Page 107 - The Golden Age of Chinese Archaeology: Celebrated Discoveries from the People’s Republic of China
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THE  TAOSI            When the  cemetery at Taosi was first uncovered, the  startling riches discovered there  gave rise to
                            speculation that this was a site of the  legendary Xia, referred to in historical texts as the  prede-
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      LONGSHAN              cessors  of the  Shang.  But much of the  material excavated at Taosi bears little direct  relation  to
                            Erlitou, now considered  by many archaeologists as a Xia capital city, and, moreover, the  radio-
      CULTURE               carbon  dates for Taosi place it somewhat earlier, in the final centuries of the  third millennium BCE.
                                 The Taosi site, north  of the  Yellow River in the  Xiangfen  region  of southern  Shanxi
                            province, was excavated between  1978 and  1985. Although remains from  this same culture have
                            been  reported  from  numerous other  locations in the  area, only Taosi has been  extensively exca-
                            vated and published  in any detail. Traces of dwellings, storage pits, and kilns have been  noted,
                            but the  archaeological investigation has focused on the  cemetery alone. Many tantalizing ques-
                            tions therefore remain about this distinctive late Longshan culture.
                                 The cemetery itself, however, is of great  importance. It is estimated  to contain several

                            thousand  burials, of which nearly a thousand  have already been excavated. The large  number
                            of burials suggests that the  area was densely populated, and the  fact that many of the graves
                            overlap indicates that the  cemetery was in use for a long period  of time. Archaeologists have
                            classified  the  burials according  to their size. The majority of graves were small, measuring
                            roughly two meters in length  and  a half to one meter in width, and  for the  most part they were
                            unfurnished. The medium-size tombs, a little more than two meters long and  a meter wide,
                            numbered  fewer than a hundred.  They contained wooden  coffins  and  a variety of burial  objects,
                            such as pottery  and  wooden vessels, jade axes, cong, and  personal ornaments, as well as pig
                            mandibles. One  of the  medium-size tombs  (M 3296) yielded the  surprising discovery of a small
                            cast copper bell. The bell is assumed to have been made in a place other than Taosi because,  so
                            far,  no evidence of either  smelting or metalworking has come to light in the  vicinity of the  site.
                                 At least four  of the  objects in the  exhibition come from  the  large tombs, which are  the
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                            burials of the  elite members of the  Taosi community.  As far as can  be ascertained, the  large
                            burials, generally about  two meters in length  and two to three  meters wide, are exclusively those
                            of adult males. The coffin,  fashioned of wooden planks, was placed  at the  center  of the  tomb,
                            surrounded  by as many as nearly two hundred  burial objects. One  of the  most lavishly provided
                            of the  tombs at Taosi, M 3015,  gives us a sense  of the  wealth and  variety of objects  destined  for
                            an elite burial. In all, the  tomb contained  178 objects, including 14 pottery  vessels, 23 wooden

                            objects, 130 items of jade and  stone, and n bone  implements. Among the  pottery  vessels were
                            examples of handsomely shaped  corded gray-ware containers,  and  even a small ceramic stove,
                            all of which are the  recognizable descendants  characteristic  of the  older Miaodigou II culture
                            that once thrived in this area. The tomb also yielded a small number of painted  earthenware
                            vessels, including  a hu (cat. 26a). 3
                                 Even more remarkable for the  very fact  of their preservation were a number of wooden
                             objects, such as caskets and  vessels. Some of the  wooden vessels, like those from  other tombs,





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