Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jn8rn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T04:42:17.308Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Astronomical Evidence for the Bamboo Annals' Chronicle of Early Xia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 March 2015

David S. Nivison
Affiliation:
1169 Russell Ave., Los Altos, CA 94022
Kevin D. Pang
Affiliation:
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Inst. of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91109

Abstract

Tradition says that Yu, first ruler of the Xia Dynasty, was chosen by the “sage emperor” Shun as Shun's successor. The “Modern Text” Bamboo Annals (Jinben Zhushu jinian) dates this act of choice to the fourteenth year of Shun. (With E. L. Shaughnessy, “On the Authenticity of the Bamboo Annals,” Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 46 (1986), we accept this text as at least in part the text found in a royal tomb of Wei in A.D. 281.) Following D. Pankenier's argument (“Mozi and the Dates of Xia, Shang and Zhou,” Early China 9–10 [1983–85]), we date this event to 1953 B.C., the year of a dramatic five-planet conjunction. (K. Pang independently dated this conjunction to Yu's reign in his article “Extraordinary Floods in Early Chinese History and their Absolute Dates,” Journal of Hydrology 96 [1987].)

We next use K. Pang's discovery (“Extraordinary Floods”) that there was an eclipse of the sun on 16 October 1876 B.C., that exactly satisfies descriptions in the Zuo zhuan (Zhao 17) and in the Bamboo Annals for Xia, Zhong Kang fifth year, of an eclipse associated with the (post-Han Shang shu) “Punitive Expedition of Yin” (except for the day-cycle in the Annals, which we assume to be a later calculation); i.e., it occurred on the first of the ninth lunar month (Xia calendar), the sun's location at the time (188å) was in lunar lodge Fang, and the eclipse was visible in the probable Xia capital area. No other eclipse within many centuries satisfies these criteria.

Extending D. Nivison's theory (“The Dates of Western Chou,” Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 43 (1983)) that Western Zhou royal calendars began only after completion of mourning, i.e., two years after accession, we then assume that there were similar two-year mourning breaks between Xia royal calendars (possibly reflected in the irregular interregnums in the present Annals). For a demonstration of this chronology, see the chart on page 94.

Type
Forum
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Study of Early China 1990

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1. Williams, John, “Solar eclipses observed in China from B.C. 481 to the Christian era”, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 24 (18631864), 185188Google Scholar.

2. Zhu Xi's source must be Xin Tang shu 新唐鲁 (Taipei: Yiwen shuju ed.) 27A.17aGoogle Scholar, where the monk-astronomer Yixing —行 (= Zhang Sui 張遂, 672-717) quotes a lost book by Liu Xiang 劉向 (80-9 B.C.), the Hong fan zhuan 洪範傳. Liu says Zhuanxu's calendar began with a jisi (6) day at the beginning of spring, month cycle number 51, year cycle number 51, when there was a conjunction in lunar lodge Shi. We assume that the conjunction has been shifted back from its correct date; but Liu's date is worth analyzing: the year that satisfies it, given the system of calculation Liu would have used, is 2287. To match 2287 with the Annals' date for the invention of the Zhuanxu calendar (Zhuanxu 13), it is necessary to assume two-year calendar-breaks after the death of each ruler before Yao. This supports our assumption in sections 3 and 4.

3. Williams, J., Observation of Comets from B.C. 611 to A.D. 1640 Extracted from the Chinese Annals (London: Strangeways and Walden, 1871)Google Scholar.

4. Stahlman, W.D., and Gingerich, O., Solar and Planetary Longitudes for Years -2500 to +2000 (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1963)Google Scholar.

5. Moore, P., The Guinness Book of Astronomy: Facts and Feats (Middlesex, England: Guinness Superlatives, Ltd., 1983)Google Scholar.

6. Weitzel, R.B., “Clusters of Five Planets”, Popular Astronomy 53 (1945), 159161Google Scholar.

7. Pankenier, D.W., “Mozi and the Dates of Xia, Shang and Zhou: A Research NoteEarly China 9–10 (19831985), 176–78Google Scholar.

8. Shaughnessy, E.L., “On the Authenticity of the Bamboo Annals”, Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 46 (1986), 149180CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

9. Pang, K.D., “Extraordinary Floods in Early Chinese History and their Absolute Dates”, Journal of Hydrology 96 (1987), 139–155, esp. 152CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

10. Legge, J., The Chinese Classics, vol 3, The Shoo King, or Book of Historical Documents (London and Hong Kong: Oxford U. press, 1865), 165Google Scholar and “Prolegomena”, 119.

11. Here we give chen its classic meaning; but see D.S. Nivison, (Ni Dewei 愧德衛), “Guoyu ‘Wu Wang fa Yin’ tian xiang bian wei” 《國語〉“武王伐殷”天象辨僞 (A study of the fabricated description of the heavens “when Wu Wang attacked Yin” in the Guoyu), tr. K'e-wen, Wang 王克文, Guwenzi yanjiu 古文字硏究 12 (10, 1985), 445461, esp. 449Google Scholar. Some have interpreted the Zuo text as dating the Xia eclipse to the fourth month rather than to the ninth. Actually the Zuo says that the eclipse recorded in the “sixth month” Chunqiu text being commented on was in the fourth month of the “Xia “calendar. The wording “chen bu ji” for an eclipse is not found elsewhere. (The word chen may originally have meant “zodiac space obscured by the sun's glare.”)

12. Zungui, Chen 陳違媳, Zhongguo tianwenxue shi 中國天文學史 (Shanghai: Renmin chubanshe, 1984), 853Google Scholar.

13. The table gives the year and day for the first day of the ninth month of the Xia calendar, i.e., the post-autumn-equinox month; solar locations are at syzygy, see Goldstine, H.H., New and Full Moons, 1001 B.C. to A.D. 1651, Memoirs of the American Philosophical Society vol. 94 (Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, 1973) VIIIb, 48Google Scholar. For the zhang and bu system, see Shinzō, Shinjō 新新藏, “Shu-sho no nendai” 周初の年代, Shinagaku 4 (1928), 471–620, esp. 541–3Google Scholar.

14. Nivison, D.S., “The origin of the Chinese lunar lodge system”, in World Archaeoastronomy, ed. Aveni, Anthony F. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989), 203218, esp. 214Google Scholar.

15. Goldstine, , New and Full Moons, 48Google Scholar.

16. The actual first day of the Xia ninth month of 1948 was jiayin (51). The discrepancy is due to the fact that the zhang-bu system assumed the solar year to lunar month ratio to be the (incorrect) formula 19 years = 19 × 365.25 days = 235 months (the basis of calendar systems such as the Western Han “Yin Liw; see Shinjo,” Shu-sho no nendai”, 541-3). After 428, at nineteen-year intervals through 314, the sun was in Fang on the first of the Xia ninth month; so the proposed calculation could have been done at any time from the late fifth century through the end of the fourth century B.C.; but this was no longer possible in A.D. 281, when the Annals text was exhumed. “Nineteen years” is a standard time unit in a late fourth century B.C. text, Mo Zi 31, “Ming gui” (line 23 of 108 in the Harvard concordance text, p. 50), where the spirits grant Duke Mu of Qin (r. 659-621) an additional nineteen years of life (and note also the cook in Zhuang zi ch. 3, whose knife stays sharp for nineteen years). Nineteen years as a time unit must have become entrenched in popular thinking before these stories became current. From this we can see that the zhang-bu system must have been in use in Warring States China.

17. Nivison, D.S., “The Dates of Western Chou,” Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 43 (1983), 563CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

18. A terminus a quo for the time of flowering of the legends of Yao and Shun as” sage kings” can be inferred from Lunyu 8/18-20. (8/21 praises Yu, celebrated in lines in the Odes that are probably late.) These sections are probably added at the end of the chapter, which begins as a celebration of Zengzi (see 8.3-7), and probably dates in its earliest form to the period of mourning for him after his death in 435. (E. Bruce Brooks, private communications to D. Nivison, 1985 and 1989.)

19. Nivison, , “The Dates of Western Chou,’ esp. 524531Google Scholar.

20. Nivison, , “The Dates of Western Chou”, 528Google Scholar; Legge, , The Shoo King 118, Notes, II.1Google Scholar.

21. Eberhard, W. and Mueller, R., “Contributions to the Astronomy of the Han Period, III”, Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 1 (1936), 224–25CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

22. See Legge, , The Shoo King, 116Google Scholar. The Shang shu tells of Shim's death using the strange words zhi fang er si 陟方而死 (at end of “Shun dian”). This may be adapted from Annals, Shun 32: zhi fang yue, as read by someone who knew that this was really the date of Shim's death.