Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-qsmjn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-15T13:24:13.068Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Liangzhu – a late Neolithic jade-yielding culture in southeastern coastal China

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Tsui-Mei Huang*
Affiliation:
Department of Fine Arts, University of Pittsburgh, 104 Frick Fine Arts Building, Pittsburgh PA 15260, USA

Extract

From the beginning, the culture-history of the Chinese archaeological sequence has had its own character. And in a country and a civilization so vast, regional variation can also be on a grand scale. An examination of a late Neolithic culture on the southeastern coast finds jade in early contexts that give a new perspective to the traditional – and later – importance jade bears in the dynastic northern sequence.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd 1992

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

Zhimin, AN. 1988. Regarding some problems of the Liangzhu Culture, Kaogu 1988(3): 235–45.Google Scholar
Chang, K.C. 1986. Cong and its significance in ancient Chinese History, in Essays on Cultural Relics and Archaeology: 252–260. Beijing: Wenwu Press.Google Scholar
Chang, K.C. 1989. An essay on Cong, Orientations 20(6): 3743.Google Scholar
Coe, M.D. 1981. Religion and the rise of Mesoamerican states, in Jones & Kautz (ed.): 157–71.Google Scholar
Creamer, W. & Haas, J.. 1985. Tribe versus chiefdom in Lower Central America, American Antiquity 50: 738–54.Google Scholar
Earle, T.K. 1987. Chiefdoms in archaeological and ethnohistorical perspective, Annual Reviews in Anthropology 16: 279308.Google Scholar
Gaines, A.M. & Handy, J.L.. 1975. Mineralogical alteration of Chinese tomb jades, Nature 253: 433–4.Google Scholar
Jianxiang, Gu & Yunao, HE. 1990. The formation and interaction of different cultural circles of oceanic cultural system in Neolithic China, Dongnan Wenhua 1990(5): 96107.Google Scholar
Huang, XUANPEI. 1988. China’s Neolithic jade ware, in Childs-Johnson, Elizabeth (ed.), Ritual and power: jades of ancient China: 7–15. New York (NY): China Institute in America.Google Scholar
Huang, XUANPEI 1991. Liangzhu jades in the Shanghai Museum, Orientations 1991(February/March): 32–6.Google Scholar
Zhungqing, Ji. 1991. The influence of the Liangzhu culture and ancient legend, Dongnan Wenhua 1990(5): 108–12.Google Scholar
Jones, CD. & Kautz, R.R. (ed.). 1981. The transition to statehood in the New World. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Keatinge, R.W. 1981. The nature and role of religious diffusion in the early stages of state formation: an example from Peruvian prehistory, in Jones & Kautz (ed.): 172–87.Google Scholar
Nanjing, MUSEUM. 1980. Caoxieshan site in Wuxian, Jiangsu Province, Wenwu Ziliao Congkan 3: 124.Google Scholar
Nanjing, MUSEUM. 1984. Excavation of Sidun Site, Wujing, Changz-hou, Jiangsu Province in 1982, Kaogu 1984(2): 109–29.Google Scholar
Wenzhung, PEI. 1963. Chinese Stone Age. Beijing: Zhunggou Qinnian Press.Google Scholar
Renfrew, C. 1973. Monuments, mobilization and social organization in Neolithic Wessex, in Renfrew, C. (ed.), The explanation of cultural change: models in prehistory: 539–58. London: Duckworth.Google Scholar
Sanders, W.T. & Webster, D.. 1978. Unilinealism, multilinealism, and the evolution of complex societies, in Redman, Charles L. et al. (ed.), Social archaeology: beyond subsistence and dating: 249–302. New York (NY): Academic Press.Google Scholar
SCRAC. Shanghai Cultural Relics Administrative Committee. 1978. The first and second excavations of the Maqiao site, Shanghai, Kaogu Xuebao 1978(1): 109–36.Google Scholar
Service, E.R. 1962. Primitive social organization – an evolutionary perspective. New York (NY): Random House.Google Scholar
Shennan, S. 1982. Ideology, change and the European early Bronze Age, in Hodder, Ian (ed.), Symbolic and structural archaeology: 155–61. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Xingeng, SHI. 1938. Liangzhu. Hangzhou: Zhejiang Provincial Department of Education.Google Scholar
Teng, Shuping. 1988. From blocking earth-heaven communication to intercommunicating heaven and earth, National Palace Museum Monthly of Chinese Art 6(7): 1331.Google Scholar
Wang, Zunguo. 1984. A general discussion of ‘jade-shrouding burial’ in the Liangzhu culture, Wenwu 1984(2): 2335.Google Scholar
Wen, Guang. 1986. Geological investigation of Neolithic archaeology of southern Jiangsu, Wenwu 1986(10): 42–9.Google Scholar
Xia, NAI. 1977. Carbon-14 dating and China’s prehis-torical archaeology, Kaogu 1977(4): 217–32.Google Scholar
Xiao, JIAYI. 1990. A preliminary study of the pollen combination and the natural environment of ancient people of Longnan site in Wujiang Prefecture of Jiangsu, Dongnan Wenhua 1990(5): 295–63, 107.Google Scholar
Zheng, JIAN. 1986. Examination of jades from Dongshan of Zhanglingshan site, Wuxian, Wenwu 1986(10): 3941.Google Scholar
ZPICRA. Zhejiang Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics Archaeology. 1988. Excavation of the ceremonial platform site of Liangzhu culture at Yaoshan, Yuhang, Wenwu 1988(1): 3251.Google Scholar
ZPICRA. 1989. Jades of the Liangzhu culture. Beijing & Hong Kong: Wenwu & Liangmu Press.Google Scholar
ZPICRA FAT. Zhejiang Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics Archaeology, Fanshan Archaeological Team. 1988. Excavation of the Liangzhu culture cemetery in Fanshan, Yuhang, Zhejiang Province, Wenwu 1988: 131.Google Scholar