The
Dawn of History in China
Thousands of
archaeological finds in the Huang He Valley--the
apparent cradle of Chinese civilization--provide
evidence about the Shang dynasty, which endured roughly
from 1700 to 1027 B.C. The Shang dynasty (also called
the Yin dynasty in its later stages) is believed to have
been founded by a rebel leader who overthrew the last
Xia ruler. Its civilization was based on agriculture,
augmented by hunting and animal husbandry. Two important
events of the period were the development of a writing
system, as revealed in archaic Chinese inscriptions
found on tortoise shells and flat cattle bones (commonly
called oracle bones), and the use of bronze metallurgy.
A number of ceremonial bronze vessels with inscriptions
date from the Shang period; the workmanship on the
bronzes attests to a high level of civilization.
A line of hereditary
Shang kings ruled over much of northern China, and Shang
troops fought frequent wars with neighboring settlements
and nomadic herdsmen from the inner Asian steppes. The
capitals, one of which was at the site of the modern
city of Anyang, were centers of glittering court life.
Court rituals to propitiate spirits and to honor sacred
ancestors were highly developed. In addition to his
secular position, the king was the head of the ancestor-
and spirit-worship cult. Evidence from the royal tombs
indicates that royal personages were buried with
articles of value, presumably for use in the afterlife.
Perhaps for the same reason, hundreds of commoners, who
may have been slaves, were buried alive with the royal
corpse.
The
Zhou Period
The last Shang ruler,
a despot according to standard Chinese accounts, was
overthrown by a chieftain of a frontier tribe called
Zhou, which had settled in the Wei Valley in modern
Shaanxi Province. The Zhou dynasty had its capital at
Hao, near the city of Xi'an, or Chang'an, as it was
known in its heyday in the imperial period. Sharing the
language and culture of the Shang, the early Zhou
rulers, through conquest and colonization, gradually
sinicized, that is, extended Shang culture through much
of China
Proper (see Glossary) north of the Chang Jiang
(Yangtze River). The Zhou dynasty lasted longer than any
other, from 1027 to 221 B.C. It was philosophers of this
period who first enunciated the doctrine of the
"mandate of heaven" (tianming), the
notion that the ruler (the "son of heaven")
governed by divine right but that his dethronement would
prove that he had lost the mandate. The doctrine
explained and justified the demise of the two earlier
dynasties and at the same time supported the legitimacy
of present and future rulers.
The term feudal
has often been applied to the Zhou period because the
Zhou's early decentralized rule invites comparison with
medieval rule in Europe. At most, however, the early
Zhou system was proto-feudal, being a more sophisticated
version of earlier tribal organization, in which
effective control depended more on familial ties than on
feudal legal bonds. Whatever feudal elements there may
have been decreased as time went on. The Zhou amalgam of
city-states became progressively centralized and
established increasingly impersonal political and
economic institutions. These developments, which
probably occurred in the latter Zhou period, were
manifested in greater central control over local
governments and a more routinized agricultural taxation.
In 771 B.C. the Zhou
court was sacked, and its king was killed by invading
barbarians who were allied with rebel lords. The capital
was moved eastward to Luoyang in present-day Henan
Province. Because of this shift, historians divide the
Zhou era into Western Zhou (1027-771 B.C.) and Eastern
Zhou (770-221 B.C.). With the royal line broken, the
power of the Zhou court gradually diminished; the
fragmentation of the kingdom accelerated. Eastern Zhou
divides into two subperiods. The first, from 770 to 476
B.C., is called the Spring and Autumn Period, after a
famous historical chronicle of the time; the second is
known as the Warring States Period (475-221 B.C.).
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