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shaman and  ghosts, and  favored  lewd sacrifice/'  an indication that  these  customs lasted  until
                           the  Han dynasty. The many imaginary figures and animal creatures  made of lacquered  wood
                           from  the  Warring States Chu tombs are an artistic reflection of the  importance of the  shaman.
                                Scholars of philosophy have noted that Daoism, as represented  by Laozi and  Zhuangzi, was
                           the  mainstream in the  regions of Yangzi and  Huai River valleys, while the  Confucianist and
                           Mohist schools were popular in the  Yellow River valley. In the  winter of 1993,  an ancient book of
                           bamboo slips from  Chu Tomb i (dated to the  Warring States period) in Guodian, Jingmen,
                           Hubei province, was unearthed; it contained fourteen fragmentary  slips containing Confucian
                           texts, three Lao zi fragments,  and  one  fragment of Taiyi  sheng shui; the  latter two were popular  in
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                           later religious Daoism.  Judging from  these discoveries, while Confucianism  and  Daoism were
                           practiced  concurrently, Daoism received greater emphasis.
                                Another important document is a Warring States period  Chu manuscript on  silk,  report-
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                           edly from  Zidanku, Changsha,  and  now in the  Sackler Collection. The historian Li Ling has
                           tentatively identified the  manuscript as calendar of the  four  seasons  (Sishiling)  that served as a
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                           guidebook  for choosing when a particular activity should take place.  During the  Han dynasty,
                           such texts were classified  as shushu (mathematics and  skills such as divination and  astrology).
                           Other  manuscripts from  the  same site also belong to this category. The content  of the  Sishiling
                           is similar to the  You guan and  You guan tu  sections of the  Guan zi and  reflects parallels between
                           Yin-Yang theory and  Daoist thought.  These manuscripts from  Warring States  period  Chu  tombs
                           document the  popularity of Daoism under the  Chu. Early shamanism is manifested in Daoist
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                           thought  and  rhetoric, particularly in the  transmitted texts of the  Lao zi and  Zhuang  zi;  the Chu
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                           ci also reveal elements of shamanic belief.  Shamanism, Daoism, and  Li sao all inform  the  color-
                           ful  and  highly imaginative thought  and  literature of the  Chu  tradition.





                           R E M N A N T S  OF  CHU  C U L T U R E  IN  THE  EARLY  HAN  DYNASTY
                           The Qin army left  a trail of destruction  in the  course  of its conquests — a practice that  funda-
                           mentally altered  the  fabric  of the  six states that it subjugated. Several tombs of the  Qin type
                           have been  discovered within these  states, yielding objects that  conform to Qin typology  but
                           contain  elements of an indigenous style. Only the  Changsha region  seems to have retained  a
                           rich  Chu  culture.
                                Historical texts are ambiguous with regard to precise dates  for the  Qin occupation  of the
                           Changsha region. The chapter  on the  genealogy of the  Qin and  the  Bai Qi chronicle  in the  Shi ji
                           report  that when the  Qin general Bai Qi took  over the  Chu capital of Ying, he also  dispersed
                           other  Chu  regions in Qianzhong, Wujun,  and Jiangnan. The Qin occupation  of Changsha may
                           have been contemporaneous  with this campaign, but  Changsha  tombs  from  the  period  still

                           yield ritual vessels — sheng  (he), hu, and fang  — that  are distinctly Chu  in  style  (short-legged
                           ding of the  Qin type are the  exception). Such burial objects endured  into the  early Han dynasty.



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