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CHINA ARQUEOLOGIA golden-age-chinese-archayeolog

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finds demonstrated that the early Shang culture was closely related to the Erlitou culture found

at Yanshi, Henan province. In other words, the Xia developed from a pre-dynastic Shang influence

in northern Henan and assimilated elements of the more advanced Erlitou culture. Chinese

archaeologists now recognize Phases I to IV of the Erlitou culture as the Xia culture. 2

The Erlitou culture, or the Xia culture — names that we can now begin to use interchangeably—

extended over western Henan and southwestern Shanxi provinces, a region corresponding

to the heartland of the Xia kingdom and its domain as related in the ancient texts.

The Shang city at Zhengzhou has been identified as the capital Bo; Erlitou cultural remains

have been found beneath the Shang city, leading to the logical conclusion that the Erlitou culture

predated that of the early Shang. Carbon-i4 testing has dated Phases I to IV of the Erlitou

culture to between 1600 and 2000 BCE, a period corresponding roughly to that described in

the ancient texts.

The Erlitou culture is the earliest Bronze Age culture discovered in China. Although the

excavated examples are limited, bronzes objects recovered include ritual vessels such as tripod

cauldrons (ding), drinking vessels (jue) fowl-shaped wine containers (yi), and weapons such as

daggers (ge), axes (yue), and arrows (zu). These bronzes were cast using relatively simple techniques

with simple patterns — testimony to an early stage of bronze metallurgy. Jade ritual objects

such as axes (yue), scepters (zhang), and stem-shaped ornaments have also been

discovered at these sites. A considerable number of pottery vessels—a fowl-shaped wine container

(yi) and a tripod drinking vessel (jue), a footed vessel (dou), a basin (pen), and a container

decorated with the sculpted image of a human head (zun) — are similar to, but not identical

with, early Shang examples of pottery. The most exciting find at Erlitou was the discovery of the

large foundations of palaces, the largest of which extended over 10,000 square meters. The

presence of these massive palace-remains suggests the existence of an established sovereign, a

fact corroborated by the ancient texts. 3

ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE SHANG DYNASTY

The Yinxu excavations of 1928-1937 confirmed the importance of the Shang dynasty. The dynasty's

capital at Yinxu, relocated by King Pangeng, however, dates to the late period; from the

standpoint of the archaeological record, what constituted the early phases of Shang culture

still remained a mystery. The large number of bronzes from Yinxu, for example, provided evidence

of an advanced level of bronze metallurgy, and oracle bones testified to an advanced

stage in writing, but these finds also raised questions about origins of Shang material and intellectual

culture. Prior to 1949, the beginnings of the late period of Shang culture, though a

point of lively discussion among historians, remained a mystery.

In 1952, the site of Erligang at Zhengzhou was discovered. The site's stratigraphy and the

types of artifacts recovered indicated unambiguously that the Erligang culture predated the

529 | THE BRONZE ACE

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