Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 March 2011
Was there a Xia Dynasty? By the mid-nineteen thirties, the works of Henri Maspero and other scholars in the West and of Gu Jiegang and his compatriots in China had clearly established the originally mythological character of the founder of the Xia Dynasty (traditionally ca. 2200–1760 B.C.) and of the rulers who preceded him in traditional Chinese historiography. The excavations near Anyang of late Shang palaces, tombs and inscribed oracle bones had also established the authenticity of the Shang Dynasty which followed the Xia, or at least of the latter part of it. In 1936, Chen Mengjia published an article in which he related the Xia king list to the Shang and argued that the two periods were the same. For the next forty years, the question of the authenticity of the Xia was left largely in abeyance although most scholars did continue to assume that the Xia Dynasty, which was hereditary like the Shang, would some day be authenticated by archaeological excavation.
1 Maspero, Henri, ‘Légendes mythologiques dans le Chou king’, Journal Asiatique CCIV (1924), 1–100Google Scholar; Jiegang, Gu, ed. Gu shi bian 7 vols., Peking and Shanghai, 1926–1941Google Scholar; see also Eberhard, Wolfram, Lokalkulturen im Alten China I (supplement to T'oung Pao, v. 37, Leiden, 1942)Google Scholar, II (Monumenta Serica, monograph III, Peking, 1942).Google Scholar
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13 See The heir and the sage, p. 6.Google Scholar
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16 Gu shi bian, v. 7, p. 196.Google Scholar
17 All reconstructions given in this form are from Karlgren, Bernhard, Grammata Serica Recensa, Bulletin of the Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities XXIX, 1957.Google Scholar
18 Shi jing, 12/4b (song 192, Xiao Yu, Zheng Yue), 16/2b (241, Da Ya, Huang Yi).
19 I have translated xuan, the colour of the bird from whom the Shang descended as black but, more precisely, it is the colour of mystery, the darkness of the unknown, not a colour on t h e spectrum. Similarly huang describes a murky dimness difficult to penetrate, not simply the colour yellow. In the Yijing ( l/; 6b, hexagram 2), xuan huang is used to describe the blood of a dragon.
20 Changsha Mawangdui yihao Han mu Peking, Wenwu Press, I, p. 39; II, pl. 72Google Scholar; “Shandong Linyi Jinjueshan jiu hao Han mu chutu baihua” Wenwu 1979, no. 11Google Scholar, inside cover; “Changsha Mawangdui er, san hao Han mu fajuejian bao” Wenwu 1974, no. 7, pl. 5.Google Scholar
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22 Mengzi 6/15a (3B.10); Xunzi l/10a; Huainanzi 3/5a (All references given in this form refer to the juan/page number of the Sibu congkan editions published in Shanghai in the 1930's. This belief may extend to snakes which may explain the prominence of snakes in both oracle bone characters for curses and disasters and in the bronze vessels for making ritual offerings to the ancestors of the Shang period.
23 Lun hengjiaoshi Shanghai, Commercial Press, 1964, 06 13, p. 207.Google Scholar
24 Zhuangzi 6/26b (pian 17). See also Huainanzi 19/6a, “if it is not the top of the ninelayered sky, it is the bottom of the Yellow Springs”.
25 See the Nineteen Old Songs, no. 16 (Gushi yuan Taiping shuju, Hong Kong, 1966, p. 91).Google Scholar
26 Shanhai jing jiaozhu Ke, Yuan ed., Shanghai, Guji chubanshe, 1980, 446 (Hainei jing).Google Scholar These identifications are also made by Bingliang, Chen, op. cit., p. 212.Google Scholar
27 See, for example, Huainanzi 9/lb.
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29 See Creel, H. G., The origins of statecraft in China, v. 1, Chicago, Univ. of Chicago Press, pp. 493–506.Google Scholar
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33 Ibid.
34 Guben zhushu jinian jijiao dingbu Shanghai, Xin zhishi chubanshe, 1956, pp. 5–6.Google Scholar The identification Han Liu and Han Huang was first made by Guo Pu, see ibid.
35 Shanhai jing jiaoshu (Dahuang xijing), p. 416.Google Scholar
36 Zhuangzi 9/38b.
37 p. 413.
38 See Huainanzi 4/la for the yellow clouds which rise from the Yellow Springs; see also Zuo zhuan jinzhu jinyi (Shao Gong 17, p. 1192) for Huang Di's emblem as clouds.Google Scholar
39 See Boltz, Willam G., “Kung Kung and the flood: Reverse euhemerism in the Yao Tien”, T'oung Pao, 67, 3–5 (1981), pp. 141.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
40 Chu ci 3/7b (lines 35–6, Hawkes, David' translation, Chu Tz'u: Songs of the south, New York, Beacon, 1962).Google Scholar
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42 For this identification, see “Sons of suns”, 322–3.
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44 Chu ci 3/6b–7a (1. 31–2).
45 Boltz, W., 150–3.Google Scholar I disagree, however, with Boltz's interpretation of Gong Gong as a personification of the flood. There are water spirits in ancient Chinese texts (and rivers were worshipped in t h e oracle bone inscriptions), but there is no pattern of personifying phenomena such as flooding as opposed to natural objects such as rivers and mountains, though there appears to be in Indian mythology. Although the Yao Dian states that Gong Gong “swelled up to Heaven” (tao tian), the text may be corrupt – elsewhere he is described as causing the waters to swell up to Heaven and the Yao Dian appears to have many layers of different periods. In any case, this one line is insufficient evidence upon which to establish a mythical system.
46 Chu ci 3/6a (1. 25–6). In a painting found in tomb no. 1 at Mawangdui (see note 20), owls and turtles are depicted in the underworld, flanking large fishlike creatures in the centre.
47 Hainei jing, op. cit., 06 13, p. 492; see also Li ji 14/4a for the damming up of the waters by Gun. The meaning of xi xiang is uncertain. The Huainanzi (5/15a) refers to the states in Kunlun's eastern range (in the far west of the central region) where the “swelling mould dams up the flooding waters. Cf. Huainanzi 4/2a which refers to Yu rather than Gun damming u p the waters with the swelling mould.Google Scholar
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50 Chu ci 3/6a–b (Tian wen, 27–8, 73–4Google Scholar, based on Hawkes', translation, p. 48).Google Scholar
51 Gui cang Changsha, Yu han shan fang jiyi shu, 1884, 12b (Qi shibian).Google Scholar
52 See p. 8 above.
53 Huainanzi 7/7a.
54 See the commentaries of the Shi ji, 06 2, 51Google Scholar, and the Diwang shiji jicun Zongyuan, Xu ed., Zhonghua shuju, Peking, 1964, p. 52.Google Scholar
55 Chu ci 3/15aGoogle Scholar (Tian wen, 66).Google Scholar
56 From a citation of the Sui chaozi as cited in the Yi shi, see Shanhai jing jiaozhu, p. 210.Google Scholar
57 Chu ci 3/15a (Tian wen, 1. 65)Google Scholar, 1/llb (Li sao, 1. 74).Google Scholar
58 Shanhai jing jiaozhu, juan 16 (Dahuang xijing), p. 414.Google Scholar See also juan 7 (Hainei xijing) and the Gui cang, 9a (Zheng Mu) for this story. For the Jiu shao, see the Guben zhushu jinian, p. 9 (in which Qi danced the Jiu shao in the ninth year)Google Scholar, and Shanhai jing jiaozhu, j. 16, 414.Google Scholar The Shi ji j. 1, p. 43, describes Yŭ as the creator of this music.Google Scholar
59 Shi ji j. 2, 85–6.Google Scholar
60 The earliest references to this story are in the Chu ci, 3/15b–16b, 18b–19a, lines 67–72, 85–90.
61 v. 7, 282–92.
62 Junshi, Yang “Kang Keng yu Xia hui” Dalu zazhi 20, no. 3 (1960), 83–88.Google Scholar
63 Guo yu, Lu yu, shang, 4/9a.
64 jijiao dingbu, p. 14.Google Scholar
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