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July 21, 2016

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Ruins of Yin research sheds light on one of China’s oldest dynasties

BODIES buried at Yinxu, or the Ruins of Yin, one of China’s oldest archeological sites, were captives from ethnic minority groups, rather than slaves, according to an archeologist in central China’s Henan Province.

The finding may help change the notion that the Shang Dynasty (c.16th century-11th century BC), China’s first recorded dynasty, was a slave society, according to Tang Jigen, head of the Anyang research branch of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

Named after the last capital of Shang, which was in Anyang, Henan, the Ruins of Yin were famous for the discovery of oracle bones and script.

Characters on the oracle bones stated that more than 10,000 people were killed and buried with the dead aristocrats as sacrificial offerings. Tang had always wondered about the identities of those people.

“In the burial pits we found the number of skeletons in each one numbered 10, 30 and 50,” he said. This reminded him of records on the oracle bones.

“In the records of emperors’ ancestor worship we always see expressions like ‘10 Qiang people,’ ‘30 Qiang people’ and ‘50 Qiang people,’” he said. The Qiang were an ancient ethnic minority group in western China.

An idea struck Tang: could those buried as sacrificial offerings be from ethnic minority groups?

Through strontium isotope analysis, the archeologists found that the newly excavated bones in the Ruins of Yin and those from Qiang settlements were quite similar.

They also unearthed 22 skulls from the tomb passage where the world’s heaviest ancient bronze item, the Houmuwuding, was discovered, and they found that they belonged to the Qiang people as well.

“In ancient times, the Qiang population was large, and they were neighbors of the Shang empire,” Tang said. When the Shang grew stronger, it drove the Qiang people further to the northwest.

The Qiang people herded sheep for a living. Tang now thinks that when the Shang people caught sheep, they captured the Qiang herdsmen as well. The sheep were eaten, and the herdsmen buried as sacrificial offerings, Tang said.

“The number of the strontium isotope varies from one place to another,” he said. “So from it we can see that the captives were killed immediately. Otherwise, if they had worked as slaves for a few years before being killed, the number would have been different.”

Among the 55 ethnic minorities in China today, there is also one called the Qiang in the western part of the country. They have a population of about 300,000, and more than 10,000 people from the group were killed in the 2008 earthquake that jolted China’s Sichuan Province.

“We need further study to know whether those buried in the Ruins of Yin were ancestors of the Qiang people today,” Tang said.

He said the findings would help people understand more about the Shang Dynasty, which some people believe was a slave society.

“In slave societies, slaves were killed and buried as sacrificial offerings,” he said. “But those in the Ruins of Yin were not slaves, but captives.”

The Ruins of Yin, where excavation officially began in 1928, were the site of the discovery of the earliest Chinese characters written on bone and tortoise shell.

This month marks the 10th anniversary since the Yin Ruins were added to the World Heritage List in 2006 by the United Nations Environmental, Scientific and Cultural Organization.




 

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