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The Role of the T'ien-kan Ti-chih Terms in the Naming System of the Yin

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 March 2015

Chang Tai-Ping*
Affiliation:
University of Washington

Abstract

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Type
Research Notes
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Study of Early China 1978

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References

FOOTNOTES

1. I-p'ing, Yen, “Shang chi-ssu-p'u ,” Chung-kuo wen-tzu , 45 (1972), 115Google Scholar.

2. Wang Kuo-wei , “Yin-hsü pu-tz'u chung so chien hsien-kung hsien-wang k'ao ,”,” and “Yin-hsü pu-tz'u chung so chien hsien-kung hsien-wang hsü-k'ao ,” 2.391-432.

3. Pan Ku (32-92 A.D.), “Hsing-ming,” Po-hu-t'ungTs'ung-shu chi-ch'en? ch'u-pien, 3b.326.

4. This passage from the “Ti-wang shih-chia ” is cited in Ssu-ma Chen's So-yin, commentary to the Shih-chi (1959; rpt. Hongkong: Chung-hua, 1970), 3.93.

5. Kuo-wei, Wang, “Yin-jen i-jih wei-ming chih so yu-lai ,” Yin li chenq-wen, Wang Kuan-t'ang hsien-shen? ch'uan-chi, pp. 1945–9Google Scholar.

6. Wan-li, Ch'ü, “Shih-fa lan-shang yü Yin-tai lun ,” Kuo-li chung-yang yen-chiu-yuan li-shih yu-yen yen-chiu-so chi-k'an 13 (1948), 222Google Scholar.

7. Tso-pin, Tung, “Lun Shang-jen i shih-jih wei-ming,” Ta-lu tsa-chih, 2, no.2 (1951), 610Google Scholar.

8. Shih-chi, 3.108.

9. Tung Tso-pin, op. cit., p. 10.

10. Ibid., p. 8.

11. Meng-chia, Ch'en, “Miao-hao, shang ,” Yin-hsü pu-tz'u tsung-shu, p. 405Google Scholar.

12. Ibid., p. 404. The chart shows that in the Tsu Chia and Tsu Keng Periods, sacrifices were made to Ancestor Chia (Yang Chia?) and Ancestor Ping, either Pao Ping or Wai Ping, which is ten or fifteen generations away. Why was their close grandfather Hsiao I removed? What are the rules by which ancestors names were removed?

13. There are three ancestors, Chung Jen, Wu Ting, and Lin Hsin, who are not found in the oracle bone inscriptions. Ch'en Meng-chia suggests that Ch'i ang Ting perhaps is Wu Ting in the Shih-chi. op. cit., p. 423.

14. See a more detailed explanation in Fang-p'u, ChuYin Chou chih-tu lun ,” Chia-ku-hsüeh Shang-shih pien (Shanghai: Chung-hua, 1935), 7.33a36bGoogle Scholar.

15. See e.g., Yen I-p'ing, op. cit., pp. 1-5. Such charts will vary depending on the number of bone inscriptions used, how one understand them, their periodization, and their relation to calendrical problems Involved.