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Chinese
History --- Xia Dynasty
Chinese
civilization, as described in mythology, begins with Pangu ( ),
the creator of the universe and a succession of legendary sage-emperors
and culture heroes among them are Huang Di ,
Yao, and Shun) who taught the ancient Chinese to communicate and to find
sustenance, clothing, and shelter.
The first chinese civilization was established
around the fertile areas of Huanghe (The Yellow River) more than four
thousand years ago. The first glimpse of chinese characters had taken
form, and unlike any other places on the world, this cultural development
has been delivered without any kind of decisive interruption till this
day. The cultural development of Central-China and East-Asia was influenced
by the contrast between two dramatically different communities. In the
northern and western parts of the country one could find enormous wastelands,
inhabited by nomadic societies. Compared to people in other regions, the
nomads were economically poor, but their military strength was superior.
In the southern and eastern parts of the country, the fertile river areas
gave life to intensive agriculture and the establishment of great communities.
These two types of communities were bound together in an exchange of goods
but conflicts often appeared. The farming areas were constantly attacked
by the northern barbarians.
The great area which eventually became China,
stretched itself from the jungle in the south to the steppes and deserts
in the north. In the south, the Yunnan-plateau, covered with mountains
and rainforests formed a barrier. This barrier could not prevent the Mongolian
habitants from moving south but it did accomplish making the South-East
Asia, except for parts of Nan Yue, impenetrable for the imperial troops.
In the west, the hard to reach highlands of Tibet were also left in peace
until
the middle of the first century after Christ.
Between the Yunnan-plataeu and the range of
mountains of Isin-ling, one could spot the south-Chinese vegetation-belt,
divided by the mighty Yangzijiang. Different types of vegetation were
gradually developed and soon, people could enjoy the fruits from hundreds
of orange trees and the extracts from different kinds of tea-plants. But
the importance of this area in the Chinese cultural development was not
determined by these types of vegetation. It was the introduction of millet
from the north and rice from South-East Asia that made this area historical.
Millet and soybeans played an important role in agriculture.
The ancient main area of China was located
near the Yellow River, covered with "loose soil". It stretched itself
up against the steppes and deserts of Mongolia. It was in this region
one first found the early development of Chinese and East-Asian agriculture
and these fertile areas also formed the basis of the first Chinese civilizations.
The "loose soil" was easy to grow but the climate troubled the farmers
with it's strong and instant rainfalls. Huanghe, "The Sorrow of China"
rapidly flooded the
lowlands and destroyed many plantations.
The ancient Chinese stories from the dawn of
time were without doubt legends. A Chinese legend said that a gigantic
god named Pan Gu separated heaven and earth by one single slice with his
mighty sword. Even though the Chinese people lived in the centuries before
Christ, they seem to have made up stories which stretched farther back
towards the dawn of time. China's most famous historian, Sima Qian, who
died around 85 BC, tells us about The Yellow Emperor, Huangdi, whom he
assumed
existed more than 2600 years before Christ.
Legend holds that the Xia was preceded by a
succession of three sovereigns and five emperors. Fuxi, the first of the
three sovereigns, usually is depicted alongside his wife and sister, the
goddess Nugua. Fuxi and Nugua are human from the waist up and have the
tails of dragons. Shun, the last of the five emperors, abdicated in favor
of Yu, the first emperor of the Xia Dynasty.
The first prehistoric dynasty is said to be
Xia ( ), from about the twenty-first
to the sixteenth century B.C. Xia-dynasty was founded by the Si-clan,
who were descendants of the clan's foundation father, Yu. Because of the
lack of written sources, historians have still not gained a correct idea
of how the people lived at that time. According to the later tradition,
Yu spent thirteen years to dig out channels and maintain dikes. When emperor
Shun died, the officials disagreed with the imperial decision of letting
Shun's son inherit the throne. They wanted Yu instead, who after his death
was followed by his son. It was Yu who founded the first imperial dynasty
in China.
Until scientific excavations were made at early
bronze-age sites at Anyang ( ),
Henan ( ) Province, in 1928,
it was difficult to separate myth from reality in regard to the Xia. But
since then, and especially in the 1960s and 1970s, archaeologists have
uncovered urban sites, bronze implements, and tombs that point to the
existence of Xia civilization in the same locations cited in ancient Chinese
historical texts. At minimum, the Xia period marked an evolutionary stage
between the late neolithic cultures and the typical Chinese urban civilization
of the Shang dynasty.
Xia was conquered by Tang, and a new era had
begun, the Shang-dynasty was founded.
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