翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Eastbrook School
・ Eastbrook, Dagenham
・ Eastbrook, Maine
・ Eastbrookend Country Park
・ Eastburn
・ Eastburn, East Riding of Yorkshire
・ Eastburn, Illinois
・ Eastburn, West Yorkshire
・ Eastburn-Jeanes Lime Kilns Historic District
・ Eastbury
・ East Wykeham, Ludford, Lincolnshire
・ East Wyoming, Rhode Island
・ East Yangon General Hospital
・ East Yarra Province
・ East Ybor
East Yi West Xia
・ East York
・ East York (disambiguation)
・ East York Board of Education
・ East York Civic Centre
・ East York Collegiate Institute
・ East York Historic District
・ East York Lyndhursts
・ East York Town Centre
・ East York, Pennsylvania
・ East Yorkshire (disambiguation)
・ East Yorkshire (district)
・ East Yorkshire (UK Parliament constituency)
・ East Yorkshire Family History Society
・ East Yorkshire Motor Services


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

East Yi West Xia : ウィキペディア英語版
East Yi West Xia
East Yi West Xia (Yi Xia Dong Xi Shuo, 夷夏東西說) is an obsolete theory about the origin of prehistory culture in current China which says that the culture of Shang dynasty was established by two ethnic groups; Western part of Shang dynasty was developed by Xia ethnic group, and the eastern part of Shang dynasty was developed by Yi ethnic group.
== History of the theory ==
This theory was suggested by Fu Sinian in 1933.〔Fu Sinian, "Yi Xia dong xi shuo" (Theory of the Yi in the East and the Xia in the West) in ''Zhongyangyuan qingzhu Cai Yuanpei xiansheng 65 sui lunwenji, Lishi yuyan yanjiusuo jikan waibian'' 1:1 (January 1933), 1093 - 1134〕〔Fu Sinian quanji (Complete Works of Fu Sinian), III, 822-893〕 It was further expanded by Liang Siyong who suggested that the newly discovered Yangshao culture was established by the Xia in the west and the Longshan culture by the Yi peoples of the east.〔Liang Siyong, "Xiaotun Longshan yu Yangshao" (小屯龍山與仰韶) in ''Zhongyangyuan qingzhu Cai Yuanpei xiansheng 65 sui lunwenji, Lishi yuyan yanjiusuo jikan waibian'' (1933), 555- 567〕 For Chinese and Western historians this hypothesis became the prevailing theory to interpret Chinese prehistory and remained so until about 1960.〔Liu Yao, "Lomgshan wenhua yu Yangshao wenhua zhi fenxi" in ''Zhongguo kaogu xuebao, 2 (1947), pp. 251-282〕〔Andersson, J.G., "Researches into the Prehistory of the Chinese" in ''Bulletin of the Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities'', 15 (1943), pp. 29-91〕
Further archaeological discoveries made the theory obsolete. In 1950s it became clear that the Yinxu culture was preceded by the Erligang culture in Zhongyuan. In addition, the gap between the Erligang culture and the Longshan culture was joined by the Erlitou culture, which was named after the Erlitou site discovered in 1959. Chinese scholars identify the Erligang and Erlitou cultures as the sites of the Shang and Xia Dynasties respectively although the archaeological boundary between the two dynasties was still debatable. In 1983, the ruin of Yanshi Shang City was discovered and identified as the Erligang culture. The ruin very close to the Erlitou site suggests that the Erlitou and Erligang cultures were dominated by people with different cultural background.
In Shandong, the Shandong Longshan culture was replaced by the Yueshi culture around 2000 B.C. The sites of the Yueshi culture show complementary distribution with those of the Erligang culture which expanded eastward from Zhongyuan. It proved that the Shang people did not originated in the east.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「East Yi West Xia」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.