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The Foundation of Chinese Civilization

LATE PREHISTORIC CHINA (c. 5OOO-2OOO BCE)

Cat. 30, detail

Prior to the birth of modern Chinese archaeology, the best accounts of China s prehistory

were the learned sagas contained in the Shiji (Records of the historian) by Sima Qian (c. 145-

86 BCE) or the narratives in the Yuejue shu (c. 40 CE) by Yuan Kang (c. first century CE). The

latter mentions an Eastern Zhou philosopher who claimed that the Iron Age had been preceded

by the Stone Age, the Jade Age, and the Bronze Age. 1 Few people took this four-fold

periodization of human history seriously; most dismissed it as vagary, a position that was maintained

even into the early twentieth century. In the 19105, for example, the Japanese archeologist

Torii Ryuzo discovered what we now know to be Neolithic artifacts in northeastern China

but attributed their manufacture to "barbarian" peoples or minorities inhabiting the peripheries

of China during the dynastic era. 2 Today, after nearly a century of archaeological investigations,

we can discern a panorama of prehistoric China spanning nearly two million years.

Surveys and excavations performed in the Yellow and Yangzi River regions and in northeastern

China have yielded a framework of six coevolving regional traditions that ranges from the

Neolithic to the Chalcolithic Age.

Five of these six regional traditions, representing the late stage of China's prehistory

(c. 5000-2000 BCE), are represented in this exhibition. They comprise the following: in the

middle Yellow River basin, the Yangshao culture, distinguished by its polychrome painted

pottery (cats. 1-5), and one of its late continuations — the Taosi Longshan culture, with a

distinctive painted ceramic style of its own (cats. 25-27); in the upper reaches of the Yellow

River, the Majiayao culture (which also developed out of the Yangshao culture), whose splendid

ceramics incorporate abstract and, more rarely, figural designs (cats. 6-9). The Dawenkou

and Shandong Longshan cultures inhabited the lower Yellow River area; they are represented

here by pottery incised with pictographs and elegant jadework (cats. 23-24). The Hongshan

culture, manifested in its jades, a terra-cotta torso, and ceramics (cats. 10-22), was situated in

northeastern China. The lower Yangzi River delta was peopled by the Liangzhu culture, associated

with jades that feature exquisite miniature carvings (cats. 29-36). The last established

nexus (not included in this exhibition) is in the middle Yangzi River basin, and its late-period

culture, Shijiahe, produced well-known, small-scale animal and human sculptures in terracotta

and jade. 3 These cultures, whose artifacts manifest distinctive characteristics, were the

main forces in the formation of Chinese civilization; each bequeathed its heritage to the later

dynastic cultures.

The most significant contributions of archaeology to our understanding of prehistoric

China are the following: (i) in the absence of reliable written records, archaeology created a

framework for the prehistory of China; (2) it established that the Chinese dynastic civilization

did not originate solely in the Yellow River valley (as had previously been thought), but that it

was formed by a confluence of cultures inhabiting the lands bordering the Yangzi River, northeastern

China, and other areas. The peoples of each region, while interacting with those from

5i

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