Late Shang
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The Late Shang, also known as the Anyang period, is the earliest known literate
civilization A civilization (also spelled civilisation in British English) is any complex society characterized by the development of state (polity), the state, social stratification, urban area, urbanization, and symbolic systems of communication beyon ...
in China, spanning the reigns of the last nine kings of the
Shang dynasty The Shang dynasty (), also known as the Yin dynasty (), was a Chinese royal dynasty that ruled in the Yellow River valley during the second millennium BC, traditionally succeeding the Xia dynasty and followed by the Western Zhou d ...
, beginning with
Wu Ding Wu Ding (; died ); personal name (), was a king of the Chinese Shang dynasty who ruled the central Yellow River valley. He is the earliest figure in Chinese history mentioned in contemporary records. The annals of the Shang dynasty compiled by l ...
in the second half of the 13th century BC and ending with the conquest of the Shang by the Zhou in the mid-11th century BC. The state is known from artifacts recovered from its capital at a site near
Anyang Anyang ( zh, s=安阳, t=安陽; ) is a prefecture-level city in Henan, China. Geographical coordinates are 35° 41'~ 36° 21' north latitude and 113° 38'~ 114° 59' east longitude. The northernmost city in Henan, Anyang borders Puyang to the eas ...
now known as
Yinxu Yinxu (; ) is a Chinese archeological site corresponding to Yin, the final capital of the Shang dynasty (). Located in present-day Anyang, Henan, Yin served as the capital during the Late Shang period () which spanned the reigns of 12 Shang ki ...
and other sites across the
North China Plain The North China Plain () is a large-scale downfaulted rift basin formed in the late Paleogene and Neogene and then modified by the deposits of the Yellow River. It is the largest alluvial plain of China. The plain is bordered to the north by th ...
. One of the richest finds was the Tomb of Fu Hao at Yinxu, thought to belong to a consort of Wu Ding mentioned in Shang inscriptions. Most Shang writing takes the form of inscriptions on
oracle bone Oracle bones are pieces of ox scapula and turtle plastron which were used in pyromancya form of divinationduring the Late Shang period () in ancient China. '' Scapulimancy'' is the specific term if ox scapulae were used for the divination, ''p ...
s used for divinations on behalf of the king. Shang ritual focused on offerings to ancestors, enabling modern investigators to deduce a king list that largely matches that of the traditional histories of
Sima Qian Sima Qian () was a Chinese historian during the early Han dynasty. He is considered the father of Chinese historiography for the ''Shiji'' (sometimes translated into English as ''Records of the Grand Historian''), a general history of China cov ...
and the ''
Bamboo Annals The ''Bamboo Annals'' ( zh, t=竹書紀年, p=Zhúshū Jìnián), also known as the ''Ji Tomb Annals'' ( zh, t=汲冢紀年, p=Jí Zhǒng Jìnián), is a chronicle of ancient China. It begins in the earliest legendary time (the age of the Yellow E ...
''. The inscriptions also give insight into royal concerns such as weather, the harvest, warfare with neighbouring polities, and mobilizing workers for warfare or agricultural work. The Late Shang shared many features of the earlier
Erlitou Erlitou (), also known as Yanshi Erlitou, is a Chinese archaeological site in the Yiluo Basin of Yanshi District, Luoyang, Henan. Discovered by survey teams led by archaeologist Xu Xusheng in 1959, it was initially identified as Bo, the first ...
and
Erligang culture The Erligang culture () is a Bronze Age urban civilization and archaeological culture in China that existed from approximately 1600 to 1400 BC. The primary site, Zhengzhou Shang City, was discovered at Erligang, within the modern city of Zhe ...
s, including the
rammed earth Rammed earth is a technique for construction, constructing foundations, floors, and walls using compacted natural raw materials such as soil, earth, chalk, Lime (material), lime, or gravel. It is an ancient method that has been revived recently ...
technique for foundations of rectangular walled compounds. Bronze casting reached new heights of decoration and a volume unmatched elsewhere in the world at that time. Workshops in the capital produced ceramics and carved stone and bone for a variety of ceremonial, decorative or utilitarian purposes. Besides writing, new features of the Late Shang included horse-drawn chariots, massive royal tombs and human sacrifice on an unprecedented scale, both in divination rituals and in royal burials.


Discovery

The traditional account of early Chinese history is found in the '' Historical Records'' (1st century BC) compiled by
Sima Qian Sima Qian () was a Chinese historian during the early Han dynasty. He is considered the father of Chinese historiography for the ''Shiji'' (sometimes translated into English as ''Records of the Grand Historian''), a general history of China cov ...
. In this account, after a series of sage rulers, China was ruled by a succession of dynasties, the Xia, Yin (or
Shang The Shang dynasty (), also known as the Yin dynasty (), was a Chinese royal dynasty that ruled in the Yellow River valley during the second millennium BC, traditionally succeeding the Xia dynasty and followed by the Western Zhou dyn ...
), Zhou and Qin, culminating in the
Han dynasty The Han dynasty was an Dynasties of China, imperial dynasty of China (202 BC9 AD, 25–220 AD) established by Liu Bang and ruled by the House of Liu. The dynasty was preceded by the short-lived Qin dynasty (221–206 BC ...
of Sima Qian's own time. In the early 20th century, the earlier parts of the textual account were challenged by the
Doubting Antiquity School The Doubting Antiquity School or Yigupai (Endymion Wilkinson, Wilkinson, Endymion (2000). ''Chinese History: A Manual''. Harvard Univ Asia Center. . Page 345, see/ref>Loewe, Michael and Edward L. Shaughnessy (1999). ''The Cambridge History of Anci ...
led by
Gu Jiegang , module = , workplaces = Peking University, Xiamen University, Sun Yat-sen University, Yenching University, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences Gu Jiegang (8 May 1893 – 25 December 1980) was a Chinese historia ...
. At about the same time, archaeological discoveries confirmed the historicity of the last nine Shang kings, and found earlier cities in the
Yellow River The Yellow River, also known as Huanghe, is the second-longest river in China and the List of rivers by length, sixth-longest river system on Earth, with an estimated length of and a Drainage basin, watershed of . Beginning in the Bayan H ...
valley.


Excavations at Anyang

In 1898, the scholar
Wang Yirong Wang Yirong (; 1845–1900) was a director of the Chinese Guozijian, Imperial Academy, best known as the first to recognize that the symbols inscribed on oracle bones were an early form of Chinese writing. His work on the oracle bone script was c ...
realized that the markings on ancient bones being sold by Chinese pharmacists were an early form of
Chinese characters Chinese characters are logographs used Written Chinese, to write the Chinese languages and others from regions historically influenced by Chinese culture. Of the four independently invented writing systems accepted by scholars, they represe ...
. By 1908, Luo Zhenyu had traced the bones to the village of Xiaotun on the northwest outskirts of
Anyang Anyang ( zh, s=安阳, t=安陽; ) is a prefecture-level city in Henan, China. Geographical coordinates are 35° 41'~ 36° 21' north latitude and 113° 38'~ 114° 59' east longitude. The northernmost city in Henan, Anyang borders Puyang to the eas ...
in modern
Henan Henan; alternatively Honan is a province in Central China. Henan is home to many heritage sites, including Yinxu, the ruins of the final capital of the Shang dynasty () and the Shaolin Temple. Four of the historical capitals of China, Lu ...
province. The area was quickly recognized as the last capital of the Shang dynasty and named
Yinxu Yinxu (; ) is a Chinese archeological site corresponding to Yin, the final capital of the Shang dynasty (). Located in present-day Anyang, Henan, Yin served as the capital during the Late Shang period () which spanned the reigns of 12 Shang ki ...
'ruins of Yin' from the name () used by Sima Qian for the Shang dynasty and by the ''
Bamboo Annals The ''Bamboo Annals'' ( zh, t=竹書紀年, p=Zhúshū Jìnián), also known as the ''Ji Tomb Annals'' ( zh, t=汲冢紀年, p=Jí Zhǒng Jìnián), is a chronicle of ancient China. It begins in the earliest legendary time (the age of the Yellow E ...
'' for the dynasty and its last capital. However, the name does not appear in the oracle bones, which refer to the state as (), and its ritual centre as ( 'Great Settlement Shang'). In 1928, Dong Zuobin located the pits from which the oracle bones had been dug. The
Academia Sinica Academia Sinica (AS, ; zh, t=中央研究院) is the national academy of the Taiwan, Republic of China. It is headquartered in Nangang District, Taipei, Nangang, Taipei. Founded in Nanjing, the academy supports research activities in mathemat ...
undertook archaeological excavation of the site until the Japanese invasion in 1937, resuming in 1950. A permanent work station was established on the site in 1959. The city covered an area of some , focussed on a complex of palaces and temples on a rise surrounded by the
Huan River The Huan River (), or Anyang River (), is a river in Henan, China, and part of the Hai River basin. The river rises north of Linzhou, Henan, Linzhou in northwestern Henan, and joins the Wei River (Shandong), Wei River near Neihuang County, Neihu ...
on its north and east, and with an artificial pond on its western side. Further caches of oracle bones were discovered nearby. The area immediately to the south of the palace district contained craft workshops and the residences and cemeteries of the Shang elite. The rest of the city consisted of lineage-based settlements or neighbourhoods, with graves close by residential areas. More workshops, handling bronze, pottery, jade and bone, were concentrated in at least three production zones: south of the palace district, east of it across the river, and in the west of the city. The Anyang site had no city wall, and a canal or moat around the central district became blocked in the later reigns, suggesting that the Shang felt no danger of invasion. On the other side of the river, to the northwest, a royal cemetery was found on the Xibeigang ridge. Shang kings were buried in large ramped tombs with extensive human and animal sacrifices. The royal tombs had been systematically looted, but in 1976 an undisturbed medium-sized tomb was discovered in the southwest part of the palace district. Many of the grave goods recovered were inscribed with the name of
Fu Hao Fu Hao () died 1200 BC, posthumous temple name Mu Xin (), was one of the many wives of King Wu Ding of the Shang dynasty and also served as a military general and high priestess. Fu Hao's life and military achievements are known almost entirely ...
, a military leader and consort of
Wu Ding Wu Ding (; died ); personal name (), was a king of the Chinese Shang dynasty who ruled the central Yellow River valley. He is the earliest figure in Chinese history mentioned in contemporary records. The annals of the Shang dynasty compiled by l ...
known from the oracle bone inscriptions. The Tomb of Fu Hao yielded some of bronze vessels, weapons and tools, as well as hundreds of jades and other worked stones, bone carvings and pottery. In 1999, the remains of a walled city of about were discovered across the Huan River from the well-explored Yinxu site. The city, now known as
Huanbei Huanbei (), also known as Huayuanzhuang, is the site of a Bronze Age city on the northern outskirts of the modern city of Anyang in Henan province, China, discovered in 1999. The name refers to its position to the north (''běi'') of the Huan Riv ...
, contains a palace-temple compound, in which the foundations of two compounds have been excavated. Huanbei was apparently occupied for less than a century and deliberately destroyed by fire around the time of the construction of the Yinxu complex. Chinese archaeologists now assign the city to a Middle Shang period.


Precursors

Encouraged by the partial confirmation of Sima Qian's account of the Shang, archeologists embarked on a search for earlier capitals. Postwar excavations uncovered earlier urban centres in the area just south of the east–west stretch of the Yellow River. Erlitou, in the valley of the Luo River, flourished in the early part of the 2nd millennium BC. It was succeeded in the middle part of the millennium by the Erligang culture, centred on a large walled city at Zhengzhou and expanding across an area stretching as far south as the
Yangtze River The Yangtze or Yangzi ( or ) is the longest river in Eurasia and the third-longest in the world. It rises at Jari Hill in the Tanggula Mountains of the Tibetan Plateau and flows including Dam Qu River the longest source of the Yangtze, i ...
. Chinese archaeologists usually identify the Erlitou and Erligang cultures with the Xia and early Shang dynasties respectively, despite the lack of direct evidence. Around 1300 BC, for reasons that are still unclear, most of the Erligang walled settlements were abandoned and new regional developments from the culture arose. By this time, the sophisticated bronze casting techniques developed by Erlitou and Erligang had spread to, and been further developed by, a string of local cultures along the Yangtze river, from
Sanxingdui Sanxingdui () is an archaeological site and a major Bronze Age culture in modern Guanghan, Sichuan, China. Largely discovered in 1986, following a preliminary finding in 1927, archaeologists excavated artifacts that radiocarbon dating placed ...
in the Sichuan basin to Feijiahe near
Dongting Lake Dongting Lake () is a large, shallow lake in northeastern Hunan Province, China. It is a flood basin of the Yangtze River, so its volume depends on the season. The provinces of Hubei and Hunan are named after their location relative to the la ...
and Wucheng in the
Gan River The Gan River (, Gan: Kōm-kong) runs north through the western part of Jiangxi before flowing into Lake Poyang and thus the Yangtze River. The Xiang-Gan uplands separate it from the Xiang River of neighboring eastern Hunan. Two similarly siz ...
valley. In the north, intermediate pottery types from before the rise of the Late Shang have been found at sites such as
Xiaoshuangqiao Xiaoshuangqiao () is the site of a Bronze Age city, located on the southern bank of the Suoxu River, 20 km northwest of Zhengzhou. At the centre of the site are rammed-earth foundations of palaces. To the north are sacrificial pits containing hu ...
and Huanbei. Several features of Late Shang material culture were already present at Erlitou and further developed during the Erligang period. These include the
rammed earth Rammed earth is a technique for construction, constructing foundations, floors, and walls using compacted natural raw materials such as soil, earth, chalk, Lime (material), lime, or gravel. It is an ancient method that has been revived recently ...
construction technique for walls and foundations, which had been used since the
Neolithic The Neolithic or New Stone Age (from Ancient Greek, Greek 'new' and 'stone') is an archaeological period, the final division of the Stone Age in Mesopotamia, Asia, Europe and Africa (c. 10,000 BCE to c. 2,000 BCE). It saw the Neolithic Revo ...
Longshan culture The Longshan culture, also sometimes referred to as the Black Pottery Culture, was a late Neolithic culture in the middle and lower Yellow River valley areas of northern China from about 3000 to 1900 BC. The first archaeological find of this cu ...
, and rectangular walled compounds containing pillared halls around a courtyard. Casting of bronze vessels began on a limited scale at Erlitou. During the Erligang period, casters developed a technique of stepwise casting that permitted shapes of arbitrary complexity. Human sacrifice was also practised in the Erlitou and Erligang cultures, though on a much smaller scale than seen at Anyang. Other inherited features included the use of jade, the
dagger-axe The dagger-axe () is a type of polearm that was in use from the Longshan culture until the Han dynasty in China. It consists of a dagger-shaped blade, mounted by its tang to a perpendicular wooden shaft. The earliest dagger-axe blades were m ...
as a standard weapon, burial practices, and pyromancy using tortoise plastrons and ox scapulae. The most prominent innovations of the Late Shang – writing, horse-drawn chariots, massive tombs and human sacrifice on an unprecedented scale – all appeared at about the same time, in the reign of king
Wu Ding Wu Ding (; died ); personal name (), was a king of the Chinese Shang dynasty who ruled the central Yellow River valley. He is the earliest figure in Chinese history mentioned in contemporary records. The annals of the Shang dynasty compiled by l ...
. The Shang script is believed to be an indigenous development. In contrast, the sudden appearance of horses and chariots similar in form to those used across the Eurasian steppe, with all the associated technology, is thought to represent an import from the northwest. In a band of highlands stretching from the edge of the Tibetan plateau, through the
Ordos Plateau The Ordos Plateau, also known as the Ordos Basin or simply the Ordos, is a highland sedimentary basin in parts of most Northern China with an elevation of , and consisting mostly of land enclosed by the Ordos Loop, a large northerly rectangular ...
and on to the northeast lay a series of cultures that transitioned in the early second millennium BC from an agricultural economy to a mixed agropastoral or fully
pastoral The pastoral genre of literature, art, or music depicts an idealised form of the shepherd's lifestyle – herding livestock around open areas of land according to the seasons and the changing availability of water and pasture. The target au ...
economy. These cultures served as an interface between the plains cultures and those of the Eurasian steppe, and had been the vector through which bronze metallurgy reached the North China Plain in the early second millennium BC. Other novel features of the Late Shang include bronze mirrors and animal-headed bronze knives derived from these northern-zone cultures.


Writing

The earliest attestation of the
Chinese language Chinese ( or ) is a group of languages spoken natively by the ethnic Han Chinese majority and List of ethnic groups in China, many minority ethnic groups in China, as well as by various communities of the Chinese diaspora. Approximately 1.39& ...
dates from the Late Shang period. The vast majority of surviving Shang texts are divinatory inscriptions on
oracle bones Oracle bones are pieces of ox scapula and turtle plastron which were used in pyromancya form of divinationduring the Late Shang period () in ancient China. '' Scapulimancy'' is the specific term if ox scapulae were used for the divination, '' ...
, with a smaller number of
bronze inscriptions Chinese bronze inscriptions, also referred to as bronze script or bronzeware script, comprise Chinese writing made in several styles on ritual bronzes mainly during the Late Shang dynasty () and Western Zhou dynasty (771 BC). Types of bronz ...
and carvings on other materials. Some of the pictographs suggest that the Shang also employed brush writing on
bamboo and wooden slips Bamboo and wooden strips ( zh, s=简牍, t=簡牘, first=t, p=jiǎndú) are long, narrow strips of wood or bamboo, each typically holding a single column of several dozen brush-written characters. They were the main media for writing documents ...
like those known from later periods, but none of these materials have survived. The
oracle bone script Oracle bone script is the oldest attested form of written Chinese, dating to the late 2nd millennium BC. Inscriptions were made by carving characters into oracle bones, usually either the shoulder bones of oxen or the plastrons of turtl ...
consists of an early form of
Chinese characters Chinese characters are logographs used Written Chinese, to write the Chinese languages and others from regions historically influenced by Chinese culture. Of the four independently invented writing systems accepted by scholars, they represe ...
, with each graph representing a word of early
Old Chinese Old Chinese, also called Archaic Chinese in older works, is the oldest attested stage of Chinese language, Chinese, and the ancestor of all modern varieties of Chinese. The earliest examples of Chinese are divinatory inscriptions on oracle bones ...
. Over 4,000 graphs have been catalogued, though the exact number depends on which are considered graphic variants. A little over 1,200 words have been identified with certainty, but this set includes the core of the Chinese lexicon. A further 1,000 characters consist of identifiable components, but have no agreed interpretation. Most of the unknown characters are thought to represent proper names. The grammar of the language is broadly similar to that of
Western Zhou The Western Zhou ( zh, c=西周, p=Xīzhōu; 771 BC) was a period of Chinese history corresponding roughly to the first half of the Zhou dynasty. It began when King Wu of Zhou overthrew the Shang dynasty at the Battle of Muye and ended in 77 ...
bronze inscriptions and received texts. As in later forms of Chinese, the basic word order is subject–object–verb, with adjectives and adjectival phrases preceding the nouns they modify. The script provides little information on the sounds of the language, but several cases in which a character is borrowed or modified to write a different word are consistent with current theories on the sounds of Western Zhou Chinese.


Chronology

Shang notions of time were based on the rhythms of the agricultural lifestyle, overlain with the ritual schedules they created. Divinations were concerned with the immediate past and present. The longest unit of time used was the lunar month, until the reigns of the last two kings, when ritual cycles roughly a year long were counted. Therefore, modern scholars have had to painstakingly assemble larger-scale Shang chronology from tens of thousands of inscriptions.


Measurement of time

The most common terms for parts of the day were based on the motions of the sun or on social events: ( 'brightness', i.e. dawn), (, around 8 a.m.), ( 'small meal'), ( 'midday'), ( 'afternoon'), ( 'large meal'), (, around 6 p.m.) and ( 'cleaving'), the point during the night when the next day began. In the inscriptions, these terms are almost always associated with past events, with future events usually discussed in terms of days. There is some evidence that Shang houses had torches to illuminate the night hours. The Shang named each day with a pair of terms of obscure origin (later known as
Heavenly Stems The ten Heavenly Stems (or Celestial Stems) are a system of ordinals indigenous to China and used throughout East Asia, first attested during the Shang dynasty as the names of the ten days of the week. They were also used in Shang-era ritual ...
and
Earthly Branches The Earthly Branches (also called the Terrestrial Branches or the 12-cycle) are a system of twelve ordered symbols used throughout East Asia. They are indigenous to China, and are themselves Chinese characters, corresponding to words with no co ...
) representing the position of the day in concurrently running cycles of 10 and 12 days respectively, yielding a 60-day cycle. For example, () was day 2 of the 10-day cycle and day 8 of the 12-day cycle, and thus day 32 of the 60-day cycle. The 60-day cycle seems to have been widely used among elites in northern China during the Late Shang period. Most scholars assume that it continued uninterrupted through the succeeding
Western Zhou The Western Zhou ( zh, c=西周, p=Xīzhōu; 771 BC) was a period of Chinese history corresponding roughly to the first half of the Zhou dynasty. It began when King Wu of Zhou overthrew the Shang dynasty at the Battle of Muye and ended in 77 ...
period up to a solar eclipse recorded in 720 BC, which provides a secure correspondence with
Julian day The Julian day is a continuous count of days from the beginning of the Julian period; it is used primarily by astronomers, and in software for easily calculating elapsed days between two events (e.g., food production date and sell by date). Th ...
s. A 10-day period ( ) also functioned as an early Chinese week in expressions such as 'three and one day', meaning 31 days. (Shang day counts tended to include both the start and end days of an interval.) The incantation () ' n the nextten days here will beno disasters' was commonly divined on the last day of each ten-day period. There was no corresponding term for a 12-day period. Diviners regularly recorded the appearance of a new moon, often assigning it a number. Most scholars believe that the first moon for ritual purposes was the first after the
winter solstice The winter solstice, or hibernal solstice, occurs when either of Earth's geographical pole, poles reaches its maximum axial tilt, tilt away from the Sun. This happens twice yearly, once in each hemisphere (Northern Hemisphere, Northern and So ...
. The ritual schedule became increasingly elaborate. By the last two reigns, a full cycle of the five rituals took 36 or 37 , approximating the length of a
solar year A tropical year or solar year (or tropical period) is the time that the Sun takes to return to the same position in the sky – as viewed from the Earth or another celestial body of the Solar System – thus completing a full cycle of astronom ...
. At around this time, diviners also began to record dates in terms of the number of ritual cycles in the current reign and the current position in the latest cycle.


King list

The oracle bones record sacrifices to previous kings and the ancestors of the current king, as in this inscription from the reign of Wu Ding: From such evidence, scholars have assembled the implied sequence of kings and their genealogy, finding that it is in substantial agreement with the later accounts, especially for later kings. According to this implied king list, Wu Ding was the twenty-first Shang king. Ritual records name a deceased Shang king (or royal relative) using one of the day-names of the 10-day Shang week, with a distinguishing prefix. The prefix used depended on the relationship to the current king, with near predecessors denoted by kinship terms such as (elder brother) or (father). The names of more distant predecessors employed prefixes such as ''Dà'' (greater), (middle), (lesser), (outer), (male ancestor), (martial) and a few more obscure names. However, the day-name assigned to an individual remained fixed, and that was day on which they most commonly received sacrifice. There is no consensus on how these cyclic names were assigned, but their unbalanced distribution makes it unlikely that they reflect days of birth or death. Due to the fall of Shang, no such rituals are recorded for the last king, and there is a single record that might refer to the second-last king, so they are conventionally referred to by the names they were given in later accounts, such as the ''Historical Records''. The prefix (emperor) in these names is thus anachronistic. The oracle bones also identify six pre-dynastic ancestors: Shàng Jiǎ, Bào Yǐ, Bào Bǐng, Bào Dīng, Shì Rén and Shì Guǐ.


Relative chronology

Using ten different criteria, including
epigraphy Epigraphy () is the study of inscriptions, or epigraphs, as writing; it is the science of identifying graphemes, clarifying their meanings, classifying their uses according to dates and cultural contexts, and drawing conclusions about the wr ...
, prose style, diviner names and bone preparation, Dong Zuobin assigned oracle bone inscriptions to five periods I–V corresponding to rulers. Later workers have subdivided some of his periods to refer to the reigns of individual kings. It has also become common to assign pieces to groups of diviners, who were active at different times. Archaeologists have defined four phases I–IV based on studies of
stratigraphy Stratigraphy is a branch of geology concerned with the study of rock layers (strata) and layering (stratification). It is primarily used in the study of sedimentary and layered volcanic rocks. Stratigraphy has three related subfields: lithost ...
and pottery types at various locations in the Yinxu site. For most of Yinxu I, the site was a small settlement. The first large buildings appeared in the later part of the period, together with oracle bone inscriptions, large-scale human sacrifice and chariot burials. This part of Yinxu I and all of the other three phases can be related to Dong's five inscription periods. The dating information from periods I to IV is too limited to assign inscriptions to a particular year of a king's reign. In contrast, the standardized ritual schedule and recording of cycle counts in period V permits estimates of the lengths of the last two reigns, though these have ranged between 20 and 33 years.


Absolute chronology

The earliest securely dated event in Chinese history is the start of the
Gonghe Regency The Gonghe Regency () was an interregnum period in Chinese history from 841 BC to 828 BC, after King Li of Zhou was exiled by his nobles during the Compatriots Rebellion, when the Chinese people rioted against their old corrupt king. It lasted ...
in 841 BC, early in the
Zhou dynasty The Zhou dynasty ( ) was a royal dynasty of China that existed for 789 years from until 256 BC, the longest span of any dynasty in Chinese history. During the Western Zhou period (771 BC), the royal house, surnamed Ji, had military ...
, a date first established by the
Han dynasty The Han dynasty was an Dynasties of China, imperial dynasty of China (202 BC9 AD, 25–220 AD) established by Liu Bang and ruled by the House of Liu. The dynasty was preceded by the short-lived Qin dynasty (221–206 BC ...
historian
Sima Qian Sima Qian () was a Chinese historian during the early Han dynasty. He is considered the father of Chinese historiography for the ''Shiji'' (sometimes translated into English as ''Records of the Grand Historian''), a general history of China cov ...
. Attempts to establish earlier dates have been plagued by doubts about the origin and transmission of traditional texts and the difficulties in their interpretation. More recent attempts, including by the
Xia–Shang–Zhou Chronology Project The Xia–Shang–Zhou Chronology Project () was a multi-disciplinary project commissioned by the People's Republic of China in 1996 to determine with accuracy the location and time frame of the Xia, Shang, and Zhou dynasties. The project was d ...
, have compared the traditional histories with archaeological and astronomical data. At least 44 dates for the Zhou conquest of the Shang have been proposed, ranging from 1130 BC to 1018 BC. Most recent authors propose dates between 1050 and 1040 BC. David Pankenier, by attempting to identify astronomical events mentioned in Zhou texts, dated the conquest at 1046 BC. The XSZ Project arrived at the same date, based on a combination of the astronomical evidence considered by Pankenier and
radiocarbon dating Radiocarbon dating (also referred to as carbon dating or carbon-14 dating) is a method for Chronological dating, determining the age of an object containing organic material by using the properties of carbon-14, radiocarbon, a radioactive Isotop ...
of archaeological layers at Yinxu and proto-Zhou sites. Using this date and counting year-long ritual cycles in the last two reigns, the XSZ project assigned accession dates to the last two Shang kings of 1101 BC and 1075 BC. Oracle bones from the diviner group (late in Wu Ding's reign and early in that of his successor Zu Geng) mention five
lunar eclipse A lunar eclipse is an astronomical event that occurs when the Moon moves into the Earth's shadow, causing the Moon to be darkened. Such an alignment occurs during an eclipse season, approximately every six months, during the full moon phase, ...
s, including the following: Most scholars identify this eclipse with one that astronomers have calculated to have occurred on the evening of 27 December 1192 BC. Some of the identifications vary, but most scholars identify these five records with eclipses spanning the period from 1201 to 1180 BC. This interval implies an approximate end date for Wu Ding's reign. Estimating an average reign length of about 20 years (based on securely dated Zhou rulers), David Keightley proposed a start date around 1200 BC or earlier. Using the statement in the "Against Luxurious Ease" chapter of the ''
Book of Documents The ''Book of Documents'' ( zh, p=Shūjīng, c=書經, w=Shu King) or the ''Classic of History'', is one of the Five Classics of ancient Chinese literature. It is a collection of rhetorical prose attributed to figures of ancient China, a ...
'' that his reign lasted 59 years, the XSZ Project estimated its start date at 1250 BC. Ken-ichi Takashima dates the earliest oracle bone inscriptions to around 1230 BC.


Geography

The oracle bones describe the Shang world in terms of three concentric regions. At the centre was the capital and ritual centre ( 'Great Settlement Shang'). Shang control or influence extended to four ( 'lands') named after the cardinal directions. Many divinations were concerned with harvests or weather in named , or smaller areas within them. The extent of Shang control, based on shifting alliances and fluctuating military power, is difficult to delineate, and probably varied over time. The term ( 'sides, regions') was used in a metaphysical sense, to refer to the four directions and associated supernatural powers. It was also used for specific neighbouring groups that might be subordinate polities, allies or enemies, in some cases changing their status over time. At least 40 different are mentioned in inscriptions. Shima Kunio attempted to map their positions based on travel time between divinations.


North China Plain

The core area of the Late Shang state lay in the eastern foothills of the
Taihang Mountains The Taihang Mountains () are a Chinese mountain range running down the eastern edge of the Loess Plateau in Shanxi, Henan and Hebei provinces. The range extends over from north to south and has an average elevation of ; its principal peak is ...
, stretching from around north of Anyang to a similar distance to the south. In the immediate surroundings of the capital, the Huan River valley experienced a substantial increase in population and growth of regional centres during the Huanbei and Late Shang periods. The Guandimiao site west of
Zhengzhou Zhengzhou is the capital of Henan, China. Located in northern Henan, it is one of the nine National central city, national central cities in China, and serves as the political, economic, technological, and educational center of the province. Th ...
, near the southern end of the core area, is a well-preserved village, which apparently specialized in the production of pottery. Many Shang sites have been found in the areas of Hebei the north, especially around the modern city of
Shijiazhuang Shijiazhuang; Mandarin: ; formerly known as Shimen and romanized as Shihkiachwang is the capital and most populous city of China's Hebei Province. A prefecture-level city southwest of Beijing, it administers eight districts, three county-le ...
. Taixi (in Gaocheng) seems to have been a strategic outpost near the northern frontier. In its Upper phase, the Erligang culture had expanded into Shandong, displacing the
Yueshi culture The Yueshi culture () was an archaeological culture in the Shandong region of eastern China, dated from 1900 to 1500 BC. It spanned the period from the Late Neolithic to the early Bronze Age. In the Shandong area, it followed the Longshan cultur ...
. Late Shang material culture expanded further, confining the indigenous Zhenzhumen culture to the eastern part of the
Jiaodong peninsula The Shandong Peninsula or Jiaodong (tsiaotung) Peninsula is a peninsula in Shandong in eastern China, between the Bohai Sea to the north and the Yellow Sea to the south. The latter name refers to the east and Jiaozhou. Geography The waters b ...
. Large concentrations of settlements occurred along the
Ji River The Ji River was a former river in north-eastern China which gave its name to the towns of Jiyuan and Jinan. It disappeared during one of the massive Yellow River floods of 1852, as the Yellow River shifted its course from below the Shandong Pen ...
, centred on Daxinzhuang, and the adjacent shores of the Bohai, centred on Subutun. These were centres of salt production and harvesting of pearls and shells, as well as mining of copper and lead. Another concentration occurred to the west of the
Taishan __NOTOC__ Taishan may refer to: *Mount Tai Mount Tai () is a mountain of historical and cultural significance located north of the city of Tai'an. It is the highest point in Shandong province, China. The tallest peak is the ''Jade Emperor Peak ...
massif, in the valley of the
Si River The Si River (Chinese: 泗河, pinyin: Sì Hé; formerly 泗水, pinyin: Sì Shuǐ) is a river in Shandong Province, eastern China. It also ran through the area of modern Jiangsu Province until floods changed its course in 1194. Course The S ...
. These areas also feature aristocratic graves, some of them ramped tombs with human sacrifices like elite tombs at Xibeigang. The site at Subutun features a four-ramped tomb, the only one found outside Anyang, where they were reserved for royal burials. This is interpreted by some archaeologists as indicating a local rival, while others believe the occupant was a favourite of a Shang king. Another cluster of sites is found in western Shandong and eastern Henan around the Anqiu site, which had been inhabited since the Longshan period. The cemetery at Tianhu, north of the
Dabie Mountains The Dabie Mountains () are a major mountain range located in central China. Running northwest-to-southeast, they form the main watershed between the Huai River, Huai and Yangtze rivers. The range also marks the boundary between Hubei Province (n ...
, is one of the southernmost sites with Late Shang features. The site also shares features with the many distinct local cultures surrounding it, and may be the lineage cemetery of a local Shang lord.


Western highlands

Of the polities located by Shima Kunio, the most frequently mentioned are to the northwest of Anyang, in the upper
Fen River The Fen River drains the center of Shanxi Province, China. It originates in the Guancen Mountains of Ningwu County in northeast Shanxi, flows southeast into the basin of Taiyuan, and then south through the central valley of Shanxi before turni ...
valley and the east bank of the
Yellow River The Yellow River, also known as Huanghe, is the second-longest river in China and the List of rivers by length, sixth-longest river system on Earth, with an estimated length of and a Drainage basin, watershed of . Beginning in the Bayan H ...
to the west. The , who are often captured and sacrificed in Shang rituals, are believed to have lived in this area. In Wu Ding's time, the Zhou, possibly at that time residing in the Fen valley, were mentioned as an ally, but in later inscriptions are referred to as , indicating that they had become more independent or even hostile. Several other northwestern allies are mentioned in the Wu Ding period, but disappear from the record in later reigns. Excavations from the northwestern zone present a mix of cultures. The Jingjie site in the Fen River valley consists of three elite burials with a mix of Shang and Northern Zone artifacts. Many of the bronzes bear an emblem that has been interpreted as , a name mentioned as an ally in oracle bones from the reign of Wu Ding. The Qiaobei site further down the Fen river also appears to have been allied to the Shang. The Lijiaya culture on the north–south stretch of the Yellow River shows a mix of Shang and Northern Zone features. People of the nearby Ordos Plateau and adjacent areas of the
Loess Plateau The Loess Plateau is a plateau in north-central China formed of loess, a clastic rock, clastic silt-like sediment formed by the accumulation of Dust#Atmospheric, wind-blown dust. It is located southeast of the Gobi Desert and is surrounded by t ...
in western Shanxi had exploited horses since Paleolithic times. This area may have been the source of Shang horses and chariots, perhaps as tribute gifts. The name ( 'horse ''fang) mentioned in the oracle bones may have referred to a polity in this area. Laoniupo in the Wei valley dominated the route from the Wei valley to the Dan River, which flows into the Han River to the south. The nearby
Qinling The Qinling () or Qin Mountains, formerly known as the Nanshan ("Southern Mountains"), are a major east–west mountain range in southern Shaanxi Province, China. The mountains mark the divide between the drainage basins of the Yangtze and Ye ...
mountains held extensive copper deposits. The site had been an outpost of the Erligang state, and became a powerful state during the Late Shang period, with close connections to Yinxu. During Yinxu Phase IV, Laoniupo possessed the only known bronze foundry outside of Yinxu producing Shang-style vessels. The site features elite burials similar to those at Yinxu, with many human sacrifices. However, its pottery and other burials show local styles. Laoniupo seems to have become more independent of the Shang core over time, but then declined suddenly, possibly due to the rise of the Zhou, at this time residing further west in the Wei valley, who went on to conquer the Shang.


Warfare

Beyond their central domains, Shang kings maintained their networks of subordinates and allies through a series of military campaigns. Campaigns and raids also supplied captives to be sacrificed in Shang rituals. The bronze foundries at the capital produced a variety of chariot fittings and weapons. The Shang
dagger-axe The dagger-axe () is a type of polearm that was in use from the Longshan culture until the Han dynasty in China. It consists of a dagger-shaped blade, mounted by its tang to a perpendicular wooden shaft. The earliest dagger-axe blades were m ...
was designed for hand-to-hand fighting on foot. Some 980 bronze arrowheads have been found, compared with 20,400 fashioned from bone. The Shang bow had a range of . Some weapons were based on imported designs, such as the spearhead, which first appeared at Yinxu in period II and appears to have been developed in the Yangtze region, while daggers with animal-head pommels and some dagger-axes have precursors in Northern zone cultures.


Mobilization

Although the Shang probably had a small standing army, typical campaigns required levies of three or five thousand men, usually provided and led by lineage leaders. Several inscriptions mention troops raised and led by Wu Ding's consort
Fu Hao Fu Hao () died 1200 BC, posthumous temple name Mu Xin (), was one of the many wives of King Wu Ding of the Shang dynasty and also served as a military general and high priestess. Fu Hao's life and military achievements are known almost entirely ...
. The most common number of troops was 3,000, who would be organized into right, centre and left units: Each body of 1,000 footsoldiers would typically be accompanied by 100 archers and 100 chariots. Each chariot carried a driver, an archer and a spearman, all presumably specially trained and drawn from the petty elite class. The king might lead the army in person, or send one of his generals. Sometimes the Shang would attack together with allies. Divinatory inscriptions concerning planned military campaigns use the verb 'order' ( ) for local leaders under the direct control of the king and a different verb 'join with' or '(cause to) follow' for more distant allies.


Military history

Inscriptions from the reign of Wu Ding speak of successful major campaigns against the and west of the
Taihang Mountains The Taihang Mountains () are a Chinese mountain range running down the eastern edge of the Loess Plateau in Shanxi, Henan and Hebei provinces. The range extends over from north to south and has an average elevation of ; its principal peak is ...
. Allied states are often mentioned in inscriptions from the Wu Ding period, but not those of later reigns. Under Wu Ding's successor Zu Geng, less successful campaigns against the and led to a loss of influence in the west. Limited strikes into enemy territory, often against the , are noted in periods III and IV. By period V (the last two kings), the Shang had established stable control over a smaller area, and no inscriptions refer to outside attacks, or to the loss of troops. Inscriptions of this period also contain fewer references to allied groups. Royal forays were more limited, with the exception of Di Xin's campaign against the in the
Huai River The Huai River, formerly romanized as the Hwai, is a major river in East China, about long with a drainage area of . It is located about midway between the Yellow River and Yangtze River, the two longest rivers and largest drainage basins ...
valley to the southeast, which may have lasted at least seven months.


Religion

The main source of information about Shang religious belief and practice is the oracle bones, supplemented by archaeological finds of ritual vessels and sacrifices. By its nature, this evidence focusses on the concerns of the royal lineage and other elites.


Powers

The head of the Shang pantheon was , the High God, who commanded the weather and various successes or disasters that might befall the Shang. Many divinations describe seeking Di's approval of or assistance with some endeavour. There are numerous theories regarding the origin of , including an early ancestor, the north
celestial pole The north and south celestial poles are the two points in the sky where Earth's axis of rotation, indefinitely extended, intersects the celestial sphere. The north and south celestial poles appear permanently directly overhead to observers at ...
, or as a generic term for the other powers. The Shang also sought the approval of nature powers such as the Earth Power , the River Power (the
Yellow River The Yellow River, also known as Huanghe, is the second-longest river in China and the List of rivers by length, sixth-longest river system on Earth, with an estimated length of and a Drainage basin, watershed of . Beginning in the Bayan H ...
) and the Mountain Power . Some scholars identify the latter with
Mount Song Mount Song (, "lofty mountain") is an isolated mountain range in north central China's Henan Province, along the southern bank of the Yellow River. It is known in literary and folk tradition as the central mountain of the Five Great Mountains of ...
, to the south of Anyang. Another group, called the "High Ancestors" in the inscriptions and the "Former Lords" in modern scholarship, includes figures such as (or ) and , a name that occurs in some texts from the
Warring States period The Warring States period in history of China, Chinese history (221 BC) comprises the final two and a half centuries of the Zhou dynasty (256 BC), which were characterized by frequent warfare, bureaucratic and military reforms, and ...
. Modern scholars have attempted to identify these with pre-dynastic figures in traditional histories. Another of these figures is
Yi Yin Yi Yin ( zh, c= 伊 尹, born Yī Zhì ( 伊 挚), also known as A Heng ( 阿 衡)), was a Chinese politician who served as a minister of the early Shang dynasty and one of the honoured officials of the era. He helped Tang of Shang, the founder of ...
, who appears in the traditional histories as a minister of the first Shang king. The ancestors of the king were central to Shang ritual, as a source of power uniquely related to him, and as a reminder of the many generations of kings that had culminated in his rule. Performing the proper sacrifices to each ancestor was a key obligation, and the ancestors were viewed as having influence with and the nature powers. The pre-dynastic ancestors were viewed as the most powerful, able to affect weather and crops. All of them were able to affect the king and those around him. Particular significance was attached to kings on the main line of descent to the current king. Royal women were also venerated, particularly consorts of main-line kings and mothers of kings. Most divinations regarding date from the reign of Wu Ding, after which the ancestors play a greater role. By period V, and the nature powers are hardly mentioned at all. Over the same period, worship of the main-line ancestors became more systematized.


Ritual

The ritual centre was a complex of temples and palaces on a hill flanked to the north and south by the Huan River. Archaeologists have mapped the rammed-earth foundations of these buildings, but the density and poor preservation of the foundations makes it difficult to produce a definitive layout. It appears that construction and refurbishment continued throughout the Late Shang period. The general consensus is that the northern part of the complex consisted of royal residences, the central part was the main locus of ritual sacrifice, and the southern part consisted of smaller ritual buildings. Inscriptions refer to temples ( ) of particular ancestors. The glyph used suggests a temple housing a spirit tablet or the altar stand on which it was placed, though no archaeological remains of such tablets have been uncontroversially identified. Inscriptions also mention architectural terms such as ( 'elevated hall'), ( 'courtyard') and ( 'gate'). Many divinations look forward to the coming day, suggesting that Shang ceremonies were performed at sunrise. Usually, the king hosted and offered sacrifices to one of his ancestors or ancestresses on each day, moving through them in sequence. However, when the king was away from the capital, he never divined about sacrifices to ancestors, suggesting that they were thought to remain at the ritual centre. Sacrificial offerings involved millet ale, grain, and large numbers of animal and human victims. One divination refers to sacrificing 1000 cattle in one ceremony, and several others refer to rituals involving hundreds of animals. The oracle bones refer to at least 14,197 human sacrificial victims, including 7,426 Qiang. The number killed at a time varied from 3 to 300, but was most commonly between 5 and 10. In the temple-palace district, archaeologists have discovered pits containing the skeletons of these victims, many decapitated and otherwise mutilated. The kings consulted their ancestors and other powers using pyromantic divination, sometimes asking binary questions, but more often seeking approval for a proposed course of action. This involved carefully prepared animal bones, usually the
scapula The scapula (: scapulae or scapulas), also known as the shoulder blade, is the bone that connects the humerus (upper arm bone) with the clavicle (collar bone). Like their connected bones, the scapulae are paired, with each scapula on either side ...
e of oxen or turtle
plastron The turtle shell is a shield for the ventral and dorsal parts of turtles (the Order (biology), order Testudines), completely enclosing all the turtle's vital organs and in some cases even the head. It is constructed of modified bony elements such ...
s, both of which provided convenient flat surfaces. Workers also drilled lines of hollows in the back of each piece. During divination, hot pokers were applied to these hollows, causing cracks in the front surface, which were interpreted as a response. There is no consensus on how cracks were read. The used pieces were then given to scribes, who recorded the charge and the interpretation of the cracks. In some cases, the scribes also later recorded the outcome of the matter divined about. For example, Based on an interpretation of certain characters in the oracle bone script, Kwang-chih Chang proposed that Shang kings interceded with the spirit world as
shamans Shamanism is a spiritual practice that involves a practitioner (shaman) interacting with the Spirit (supernatural entity), spirit world through Altered state of consciousness, altered states of consciousness, such as trance. The goal of th ...
. However, the carefully ordered nature of Shang ritual seems inconsistent with the states of trance or ecstasy that normally characterize shamanism.


Burials

Across the Huan River lies the Xibeigang cemetery, with eight large tombs each consisting of a square shaft some deep approached by four ramps dug into the earth and approximately aligned with the cardinal directions. These eight tombs, together with an unfinished shaft in their midst, match the nine kings of the Late Shang state, and are generally considered royal tombs. Smaller tombs, two with single ramps (from the south) and three with two ramps (north and south) each, are thought to hold elites of lower status. The only other four-ramp tomb of the period, found at Subutun, is variously interpreted as belonging to a favourite of the Shang king or a rival. Anyang tombs differ from those of Erlitou and Erligang in the introduction of ramps, more elaborate structures, an increase in the number of grave goods, and a greater contrast between the largest tombs and the rest. The effort invested in their tombs shows that the Shang believed that their deceased rulers needed to be provided for in the afterlife, from where they could exert influence over the living. The body of the king was placed in a
supine position The supine position () means lying horizontally, with the face and torso facing up, as opposed to the prone position, which is face down. When used in surgical procedures, it grants access to the peritoneal, thoracic, and pericardium, pericardial ...
, oriented north–south, within a wooden chamber constructed at the bottom of the central shaft. Under the middle of the coffin, a "waist pit" contained a dog or human sacrificial victim. Rammed-earth ledges surrounding this chamber held the king's attendants who had followed him in death, equipped with weapons or vessels with which to serve the king and often accompanied by dogs. The excavated areas were filled with earth and 100 or more beheaded sacrificial victims, mostly young men, buried in a
prone position Prone position () is a body position in which the person lies flat with the chest down and the back up. In anatomical terms of location, the dorsal side is up, and the ventral side is down. The supine position is the 180° contrast. Etymology T ...
. The royal tombs have long been looted, but a hint of the treasures they once contained is given by the much smaller tomb of Fu Hao, which was discovered intact just southwest of the temple-palace zone. This medium-sized tomb, with 16 human victims and a dog, also contained of bronze, 755 jades, 110 pieces of worked stone, 564 objects of carved bone, two ivory cups inlaid with
turquoise Turquoise is an opaque, blue-to-green mineral that is a hydrous phosphate of copper and aluminium, with the chemical formula . It is rare and valuable in finer grades and has been prized as a gemstone for millennia due to its hue. The robi ...
, 6,880
cowrie Cowrie or cowry () is the common name for a group of small to large sea snails in the family Cypraeidae. Cowrie shells have held cultural, economic, and ornamental significance in various cultures. The cowrie was the shell most widely used wo ...
shells and 11 pots. The lower part of the tomb had been damaged by water, so little remained of the occupant and the nested
lacquer Lacquer is a type of hard and usually shiny coating or finish applied to materials such as wood or metal. It is most often made from resin extracted from trees and waxes and has been in use since antiquity. Asian lacquerware, which may be c ...
ed coffins that excavators believe encased the body. Tombs in the West Zone of the Yinxu site are believed to have belonged to petty elite lineages. They mirror the pits and ledges of the royal tombs, but at much smaller scale. The grave goods include a few bronze vessels, but more commonly ceramics including ceramic wine-pouring vessels corresponding to the bronze vessels of elite tombs. Many of them were buried with weapons, possibly indicating warriors. Ten graves had a ramp and surrounding graves, which are interpreted as attendants who followed a minor lord in death. Smaller graves with modest goods are found adjacent to lineage settlements across the Yinxu site. Away from the capital, non-elite burials rarely featured grave goods.


Society

Divination inscriptions refer to various patrilineal lineages ( ) or lineage groups, some of which also appear on contemporaneous bronze vessels. Shang society was organized as a socially differentiated hierarchy of such lineage groups, all ultimately bound to the king in various ways.


Elites

The kingly lineage, centred on the king ( ), occupied the political and ritual pinnacle of Shang society. Some sons also formed their own princely ( ) lineages. A cache of oracle bones found at the Huayuanzhang East site, southeast of the palace-temple area, contains divinations performed on behalf of one of these princes during the reign of Wu Ding. Other lineages were more distantly related to the king, forming an extended royal lineage group at the core of the Shang state. The term ( 'lady') is not completely understood, but is generally thought to denote women of high status, including the king's consorts and those of his sons. Deceased ancestresses received sacrifices under names consisting of ( 'ancestress') and a day name, e.g. Fu Hao was referred to by the posthumous name . The inscriptions mention various titles, for which several interpretations have been proposed. The titles , and (less commonly) were often appended to place names, suggesting local lords affiliated with the Shang. The inscription on the Western Zhou Da Yu ''ding'', dated 58 years after the fall of the Shang, speaks of and lords on the periphery of the Shang domain.


Officers

Divination inscriptions recording numbers of men mobilized, enemies killed or captured, booty taken, animals killed in hunts and quantities of sacrifices must have been supported by a system of record keeping. The organization of armies, the supply of ores and management of bronze-casting imply some level of hierarchical control. The inscriptions mention various kinds of officers in particular roles such as the 'many horses' ( ), 'many dogs' ( ), 'many archers' ( ), 'many artisans' ( ) or 'many officers' ( ). There were also 'junior servitors' ( ) responsible for such things as mobilizing workers or cultivation. However, the Shang government was not yet a bureaucratic structure with clearly differentiated roles and relationships. Most officials of the Shang state were relatives of the king, by blood or by marriage.


Common people

The common people were required to provide the king with labour rather than goods. Many inscriptions refer to mobilizing the population for warfare, opening new land to agriculture and various other tasks. The terms used, ( 'people'), ( 'multitude') or the combination (), have been much debated, and there is no consensus on whether or how these terms were distinguished by the Shang. Scholars such as
Guo Moruo Guo Moruo (November 16, 1892 – June 12, 1978), courtesy name Dingtang, was a Chinese author, poet, historian, archaeologist, and government official. Biography Family history Guo Moruo, originally named Guo Kaizhen, was born on November 10 or ...
and Chen Mengjia proposed that the Shang represented the "slave society" phase prescribed by Marxian
historical materialism Historical materialism is Karl Marx's theory of history. Marx located historical change in the rise of Class society, class societies and the way humans labor together to make their livelihoods. Karl Marx stated that Productive forces, techno ...
. They interpreted such terms as ( 'servitor'), ( 'servant, follower, groom') and ( 'prisoners', mostly in period I inscriptions) as denoting slaves. However, there is no mention of people being bought or sold, and no indication that the large numbers of prisoners sacrificed had been used as slave labour.


Economy

The Late Shang economy was predominantly agricultural. Since transportation was limited, most bulk goods were consumed locally, and only high-value items were gifted or traded over long distances. Pottery was produced locally throughout the North China Plain, but specialist crafts were concentrated in the workshops of the capital, drawing on raw materials from the countryside and further afield.


Agriculture

The staple crop was
millet Millets () are a highly varied group of small-seeded grasses, widely grown around the world as cereal crops or grains for fodder and human food. Most millets belong to the tribe Paniceae. Millets are important crops in the Semi-arid climate, ...
, which had been widely cultivated in northern China since Neolithic times. The main varieties were
foxtail millet Foxtail millet, scientific name ''Setaria italica'' (synonym ''Panicum italicum'' L.), is an annual grass grown for human food. It is the second-most widely planted species of millet, and the most grown millet species in Asia. The oldest evidenc ...
and
broomcorn millet ''Panicum miliaceum'' is a grain crop with many common names, including proso millet, broomcorn millet, common millet, hog millet, Kashfi millet, red millet, and white millet. Archaeobotanical evidence suggests millet was first domesticated a ...
. The planting, care and harvesting of the crop was a major concern in divinations. Millet was also fermented to make a drink usually described as "wine", but technically an
ale Ale is a style of beer, brewed using a warm fermentation method. In medieval England, the term referred to a drink brewed without hops. As with most beers, ale typically has a bittering agent to balance the malt and act as a preservative. Ale ...
.
Hemp Hemp, or industrial hemp, is a plant in the botanical class of ''Cannabis sativa'' cultivars grown specifically for industrial and consumable use. It can be used to make a wide range of products. Along with bamboo, hemp is among the fastest ...
was grown and woven for textiles. The Shang also cultivated
mulberries ''Morus'', a genus of flowering plants in the family Moraceae, consists of 19 species of deciduous trees commonly known as mulberries, growing wild and under cultivation in many temperate world regions. Generally, the genus has 64 subordinate ...
and practised
sericulture Sericulture, or silk farming, is the cultivation of silkworms to produce silk. Although there are several commercial species of silkworms, the caterpillar of the Bombyx mori, domestic silkmoth is the most widely used and intensively studied silkwo ...
. Most farming tools were made of wood or stone, including wooden ploughs, shovels of stone, shell or bone, and sickles of shell or stone. A small number of bronze tools have been found, with picks more common than axes. Both animal and human waste were used to fertilize the fields. Although the Shang built a system of drainage ditches around the ritual centre at Xiaotun, there is no evidence of large-scale use of irrigation for agriculture. The inscriptions focus on sufficient rainfall for the crops, while also expressing a fear of flooding. More than 7% of bone inscriptions were concerned with the weather, with many mentions of winds, rain and thunderstorms. Summers in modern Anyang feature torrential bursts of rainfall, especially in July, triggered when the East Asian Monsoon collides with cold air from the
Loess Plateau The Loess Plateau is a plateau in north-central China formed of loess, a clastic rock, clastic silt-like sediment formed by the accumulation of Dust#Atmospheric, wind-blown dust. It is located southeast of the Gobi Desert and is surrounded by t ...
on the eastern slopes of the
Taihang Mountains The Taihang Mountains () are a Chinese mountain range running down the eastern edge of the Loess Plateau in Shanxi, Henan and Hebei provinces. The range extends over from north to south and has an average elevation of ; its principal peak is ...
. From late April to early June the region is buffeted by unpredictable and occasionally damaging winds. During the Late Shang period, summers in the Anyang area were only about warmer than at present, and might be expected to have had similar weather. In contrast, Late Shang winters were warmer and thus milder and wetter than in modern times. This is confirmed by several inscriptions referring to rain and even thunderstorms in the winter months. It is likely that the growing season was longer in Late Shang times, beginning as early as January or February. Divinations relating to planting are recorded between late December and mid-February, and a few dated appeals to the powers for rain (crucial for newly planted and sprouting crops) occur early in the year. The Yellow River plain to the east and south of Anyang may have received even more rain than the area of the capital. At that time, most of northern China was covered with deciduous broadleaf forests, in which large animals such as elephants, rhinoceros and tigers roamed. Inscriptions refer to organizing labour to clear lands for farming. Kings often combined their frequent hunts with surveying and clearing new lands to be opened. The connection is reflected in the extension of the noun 'field' to a verb 'hunt' (take to the field) in inscriptions from period III. The Shang kept cattle, sheep, pigs, dogs and horses. Many inscriptions describe sacrifices of large numbers of cattle, sheep, pigs and dogs, which were presumably consumed in ritual feasts by the Shang elite. Horses were used to draw chariots for royal hunts and as command vehicles on military expeditions. Many royal burials at Anyang feature sacrificial horses, often together with chariots.


Industries

As well as a political and ritual centre, Yinxu was also a centre of craft production. Artisans were clustered in highly specialized production zones in different parts of the site. Their lodgings appear to have been of better quality than those of the common people, suggesting a higher status. Some workshops, particularly those producing bronze or worked jade, appear to have been under direct royal control.


Bronze

The best-known craft of the Shang was the production of bronze objects. Bronze and the piece-mould process were used from the Erlitou culture, and continued with increasing sophistication and volume of production up to the Late Shang period. The main items produced were ritual vessels, weapons, tools and chariot fittings. Many types of ritual vessel were produced, the most common being the wine goblet and the pouring vessel, which were often found paired. Next most numerous were various kinds of cauldron. These vessels were decorated with intricate motifs, requiring extensive labour from a variety of highly skilled artisans. Towards the end of the period (Yinxu IV), artisans tended to focus on a smaller number of vessel types and decorative styles. Vessels produced at Yinxu have been found in elite burials within Yinxu and also across the North China Plain and the adjacent regions to the west. Many of these vessels bear brief inscriptions, often just clan insignia. Longer inscriptions tend to come from the Yinxu IV period. A wide variety of bronze weapons were produced by the Yinxu foundries, many of whose designs were influenced by Yangtze cultures or northern cultures. Elaborately decorated weapons often signified status within Shang society. Some graves featured axes that were too heavy for use in combat and probably awarded as a mark of military command. A small proportion of bronze implements were tools, usually lacking decoration and used for woodworking rather than farming. The foundries also produced various fittings for the chariots used by the elite for hunting and as military command vehicles. Handheld bronze bells, in height, have also been found, sometimes in sets of three with matching decoration but random pitch relationship. Six bronze foundries have been found at Yinxu, though they may not all have been operating at the same time. One of these, located south of the temple-palace complex, operated throughout the period. The largest centre of bronze production consisted of two foundries apart in the West Zone of the Yinxu site, which operated in the second half of the period. The volume of bronze production under the Late Shang was many times greater that at Zhengzhou and without parallel elsewhere in the ancient world. For example, the mid-sized tomb of Fu Hao contained of bronze objects, and it seems likely that the looted royal tombs originally contained many times as much bronze, exemplified by isolated finds such as the
Houmuwu Ding The Houmuwu ''ding'' (), also called Simuwu ''ding'' (), is a rectangular bronze '' ding'' (sacrificial vessel, one of the common types of Chinese ritual bronzes) of the ancient Chinese Shang dynasty. It is the heaviest piece of bronzeware to s ...
. The sheer volume of production implies considerable mobilization of labour and specialization. The huge amount of metals required were obtained from other regions, especially the middle Yangtze, with some from distant northeastern Yunnan.


Ceramics

Large amounts of grey-ware pottery, produced from local clays, were used for a variety of purposes at all levels of society. Vessel designs and decoration were directly descended from Erlitou and Erligang pottery, with some elements traceable back to the Henan
Longshan culture The Longshan culture, also sometimes referred to as the Black Pottery Culture, was a late Neolithic culture in the middle and lower Yellow River valley areas of northern China from about 3000 to 1900 BC. The first archaeological find of this cu ...
. These vessels were produced across the North China Plain and regions to the west, with variations in each area. The most common type was the , a tripod cooking pot. Shang workshops also produced much smaller amounts of luxury white pottery, richly decorated with motifs similar to those found on bronze and other artifacts. The clay from which they were made is found in the Anyang area, but the workshops that produced them have not been identified. The pottery workshops also produced the moulds and crucibles used for casting bronze.


Bone and ivory

Chinese use of worked bone objects peaked in the Late Shang period. Extensive bone working took place both in households and in large specialized workshops. One workshop, in the eastern part of the settlement, has been systematically excavated, with a single trench on the site yielding of worked and unworked bones. The most common products were decorative pins, awls and arrowheads. More than 20 times more arrowheads of bone have been found than those of bronze. Other items include flat plates, tubes,
ocarina The ocarina (otherwise known as a potato flute) is a wind musical instrument; it is a type of vessel flute. Variations exist, but a typical ocarina is an enclosed space with four to twelve finger holes and a mouthpiece that projects from the bo ...
s and handles. Many elite tombs feature fine objects carved from the ivory of elephants and boars.


Stone working

Various kinds of stone were available from the foothills of the
Taihang Mountains The Taihang Mountains () are a Chinese mountain range running down the eastern edge of the Loess Plateau in Shanxi, Henan and Hebei provinces. The range extends over from north to south and has an average elevation of ; its principal peak is ...
just to the west of Anyang. The most common stone products were knives and sickles. A workshop excavated in Xiaotun yielded thousands of
slate Slate is a fine-grained, foliated, homogeneous, metamorphic rock derived from an original shale-type sedimentary rock composed of clay or volcanic ash through low-grade, regional metamorphism. It is the finest-grained foliated metamorphic ro ...
sickles, some unfinished, suggesting mass production organized by the state. Stone axes and shovels were also common. Many workshops produced finely carved decorative and ritual objects of
marble Marble is a metamorphic rock consisting of carbonate minerals (most commonly calcite (CaCO3) or Dolomite (mineral), dolomite (CaMg(CO3)2) that have recrystallized under the influence of heat and pressure. It has a crystalline texture, and is ty ...
and
jade Jade is an umbrella term for two different types of decorative rocks used for jewelry or Ornament (art), ornaments. Jade is often referred to by either of two different silicate mineral names: nephrite (a silicate of calcium and magnesium in t ...
. A small workshop within the temple-palace complex produced a variety of sculpted jade objects. Sculptures featured human figures and both real and mythical animals. All known examples of marble sculpture were found in royal tombs. Many jade objects were found in the tomb of Fu Hao. Decorated limestone sounding stones have been recovered from several tombs.


Trade

As of the 2010s, archaeological investigation of exchange networks was in its infancy, and many details remain unclear. However, it is clear that the capital required a continuous supply of materials of many kinds, some of which may have been exchanged for products of the Yinxu workshops. The bronze foundries of Yinxu required huge amounts of metal, most of which was sourced from the Yangtze region, with additional sources in Shandong and the Qinling mountains. Most bronzes from phases I and II contain high-radiogenic
lead Lead () is a chemical element; it has Chemical symbol, symbol Pb (from Latin ) and atomic number 82. It is a Heavy metal (elements), heavy metal that is density, denser than most common materials. Lead is Mohs scale, soft and Ductility, malleabl ...
, with the proportion reducing in phase III and then disappearing. This unusual type appears to have originated from northeastern Yunnan. It is also common in bronzes from
Sanxingdui Sanxingdui () is an archaeological site and a major Bronze Age culture in modern Guanghan, Sichuan, China. Largely discovered in 1986, following a preliminary finding in 1927, archaeologists excavated artifacts that radiocarbon dating placed ...
in northern Sichuan, and also bronzes from the upper Han River valley from the same period, suggesting that the Late Shang obtained metals from Sanxingdui via the upper Han valley. Thin
stoneware Stoneware is a broad class of pottery fired at a relatively high temperature, to be impervious to water. A modern definition is a Vitrification#Ceramics, vitreous or semi-vitreous ceramic made primarily from stoneware clay or non-refractory fire ...
vessels found around Anyang, some glazed, were probably imported from the Yangtze region. Over 30 high-temperature kilns producing nearly identical wares have been found at the Dongtiaoxi site in northern
Zhejiang ) , translit_lang1_type2 = , translit_lang1_info2 = ( Hangzhounese) ( Ningbonese) (Wenzhounese) , image_skyline = 玉甑峰全貌 - panoramio.jpg , image_caption = View of the Yandang Mountains , image_map = Zhejiang i ...
. Similar wares were produced by the
Wucheng culture The Wucheng culture (吳城文化) was a Bronze Age archaeological culture in Jiangxi, China. The initial site, spread out over , was discovered at Wucheng Township, Jiangxi. Located on the Gan River, the site was first excavated in 1973. The Wuch ...
in the
Gan River The Gan River (, Gan: Kōm-kong) runs north through the western part of Jiangxi before flowing into Lake Poyang and thus the Yangtze River. The Xiang-Gan uplands separate it from the Xiang River of neighboring eastern Hunan. Two similarly siz ...
valley. Some evidence suggests experimentation with these techniques at various northern sites to meet the elite demand for these vessels. Many
cowrie Cowrie or cowry () is the common name for a group of small to large sea snails in the family Cypraeidae. Cowrie shells have held cultural, economic, and ornamental significance in various cultures. The cowrie was the shell most widely used wo ...
shells have been found among the grave goods of elite tombs. Based on interpretations of Western Zhou inscriptions, many scholars have argued that they were a form of money, but direct evidence is lacking and the issue is still disputed. Whether markets existed in the Late Shang period is similarly disputed.


Legacy

At the time of the reigns of the last two Shang kings, courtyard buildings using Shang techniques and oracle bones inscribed in a distinctive style appeared in the Zhouyuan ('plain of Zhou') region of western
Shaanxi Shaanxi is a Provinces of China, province in north Northwestern China. It borders the province-level divisions of Inner Mongolia to the north; Shanxi and Henan to the east; Hubei, Chongqing, and Sichuan to the south; and Gansu and Ningxia to t ...
. The Zhou conquest of the Shang is marked in the material record by the abrupt appearance throughout the
Wei River The Wei River () is a major river in west-central China's Gansu and Shaanxi provinces. It is the largest tributary of the Yellow River and very important in the early development of Chinese civilization. In ancient times, such as in the Records ...
valley, formerly a materially backward area, of large numbers of bronze vessels, inscriptions, buildings and rich burials, all in Late Shang styles. It is likely that the Zhou moved all the artisans from Yinxu to their ritual centre (the Zhouyuan) in the northern Wei valley. To legitimate their rule, the Zhou adopted these and other Shang features, including ancestor ritual, divination and the calendar based on the sexagenary cycle. However, the Late Shang practice of human sacrifice was simply forgotten. Above all, the Zhou recognized and developed the role of writing for administration and state authority.


Relation to traditional accounts

Sima Qian's account of the Shang dynasty is found in chapter 3 of his ''Historical Records'', the "Basic Annals of Yin". This chapter has the form of a list of pre-dynastic ancestors and kings, extended with didactic anecdotes about some kings, but nothing at all about others. The bare king list is repeated in the genealogical table in chapter 13. King lists were maintained by many early states, not only in China but also in the Middle East and the Americas, as a means of legitimizing the current ruler by tracing a linear succession back the founder. Sima Qian presented the Shang list as part of a linear sequence of dynasties and rulers stretching from the
Yellow Emperor The Yellow Emperor, also known as the Yellow Thearch, or Huangdi ( zh, t=黃帝, s=黄帝, first=t) in Chinese, is a mythical Chinese sovereign and culture hero included among the legendary Three Sovereigns and Five Emperors. He is revered as ...
to his own day. Archaeological discoveries have revealed a much more complex picture of the Late Shang period, with other regional powers such as
Sanxingdui Sanxingdui () is an archaeological site and a major Bronze Age culture in modern Guanghan, Sichuan, China. Largely discovered in 1986, following a preliminary finding in 1927, archaeologists excavated artifacts that radiocarbon dating placed ...
in the
Sichuan Basin The Sichuan Basin (), formerly transliterated as the Szechwan Basin, sometimes called the Red Basin, is a lowland region in southwestern China. It is surrounded by mountains on all sides and is drained by the upper Yangtze River and its tributar ...
and the
Wucheng culture The Wucheng culture (吳城文化) was a Bronze Age archaeological culture in Jiangxi, China. The initial site, spread out over , was discovered at Wucheng Township, Jiangxi. Located on the Gan River, the site was first excavated in 1973. The Wuch ...
on the
Gan River The Gan River (, Gan: Kōm-kong) runs north through the western part of Jiangxi before flowing into Lake Poyang and thus the Yangtze River. The Xiang-Gan uplands separate it from the Xiang River of neighboring eastern Hunan. Two similarly siz ...
. However, the cyclical names of Sima Qian's king list accurately reflect those reconstructed from the ritual schedule, and many of the prefixes also match, especially for later kings. Sima Qian states that he drew stories from the ''
Classic of Poetry The ''Classic of Poetry'', also ''Shijing'' or ''Shih-ching'', translated variously as the ''Book of Songs'', ''Book of Odes'', or simply known as the ''Odes'' or ''Poetry'' (; ''Shī''), is the oldest existing collection of Chinese poetry, co ...
'' and the ''
Book of Documents The ''Book of Documents'' ( zh, p=Shūjīng, c=書經, w=Shu King) or the ''Classic of History'', is one of the Five Classics of ancient Chinese literature. It is a collection of rhetorical prose attributed to figures of ancient China, a ...
''. In particular he relied heavily on a collection of prefaces to each of the ''Documents'', which scholars believe was added either late in the
Warring States The Warring States period in Chinese history (221 BC) comprises the final two and a half centuries of the Zhou dynasty (256 BC), which were characterized by frequent warfare, bureaucratic and military reforms, and struggles for gre ...
period or early in the Han dynasty. Scholars have traced elements to other Warring States texts. Some elements of these anecdotes are clearly mythical. Sima Qian's account, like other early chapters of the ''Records'', is coloured with the values, concepts and governmental structures of the Han period. Another account of the Shang dynasty is found in the ''
Bamboo Annals The ''Bamboo Annals'' ( zh, t=竹書紀年, p=Zhúshū Jìnián), also known as the ''Ji Tomb Annals'' ( zh, t=汲冢紀年, p=Jí Zhǒng Jìnián), is a chronicle of ancient China. It begins in the earliest legendary time (the age of the Yellow E ...
'', a chronicle of the
state of Wei Wei (; ) was one of the seven major State (Ancient China), states during the Warring States period of ancient China. It was created from the three-way Partition of Jin, together with Han (Warring States), Han and Zhao (state), Zhao. Its territo ...
buried in the early 3rd century BC and recovered in the late 3rd century AD, but lost before the
Song dynasty The Song dynasty ( ) was an Dynasties of China, imperial dynasty of China that ruled from 960 to 1279. The dynasty was founded by Emperor Taizu of Song, who usurped the throne of the Later Zhou dynasty and went on to conquer the rest of the Fiv ...
. Two versions exist today: an "ancient text" assembled from quotations in other works and a fuller "current text" that many scholars believe to be a forgery. Even the "ancient text" contains elements that must have been added after the work was unearthed. Both the ''Records'' and the ''Bamboo Annals'' record several re-locations of the Shang capital. According to the "ancient text" version of the ''Bamboo Annals'', the final move was by Wu Ding's uncle
Pan Geng Pán Gēng (), personal name Zi Xun, was a Shang dynasty King of China. He is best known for having moved the capital of the Shang dynasty to its final location at Yinxu, Yīn. Records In the ''Records of the Grand Historian'' he was listed by ...
to a place called (). Pan Geng's move to Yin was also described in the ''Book of Documents'' chapter "Pan Geng", which is thought to date from the Eastern Zhou period. In contrast, Sima Qian describes Pan Geng as moving to the original Shang capital () south of the
Yellow River The Yellow River, also known as Huanghe, is the second-longest river in China and the List of rivers by length, sixth-longest river system on Earth, with an estimated length of and a Drainage basin, watershed of . Beginning in the Bayan H ...
, followed by a move back north of the river by Wu Yi (or the preceding king
Geng Ding Kang Ding (康丁) or Geng Ding (庚丁) was a king of the Shang dynasty of China His given name is Xiao (嚣). He got his throne in the year of Jiawu (甲午) and his capital was at Yin (殷). Regin disputes Different sources suggest differen ...
according to chapter 13). However, there is no clear evidence for any kings before Wu Ding at the Yinxu site. Both accounts call the state and its capital rather than (). The theory that the dynasty was called up to Pan Geng's relocation of the capital and afterwards first appeared in the ''Diwang shiji'' by
Huangfu Mi Huangfu Mi (c. 215 – 282), courtesy name Shi'an (), was a Chinese physician, essayist, historian, poet, and writer who lived through the late Eastern Han dynasty, Three Kingdoms period and early Western Jin dynasty. He was born in a poor farmi ...
(3rd century AD). They also feature later usages not found in the oracle bones, such as calling the rulers 'emperor' ( ) rather than 'king' ( ), and using () for 'year' rather than (). Neither account uses the date forms found on the oracle bones. They also do not mention the royal consorts, who feature prominently in the rituals recorded on the oracle bones. Both accounts describe a preceding
Xia dynasty The Xia dynasty (; ) is the first dynasty in traditional Chinese historiography. According to tradition, it was established by the legendary figure Yu the Great, after Emperor Shun, Shun, the last of the Three Sovereigns and Five Emperors, Fiv ...
, which is not mentioned in Shang inscriptions. Authors of the received texts seem unaware of the human sacrifice that was central to Shang ritual and is amply attested in archaeological finds. Western Zhou authors reproach the last Shang kings for drunkenness and licentiousness, but do not mention human sacrifice. In contrast, the concept of royal virtue is absent from Shang inscriptions.


See also

*
Shang archaeology Shang archaeology is concerned with the archaeological evidence for the Chinese Shang dynasty. Choice of excavation sites and interpretation of finds have been heavily influenced by the textual historical record. Excavation sites The earliest ...


Notes


References


Works cited

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * (English translation of ''Wénzìxué Gàiyào'' 文字學概要, Shangwu, 1988.) * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *


Further reading

* * * {{refend Shang dynasty Bronze Age in China