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Chapter 5. Early Society in East Asia. The Yellow River. Huang He 3000 Miles: Tibet to the Yellow Sea Deposits fertile, light colored soil Periodic flooding: “China’s sorrow”. Prehistoric Society: Yangshao. 5000-3000 BCE Middle region of the Yellow River valley Banpo Village
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Chapter 5 Early Society in East Asia
The Yellow River • Huang He • 3000 Miles: Tibet to the Yellow Sea • Deposits fertile, light colored soil • Periodic flooding: “China’s sorrow”
Prehistoric Society: Yangshao • 5000-3000 BCE • Middle region of the Yellow River valley • Banpo Village • Painted pottery • Bronze tools
The Earliest Dynasties The Xia, Shang, and Zhou dynasties, 220-256 BCE • Xia • C. 2200 BCE • Organized through village network • Hereditary monarchy • Flood control • Shang • 1766-1122 BCE • Zhou • 1122-256 BCE
Shang Dynasty • Bronze metallurgy • State monopoly • Horse-drawn chariots, other wheeled vehicles • Large armies • Political organization: network of fortified cities, loyal to center • 1000 cities • Capital moved six times • Impressive architecture at Ao, Yin • Other regional kingdoms coexist: Sanxingdui
Shang Dynasty Burial Practices • Hierarchical social structure • Live burials alongside deceased member of ruling class • Sacrificial victims, mostly slaves • Wives, servants, friends, hunting companions • Later replaced by statuary, often monumental
Zhou Dynasty, 1122-256 BCE • No law codes: rule by decree • “Mandate of Heaven” • Aggregation of villages opposed to Shang leadership • Decentralization of authority • Development of cheap iron weaponry ends Shang monopoly on Bronze • Early money economy
Decline of the Zhou Dynasty • Decentralized leadership style allows for building of regional powers • Increasing local independence, refusal to pay Zhou taxes • Iron metallurgy allows for widespread creation of weaponry • Northern invaders weaken Zhou dynasty, beginning 8th c BCE • Internal dissention: the Period of the Warring States (403-221 BCE)
Social Order • Ruling classes great advantage • Palatial compounds, luxurious lifestyle • Supported by agricultural surplus, tax revenues • Defended by monopoly on bronze weaponry • Hereditary privilege • Support class of artisans, craftsmen • Evidence of long-distance trade, merchant class • Large class of semi servile peasants • Slave class
Family and Patriarchy • Devotion to family, ancestor veneration • Connection of spirit world to physical world • Ritual sacrifices • Father ritual head of family rites • Earlier prominence of individual female leaders fades in later Shang, Zhou dynasties
Oracle Bones and Early Chinese Writing • Used for communicating with spirit world, determining future • Question written on animal bones, turtle shells • Then heated over fire, cracks examined for omens • Early archaeological evidence of Chinese writing • Evolution of Chinese script • Pictograph to ideograph
Zhou Literature • The reflections of Confucius • Book of Changes • Manual for divination • Book of History • Book of Etiquette (Book of Rites) • Book of Songs • Little survived • Often written on perishable bamboo strips • Many destroyed by Emperor of Qin dynasty in 221 BCE
Nomadic Peoples of Central Asia • Steppe nomads • Poor lands for cultivation, extensive herding activities • Horses domesticated c. 4000 BCE, bronze metallurgy in 2900 BCE • Extensive trade with sedentary cultures in China • Tensions: frequent raiding
Southern Expansion of Chinese Society • Yangzi Valley • Yangzi river: Chang Jiang, “long river” • Excellent for rice cultivation • Irrigation system developed • The State of Chu • Autonomous, challenged Zhou dynasty • Culture heavily influenced by Chinese