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  • It is commonly said that China is one of the  oldest continuously existing civilizations in  

  • the world. However, if you took a modern  Chinese person, or even a subject of the  

  • Middle Kingdom's medieval dynasties, and  transplanted them into China's ancient bronze age,  

  • they would likely find the people of  that time utterly alien in language,  

  • religion and custom. In this video, we will  be examining the earliest origins of one of  

  • the world's most esteemed civilizations, with  an emphasis on the Kingdoms of Shang and Zhou,  

  • exploring exactly how far back in historyrecognizably Chinese culture can be traced.

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  • While it is said that Chinese  history is 5,000 years old,  

  • many of its iconic features are comparatively much  more recent. For example, the mandate of heaven,  

  • the beating heart of Chinese historiography which  frames the rise and fall of Imperial dynasties,  

  • did not crystallize into a solid concept  until the rise of the Zhou around 3,000 years  

  • ago. Meanwhile, staples of Chinese social  doctrine, like Confucianism and Buddhism,  

  • only started becoming mainstream parts of society  during the Han dynasty of around 2,000 years ago.  

  • Throughout history, the territory, religionscultures and languages that constituteChina”  

  • have undergone massive change, which problematizes  the idea of China as a linearly continuous 5,000  

  • year old civilization. So, how far back can one  go can still see something recognizably 'Chinese?' 

  • As it is with myriad other nations, the origins  of Chinese civilization in the popular narrative  

  • is shrouded in fantastic folklore, replete  with various mythical Emperors and Sage Kings  

  • possessed of various supernatural powersPerhaps the most famous of these is Yu the Great,  

  • who around 4,000 years ago stopped a devastating  flood of the Yellow River by personally dredging  

  • it with his superhuman strength. Thereafter, Yu  became the first ruler of a hereditary domain,  

  • known as the Xia, traditionally considered to be  China's first dynasty. In modern historiography,  

  • Yu, and the Xia dynasty have been consigned  to the realm of myth and folklore, as little  

  • archaeological evidence and no literary  records from this primordial era survives

  • With that said, modern archaeology has discovered  various prehistoric material culture complexes  

  • along the Yangtze and Yellow rivers dating  back at least 4,000 years, such as the Erlitou  

  • culture. These societies may well have ties  to the myth of Yu and his predecessors,  

  • especially since they were farming cultures who  relied on the capricious flow of the Yellow River.  

  • However, as they were pre-literate communitiesand left no written record of themselves, we have  

  • no way of knowing if they were the cultural  or linguistic predecessors of the Chinese

  • Let us now set the clock to the dying years  of China's last imperial dynasty. In 1899,  

  • a malaria epidemic erupted in Beijing. At  the time, it was believed that the cure  

  • to this disease was to grind up ancient  dragon bones and mak e a soup from them.  

  • Taking advantage of this fad, peasants from  Anyang village in Henan Province began digging  

  • old ox bones and turtle shells out of the  ground and passing them off as dragon remains.  

  • Many of these bones had odd scratchings on themFearing these marrings would lower their value,  

  • the peasants of Anyang smoothed them off  before selling them. However, some of these  

  • specimens soon circulated into the hands of  a scholar, who realized something remarkable:  

  • these etchings were, infact, a hitherto unknown  form of ancient Chinese writing, so different  

  • from the modern Chinese script that the peasants  had no clue what they were defacing. Henceforth,  

  • archaeologists flooded into Anyang, and discovered  something remarkable: an ancient settlement, and  

  • 3,200 year old seat of the royal house of Shang. The Shang state, which extended over only a small  

  • portion of modern China, is considered the  first historically attested Chinese polity  

  • because unlike the Xia state which supposedly  predated them by centuries, the Shang left  

  • behind an observable written record in the form of  those aforementioned bones. Known to scholars as  

  • 'oracle bones', the archaic characters written  upon them represent questions posed by the people  

  • of Shang to the spirits, such as if the lady of  their royal family would give birth to a son,  

  • whether they should attack neighboring  tribes, or whether sacrifices should be made.  

  • The oracle bones were then tossed into a fireand the manner in which the heat cracked the bone  

  • along the writing determining the spirit's answer. Few in the historical community deny that the  

  • 3,200 year old remains found at Anyang represent  a culture directly ancestral to modern China.  

  • The most glaring testament to this lies  in their written languages. The runes  

  • etched onto Shang oracle bones represent cleararchaic versions of modern Chinese characters,  

  • which allows us to infer that, at least  amongst their elite and priestly castes,  

  • their spoken language was ancestral  to today's Chinese dialects as well

  • Moreover, our limited window into Shang  spiritualism reveals many familiar  

  • Chinese features. As is still the case in  many contemporary households in Taiwan,  

  • Hong Kong and the mainland, the worship of family  ancestors was a core pillar of Shang society.  

  • Shang Kings in particular appeared to draw their  power from the spirits of their royal ancestors.  

  • Through this, a hierarchy existed, in which  the long dead outranked the recently dead,  

  • who outranked the Shang King, who outranked  all other living humans. The importance of  

  • ancestors is further emphasized in how the Shang  created great sacrificial vessels out of bronze,  

  • in which was placed wine and various cooked dishes  for the enjoyment of their long deceased kin.  

  • On top of human ancestors, the Shang also  worshiped a variety of nature spirits,  

  • and had a chief deity, Di, who determined the  natural order and the fate of Kingdoms. Di,  

  • whose name shares the modern Chinese character for  'Emperor', would play an incredibly important role  

  • in the Chinese psyche for millenia to come. In government, the Shang polity also seems to  

  • have resembled an early version  of later Chinese statecraft.  

  • The ancient Shang were ruled by a hereditary  monarch and his royal family, which presided  

  • over a bureaucratic court of appointed individuals  with specialized departments of responsibility.  

  • This can be seen as a precursor to the highly  centralized courts of later Chinese dynasties  

  • such as the Han, Song, and Qing which would  emerge thousands of years down the line.  

  • Indeed, the literati of those later  dynasties considered the Shang to be  

  • their direct cultural predecessors. For examplein his sweeping work on the history of China,  

  • the historian Sima Qian of the Han dynasty  wrote a genealogical account of the house of  

  • Shang, in which he names several of their Kingsincluding Wu Ding, who reigned around the time the  

  • city at Anyang was at its height. However, unlike  his accounting of the Yellow Emperor and the Xia,  

  • Sima Qian's attestations of the Shang can be  corroborated with hard archaeological evidence,  

  • as the names of the Shang Kings he writes about  also appear on the oracle bones found at Anyang

  • With all that said, the Shang Kingdom was still  a drastically different state than what one would  

  • expect from a typical Chinese dynasty, with many  features of Shang society not considered part of  

  • conventional Chinese cultural continuity. For one  thing, Shang gender roles appear very different  

  • from the later Chinese norm. This is exemplified  by the perhaps the most remarkable of finds at the  

  • Anyang archaeological site: the tomb of Lady HaoFound interred in a massive mausoleum alongside  

  • thousands of ornate luxuries of jade, ivory and  bronze, Fu Hao was one of the sixty-four consorts  

  • of the aforementioned King Wu Ding. Howeverfar from lounging around in a royal harem, Fu  

  • Hao was a renowned warrior who led her own armies  and launched conquests into neighboring states,  

  • all while owning and administering her own lands  outside the capital, essentially making her a  

  • critical member of the Shang military aristocracyWhile many famous women would serve as warriors  

  • throughout Chinese history, the remains of  Fu Hao is evidence that in the Shang realm,  

  • female fief-holders and military leaders were  a normalized part of the state apparatus,  

  • a highly unusual idea for China's later  dynasties, for whom, at least ostensibly,  

  • women were far less politically active. In her campaigns, Fu Hao took many captives  

  • from foreign tribes, who would then be used as  ritual victims in cult rites. This brings us  

  • to the topic of human sacrifice, a gruesome staple  of Shang religion. The mass slaughter of hundreds,  

  • if not thousands of captives wascommon occurrence at the Shang capital,  

  • and while human sacrifice would persist for some  centuries after the Shang's eventual collapse,  

  • it would become a taboo and ultimately abolished  practice by the time of the Han dynasty

  • Perhaps the largest thing holding the Shang  apart from later Chinese dynasties was that  

  • in all likelihood, its demographic makeup was  hardly Chinese to begin with. Deep in antiquity,  

  • the area that is now modern China was far more  ethnically and linguistically diverse than today,  

  • with vast swathes of it inhabited by speakers  of non-Chinese tongues potentially ancestral  

  • to todays' Viet, Thai, and Tibetan languagesamong many others. This was likely the case  

  • even in the Shang's Yellow River valley heartlandThus, while later Chinese dynasties ruled during  

  • eras where the Chinese language and writing system  had assimilated more evenly across the land, the  

  • Shang state resembled more a deeply multicultural  feudal confederacy, with the ancestrally Chinese  

  • writing system seen on their oracle bones used  mainly by their elite caste and royal house.  

  • To add on to this, Shang Kings seem  to have led highly mobile lives,  

  • constantly riding around to ensure the loyalty  of their many militant confederates. This is  

  • a big contrast to later Chinese Emperors, who  were largely confined to their massive palaces

  • It therefore follows that the Shang were  constantly absorbing foreign influences  

  • into their culture. The use of chariots in  war, for example, was likely adopted from an  

  • indo-European speaking Caucasian people, native  to the modern Xinjiang desert, and ancestrally  

  • related to many of todays' European and Northern  Indian populations. Later Chinese dynasties would,  

  • of course, absorb cultural practices from  their non-Chinese neighbors too. However,  

  • while from the Han Dynasty onwards, Chinese  high culture was the sun around which all  

  • east Asia orbited around, during the Shang  Dynasty, the proto-Chinese world was but one  

  • of many mid-sized realms, likely no more or less  influential than many other states in the region

  • Ultimately, the Shang polity's relationship to the  cultural continuity of Chinese civilization is a  

  • complex one. It is perhaps best described asChinese state that existed before Chinese culture  

  • had become aware of its own identity and special  nature. A good historical parallel could be early  

  • Rome when it was but a small city-state among the  many diverse peoples of the Italian Peninsula,  

  • oblivious to the thousands of years of deeply  established Imperial tradition it was starting.  

  • For China, the core of those  Imperial traditions would begin  

  • with the successors of the Shang, the Zhou. Originally, the Zhou were one of the Shang's  

  • many vassals. They were a semi-nomadic peopleand perhaps speakers of a non-Chinese language.  

  • If tradition is to be believed, then around  1100 BC, their King, Wen, pursued a deliberate  

  • acculturation policy to make his people imitate  the language and patterns of the prestigious  

  • Shang. So prosperous and powerful did King Wen  become that he began to outshine his overlord.  

  • When he died in 1050 BC, his son and heir, King  Wu, would bring tensions with the Shang to a head.  

  • If the hilariously anachronistic account of Sima  Qian is to be believed, then he accomplished  

  • this in a single morning, slaughtering over  500,000 loyal Shang soldiers in the process

  • King Wu of Zhou had overthrown the house of  Shang, but establishing rule over the multitudes  

  • of vassal states the Shang had once controlled  would be no easy feat. The Zhou needed to make  

  • a case as to why the tribes who had once bowed  to the Shang now owed their loyalty to this new  

  • house of overlords. To that end, they utilized  the chief Shang god Di, rebranding him as Tian,  

  • which directly translates to 'sky', but is  generally translated in English as 'heaven'.  

  • King Wu and his successors promoted the idea that  their ascension to power had occurred only because  

  • almighty Heaven, ever omnipotently controlling  the fate of the civilized world, had deemed it  

  • to be so. Furthermore, if the last Shang King  had not been so ruthless, corrupt, or depraved,  

  • then Heaven would not have seen fit to cast  him down and replace him with a new ruler. Thus  

  • was born one of the longest enduring political  philosophies in the world, the mandate of heaven

  • This philosophy might have died in the crib, if  not for the fact that, when King Wu of Zhou died  

  • in 1043 BC, a rebellion broke out in an attempt  to overthrow his heir, who was a powerless child.  

  • This rebellion was put down by one of the late  King's brothers, known to history as the Duke of  

  • Zhou. After emerging victorious, the Duke of Zhou  could easily have deposed his underage nephew and  

  • ruled himself, but he didn't, and ensured the son  of King Wu was restored to his rightful throne,  

  • because it was the child who had been given Tian's  mandate, not he. This set the precedent that the  

  • Mandate of Heaven, by which monarchs could only  be deposed by divine will, not human machinations,  

  • would become a real and active force in  Chinese politics for millenia to come

  • If Shang was an archaic, dubiously Chinese state  not yet aware of its own nature, then the Zhou  

  • was when that awareness began to truly blossomand the prestige of cultural continuity began to  

  • cement in the minds of the Chinese literatiMany elements of Shang courtly life, such as  

  • ancestor worship, divination through bones, and  the written language, were directly continued by  

  • the Zhou royal family, however, the Zhou pushed  the boundaries of their realm further than the  

  • Shang ever had, thereby expanding the influence  of an ever-evolving written Chinese language,  

  • all while improving on the efficiency of the  Chinese feudal bureaucracy seeded by the Shang,  

  • and maintaining their prestige with all  manner of religious and cultural rites

  • In theory, the Zhou Dynasty was the  longest lasting of all Chinese dynasties,  

  • clocking in at nearly 800 years. In practiceits power was effectively crippled about 200  

  • years into its rule, when the Quanronglikely a group of Tibeto-Burman nomads,  

  • sacked their western capital in 771 BC, forcing  them to move their power base east, ultimately  

  • losing control over their vassals and becoming one  of many fractureous Chinese states in the ensuing  

  • Spring and Autumn period and warring states eras. Nevertheless, compared to the Shang, the Zhou era  

  • occupies a titanic place in the Chinese peoplesconcept of their own cultural continuity. Even a  

  • certain Confucius, who was born in the 6th century  BC, 200 years after the collapse of Zhou unity,  

  • predicated his entire philosophy on a nostalgia  for the enlightened rule of the wise Zhou Kings of  

  • eld, wishing to return to a time when their proper  ritual and observance of heaven's will defined  

  • Chinese statecraft, rather than the capricious  warring armies of the divided China he lived in.  

  • Centuries later still, when Buddhism arrived to  China via the silk road in the late Han Dynasty,  

  • many Chinese literati questioned why this strangeforeign Indian religion should be allowed to take  

  • root in their ancient and prestigious cultureIn response, Chinese Buddhists drew upon the  

  • lessons of the Duke of Zhou to explain  why their faith had a place in society

  • All of this serves to route us  back to our original question:  

  • how far back in time can one go, and  see a recognizably 'Chinese' state?  

  • Based on the information explored in our videowe can confidently conclude that the answer is  

  • a definitive 'it depends'. As we have seen, the  idea of what Chinese culture is is ever evolving,  

  • constantly absorbing foreign influences, while old  cultural elements evolve internally or fade away.  

  • If one considers the most archaic written language  and courtly rituals sufficient, then China begins  

  • with the Shang, but if one believes China needs  to be aware of its own cultural continuity to be  

  • China, then it only truly begins with the ZhouIf Confucianism need to be part of the equation,  

  • then we need to go even farther forward, and  this is all before accounting for the many,  

  • many diverse languages and cultures which have  existed within the Chinese state apparatus  

  • all throughout its history, whose members  may interpret their place in Chinese history  

  • differently than the elite Chinese-speaking  literati. With all that said, that China is  

  • a deeply storied civilization with incredibly  ancient roots is a fact that cannot be challenged,  

  • and regardless of how the way we interpret  her story involves, this will always be true.

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  • More videos on the history of China are on  the way, so make sure you are subscribed  

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It is commonly said that China is one of the  oldest continuously existing civilizations in  

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How Old Is Chinese Civilization? - Ancient Civilizations DOCUMENTARY(How Old Is Chinese Civilization? - Ancient Civilizations DOCUMENTARY)

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    香蕉先生 發佈於 2022 年 06 月 28 日
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