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Early Chinese History: The State of the Field
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 March 2011
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In this essay, I will survey recent scholarship on several major issues in the political, social, and economic history of ancient China, from the beginning of the Shang Dynasty to the end of the Han Dynasty. Archaeological aspects will be discussed only when their historical significance requires it, since the archaeological discoveries of recent decades have already been the subject of Professor Kwang-chih Chang's state-of-the-field article in The Journal of Asian Studies.
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References
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94 Ch'ang-chiang liu-yü ti-erh-ch'i wen-wu k'ao-ku kung-tso jen-yüan hsün-lien-pan, “Hupei Chiang-ling Feng-huang-shan hsi-Han-mu fachüeh chien-pao,” Wen-wu, No. 6 (1974), pp. 41–60Google Scholar; Sheng-chang, Huang, “Chiang-ling Fenghuang-shan Han-mu chien-tu chi-ch'i tsai li-shih ti-li yen-chiu shang ti chia-chih,” Wen-wu, No. 6 (1974), pp. 66–77Google Scholar; and I, Hung, “Chiang-ling Feng-huang-shan shih-hao Han-mu chien-tu ch'ut'an,” Wen-wu, No. 6 (1974), pp. 78–84Google Scholar.
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