Erligang culture should not be confused with Erlitou culture.
Erligang culture | |
Map: | Erligang map.svg |
Mapalt: | Relief map of eastern China with an oval covering most of the North China Plain, the Yanshi and Zhengzhou sites just south of the Yellow River and the Panlongcheng site just north of the Yangtze |
Region: | North China Plain |
Period: | Bronze Age China |
Typesite: | Erligang |
Majorsites: | Zhengzhou, Yanshi, Panlongcheng |
Precededby: | Erlitou culture |
Followedby: | Xiaoshuangqiao–Huanbei |
The Erligang culture is a Bronze Age urban civilization and archaeological culture in China that existed from approximately 1600 to 1400 BC. The primary site, Zhengzhou Shang City, was discovered at Erligang, within the modern city of Zhengzhou, Henan, in 1951.
The culture was centered in the Yellow River valley. In its early years, it expanded rapidly, reaching the Yangtze River. The culture then gradually shrank from its early peak.
See main article: article and Zhengzhou Shang City. Later investigations showed that the Erligang site was part of an ancient city surrounded by a roughly rectangular wall with a perimeter of about 7sigfig=1NaNsigfig=1. The walls were of rammed earth construction, a technique dating back to Chinese Neolithic sites of the Longshan culture . It has been estimated that the walls would have been 20m (70feet) wide at the base, rising to a height of 8m (26feet). Large workshops were located outside the city walls, including a bone workshop, a pottery workshop and two bronze vessel workshops. The modern city sits on the remains of the Erligang city, rendering archaeological excavations impossible. Therefore, most of the information about the culture comes from studying other Erligang sites.
The large site at Panlongcheng, on the Yangtze River in Hubei, is currently the largest excavated site associated with the Erligang culture. It was discovered in 1954, and excavated in 1974 and 1976.Since Zhengzhou lacked local access to the component metals of bronze, sites like Panlongcheng were probably used to secure distant metal resources. A large number of bronze wares were found in Panlong City. Through carbon dating of wood samples unearthed from Tonglu Mountain in Dazhi, Hubei and Tongling Mining and Metallurgical Site in Ruichang, Jiangxi, comparisons were made between the bronze wares unearthed in Panlongcheng City and Tonglu Mountain. The mineral elements of Panlongcheng bronzes were found to be the same as those of Tonglushan, which indicates that the copper of Panlongcheng originated from Tonglushan.[1]
Erligang bronzes developed from the style and techniques of the earlier Erlitou culture, centered at 85km (53miles) to the west of Zhengzhou. Erligang was the first archaeological culture in China to show widespread use of bronze vessel castings. Bronze vessels became much more widely used and uniform in style than at Erlitou.
Many Chinese archaeologists believe that the ancient cities of Yanshi and Zhengzhou were among the early capitals of the Shang dynasty mentioned in traditional histories, and refer to the Erligang culture as early Shang. However many scholars and Western archaeologists have pointed out that, unlike the later Anyang settlement, no written records have been found at Erligang sites to link the archaeological remains with traditional accounts written a millennium later.