knowt logo

Ancient China

Neolithic

Bi

  • Jade disk that has a flat, circular body.

  • Has a round hole at the center and a complex, openwork design on top.

  • Almost translucent and in a pale greenish-white color

  • Both front and back are carved identically

  • Decorated with repeating raised dots, known as “grain pattern.”

  • Symbols of heaven

  • Han dynasty

  • Artisans would extend the circular shape of the disk by adding fantastic serpentine creatures

  • Both dragons and felines were considered auspicious symbols in the Han dynasty

  • Dragons were believed to bring good luck and represent peace, courage, and wisdom. They came to be associated with imperial power.

  • Extremely rare

  • Similar disks have been found only in royal tombs

Cong

  • A square outer section around a circular inner part, and a circular hole.

  • The meaning and purpose of cong remain a mystery

  • Face pattern → spirits or deities

  • Tough and time-consuming to produce

    • It must be worked with a hard abrasive sand

Shang Dynasty

Fang Ding with Taotie Design

  • Rectangular or square-shaped bronze vessel with four legs

  • Typically features two hands on either side and a flat lid, though not all examples have lids.

  • Used in rituals to hold food offerings, particularly meat.

    • To nourish the honor the spirits of deceased ancestors

  • Symbols of power, authority, and status.

    • Owning one signified political and religious influence

  • Taotie design consists of a frontal view of an animal’s face with prominent eyes, horns, and sometimes fangs

    • Its body is often abstract or missing

    • Symmetrical

    • Fills the surface of the bronze

  • May represent a guardian or protective spirit

  • Or mythological creature symbolizing balance between order and chaos

  • Piece-mold casting

Qin Dynasty

Tomb of the Terracotta Soldiers, Army of the First Emperor (Qin Dynasty)

  • Lishan, China

  • Every figure is unique

    • Different shapes of tunics, features, and hairstyles.

    • Replicas of actual soldiers

    • Different roles in the army from archers to infantrymen to charioteers

  • Start of construction → 221 B.C.E.

  • Unification of the Qin Empire

    • King of Qin declared himself Emperor

  • Over 700,000 convicts and forced laborers

  • Weapons were real

  • Pit 1: the main part of the army

  • Pit 2: four sections

    • Section 1: archers and spearmen

    • Section 2: chariots (four horses, a driver, and two assistants each)

      Section 3 combines 19 chariots with 264 infantrymen as well as a small cavalry force at the rear.

    • Section 4: cavalry with 108 cavalrymen and a group of 6 chariots

      • Cavalry was a recent innovation

  • Pit 3: smallest and most sparse

    • 22 armored infantrymen in its north wing and 42 in the south wing

    • Military formations in the others face east

  • Originally brightly colored

Vocabulary

  • Yellow River

    • Used for transportation, fishing, and agriculture.

    • The birthplace of Chinese civilization

    • Reliable source of water and life

    • Destructive flooding patterns

      • Drowning of people and the spread of disease.

    • Symbol of both sustenance and calamity

    • Yellow → power, royalty, and prosperity.

  • Yangtze River

    • Used for transportation, irrigation, sanitation, industry, boundary-marking, and war.

      • Political and cultural boundary

  • Bi

    • Flat, circular disc made of jade

    • Could represent heaven, sun, rank, and submission.

    • Could be used to ward off evil spirits

    • Could be used for sacrifices to gods and ancestors and funerary rites

    • Neolithic period to the Han dynasty

  • Cong

    • Jade tube-shaped object with square corners

    • Maybe used for ritual purposes

    • May have represented wealth and social status

    • Found in the tombs of people who held important positions

    • Outer surfaces are sometimes decorated with mask-like faces, horizontal segments, lines, and other abstract designs.

    • Proportions vary, with some being squat and others taller.

    • Made from jade, but sometimes from stone.

    • Neolithic times

  • Jade

    • Metamorphic rock that is soft, firm, and smooth, and can be carved into many shapes.

    • Can be white, green, cream, yellow, brown, gray, black, or mottled.

    • Associated with royalty, high status, purity, moral integrity, and indestructibility.

    • Believed to contain the essence of life, virtue, and eternity.

    • Used to make ornaments, ceremonial weapons, ritual objects, plaques, dragons, animal and human sculptures, and percussion instruments.

    • Believed to be powerful in death, protecting the body from decay.

    • Believed you can use it to communicate with supernatural forces.

  • Taotie

    • Mythical creature and a zoomorphic mask

    • Represented gluttony and was used to warn against greed

    • Beast with large eyes, a gaping mouth, and a curled upper lip with exposed fangs.

    • Shang dynasty

  • Oracle Bones

    • Used for divination and provide important information about the Shang Dynasty

    • Writing questions on bones and heating them to see how they cracked

      • Cracks were interpreted as answers to the questions

    • Animal bones, such as turtle shells and cattle scapula.

    • Shang Dynasty

    • Provide insight into the ancient Chinese understanding of diseases, agriculture, weather, military decisions, and health and well-being.

  • Daoism

    • Chinese philosophy and religion

    • Belief in living in harmony with the universe, or dao, and a rejection of human ideas and standards that lead to violence, ignorance, and unnecessary worldly goals.

    • Dao: The underlying order that governs the universe, which can be translated as "way", "guide", or "road"

    • Influenced the development of practices such as meditation, astrology, qigong, feng shui, and internal alchemy.

  • Confucianism

    • Social and ethical philosophy that influenced Chinese society and government for centuries

    • Based on the idea that there was a natural order in the universe

    • Emphasized the importance of social harmony, which could be achieved by respecting social mores and hierarchies.

    • Devotion to family is the foundation of all other relationships

    • education was important for developing a virtuous character

    • Rituals were designed to create a sense of community and a respectful attitude

  • Li

    • The central concept can be translated as "ritual", "propriety", "etiquette", or "ritual propriety".

    • Standard of conduct based on traditional forms.

    • Emphasize respect for others and piety through ceremonies and rules of conduct

    • Markings in jade, the grain in wood, and the fiber in muscle.

  • Dao

    • “The way" or "a path"

    • The natural order of the universe

    • The belief that people should live in harmony with this natural order and that human actions should be in line with the flow of nature

    • The belief that nature, not people, controls how things change, and that humans and their rules are less important.

  • Warring States

    • A time in ancient China when several small kingdoms fought each other for control of the territory

    • The establishment of territorial states led by monarchs and their officials

    • The rise of many great philosophers

    • Led to improvements in tools and craft skills

      • Metalworking and the use of iron

    • Improved efficiency in agriculture helped to meet the large supply needs of the large armies

    • Produced more skilled artworks, mastering difficult materials like jade and lacquer.

    • The Qin state was victorious in the Warring States period and established the first unified Chinese state.

      • The first emperor of China, Qin Shi Huang, connected the fortifications built during the Warring States period to create the Great Wall of China.

  • Clerical Script

    • Style of Chinese writing that was used for official documents, public monuments, and private correspondence

    • Simplified version of seal script

      • Wider than seal script and modern standard script, and have a flat appearance.

      • Angular turn strokes, and has more prominent modulated and tapered strokes than seal script.

      • Simplified complex characters to make writing faster

        • Important for record-keeping and bureaucratic tasks.

    • Evolved from the Warring States period to the Qin dynasty, and matured during the Han dynasty.

  • Fu Hao

    • "Lady Hao"

    • Military general, high priestess, and wife of King Wu Ding during the Shang dynasty.

      • One of the most important female military commanders, warriors, and ritualists in ancient China's history.

    • First recorded Chinese woman warrior

      • Led Shang armies against the Qiang, Yi, and Tufang tribes.

    • Presided over important sacrificial ceremonies

    • Controlled her own estate

    • Contained many artifacts, including:

      • Over 200 bronze ritual vessels

      • Over 130 weapons

      • The remains of six sacrificial dogs

      • The skeletons of 16 human slaves

      • The tomb's contents and discovery confirmed Fu Hao's importance in ancient China.

  • Qin Shi Huangdi

    • "First Emperor"

      • Qin → name of native state

      • Shi → "the first"

      • Huang → "August" and reference to the name of three mythical kings

      • Di → "divine ruler"

    • First emperor of a unified China

      • Established after the state of Qin conquered all other states at the end of the Warring States period

    • Standardized weights, measures, coinage, and the writing system.

    • Began construction on the Great Wall of China to protect the nation

    • Divided the state into provinces and prefectures, and appointed officials to govern them.

    • Discouraged philosophy and history, and executed or buried alive scholars who criticized the government.

    • Commissioned the construction of an elaborate tomb for himself, which included thousands of terracotta soldiers to protect him in the afterlife.

SY

Ancient China

Neolithic

Bi

  • Jade disk that has a flat, circular body.

  • Has a round hole at the center and a complex, openwork design on top.

  • Almost translucent and in a pale greenish-white color

  • Both front and back are carved identically

  • Decorated with repeating raised dots, known as “grain pattern.”

  • Symbols of heaven

  • Han dynasty

  • Artisans would extend the circular shape of the disk by adding fantastic serpentine creatures

  • Both dragons and felines were considered auspicious symbols in the Han dynasty

  • Dragons were believed to bring good luck and represent peace, courage, and wisdom. They came to be associated with imperial power.

  • Extremely rare

  • Similar disks have been found only in royal tombs

Cong

  • A square outer section around a circular inner part, and a circular hole.

  • The meaning and purpose of cong remain a mystery

  • Face pattern → spirits or deities

  • Tough and time-consuming to produce

    • It must be worked with a hard abrasive sand

Shang Dynasty

Fang Ding with Taotie Design

  • Rectangular or square-shaped bronze vessel with four legs

  • Typically features two hands on either side and a flat lid, though not all examples have lids.

  • Used in rituals to hold food offerings, particularly meat.

    • To nourish the honor the spirits of deceased ancestors

  • Symbols of power, authority, and status.

    • Owning one signified political and religious influence

  • Taotie design consists of a frontal view of an animal’s face with prominent eyes, horns, and sometimes fangs

    • Its body is often abstract or missing

    • Symmetrical

    • Fills the surface of the bronze

  • May represent a guardian or protective spirit

  • Or mythological creature symbolizing balance between order and chaos

  • Piece-mold casting

Qin Dynasty

Tomb of the Terracotta Soldiers, Army of the First Emperor (Qin Dynasty)

  • Lishan, China

  • Every figure is unique

    • Different shapes of tunics, features, and hairstyles.

    • Replicas of actual soldiers

    • Different roles in the army from archers to infantrymen to charioteers

  • Start of construction → 221 B.C.E.

  • Unification of the Qin Empire

    • King of Qin declared himself Emperor

  • Over 700,000 convicts and forced laborers

  • Weapons were real

  • Pit 1: the main part of the army

  • Pit 2: four sections

    • Section 1: archers and spearmen

    • Section 2: chariots (four horses, a driver, and two assistants each)

      Section 3 combines 19 chariots with 264 infantrymen as well as a small cavalry force at the rear.

    • Section 4: cavalry with 108 cavalrymen and a group of 6 chariots

      • Cavalry was a recent innovation

  • Pit 3: smallest and most sparse

    • 22 armored infantrymen in its north wing and 42 in the south wing

    • Military formations in the others face east

  • Originally brightly colored

Vocabulary

  • Yellow River

    • Used for transportation, fishing, and agriculture.

    • The birthplace of Chinese civilization

    • Reliable source of water and life

    • Destructive flooding patterns

      • Drowning of people and the spread of disease.

    • Symbol of both sustenance and calamity

    • Yellow → power, royalty, and prosperity.

  • Yangtze River

    • Used for transportation, irrigation, sanitation, industry, boundary-marking, and war.

      • Political and cultural boundary

  • Bi

    • Flat, circular disc made of jade

    • Could represent heaven, sun, rank, and submission.

    • Could be used to ward off evil spirits

    • Could be used for sacrifices to gods and ancestors and funerary rites

    • Neolithic period to the Han dynasty

  • Cong

    • Jade tube-shaped object with square corners

    • Maybe used for ritual purposes

    • May have represented wealth and social status

    • Found in the tombs of people who held important positions

    • Outer surfaces are sometimes decorated with mask-like faces, horizontal segments, lines, and other abstract designs.

    • Proportions vary, with some being squat and others taller.

    • Made from jade, but sometimes from stone.

    • Neolithic times

  • Jade

    • Metamorphic rock that is soft, firm, and smooth, and can be carved into many shapes.

    • Can be white, green, cream, yellow, brown, gray, black, or mottled.

    • Associated with royalty, high status, purity, moral integrity, and indestructibility.

    • Believed to contain the essence of life, virtue, and eternity.

    • Used to make ornaments, ceremonial weapons, ritual objects, plaques, dragons, animal and human sculptures, and percussion instruments.

    • Believed to be powerful in death, protecting the body from decay.

    • Believed you can use it to communicate with supernatural forces.

  • Taotie

    • Mythical creature and a zoomorphic mask

    • Represented gluttony and was used to warn against greed

    • Beast with large eyes, a gaping mouth, and a curled upper lip with exposed fangs.

    • Shang dynasty

  • Oracle Bones

    • Used for divination and provide important information about the Shang Dynasty

    • Writing questions on bones and heating them to see how they cracked

      • Cracks were interpreted as answers to the questions

    • Animal bones, such as turtle shells and cattle scapula.

    • Shang Dynasty

    • Provide insight into the ancient Chinese understanding of diseases, agriculture, weather, military decisions, and health and well-being.

  • Daoism

    • Chinese philosophy and religion

    • Belief in living in harmony with the universe, or dao, and a rejection of human ideas and standards that lead to violence, ignorance, and unnecessary worldly goals.

    • Dao: The underlying order that governs the universe, which can be translated as "way", "guide", or "road"

    • Influenced the development of practices such as meditation, astrology, qigong, feng shui, and internal alchemy.

  • Confucianism

    • Social and ethical philosophy that influenced Chinese society and government for centuries

    • Based on the idea that there was a natural order in the universe

    • Emphasized the importance of social harmony, which could be achieved by respecting social mores and hierarchies.

    • Devotion to family is the foundation of all other relationships

    • education was important for developing a virtuous character

    • Rituals were designed to create a sense of community and a respectful attitude

  • Li

    • The central concept can be translated as "ritual", "propriety", "etiquette", or "ritual propriety".

    • Standard of conduct based on traditional forms.

    • Emphasize respect for others and piety through ceremonies and rules of conduct

    • Markings in jade, the grain in wood, and the fiber in muscle.

  • Dao

    • “The way" or "a path"

    • The natural order of the universe

    • The belief that people should live in harmony with this natural order and that human actions should be in line with the flow of nature

    • The belief that nature, not people, controls how things change, and that humans and their rules are less important.

  • Warring States

    • A time in ancient China when several small kingdoms fought each other for control of the territory

    • The establishment of territorial states led by monarchs and their officials

    • The rise of many great philosophers

    • Led to improvements in tools and craft skills

      • Metalworking and the use of iron

    • Improved efficiency in agriculture helped to meet the large supply needs of the large armies

    • Produced more skilled artworks, mastering difficult materials like jade and lacquer.

    • The Qin state was victorious in the Warring States period and established the first unified Chinese state.

      • The first emperor of China, Qin Shi Huang, connected the fortifications built during the Warring States period to create the Great Wall of China.

  • Clerical Script

    • Style of Chinese writing that was used for official documents, public monuments, and private correspondence

    • Simplified version of seal script

      • Wider than seal script and modern standard script, and have a flat appearance.

      • Angular turn strokes, and has more prominent modulated and tapered strokes than seal script.

      • Simplified complex characters to make writing faster

        • Important for record-keeping and bureaucratic tasks.

    • Evolved from the Warring States period to the Qin dynasty, and matured during the Han dynasty.

  • Fu Hao

    • "Lady Hao"

    • Military general, high priestess, and wife of King Wu Ding during the Shang dynasty.

      • One of the most important female military commanders, warriors, and ritualists in ancient China's history.

    • First recorded Chinese woman warrior

      • Led Shang armies against the Qiang, Yi, and Tufang tribes.

    • Presided over important sacrificial ceremonies

    • Controlled her own estate

    • Contained many artifacts, including:

      • Over 200 bronze ritual vessels

      • Over 130 weapons

      • The remains of six sacrificial dogs

      • The skeletons of 16 human slaves

      • The tomb's contents and discovery confirmed Fu Hao's importance in ancient China.

  • Qin Shi Huangdi

    • "First Emperor"

      • Qin → name of native state

      • Shi → "the first"

      • Huang → "August" and reference to the name of three mythical kings

      • Di → "divine ruler"

    • First emperor of a unified China

      • Established after the state of Qin conquered all other states at the end of the Warring States period

    • Standardized weights, measures, coinage, and the writing system.

    • Began construction on the Great Wall of China to protect the nation

    • Divided the state into provinces and prefectures, and appointed officials to govern them.

    • Discouraged philosophy and history, and executed or buried alive scholars who criticized the government.

    • Commissioned the construction of an elaborate tomb for himself, which included thousands of terracotta soldiers to protect him in the afterlife.

robot