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New materials on sacrificial animals in Yanglang culture burials of the 5th - 3rd CC. BCE (China). / Shulga, P. I.; Shulga, D. P.

In: Materialy po Arkheologii i Istorii Antichnogo i Srednevekovogo Prichernomor'ya, No. 13, 11, 2021, p. 453-466.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Shulga, PI & Shulga, DP 2021, 'New materials on sacrificial animals in Yanglang culture burials of the 5th - 3rd CC. BCE (China)', Materialy po Arkheologii i Istorii Antichnogo i Srednevekovogo Prichernomor'ya, no. 13, 11, pp. 453-466. https://doi.org/10.53737/2713-2021.2021.93.37.011

APA

Shulga, P. I., & Shulga, D. P. (2021). New materials on sacrificial animals in Yanglang culture burials of the 5th - 3rd CC. BCE (China). Materialy po Arkheologii i Istorii Antichnogo i Srednevekovogo Prichernomor'ya, (13), 453-466. [11]. https://doi.org/10.53737/2713-2021.2021.93.37.011

Vancouver

Shulga PI, Shulga DP. New materials on sacrificial animals in Yanglang culture burials of the 5th - 3rd CC. BCE (China). Materialy po Arkheologii i Istorii Antichnogo i Srednevekovogo Prichernomor'ya. 2021;(13):453-466. 11. doi: 10.53737/2713-2021.2021.93.37.011

Author

Shulga, P. I. ; Shulga, D. P. / New materials on sacrificial animals in Yanglang culture burials of the 5th - 3rd CC. BCE (China). In: Materialy po Arkheologii i Istorii Antichnogo i Srednevekovogo Prichernomor'ya. 2021 ; No. 13. pp. 453-466.

BibTeX

@article{021723ce4e0347eca2563763760e6605,
title = "New materials on sacrificial animals in Yanglang culture burials of the 5th - 3rd CC. BCE (China)",
abstract = "This article focuses on the analysis of the sacrificial animals remains in burials of the 5th — 3rd сс. BCE of the Yanglang Culture Wangdahu burial ground identified with the Western Rongs who lived on the Qin kingdom western borders. As a rule, Eurasia Cattle breeders placed one or two parts or livestock carcasses in ordinary burials. In contrast to them, in the Yanglang Culture in one person ordinary burial up to 30, 50 or more skulls of all major livestock species (horses, cattle, sheep and goats) could be placed. In the analysis of sacrificial animals from the Yanglang Culture burial grounds detailed description, the authors came to the conclusion that in a number of burials the composition of animal species and their ratio fully correspond to the Central Asia nomads{\textquoteright} herd averaged data. Apparently, the burial grounds organizers were sent real herd to the other world with the dead people or recruited animals for slaughter keeping the proportions known to them. The proportion of horses is much higher in the chariot warriors` burials which is associated with the deceased special status. As it turned out, even 1—3 years old children could have such status during burial in Wangdahu. Foals and votive weapons full set were placed in such burials. All of this suggests the chariot warrior{\textquoteright}s high status which was established in the funeral rite. The maintenance and training of chariot horses large number, the horses and chariot warriors equipment manufacturing required the state structures participation. It is no coincidence that the number of chariots served as a state power yardstick in ancient China. All these preliminary observations and conclusions are consistent with indirect information from Chinese historical sources about the developed horse breeding among the Western Rongs, their special relationship with the Qin kingdom and possibly the early state formation existence among them.",
keywords = "Burial rite, Burials of chariot warriors, Nomads{\textquoteright} herd composition, Northern China, Sacrificial animals, Scythian time, Western rong, Yanglang Culture",
author = "Shulga, {P. I.} and Shulga, {D. P.}",
note = "Shulga, P. I., Shulga D. P. New materials on sacrificial animals in Yanglang culture burials of the 5th - 3rd CC. BCE (China) // Proceedings in Archaeology and History of Ancient and Medieval Black Sea Region. – 2021. – No 13. – P. 453-466.",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.53737/2713-2021.2021.93.37.011",
language = "English",
pages = "453--466",
journal = "Материалы по археологии и истории античного и средневекового Причерноморья",
issn = "2713-2021",
publisher = "Cimmeria Publishing",
number = "13",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - New materials on sacrificial animals in Yanglang culture burials of the 5th - 3rd CC. BCE (China)

AU - Shulga, P. I.

AU - Shulga, D. P.

N1 - Shulga, P. I., Shulga D. P. New materials on sacrificial animals in Yanglang culture burials of the 5th - 3rd CC. BCE (China) // Proceedings in Archaeology and History of Ancient and Medieval Black Sea Region. – 2021. – No 13. – P. 453-466.

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - This article focuses on the analysis of the sacrificial animals remains in burials of the 5th — 3rd сс. BCE of the Yanglang Culture Wangdahu burial ground identified with the Western Rongs who lived on the Qin kingdom western borders. As a rule, Eurasia Cattle breeders placed one or two parts or livestock carcasses in ordinary burials. In contrast to them, in the Yanglang Culture in one person ordinary burial up to 30, 50 or more skulls of all major livestock species (horses, cattle, sheep and goats) could be placed. In the analysis of sacrificial animals from the Yanglang Culture burial grounds detailed description, the authors came to the conclusion that in a number of burials the composition of animal species and their ratio fully correspond to the Central Asia nomads’ herd averaged data. Apparently, the burial grounds organizers were sent real herd to the other world with the dead people or recruited animals for slaughter keeping the proportions known to them. The proportion of horses is much higher in the chariot warriors` burials which is associated with the deceased special status. As it turned out, even 1—3 years old children could have such status during burial in Wangdahu. Foals and votive weapons full set were placed in such burials. All of this suggests the chariot warrior’s high status which was established in the funeral rite. The maintenance and training of chariot horses large number, the horses and chariot warriors equipment manufacturing required the state structures participation. It is no coincidence that the number of chariots served as a state power yardstick in ancient China. All these preliminary observations and conclusions are consistent with indirect information from Chinese historical sources about the developed horse breeding among the Western Rongs, their special relationship with the Qin kingdom and possibly the early state formation existence among them.

AB - This article focuses on the analysis of the sacrificial animals remains in burials of the 5th — 3rd сс. BCE of the Yanglang Culture Wangdahu burial ground identified with the Western Rongs who lived on the Qin kingdom western borders. As a rule, Eurasia Cattle breeders placed one or two parts or livestock carcasses in ordinary burials. In contrast to them, in the Yanglang Culture in one person ordinary burial up to 30, 50 or more skulls of all major livestock species (horses, cattle, sheep and goats) could be placed. In the analysis of sacrificial animals from the Yanglang Culture burial grounds detailed description, the authors came to the conclusion that in a number of burials the composition of animal species and their ratio fully correspond to the Central Asia nomads’ herd averaged data. Apparently, the burial grounds organizers were sent real herd to the other world with the dead people or recruited animals for slaughter keeping the proportions known to them. The proportion of horses is much higher in the chariot warriors` burials which is associated with the deceased special status. As it turned out, even 1—3 years old children could have such status during burial in Wangdahu. Foals and votive weapons full set were placed in such burials. All of this suggests the chariot warrior’s high status which was established in the funeral rite. The maintenance and training of chariot horses large number, the horses and chariot warriors equipment manufacturing required the state structures participation. It is no coincidence that the number of chariots served as a state power yardstick in ancient China. All these preliminary observations and conclusions are consistent with indirect information from Chinese historical sources about the developed horse breeding among the Western Rongs, their special relationship with the Qin kingdom and possibly the early state formation existence among them.

KW - Burial rite

KW - Burials of chariot warriors

KW - Nomads’ herd composition

KW - Northern China

KW - Sacrificial animals

KW - Scythian time

KW - Western rong

KW - Yanglang Culture

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UR - https://www.elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=47970057

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/e90fb8bc-9622-33a0-ba54-81865265fc85/

U2 - 10.53737/2713-2021.2021.93.37.011

DO - 10.53737/2713-2021.2021.93.37.011

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85125461737

SP - 453

EP - 466

JO - Материалы по археологии и истории античного и средневекового Причерноморья

JF - Материалы по археологии и истории античного и средневекового Причерноморья

SN - 2713-2021

IS - 13

M1 - 11

ER -

ID: 35608511