10.05.2022 Views

CHINA ARQUEOLOGIA golden-age-chinese-archayeolog

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

A History of Modern Chinese Archaeology

XIAONENGYANG | Traditional Chinese antiquarianism, particularly the jin shi xue (the study of ancient Chinese

bronzes and stone stelae), has endured for one thousand years. 1 In contrast, modern field

archaeology has come to be practiced in China only recently, starting in the early twentieth

century. It is a young sibling if compared with Roman, Greek, and Egyptian archaeology. 2 Modern

Chinese archaeology is distinguished from previous efforts to investigate physical remains

by its scientific methodology of field surveys and excavations.

A series of momentous discoveries during the first decade of the twentieth century —

in particular, the Shang oracle-bone inscriptions at Anyang in Henan province and the Han-

Tang manuscripts, paintings, textiles, and wooden slips from Dunhuang and Jiuquan in Gansu

province, stimulated modern Chinese archaeology. 3 Evolving from traditional sinology, after the

political revolution of 1911 it absorbed the Western disciplines of palaeontology and geology.

Initiated and first practiced in China by Japanese, Russian, and Western scholars and explorers,

most of them self-taught, Chinese archaeology would eventually come to be a province of

Chinese intellectuals.

Despite the interruptions imposed by political and social turmoil, 5 the discipline developed

rapidly over the course of less than a century, and much of China's early history has been

rewritten as a result. The achievements of Chinese archaeologists have drawn attention and

admiration from around the world. Chinese archaeology has in fact entered a golden age, 6 the

result of a developmental process comprising four stages: initiation (18905-19105); formation

(19205-19405), institutionalization (1949-1976), and maturation (1977 to the present).

18905-1910$: INITIATION

Cat. 126, detail

Long known as the "Central Kingdom," China was battered during the nineteenth century and

the first decade of the twentieth century by totalitarianism, poverty, and foreign invasion. In

1911, Chinese intellectuals and patriots engineered the overthrow of the Qing dynasty, and the

Republic of China was established. 7 One of their foremost goals was the pursuit and importation

of science and democracy from the West, epitomized by the May Fourth Movement of

1919. 8 If the door of China was first cracked by foreign forces, it was the Chinese people who

enthusiastically swung it wide open.

Chinese intellectuals eagerly embraced foreign scholarship, including that of Western

archaeologists. Liang Qichao (1873-1929), a key reformer and a leading scholar, was among the

first to apply Western archaeologists' periodization of the prehistoric era to China. His 1901

essay summarizing Chinese history refers to three successive prehistoric periods — delineated

by the use of stone, bronze, and iron tools — a chronology established by the Danish archaeologist

Christian Jiirgensen Thomsen (1788-1865). Although the periods vary in length in different

regions, Liang suggested that the sequence applies to prehistoric China, and he further

posited the existence of a Stone Age before the legendary figure Shen Nong and a bronze age

25

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!