aura of privilege rather
    than serve defensive purposes.

8
Shang Cities and Towns 2
  • Palace architecture at capital and other towns is
    clearly the prototype for later, historical
    palaces (buildings on raised platforms, major
    entry faces south, ancestral temples, etc.).
  • Wheatley 46, 45
  • The town settlement, like the capital, has
    workshops and gricultural units outside the
    palace enclosure.

9
Shang Cities and Towns 3
  • Barnes 128 Yinxu settlement with Hiaotun
    palace-temple complex and Xibeigang royal
    cemetary.
  • The settlement includes the Royal Cemetary at
    Xibeigang that contains massive tombs with great
    wealth in bronzes, pottery, chariots, and human
    and animal sacrifices commoner tombs of
    specialists may have modest associated grave
    furnishings.
  • Barnes 128 plan of Royal Cemetary and 129 section
    of royal tomb.

10
Shang and Political Control Patrimony 1
  • We identify Anyang as the last Shang capital
    based on written documents found in oracle bone
    archivesthey also refer to an inner capital
    region and an outer Shang domain, and to other
    groups who were variously allies or enemies,
    many sharing Shangs elite culture.
  • Barnes 133 Chang Shang 72
  • The inner capital was directly under the kings
    control other towns were semi-autonomous and
    ruled by grantees and elite subjects in the name
    of the king (some call Shang a patrimonial state
    in which lords rule on behalf of the
    father/king who made the grant).

11
Shang and Political Control Patrimony 2
  • The two basic units of political organization
    were the walled town (yi) and the lineage (tsu).
    To date, few of the thousands of Shang towns
    named in the oracle bone records have been
    located or excavated, limiting our data.
  • Any particular town had at its head the grantee,
    a relative or fictive kin of the king,
    sacrificing to the kings and his/her own lineage
    ancestors.
  • The town included people from more than one
    kinship group serving the needs of agriculture,
    craft production, services to the elites, etc.
  • Towns were semi-autonomous but the grantee had
    obligations at the Anyang capital, more if
    enfeoffed nearby, less if further away (and
    presumably he/she was of lower status in the
    overall hierarchy of elites).
  • Chang Shang 71

12
Shang Economy 1 Climate, food, other resources 1
  • Climate 5000-2500 y.a.
  • Climate of the Central Plain was several degrees
    warmer and moister than now, with a more
    northerly distribution of plants and animals than
    latter the landscape was less affected by human
    activities than later.
  • Animals hunted by Shang elites for food included
    wild boar, elephant, deer and other woodland and
    marsh animals whose distribution extended to
    Anyang 3500 y.a.
  • Domesticated animals tended by agriculturalists
    for elites were water buffalo, sheep, horse, pig,
    dog, cattle and even a local deer. Many were
    used in the ritual feasting and sacrificing of
    the elites. Horses drew war chariots and appear
    together with chariots and charioteers as
    sacrifices in royal burials.
  • Domesticates include several millets, rice, a
    wild rice (?), wood, fiber and other economic
    plants, vegetables and fruits mulberry orchards
    fed the silkworm other grains named by the Shang
    arent yet translatable.

13
Shang Economy 1 Climate, food, other resources 1
  • Crafts and specialists
  • Pottery clay selection and tempering was highly
    refined to produce a number of wares used for
    domestic, elite and ritual purposes among the
    classes.
  • Weavers of silk and hemp, tailors, chariot
    makers, etc. were among the other crafts.
  • Bronze manufacture was a high status craft
    specialization. Copper and tin mining and
    smelting, may have meant trade for ingots from
    towns near sources or/and Shang trading/raiding
    beyond the Shang realm.
  • Cowry shells were considered precious and were a
    symbol of wealth accumulated and possibly used
    among elites. They came from the Yangtze Delta
    area through trade.
  • Turtle shells for divination included one local
    species and several imports from the Yangtze
    area. Shells arrived in lots up to several
    thousand.
  • The closest jade source is 200 mi from Anyang but
    scientific study of jades and jade sources is
    lacking so we dont know the extent of traffic in
    this stone.
  • Gold has a known source east in Shandong
    however, it is rare in sites and probably not
    much prized by the Shang (in contrast to Egypt,
    Sumer, etc.).

14
Shang Economy 2 Upward Outward Flow of
Resources
  • The king divined only about crops and harvests in
    his state--he received a share of grain, game,
    domestic animals, industrial products and
    services from towns and villages of his domain.
  • Food and industrial products were made in the
    workshops and villages but their movement beyond
    was not transactional (as it was in Sumer, for
    example)specialty products were for elites.
  • The royal hunt was a device for economic
    exploitation as well as sportand the kings
    entourage had to be hosted when it passed through
    the lands of a person/town he enfeoffed.
  • The outflow from Anyang was smaller than in-flow
  • The king made gifts to provincial lords
    (recognized sometimes by them casting
    commemorative bronzes recording the gift).
  • The king maintained an umbrella military force.
  • The king made ritual expressions of well-being to
    beyond the capital.
  • Materials were moved by carts drawn by men and
    animals, by animal and human bearers, and by
    boatslikely the movement of goods and
    commutations was in the hands of lineages
    specialized in these activities.
  • Cowries may have served as currency but more
    likely mainly symbolized wealth--they show up in
    quantities in elite graves.
  • Did you know that the word for merchant is Person
    of Shang?
  • Background should be character Shang Jen !!!

15
Shang Stratification and Class 1
  • At and around Anyang the distribution of elite
    and commoner sites is likely, with significant
    status and wealth differences between the
    lineages in each.
  • Chang Shang 130
  • Social stratification was pyramidal with elites
    above and a vast commoner class below. There was
    a category of captives but no institutionalized
    slave class.
  • The top of the elite class was the Tzu clans
    royal lineage from whom the kings were chosen
  • Recognized in descending order were the royal
    wives (the Royal Consort at the apex), the
    princes (a group that we cannot confidently
    define it included Tzu and non-Tzu males who
    had ritual functions and hunted with the king),
    and officials.
  • Chang Shang 231

16
Shang Stratification and Class 2
  • Commoners, like elites, were internally ranked
    some craft specialists (bronze) ranked higher
    than others (pottery), as seen in their graves
    and houses, and many/most of them ranked above
    the great mass of full time agriculturalists.
  • Agriculturalists made their own pottery,
    clothing, houses, etc.
  • There was a strong military aspect to Shang
    societyfrom the king on down to the least male
    lineage member, one could be called upon through
    conscription to serve.
  • Besides quelling neighboring states and tribes,
    Shang undertook deliberate actions outside their
    realm, for example, to capture potential
    sacrificial victims (sacrifices might involve
    hundreds).
  • The professional military included various ranks
    and functions. There were foot soldiers and
    archers in companies of 100 each, organized into
    regiments of 3 companies there were higher
    ranking charioteers, 3 men to a chariot, 5
    chariots to a squadron, and 25 chariots to a
    company.
  • The number of full-time military personnel,
    versus those conscripted is not known but it was
    likely not large.
  • Status of the military did not diminish in the
    eyes of the Chinese until Middle Zhou times when
    Confucians and others deplored them as embodying
    violence (and being productive in a Confucian
    senseas distinguished from farmers, etc. who
    were conscripted).

17
Shang Dualism and Patrilineal Kinship 1
  • The Royal Lineage was patrilineal and segmented
    into 10 sub-lineages which were arranged in two
    groups (referred to here as A B).
  • Kinship was reckoned in the males line only.
  • Kingship alternated between the two groups with
    each generational change.
  • An group A kings son (also A) could not succeed
    him theoretically, his grandson could since a
    king from B was from the intervening generation.
  • Kings married women from the opposite sub-lineage
    group as well as outsidersmales were polygamous.
  • The movement of females into and outside the
    Royal Lineage (or the Shang elite) was based on
    status (high status non-Shang women to Shang
    relatively lower status Shang females outside the
    clan. Such marriages build and maintained
    alliances.
  • Commoners adhered to patrilineal, patrilocal
    kinship, marriage and descent patterns.
  • Patrilocal means women went to live with the
    extended family of her husband.
  • The extended family (multiple generations of
    related males and their families) was the norm
    among all classes, with the lineage head its
    authority--just as the king was the embodiment of
    the father of all Shang lineages.

18
Shang Dualism and Patrilineal Kinship 2
  • Dualism is clearly an element of great
    importance throughout Shang culture. The shift
    of kingship between Royal Lineage sub-groups
    appears to be confirmed by the relationships
    between the many kings of Shang.
  • Chang Shang 112 bled as background for this slide
  • In the Royal Cemetery, 11 of 12 Anyang kings are
    buried in two groupsone of 7, equal to the
    number of sub-lineage A kings 4 from group B who
    are known to have been buried (the last king was
    killed by the Zhou).
  • The largest tomb is 40 deep, 54 NS, 50 EW,
    with 4 ramps 45-95 longa massive public works
    and labor force at the command of the rulers.
  • There are two divination styles or schools
    (some differences in ancestors consulted, the
    divination calendar, etc.).
  • King and prime minister an sub-lineage A king
    had as his chief minister a contemporary from
    sub-lineage B, balancing the interests of the two
    group of sub-lineages.
  • Religious art was markedly dualistic split-faces
    or double animal profiles found on ritual bronzes
    used by the Royal Lineage may reflect the
    complimentarity of heaven and earth, Royal
    Lineage succession, and other dualistic
    principles.
  • Ancestor temples were spatially separated in the
    capital.

19
Shang Bronzes and Decoration
  • Barnes 122, 123, 124, 125

20
Shang King as Father Patrilineal State
  • Patrimonial Rule
  • New towns were assigned to clan/lineage members
    who served as court officialsto princes, royal
    consorts, or elites from other groups (defeated
    Xia, for example)--who swore allegiance to Shang.
  • Size of benefice related to status of the person
    enfeoffed.
  • Benefice holders ruled in the name of the king
    (father), were expected to lead an army in
    times of war, to sacrifice to the kings
    ancestors (as well as their own lineage founder),
    and host the royal entourage on visits (hunting,
    etc.).
  • Some crafts are associated with specific lineages
    and the artisans often live in an area devoted to
    producing those goods (bronze vessels, wine,
    arrows, etc.) for the town elites.
  • Ideally, 100 households were under the authority
    of the lineage head and his word was inviolate
    male householders would serve as a unit in
    warfare as well, although there was a standing
    army as well.
  • There was little commerce since each town was
    self-sufficient in its productionelite items
    might move but markets were not developed nor was
    there a system of coinage (cowry shells may have
    a kind of currency but restricted in its use).

21
Shang Science and Technology
  • Aspects of each of many technologies involved
    technical breakthroughs and application of
    knowledge on the part of Shang artisans.
  • Bronze making was a significant technology, with
    refinements and elaborations over time and, like
    many crafts, in the hands of certain lineages.
    Higher status of bronze makers was reflected in
    their houses, materials goods, burials, etc.
  • Pottery making included specialized production
    and knowledge of clay sources, the potters
    wheel, engraving, heat, kiln use, temperature
    control etc. Early porcelain needed kilns with
    1000 C heat and the Shang developed them.
  • Stone and jade making showed many grades of
    skills and scales of operation, from making slate
    knives to master craftsmen carving jade. The
    latters workshop plastered walls, murals, and
    evidence of some ritual activity.
  • Chariot making involved producing spoke wheels,
    axles, body, pole and yoke for two horses.
    Several sizes of chariots are known.
  • Silk weaving and embroidery, the jacquard loom,
    bookmaking, new plant varieties, and so on, were
    all present.
  • Astronomy, mathematics (base10), civil
    engineering, solar and lunar calendars, and
    observation of eclipses advanced, with
    applications both for elites and
    commoners--practical application of knowledge was
    emphasized in most fields of Chinese science and
    technology for the next 2500 years.

22
The Shang Realm and External Relations
  • The Shang State Network
  • The Capital the capital area (Anyang) was not a
    fixed point as there were several capitals over
    time Shang, was a town/city often referred to
    that was a fixed place important in the
    pre-dynastic and early dynastic state the area
    of royal hunts, were a bridge to the wider realm.
  • The Domain the area was where the king had
    direct access to economic resources (where he
    divined about the harvest and pursued hunts).
    There were greater and lesser cities/towns, in
    hierarchical arrangements. Beyond were
    polities/groups not under Shang control.
  • Outside the domain, the polities sometimes paid
    tribute to Shang and sometimes were independent
    some were long-time enemies that Shang raided for
    sacrificial victims one polity extant throughout
    Anyang times was Zhou, to the west, with its own
    written historyZhou defeated the last Shang king
    to take on the Mandate of Heaven.
  • Over the several hundred years that Anyang was
    the capital, the number of border states
    diminished--some incorporated by Shang or others
    through warfare. Notably, by late Shang many
    shared the same culture, linked to Shang and each
    other through the exchange of women as wives to
    the elite males.
  • Oracle texts indicate that relations NW were
    often tense this is where important tin sources
    are recorded.

23
Shang Elite Culture
  • Royal elites in Anyang enjoyed spacious, above
    ground palatial dwellings and ancestral halls on
    slightly raised platforms in their foundations
    sacrifices are common.
  • Residential areas for lower ranking elites lacked
    sacrifices in the earthen platforms.
  • Besides the kings male contemporaries of the
    Royal Lineage, Shang royal consorts, the princes
    and officials had special duties at Anyang and
    some, mostly males, were granted titles to walled
    towns with agricultural land and to the income
    from the harvests.
  • Lady Fu Hao, one of 64 of king Wu Tings wives,
    was prominent and a subject of royal divination
    and granted a walled town outside of Anyang in
    which were built ancestral temples of the kings
    line and her own.
  • The town was established with her clan name and
    given a new town name.
  • She was given ritual regalia befitting her new
    political status and role.
  • She led military expeditions.
  • Her burial tomb near Anyang is massive, with
    human and animal sacrifices, 200 ritual bronzes,
    thousand of cowries, etc.
  • Elites had access to wealth commensurate with
    their statusbronzes, jades, palaces, ritual
    functions, etc.
  • Chang Shang 93 as background

24
Shang Common People
  • All the land belonged the king, parceled out
    through benefices to aristocrats to oversee it on
    his behalf.
  • Thus, most Shang were agricultural laborers who
    were organized to work the land. If they went to
    a new benefice, then they debarked woodland in
    one year and burned the trees the next. They
    opened the ground using a two-pronged digging
    stick pushed by one or pushed and pulled by two
    (a primitive plow). The common people who worked
    the fields were a vast lower classthe lowest
    members of the lowest ranked lineages.
  • The king oversaw the agricultural cycle (he made
    sacrifices for information about when to plant,
    harvest, etc.)the cycle was based on the solar
    calendar. Good weather, good harvests, etc. were
    a benefit commoners gained from his divination
    and sacrifices.
  • Lineage leaders headed the lineage members (100
    householders) who were organized into production
    teams. Cattle, sheep and horses were kept in
    pens.
  • Lineage groups were occupational units engaging
    in the production of industrial goods and
    specialized services pottery making wine vessel
    manufacture rope making fencing stone working
    lacquer ware making etc. All were present at
    Anyang smaller towns probably had fewer
    specialists or depended on the regional lords
    town to produce some items.
  • At the Anyang capital, dwellings, often partly
    underground, storage pits and workshops of
    commoners are also identifiable. The houses and
    associated household goods of bronze workers
    surpassed those of other workers, indicating
    ranking/wealth differences by occupation.

25
Shang and Culture Beyond the Shang
  • The influence of Shang was widespread, with many
    groups taking on the trappings of the culture and
    remaining for a time subordinate to Shang.
  • Over time, subordinate states outside Shang
    developed and some old Shang benefices exercised
    some independence.
  • At the same time, by late Shang culturally
    different areas to the south became more involved
    in interaction with Shang as their own societies
    developed to a level comparable with Shang.
  • Here we see Shang-type bronze ritual vessels but
    with local decorations, reflecting these
    differences and these interactions.
  • On their sweep to Anyang from the west, the Zhou
    report subjugating a number of entities that were
    associated with but not part of Shang (as they
    had been).
  • The Zhou defeated Shang, grown weak and
    unworthy under the last king, and they assumed
    the mantle of heaven.
  • They took over the nine bronzes from Xia times,
    extinguished (symbolically covered) the Shang
    altar to heaven, and continued the royal
    ancestral cult sacrificing to their ancestors.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com