Heinz-Murray 2E.book

(Axel Boer) #1

242 Part IV: East Asian Civilization


A cultural unity among the Han Chinese is already apparent in Neolithic
archaeological sites in North China. As long ago as 1600 B.C.E. the Chinese
elite were asking questions of their ancestors by inscribing on oracle bones the
earliest versions of the script still in use today. These oracle bones were usually
the plastrons (or underbellies) of tortoises or the shoulder blades of the oxen
that they used to plow their fields. A ritual master would inscribe a question on
the bone and then apply heat until cracks ran across the inscribed surface. The
cracks were interpreted as a resolution to the question in a way that was
believed to represent the will of the ancestors or the gods. Writing and literacy
early on became to the Chinese the supreme marker of civilization. It was the
possession of civilization, in their view, that distinguished them from all other
known peoples.
The Zhou dynasty text, Liji (Li Chi, or Book of Rites), provides a kind of
ancient Chinese ethnographic classification of peoples in a system of “Five
Regions.” At the center was the “Middle Kingdom” (Zhongguo), that is, the

Map 7.1 China.

Tibet

Anyang

Taklamakan
Desert

Him
ala
yas

CHINA

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