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On the origin and formation of the early Qin Culture

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Published/Copyright: November 13, 2018
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Abstract

The early Qin Culture refers to the Qin Culture from the Western Zhou Dynasty to the early Spring-and-Autumn Period. Considering its cultural composition, we will realize that it has three main sources, namely the Shang, Zhou, and Western Rong (Western Barbarian) Cultures. The elements derived from the Shang Culture comprised the furniture of waist pits and the custom of dog burial in graves, the use of human sacrifice, the interment of chariots and horses, the Shang-style pottery wares and the tradition of constructing huge-scale mausoleums. These elements reflect that the Qin people initially came from the east and had strong ties with the Shang Dynasty and were deeply influenced by the Shang Culture, and belonged to the Yin people (after the fall of the Shang Dynasty) in the broader sense. The elements absorbed from the Zhou Culture comprised the architectural types of ancestral temples and palaces, the adoption of the ritual vessels, the suspended musical instruments, the Zhou style pottery wares and the writing system. These elements indicate that the Qin people adopted the ritual and musical culture of the Western Zhou Dynasty, which had a great political significance at the early stage of Qin’s history. The factors derived from the cultures of the Western Rong ethnic group or the northern steppes included the flexed burial position, the golden body ornaments and chariots and horses, iron wares, animal motifs on utensils, recesses on the walls of the burial pits and the ditches around the graves, the use of bronze cauldrons and swords (daggers). Such elements reflect that during the development process in the Longyou region, the Qin people absorbed the cultures of the adjacent Western Rong ethnic group, the Eurasian steppes and farther beyond. The first kind of elements continued to predominate the Qin Culture down to the middle Western Zhou, then the second and the third ones arose from the late Western Zhou to the early Spring-and-Autumn Period, and simultaneously, the first were only present in the aristocratic burial activities. Based on the remnants of the Shang Culture, the early Qin Culture came into being by widely absorbing elements of the Zhou and Western Rong Cultures.


Postscript

The original paper published in Kaogu Xuebao 考古学报 (Acta Archaeologica Sinica) 2017.2:149–74 with nine illustrations is authored by Yun Liang 梁云. This abridged version is prepared by the author and translated into English by Liangren Zhang 张良仁.


References

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Published Online: 2018-11-13
Published in Print: 2018-11-27

© 2018 by Walter de Gruyter, Inc. · Boston · Berlin

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  1. Frontmatter
  2. New archaeological discoveries
  3. The Banlashan Cemetery of Hongshan Culture in Chaoyang City, Liaoning
  4. Surveys and excavations in 2014–2016 at Shijiahe Site in Tianmen City, Hubei
  5. The Imperial City Terrace Locality of the Shimao City Site in Shenmu County, Shaanxi Province
  6. The Jartai Pass Site in Nilka County, Xinjiang
  7. Reports
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  9. The excavation of the Daxi Cultural remains at Dashuitian Site in Wushan County, Chongqing
  10. The excavation of the Wujiachang Cemetery in Fuquanshan Site, Shanghai in 2010
  11. The Shang burials at the Yangjiawan Locality of the Panlongcheng Site in Wuhan
  12. The excavation of burial M89 at Tiesan Road at the Yinxu Site in Anyang, Henan
  13. The excavation of the burial M8 at the Zhoujiazhai Cemetery in Suizhou, Hubei
  14. The recovering of the Qianfosi cliff sculptures in Tongnan County, Chongqing
  15. Research
  16. On the subsistence types of the Xiantouling Culture
  17. On the origin and formation of the early Qin Culture
  18. On the provenance study method of the archaeological relics based on styles and distributions
  19. Maitreya statues in the Southern Dynasties and the incarnation of Fu Dashi as Maitreya
  20. A preliminary research on the burials of the Mongol Khanate period and Yuan Dynasty in northern area
  21. The emergence and early utilization of domestic sheep in Xinjiang
  22. The development and formation of soldering technique on the bronze ritual vessel casting of the Shang and Zhou Dynasties
  23. Brief report on the laboratory archaeology of the tomb M1 at Dahekou
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