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The beginning of Chinese civilization

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Extract

The origins of man and the beginnings of culture in China were taken for granted in traditional Chinese history. Man was either simply evolved in the creation of the world or created by supernatural beings. In historical times all the peoples of China were recognized as the descendants of Huang-ti, the Yellow Emperor, and the basic cultural practices were attributed to the various rulers in remote antiquity. They formed a continuous sequence with its beginnings in the third millennium BC, followed by a succession of dynasties for some 5,000 years until the present day.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd 1973

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References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

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1. Preliminary report of the excavation of a neolithic site at Li-chia-ts’un, Hsi-hsiang, Shensi, in 1961, Kaogu, 62.6. 2905.Google Scholar
2. Notes on some prehistoric dates in China, Kaogu, 72.1.579.Google Scholar
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6. Archaeological studies in Szechwan (Cambridge), 1957.Google Scholar
7 Prehistoric China: archaeology in China, I (Cambridge), 1959.Google Scholar
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11. Numerals in ancient China, Journal of the Chinese University of Hong Kong, I, 1973.Google Scholar
12. Hoabinhian: a pebble-tool complex with early association in South-east Asia, Science, CLXIII, 1969, 6713.Google Scholar
13. Hoabinhian transformation in early Southeast Asia : a cultural-chronological sequence c. 20,000 to 5500 BC (New Orleans), 1969.Google Scholar
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15. New archaeological finds in China during the great cultural revolution, Kaogu, 71.1 2942.Google Scholar
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17. Miao-ti-kou and Sun-li-ch’iao (Peking), 1959.Google Scholar
18. Archaeology in New China (Peking), 1962.Google Scholar
19. Ching-shun Ch’ü-chia-ling (Peking), 1965.Google Scholar
20. Reports on radiocarbon dates, Kaogu, 72.1.52-6;72.5.568.Google Scholar
21. Sian Pan-p’o (Peking), 1963.Google Scholar
22. Upper Pleistocene and Holocene environmental conditions in Japan, Arctic Anthropology, V, 1969, 2. 133.-158.Google Scholar
23. Ku-tai wen-tzu chih pien-cheng ti fa-chan, Kaogu, 72.3.2-13.Google Scholar
24. How to study Chinese bronze, National Palace Museum Quarterly, I, 1966, 19.Google Scholar
25. Ch’ung chi-chung shih-ch’ien ho yu-shih tsao-ch’i t’ao-wen ti kuan-ch’a li ts’e Chung-kuo wen-tzu ti ch’i-yuan, Journal of Nanyang University, III, 1969, 128.Google Scholar
26. The neolithic site of Li-chia-ts’un, Hsi-hsiang, Shensi, Kaogu, 61.7.3524.Google Scholar
27. Hsin-shih-ch’i shih-tai ti Chung-yuan, Ta-lu cha-chih, IV, 1952,6573.Google Scholar
28. Re-working south-east Asian prehistory, Paidarn, XV, 1969, 12539.Google Scholar
29. Some problems concerning the Yang-shao culture, Kaogu Xuebao, 65.1.5182.Google Scholar
30. Stone artifacts found at Nieh-la-mu-hsien, Tibet, Kaogu, 72.1.423.Google Scholar
31. Cultural frontier in ancient east Asia (Edinburgh),1971.Google Scholar
32. Metallurgy in ancient China, Tōhogakuhō, XXXIV, 1959, 58.Google Scholar
33. New finds in archaeology and palaeontology, China reconstructs, 72.8.401.Google Scholar
34. A trial digging at the Hsia-wang-kang site in Hsi-ch’nan, Honan, Wen-wu, 72.10.619.Google Scholar