Earliest direct evidence of horse husbandry and essential social network for sacrificial rituals during the Western Zhou Dynasty in China

IF 3.2 1区 地球科学 Q1 GEOGRAPHY, PHYSICAL Quaternary Science Reviews Pub Date : 2024-10-17 DOI:10.1016/j.quascirev.2024.108997
Huiping Cai , Qiang Ma , Mengling Gao , Yaowu Hu
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Abstract

Horses were initially managed and domesticated in Central Asia during the Neolithic period for their utilization as a source of sustenance and transportation. Subsequently, they came to symbolize the elevated status of individuals when interred alongside elites in nomadic cultures during the Bronze Age in the eastern Eurasian Steppe. This practice was also adopted in China and became an indispensable component of Zhou rituals, with its origins dating back to the Late Shang Dynasty and subsequently spreading throughout the Western Zhou Dynasty. The understanding of horse management for sacrificial purposes after its introduction to China remains limited. In this study, we present isotopic data (δ13C, δ15N, δ34S, δ18O) and 14C-dating results obtained from equine bones discovered at the Yaoheyuan site in Ningxia, China, which served as a vassal state attached to Western Zhou. The dating analysis reveals that horses lived during the period of 1203 BC∼821 BC (2σ, 95.4%), within the chorological range of the early to middle Western Zhou Dynasty generally. The multi-isotope analysis demonstrates that sacrificial horses exhibited diverse dietary patterns and originated from various regions, highlighting how burial owners held dominant authority over valuable equine resources. Similar patterns of horse management can be observed across other sites in China during both the Bronze Age and Iron Age periods as well as within the eastern Eurasian Steppe region. This suggests that horse sacrificial ritual originated from this steppe region but became localized within Chinese culture upon its introduction to China and eventually turned into an intrinsic characteristic of Zhou ritual practices. Sustaining such widespread adoption of this ritual throughout Western Zhou period required a continuous social network, including a self-sustained system to raise horse locally and an imported system to obtain horses in the steppe by wars, tributes, or trade exchange. Our study offers the earliest direct evidence of the ceremonial handling of equine sacrifices and the crucial social network during the Western Zhou Dynasty, enhancing our comprehension of cultural exchange between the eastern Eurasian Steppe and China.
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中国西周时期最早的养马业直接证据和祭祀活动的重要社会网络
马匹最初是在新石器时代的中亚地区被管理和驯化,用作食物来源和交通工具。随后,在欧亚草原东部青铜时代的游牧文化中,马与精英一起被埋葬,成为个人地位提升的象征。这种习俗在中国也被采用,并成为周礼不可或缺的组成部分,其起源可追溯到商代晚期,随后传遍整个西周。马匹传入中国后,人们对其祭祀管理的了解仍然有限。在本研究中,我们展示了从中国宁夏姚河源遗址发现的马骨(δ13C、δ15N、δ34S、δ18O)中获得的同位素数据(δ13C、δ15N、δ34S、δ18O)和 14C 测定结果。年代分析表明,马的生活年代为公元前1203年∼公元前821年(2σ,95.4%),大致在西周早中期的脉学范围内。多同位素分析表明,祭祀用马表现出多样化的饮食模式,且来自不同地区,突出了墓葬主人对珍贵马匹资源的支配权。在中国青铜时代和铁器时代的其他遗址以及欧亚草原东部地区也可以观察到类似的马匹管理模式。这表明,祭马仪式起源于草原地区,但传入中国后在中国文化中本土化,并最终成为周代祭祀活动的固有特征。在整个西周时期,要维持这种仪式的广泛采用,需要一个持续的社会网络,包括在当地养马的自给自足系统和通过战争、贡品或贸易交换从草原获取马匹的输入系统。我们的研究为西周时期马祭的礼仪处理和重要的社会网络提供了最早的直接证据,加深了我们对欧亚草原东部与中国之间文化交流的理解。
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来源期刊
Quaternary Science Reviews
Quaternary Science Reviews 地学-地球科学综合
CiteScore
7.50
自引率
15.00%
发文量
388
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Quaternary Science Reviews caters for all aspects of Quaternary science, and includes, for example, geology, geomorphology, geography, archaeology, soil science, palaeobotany, palaeontology, palaeoclimatology and the full range of applicable dating methods. The dividing line between what constitutes the review paper and one which contains new original data is not easy to establish, so QSR also publishes papers with new data especially if these perform a review function. All the Quaternary sciences are changing rapidly and subject to re-evaluation as the pace of discovery quickens; thus the diverse but comprehensive role of Quaternary Science Reviews keeps readers abreast of the wider issues relating to new developments in the field.
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