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CHINA ARQUEOLOGIA golden-age-chinese-archayeolog

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Bovid scapulas excavated in

1971 from Huayuanzhuang,

Anyang, Henan province;

Shang dynasty.

untouched by the hands of copyists and editors. The inscriptions reveal that divination was one

of the central institutions of the Shang state, for it demonstrated the king's contact with the

powers that ruled the Shang world. The king, known as "I, the one man," was usually the person

who interpreted the cracks, and his forecasts (the recorded outcomes carved into the bones

almost invariably proved him correct) served to legitimate his position and reassure his supporters.

A king such as Wu Ding (the twenty-first Shang king, who died c. 1189 BCE) divined

about most aspects of his life: harvests, rainfall, settlement building, his hunts and excursions,

the mobilization of conscripts, military campaigns and alliances, enemy invasions, the birth of

his children, his health, the meaning of his dreams, the good fortune of the coming ten-day

week and of the night to come, the harm caused by ancestors and other powers (usually in the

form of illness or crop damage), and the successful offering of reports, prayers, rituals, and

sacrifices to his ancestors. Many of the divinations end with the wish that there will be "no

disasters" or "no fault," others with the hope that the powers will provide spiritual assistance.

The oracle-bone inscriptions form the earliest body of writing yet found in eastern Asia.

The Shang engravers employed a repertoire of more than three thousand oracle-bone characters,

many of which exemplify the traditional principles of logographic script and prefigure

specific Chinese characters in use to this day. Many of the Shang values and practices that the

inscriptions document — the concern with ancestor worship and with the powers of nature,

respect for senior generations and kinship ties, the keeping of bureaucratic records, the ability

to mobilize large numbers of workers in the service of the elites, and the close association between

divination, spiritual insight, and worthy leadership — continued to play a strategic role

in later Chinese history. The Shang kings appear to have placed their oracle bones in storage

pits once their usefulness had been exhausted. But the divination inscriptions recorded on

them represent a remarkable legacy, providing us with an intimate sense of the Shang kings'

daily activities, their decision making, and their hopes and fears across a span of over three

thousand years. DNK

i Guo Moruo 1978 -1982.

183 SHANC ORACLE-BONE INSCRIPTIONS

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