Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7fkt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-26T14:12:11.618Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

KOSHI SHUNJŪ

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 March 2015

Lothar von Falkenhausen*
Affiliation:
Asian Languages DepartmentStanford University Stanford, California

Extract

The Fuyang bamboo-strip “Annals” was compiled prior to 165 B.C., at least sixty or seventy years earlier than Sima Qian edited the various chronological tables in the Shiji. The “Annals,” which begins about the time of the Gong He interregnum of the Western Zhou and continues through the time of Qin Shi huangdi, seems to be incompatible with the “Qin Records” and was perhaps compiled using the “Historical Records” of some state other than Qin. It possibly includes two different types of tables: one in which years denominate the vertical columns and statenames the horizontal rows, with events recorded therein horizontally; and one that records the number of years that the feudal lords reigned. Although extensive damage makes it impossible to reconstitute the “Annals,” it can still provide useful information regarding some historical questions, such as the Warring States-period states of “East Zhou” and “West Zhou,” the appellations “Current King” and “Current Duke,” etc.

165 B.C. .

Type
Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Study of Early China 1989

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. Koshi Shunjü (A collection of studies on ancient China), edited by Minao, Hayashi , Kyöto: Höyü Shoten, vol. 4 (1987), 84 pp.Google Scholar, ¥ 2,500; vol. 5 (1988), 102 pp., ¥ 2,500.

2. “Shin, Kan-sho-no shikki-no seisan-ni tsuite (fu Shin-Kan shutto shikki chiikibeppyö)” , Koshi Shunjü 4 (1987), 316 Google Scholar. This article is a sequel to the same author’s “Senigoku jidai So-no shikki” in Sen’goku jidai shutto bunbutsu-no kenkyū , ed. Minao, Hayashi (Kyōto: Jinbun kagaku kenkyūjo, 1985), 155. The useful lists of lacquer finds appended to the two articles complement one another.Google Scholar

3. “Sha-no saishi-no shokeitai-to sono kigen” , Koshi Shunjū 4 (1987), 1737.Google Scholar

4. “Chūgoku kodai-no jumoku shisō — Sai-no angatō-no jumoku monyō-ni yosete” , in Takeshi, Sekino, Chūgoku kōkogaku kenkyū , 2nd ed. (Tōkyō: Tōkyō University Press, 1963), 527552.Google Scholar

5. For a more in-depth discussion of the zhongliu, see Stein, Rolf A., “L’habitat, le monde et le corps humain en Extreme-Orient et en Haute-Asie,” Journal Asiatique 245 (1957), 3774.Google Scholar

6. Masanori, Kawamata, “‘Saiku hakuhaku’ — Higashi Ajia-no kodai sensha-to Nishi Ajia” , Koshi Shunjū 4 (1987), 3858.Google Scholar

7. Since literature in Western languages on Near Eastern chariots is relatively plentiful, a detailed summary can be dispensed with here; see, e.g., Piggott, Stuart, The Earliest Wheeled Transport: From the Atlantic Coast to the Caspian Sea, (Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1983)Google Scholar; for more titles, see Kawamata’s extensive bibliography.

8. The Central Asian and Chinese evidence is presented also by Shaughnessy, Edward L. in his more recent article “Historical Perspectives on the Introduction of the Chariot into China,” HJAS 48 (1988), 189237.Google Scholar

9. In its final form, this invention dates to the Western Zhou, though in some Shang chariots the chariot-box is already separated from the axle by transverse connecting pieces (zhen ).

10. Shiki genshi(ichi) —Sei-Shū-ki, Tōsenki” (—) — , Koshi Shunjū 4 (1987), 5982.Google Scholar

11. Liaoning sheng Wenwu kaogu yanjiusuo , “Liaoning Niuheliang Hongshan wenhua ‘Nüshenmiao’ yu shizhongqun fajue jianbao” , Wenwu 1986. 8, 117 Google Scholar; and Shoudao, Sun and Dashun, Guo , “Niuheliang Hongshan wenhua nüshen touxiang de faxian yu yanjiu” , Wenwu 1986. 8, 1824.Google Scholar

12. “Kōzan bunka-to Zen-Kōzan bunka — Sekihō Kōzan kōko, sono ichi” —, Koshi Shunjū 5 (1988), 226.Google Scholar

13. With the exception of the recent Niuheliang finds, this evidence is well presented by Chang, K.C. in The Archaeology of Ancient China (4th rev. ed.; New Haven: Yale U. Press, 1986), 181191 Google Scholar.

14. “Sekai-no naka-no Jōmon toki” , Zoku-Jōmon toki (i-e. V. 5 of Jōmon toki taisei , Tōkyō: Kōdansha, 1982)Google ScholarPubMed.

15. “Rikuhaku-no jinbutsu zazōchin-to hakkyokumon-ni tsuite” , Koshi Shunjū 5 (1988), 2749.Google Scholar

16. For a Western-language treatment, see Loewe, Michael, Ways to Paradise (London: George Allen & Unwin, 1979)Google Scholar, chapter 3 and appendices.

17. “Chūgoku kodai-ni okeru hasu-no hana-no shōchō” , Tōhō Gakuhō 59 (1987), 129 Google Scholar.

18. “Kyo’en Kan-kan geppōkō” , Koshi Shunjū 5 (1988), 5067.Google Scholar

19. “Kyo’en Kan-kan-no shūsei” , TōhO Gakuhō 46 (1974), 161188 Google Scholar; 47 (1975), 243-300, and 51 (1979), 461-514.

20. “Gessō sōtai fukusa-to Shunjū chōreki , Koshi Shunjū 5 (1988), 68101.Google Scholar

21. “Sei-Shū kinbun-to reki” , Tōhō Gakuhō 58 (1986), 71120.Google Scholar