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Erlitou

Coordinates: 34°41′35″N 112°41′20″E / 34.693°N 112.689°E / 34.693; 112.689
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Erlitou
二里頭
An aerial view of an archaeological site amidst grassy plains near a town. In the distance, a city with high-rise apartments and a power plant looms
Aerial view, 2024
Erlitou is located in Henan
Erlitou
Location within Henan
Erlitou is located in China
Erlitou
Erlitou (China)
LocationSouth of Erlitou village, Yanshi, Luoyang, Henan, China
Coordinates34°41′35″N 112°41′20″E / 34.693°N 112.689°E / 34.693; 112.689
TypeSettlement
Area300 hectares (740 acres)[a]
History
Founded
  • First period: c. 3500–3000 BCE
  • Second period: c. 1870 BCE
Abandoned
  • First period: c. 2600 BCE
  • Second period: c. 1300 BCE
Cultures
Site notes
Discovered1959

Erlitou (Chinese: 二里头; pinyin: Èrlǐtou), also known as Yanshi Erlitou, is a Chinese archaeological site in the Yiluo Basin of Yanshi District, Luoyang. Discovered by archaeologist Xu Xusheng in 1959, it was initially identified as Bo, the first capital of the Shang dynasty, although Chinese archaeologists now generally recognize it as the capital of the Xia dynasty—although the existence of the dynasty is still debated by scholars. A major center of early Bronze Age China, it is the type site and largest settlement of the eponymous Erlitou culture, although limited occupation has been found from the earlier Yangshao and Longshan cultures and the later Erligang culture.

The site was the paramount settlement of a polity which spread across the Yiluo Basin and adjacent portions of the Mount Song region. The site lies south of the modern Luo River; however, during its period of occupation, the settlement was on the river's northern bank. An initial Neolithic period of occupation, which saw several small settlements at the site, lasted from c. 3500–2600 BCE. After several centuries of vacancy, a major settlement emerged around 1860 BCE, and soon became the largest settlement in the Yiluo Basin, likely attracting waves of migrants. At its peak, it reached a population of around 24,000 residents and an area of around 300 hectares (740 acres). Centered around a large palatial complex surrounded by rammed earth walls, the city became a center of bronze casting, pioneering piece-mold casting and the production of bronze ritual vessels. Turquoise and jade goods were also produced the site, including ritual artifacts such as ceremonial weapons and turquoise-inlaid bronze plaques. Outside of the palatial complex, the settlement is largely comprised of small semi-subterranean houses intermixed with haphazardly located graves and tombs, often underlying houses, courtyards, and roads. There are no formal areas set aside for burials, and tomb sites were used for only short intervals. The site contains the remains of the earliest known road network in China. A set of wagon tracks has been found on these roads, although it is unknown if the vehicle was drawn by humans or animals.

In the modern era, the site partially underlies three villages, which continue construction projects and development atop the site. Probing excavations are made by the Institute of Archaeology prior to development, although at times construction is done without archaeological involvement. The Chinese government declared Erlitou a national priority protected site in 1988 and a National Archaeological Park in 2022. In 2019, the Erlitou Site Museum of the Xia Capital opened near the site, exhibiting over 2,000 artifacts.

Geography

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A topographic map of China, showing the area occupied by the Erlitou culture in the north. A black square marks the Erlitou site
Spread of the Erlitou culture in China, with the Erlitou site marked

Erlitou (also known as Yanshi Erlitou)[2] is the type site of the eponymous Erlitou culture (c. 1900–1500 BCE) of ancient China—although a prior period of occupation dates to the earlier Yangshao and Longshan cultures (c. 3500–2600 BCE) of the Neolithic period. The Erlitou culture spans over five hundred sites[b] across portions of Henan, Hebei, Shanxi, and Shaanxi, with a total area of around; many of these have not been excavated, and have been identified with the culture through analysis of ceramic sherd finds. The Yiluo Basin and adjacent portions of Mount Song are the core territory of the culture,[3][4][5] and likely hosted a polity centered at Erlitou itself.[6] The Yiluo Basin is an alluvial plain flanked by the Mangling hills to the north and mountain ranges on all other sides, forming natural defensive barriers. Combined with the highly fertile soils of the basin, this allowed for a high population density.[7][8]

During the time of the Erlitou culture, other settlements emerged in the basin. To the east of Erlitou, Shaochai was the second largest settlement in the basin, and may have been a regional center which supported Erlitou through its advantageous position along the route to the Yellow River.[1][3] Further east, sites such Dashigu may have been been associated with the Erlitou or served as the centers of other neighboring polities.[6] Chinese archaeologists generally divide the settlement sites of the Erlitou culture into four tiers: small villages, secondary centers, regional centers, and the Erlitou site itself in the highest tier.[9][10] Erlitou is much larger than other sites of the culture, at around 3,000,000 square metres (740 acres); in comparison, most settlements of the culture are less than 100,000 square metres (25 acres), while particularly large sites such as Shaochai and Dashigu measure at around 600,000 square metres (150 acres).[11]

Most other Erlitou sites are located along the central reaches of the Yellow River, while outlying sites with some similarities with the Erlitou have been found along the Yangtze and Dan River.[4][5] Although it is not the earliest culture within China which made use of bronze, it is the first within the Central Plains, and is generally considered to mark the beginning of the Chinese Bronze Age. The Erlitou people were the creators of the first ritual bronzes in China through compound molds, an artistic tradition which would remain extremely prominent within the political and religious culture of the Central Plains into the late first millennium BCE.[12]

Erlitou is located in Yanshi District, Luoyang, between three modern villages which partially or fully overlie the site; Erlitou to the north, Gedangtou to the southeast, and Sijiaolou to the the south. Another village, Beixu, lies immediately adjacent to the northwestern end of the site.[13][14][15] It is adjacent to the Luo River, shortly upstream from its confluence with the Yi to form the Yiluo, which drains into the Yellow River to the north. During its period of occupation, Erlitou was on the northern bank of the Luo. The river moved to the north of the site during the Tang Dynasty (618–907 CE); portions of the site may have been destroyed during the river's change in course. Outside of the main settlement area, some scattered ruins associated with the site which have been found on the northern side of the Luo.[7][4][16]

History and periodization

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During the last portion (c. 3500–3000 BCE) of the Yangshao culture, three small settlements existed at the site on its western, southern, and eastern extents. From about 3000–2600, during the early period of the Longshan culture, these were succeeded by another settlement at the southern end of the site. After this, the site was abandoned for many centuries, before it was reoccupied by the Erlitou culture,[13][4][17] beginning a primary period of occupation lasting from c. 1860–1545.[18] The history of the site as part of the Erlitou culture (a period of roughly 360 years) has been divided into four phases, numbered I through IV.[14]

During Phase I, the Erlitou site exceed 100 hectares (250 acres) and became the largest known settlement in the Yiluo Basin. Its growth was likely fueled by migration from the surrounding region.[19] The layout of the site during this period is uncertain, as the stratum was heavily disrupted by occupants in later periods. The population of the settlement engaged in both agriculture and artisanry. The production of bronze, ceramics and bone tools were local industries, each apparently delegated to workshops in different portions of the site. Although slag from bronze casting was produced, knives are the only bronze objects found from this phase.[19][20]

Erlitou greatly expanded during Phase II, reaching its maximum size of around 300 hectares (740 acres),[a] and likely increasing greatly in population. The number of known burials and tools at the site tripled. While no houses or kilns have been discovered from Phase I, the remains of seven homes and one kiln are attested from Phase II. In the southeastern portion of the site, a palace complex of large rammed earth buildings was constructed, enclosed by a set of four roads.[21][22] Production of bone tools, bronze, and ceramics continued, while turquoise production may have begun.[23]

During Phase III, craft production and population density increased, and the city reached its peak population. The palace structures built in Phase II were superseded by six new structures built in a more organized pattern. The new palace complex, significantly larger in area, had significantly fewer storage pits and wells, indicating that the area was likely used by a small group of elites. Production of agricultural tools in the city decreased relative to the production of crafts and arrowheads, the latter of which increased tenfold from Phase II.[24] Development continued during Phase IV, which saw several new buildings erected in the palatial complex. Bronze production increased in number and quantity during the phase.[25]

As Erlitou reached its peak, fortified settlements of the Erligang culture began to emerge in the surrounding region. The city was eclipsed by the Yanshi Shang City, a large fortified Erligang settlement about 6 km (3.7 mi) to the northeast. As estimates for Phase IV (c. 1560–1520) overlap with the early subperiod (c. 1600–1415) of the Erligang, the production of traditional Erlitou-style pottery may have continued at Erlitou even after the beginning of Erligang pottery production at Yanshi. By the latter portion of the Erligang (ending around 1300), production of goods such as bronzes had ceased, and the settlement became a village around 30 hectares (74 acres) in area, centered on what was once the palace complex. The remains of small houses, ash pits, and burials are attested from this period. After the end of the Erligang culture, the settlement was abandoned.[22][26] During Erlitou's decline, the Zhengzhou Shang City, about 85 km (53 mi) to the east, also emerged as a prominent regional center. Zhengzhou's metallurgical technology shows similarities to Erlitou, suggesting that craftsmen from Erlitou may have migrated to the new city as Erlitou declined.[26]

Exact estimates for the dates of the Erlitou culture at the site vary. Various radiocarbon dating measures taken during the 20th century attested a date range of 1900–1500 BC for the Erlitou culture remains at the site, while accelerator mass spectrometry dates published for Erlitou culture remains at Xinzhai and Erlitou in 2007 gave a range of 1750–1530.[20]

Layout

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The site stretches around 2,400 m (7,900 ft) east-west and 1,900 m (6,200 ft) north-south, with an area of around 300 hectares (740 acres);[27] including northern portions destroyed by the movement of the Luo, the settlement may have totaled around 400 hectares (990 acres) in area.[1] Its maximum population is not known. One study estimated that the site had between 18,000 to 30,000 residents, with a mean around 24,000.[28]

Palatial complex

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The palatial complex, near the center of the site, was an enclosed rectangular area at least 12 hectares (30 acres) in area at its peak. It formed the original core of the city prior to expansion.[29] The purpose of the palatial complex (宫城; gongcheng), also referred to as a palace complex or palace city, remains a matter of academic contention. The purposes of the site may have changed over time. In 1991, historian Robert Thorp critiqued the complex's identification as a palace, theorizing that the structures were likely gathering or ritual spaces, as large audiences could congregate within their courtyards.[10][30][31]

The complex was divided into two clusters of buildings on the western and eastern ends of the enclosure. On the western end was a structure referred to by archaeologists as Foundation 1, an irregularly-shaped rammed-earth platform built during Phase III which measures 107 m × 99 m (351 ft × 325 ft), with a total area of around 1 hectare (2.5 acres). A series of covered corridors enclosed this platform, creating a courtyard for a wooden building on the northern end. One 1979 study estimated that the foundation would have taken 200,000 person-days to construct, not including the management and the logistics required for such a large project.[32]

The eastern portion of the complex contains the remains of multiple structural foundations. Foundation 3 measures more than 150 m × 50 m (490 ft × 160 ft), and contains three courtyards. It was built during Phase II, predating the surrounding wall. A 3 m (9.8 ft) passageway containing a wooden drainage ditch separates it from another early structure. During Phase III, two more structures were built atop these layers. One of these, Foundation 2, is a large rectangular platform, measuring 73 m × 53 m (240 ft × 174 ft) and 3 m (9.8 ft) in depth. On top of the platform laid a enclosed courtyard containing a wood and wattle-and-daub structure on the northern end. Another foundation was built on the site during Phase IV.[33] Archaeologist Xu Hong proposed that the layout of the structures shares intense similarities with descriptions of Western Zhou architecture, and evidences continuity between Erlitou and Zhou ritual practice.[33]

Large rammed-earth walls, about 2 m (6.6 ft) thick, were built around the palatial complex and an adjacent cluster of turquoise and bronze workshops to the south. The enclosure of the workshops, roughly 1 ha (2.5 acres) in area, likely indicates that they received state support. The city lacks an outer wall; similar urban plans, with a walled palace surrounded by an unwalled city, would remain common for the following millennium.[34][29]

Smaller buildings and infrastructure

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Elite tombs and residences are located immediately adjacent to the palatial complex. The residences and tombs of commoners are located at a lower elevation in the western part of the site; these areas also include tombs.[28][29] The residences of commoners are very small semi-subterranean structures ranging from 3–5 m2 (32–54 sq ft). Medium-sized buildings, generally to the north of the palatial complex, vary between tens to hundreds of square meters in size. They are generally one-roomed, although some have multiple. They are thought to be either residences or areas for meetings and ritual offerings.[32][35] To the north of the palatial area is an apparent ceremonial complex, evidenced by uniquely designed buildings with detached burials.[28]

Large roads, generally between 10–20 m (33–66 ft) wide, flank each side of the palatial complex with intersections at each corner, forming a shape resembling a number sign (#). This is the earliest known urban road network in China.[22] A set of parallel wagon tracks spaced about 1 m (3 ft) apart were found on the road at the southern end of the palatial complex. This is the earliest known evidence of wagon use in China. It is unknown if the vehicle was pulled by humans or animals. The width between suggests a much smaller vehicle than the horse-drawn chariots of the Late Shang, currently the earliest confirmed evidence of domesticated horses in China.[36][37]

Tombs and burials

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More than 400 graves have been discovered during excavations at the site. In contrast to the cemeteries of Neolithic and Late Shang settlements, there are no formal areas set aside for burials. Tombs are located haphazardly, adjacent to or directly underlying houses, courtyards, and roads. These tombs are generally found by themselves or in small clusters arranged in rows. Land use appears to have frequently alternated between tombs and houses, and so tomb sites were likely used for relatively short intervals. Archaeologists such as Liu Li have theorized that this sharp distinction from other Chinese mortuary traditions stems from Erlitou's demographic composition of migrants from many unrelated small kin groups.[38][39][40]

Two particularly dense assemblages of elite tombs are located to the north and northeast of the complex.[28][29] Ceramic vessels are the most common grave goods found at Erlitou, although in the tombs of elites, bronze ritual vessels, turquoise, and jade have also been found. Most graves are small and shallow, with little to no grave goods, although some contain a secondary ledge within the grave and a coffin. The largest tomb at the site is 5.2 by 4.5 metres (17 ft × 15 ft) and 6 metres (20 ft) deep, with the remains of a wooden coffin. The ornamentation of the tomb is unknown, as it was looted in antiquity.[41][38] About ten of the largest graves have traces of wooden coffins with cinnabar dye, which likely had ritual significance.[38]

Some graves have been found without proper burial whatsoever, whether found within a suspected sacrificial area or disposed in pits. Some of these skeletons are incomplete, while others show evidence of bound hands and feet.[38]

Artifacts

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A photo of a bronze plaque in a museum inlaid with an animistic turquoise design
A turquoise-inlaid bronze plaque recovered from Erlitou
A thin bronze drinking vessel standing on a museum display stand
A jue, a form of ritual bronze vessel, recovered from Erlitou

Although many not have been the earliest culture in China to cast bronze and copper—the Qijia and Huoshaogou cultures did so roughly contemporaneously—Erlitou was the first site confirmed to produce bronze ritual vessels. This practice may have originated in late Longshan sites; a slightly rounded copper fragment from the Wangchenggang site in Dengfeng[c] may have been part of a ritual vessel.[42] Bronze ritual vessels were produced at Erlitou by Phase III.[43] Seventeen have been found at the site. The most common of these are small drinking cups, jia and jue, although a he [zh] and a ding have also been recovered from the site.[44] Associated with powerful elites and religious power, they are found in elite burials and residential areas. The Erlitou site appears to have monopolized both the production and distribution of the Erlitou culture's ritual vessels.[24][43][45] Animal bones, especially those of pigs and cattle, have been recovered from the site. About one-fifth of these are burnt, evidencing that meat was frequently roasted, possibly in ding.[46]

The head of a large turquoise and jade sculpture of a dragon embedded within a block of earth
The head of the turquoise dragon-form artifact recovered from Erlitou

Turquoise fragments have been found concentrated along a suspected workshop at the southern portion of the palatial complex wall. Characteristic turquoise-inlaid bronze plaques have been found in elite burials from Phase III onward. One particularly large artifact recovered from the site, a dragon sculpture comprised of 2,000 pieces of turquoise and jade, has been found as a grave good.[44] Large jade objects such as daggers, axes, tablets, and dagger-axes, as well as ceremonial bronze weapons such as yue axes have also been recovered.[47]

Alongside copper and lead, metal objects recovered from Erlitou were also fashioned out of tin-copper, lead-copper, tin-lead-copper, and arsenic-copper alloys; tin-lead-copper is the most frequently attested of these alloys, although the exact proportions of each metal vary greatly between artifacts. Piece-mold casting was either invented or refined at Erlitou, a technology likely utilized by a select group of craftsmen affiliated with the Erlitou elite. The technique requires a high degree of technical mastery and thus likely indicates an advanced division of labour and a stratified and complex society. The casting technique allowed for the creation of the ritual vessels; this separated the culture from other Bronze Age cultures in the surrounding region, which rarely cast bronze objects for ritual purposes. Piece-mold casting is only attested at Erlitou, while other sites used stone molds.[44][45] The earliest bronze-cast objects at Erlitou, made with the piece-mold technique, are ling bells. These first appear in the archaeological record during Phase II.[34]

Metallurgical artifacts recovered from the workshop area include crucibles, slag, lead sheets, and charcoal. Abundant quantities of ceramic piece-molds have been found, generally external molds which were discarded after casting. Apparently used to produce vessels around 30 cm (12 in) in diameter, they have polished linings, which were sometimes decorated with patterns such as animal motifs.[34] Bronze tools such as adzes, chisels, and fishhooks have also been recovered from the site.[34]

As it was located within a floodplain, the resources in the immediate vicinity of the city were largely restricted to agricultural products, necessitating imports from both the surrounding region and further afield. Prestige goods such as proto-celadon wares and jade artifacts were also commonly imported.[48]

Excavation and analysis

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A Chinese sign in a grassy park, marking the area as the Erlitou National Archaeological Site Park
Erlitou National Archaeology Park

An archaeological team led by Xu Xusheng, seeking to find the ruins of the legendary Xia dynasty, discovered the Erlitou site in 1959.[49] It was recognized as a major advance in urban culture and development within China, although other prominent sites from the 3rd millennium BCE of a similar size to Erlitou have since been discovered elsewhere in China.[50][51] The site has become an important case study for research into the early history of urbanization in China. Alongside excavations of residential areas and workshops, archaeologists have made broader regional surveys in the Yiluo basin to study settlement patterns.[52]

Identification

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Xu Xusheng identified the Erlitou site with Bo, the capital founded by the first Shang king Tang of Shang, which some ancient texts placed at Yanshi.[49] According to the Bamboo Annals, Bo was the capital for the reign of the first eight kings, before a rapid series of capital changes during the reigns of Zhong Ding through Pan Geng, who moved the capital to its final site of Yin. Unlike all previous capitals, the presence of written records has allowed Yin's identification with the Yinxu site at Anyang. The site of Bo, the other Shang capital to be occupied for a significant length of time, has been generally identified with one of three sites; Erlitou, Shixianggou (also in Yanshi District), or Zhengzhou.[53]

Erlitou's identification with Bo was the academic consensus in China until archaeologist Zou Heng proposed in 1978 that it was actually the site of the Xia capital, while the newly-discovered Zhengzhou Shang City was the historic Bo. This sparked academic debate among Chinese archaeologists on the identification of the site — Phases I through IV have all been identified with either dynasty by different scholars. Excavation teams at the site generally placed the site within the Xia-Shang transition, often identifying the rapid development which began in Phase III with the beginning of the Shang dynasty. The discovery of the Yanshi Shang City (founded contemporaneously with Phase IV) in the 1980s sparked another round of discourse; by the end of the 1990s, Chinese scholars generally identified Phases I through III with the Xia, and Phase IV with the early Shang. Proponents of this theory point to the abandonment of Foundation No. 1. Initially thought to have been abandoned during Phase IV, a 1999 Institute of Archaeology report reinterpreted some portions of the temple (which were previously placed within Phase III or thought of as undatable) as belonging to Phase III.[54]

According to historian Sima Qian's (c. 145–85 BCE) Shiji, the Xia dynasty was the first dynasty of Chinese history. Founded by Yu the Great, thirty kings of the dynasty ruled over a period of 400 years, before it was superseded by the Shang. The existence of the Xia dynasty remains a matter of historical debate. Chinese historians and archaeologists generally interpret later historical materials such as the Bamboo Annals and Shiji as sufficient evidence for the dynasty's existence, especially as they recorded the list of Shang kings with relative accuracy. However, unlike the oracle bones of the Shang, no contemporary writings exist to attest the Xia dynasty, and no Shang sources mention the Xia. The Xia may have been a group of people prior to the Shang recorded through the oral tradition, who were only later reinterpreted as a dynastic state.[55][56] In 1996, the Chinese government commissioned the Xia–Shang–Zhou Chronology Project, attempting to standardize the chronology of the early Chinese dynasties. Relying on both historical texts and archaeological data, the project produced dates of 2070–1600 BCE for the Xia and 1600–1046 for the Shang.[56]

Conservation

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An overhead view of a large museum in a grassy environment
The Erlitou Site Museum of the Xia Capital

Past agricultural activities have removed some of the top levels of the ancient deposits at Erlitou.[14] Construction projects continue in the three overlying villages. Probing excavations are made by the Institute of Archaeology prior to development, although at times construction is done without archaeological involvement. Several bronze vessels from the site were removed from the site by construction workers during an unsanctioned dig; these were later recovered by the Ministry of Public Security.[57]

The Ministry of Culture and State Council declared Erlitou a national priority protected site in January 1988,[58] while the National Cultural Heritage Administration established a National Archaeological Park at the site in 2022.[59] In October 2019, the Erlitou Site Museum of the Xia Capital opened near the site. It exhibits over 2,000 artifacts, including 112 first-class national cultural relics.[60]

Notes

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  1. ^ a b Including northern portions destroyed by the movement of the Luo, it may have been around 400 hectares (990 acres) in area.[1]
  2. ^ Only a portion of sites associated with the Erlitou culture have been excavated. In 2013, archaeologist Xu Hong estimated that over 100 of the 500 sites had been excavated.[3]
  3. ^ Sometimes identified with Yangcheng, the first Xia capital[42]

Citations

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  1. ^ a b c Xu 2018, p. 75.
  2. ^ Allan 2007, p. 463.
  3. ^ a b c Xu 2013, p. 301.
  4. ^ a b c d Liu & Chen 2012, pp. 262–264.
  5. ^ a b Thorp 2006, p. 33.
  6. ^ a b Xu 2013, pp. 301–302.
  7. ^ a b Liu 2009, p. 165.
  8. ^ Li 2018, pp. 184–185.
  9. ^ Xu 2013, p. 302.
  10. ^ a b Shelach & Jaffe 2014, p. 330.
  11. ^ Xu & Li 2021, pp. 177–179.
  12. ^ Campbell 2014, pp. 20–21.
  13. ^ a b Thorp 2006, p. 21.
  14. ^ a b c Liu & Xu 2007, p. 887.
  15. ^ Shelach & Jaffe 2014, p. 344.
  16. ^ Thorp 2006, p. 25.
  17. ^ Liu & Xu 2007, p. 888.
  18. ^ Allan 2007, p. 475.
  19. ^ a b Liu 2009, p. 169.
  20. ^ a b Liu & Chen 2012, p. 266.
  21. ^ Liu 2009, pp. 169–173.
  22. ^ a b c Xu 2013, pp. 306–307.
  23. ^ Liu & Xu 2007, pp. 888–889.
  24. ^ a b Liu & Chen 2012, p. 268.
  25. ^ Liu & Xu 2007, pp. 889–891.
  26. ^ a b Liu & Chen 2012, pp. 269–270.
  27. ^ Xu 2013, p. 306.
  28. ^ a b c d Liu & Chen 2012, p. 270.
  29. ^ a b c d Xu 2018, pp. 75–77.
  30. ^ Campbell 2014, pp. 25–27.
  31. ^ Thorp 1991, p. 16.
  32. ^ a b Xu 2013, p. 312.
  33. ^ a b Xu 2013, pp. 309–311.
  34. ^ a b c d Xu 2013, p. 313.
  35. ^ Xu & Li 2021, p. 182.
  36. ^ Liu & Xu 2007, p. 889.
  37. ^ Xu 2013, p. 308.
  38. ^ a b c d Xu 2013, p. 314.
  39. ^ Liu & Xu 2007, p. 893.
  40. ^ Liu & Chen 2012, pp. 270–271.
  41. ^ Shelach & Jaffe 2014, pp. 346–347.
  42. ^ a b Allan 2007, pp. 473–475.
  43. ^ a b Liu & Xu 2007, p. 891.
  44. ^ a b c Shelach & Jaffe 2014, p. 347.
  45. ^ a b Liu & Chen 2012, pp. 271–272.
  46. ^ Xu 2013, p. 316.
  47. ^ Xu 2013, pp. 314–316.
  48. ^ Liu & Chen 2012, pp. 272–273.
  49. ^ a b Liu & Xu 2007, p. 894.
  50. ^ Campbell 2014, pp. 21–22.
  51. ^ Thorp 2006, p. 36.
  52. ^ Xu 2018, p. 71.
  53. ^ Huber 1988, pp. 46–47.
  54. ^ Liu & Xu 2007, pp. 894–895.
  55. ^ Liu & Xu 2007, pp. 897–898.
  56. ^ a b Shelach & Jaffe 2014, pp. 328–329.
  57. ^ Thorp 2006, pp. 25–26.
  58. ^ "国务院关于公布第三批全国重点文物保护单位的通知" [Notice of the State Council on the Announcement of the Third Batch of National Key Cultural Relics Protection Units]. State Council of China (in Chinese). 21 July 2014. Retrieved 21 February 2025.
  59. ^ "国家文物局关于公布第四批国家考古遗址公园名单和立项名单的通知" [Notice of the State Administration of Cultural Heritage on the Announcement of the Fourth Batch of National Archaeological Sites and Parks and Project Lists]. National Cultural Heritage Administration (in Chinese). 16 December 2022. Retrieved 22 February 2025.
  60. ^ "Discover China's 'Earliest Dynasty; at Erlitou Site Museum in Central China". People's Daily. 20 October 2021. Retrieved 21 February 2025.

Bibliography

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Further reading

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