A Companion to Chinese Archaeology 2013
DOI: 10.1002/9781118325698.ch17
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Recent Discoveries and Some Thoughts on Early Urbanization at Anyang

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Cited by 11 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…This argument can be significant as it would allow us to speculate the existence of an expanded family/clan/lineage system in Yinxu society. Meanwhile, many Shang archaeologists argue that Yinxu society was spatially organized by lineage-based neighbourhoods [34,51], which were physically segregated but socially and economically connected [51]. Yinxu neighbourhoods have been proposed to be most likely defined by occupational specialization [3,4,51].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This argument can be significant as it would allow us to speculate the existence of an expanded family/clan/lineage system in Yinxu society. Meanwhile, many Shang archaeologists argue that Yinxu society was spatially organized by lineage-based neighbourhoods [34,51], which were physically segregated but socially and economically connected [51]. Yinxu neighbourhoods have been proposed to be most likely defined by occupational specialization [3,4,51].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Yinxu society is considered to be organized and stratified by lineage-based groups ( zu 族) [1,4,48–51]. The kingly lineage ( wangzu 王族), princely lineages ( zizu 子族) and all other royal descendant lineages ( duozizu 多子族) were at the top of the kinship community pyramid [4,52].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…An intricate mix of intensifying subsistence strategies, population movement, and the spread of ideas seem more appropriate for explaining the "origins of agriculture" in Southeast Asia than unidirectional models that ignore local dynamics, particularly because local populations did not always embrace a Neolithic package. The island of Borneo is an increasingly well-researched example of this latter behavior (e.g., Barker and Richards 2012;Barton 2012 Jing et al 2013) characterizes the Yinxu urbanization process as an 'evolution of simplicity' that accompanied the institution of China's earliest state tradition. Artifactbased research from four of his colleagues complemented this macro-scale perspective n Yinxu.…”
Section: Studying the Pastmentioning
confidence: 99%