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Beliefs Are Tested in Saga Of Sacrifice and Betrayal

REAL STORY: A Study Group Is Crushed in China's Grip
Beliefs Are Tested in Saga Of Sacrifice and Betrayal
Chinese ver
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The Enemy From Within; Huangqiao Battle; Wan-nan Incident
1945-1949 Civil War
Liao-Shen, Xu-Beng, Ping-Jin Yangtze Campaigns
Korean War Vietnamese War
Japanese Ichigo Campaign & Stilwell Incident
Lend-Lease; Yalta Betrayal: At China's Expense
Acheson 2 Billion Crap ; Cover-up Of Birch Murder
Marshall's Dupe Mission To China, & Arms Embargo
Chiang Kai-shek's Money Trail
*** Related Readings ***:
The Amerasia Case & Cover-up By US Government
The Legend of Mark Gayn
The Reality of Red Subversion: The Recent Confirmation of Soviet Espionage in America
Notes on Owen Lattimore
Lauchlin Currie / Biography
Nathan Silvermaster Group of 28 American communists in 6 Federal agencies
Solomon Adler the Russian mole "Sachs" & Chi-com's henchman; Frank Coe; Ales
The Wuhan Gang, including Joseph Stilwell, Agnes Smedley, Evans Carlson, Frank Dorn, Jack Belden, S.T. Steele, John Davies, David Barrett and more, were the core of the Americans who were to influence the American decision-making on behalf of the Chinese communists. It was not something that could be easily explained by Hurley's accusation in late 1945 that American government had been hijacked by i) imperialists and ii) communists. At play was not a single-thread Russian or Comintern conspiracy against the Republic of China but an additional channel that was delicately knit by the sohphiscated Chinese communist saboteurs to employ the above-mentioned Americans for their cause The Wuhan Gang & The Chungking Gang, i.e., the offsprings of the American missionaries, diplomats, military officers, 'revolutionaries' & Red Saboteurs and "Old China Hands" of 1920s and the herald-runners of the Dixie Mission of 1940s.
Wang Bingnan's German wife, Anneliese Martens, physically won over the hearts of  Americans by providing the wartime 'bachelors' with special one-on-one service per Zeng Xubai's writings. Though, Anna Wang [Anneliese Martens], in her memoirs, expressed jealousy over Gong Peng by stating that the Anglo-American reporters had flattered the Chinese communists and the communist movement as a result of being entranced with the goldfish-eye'ed personal assistant of Zhou Enlai
Stephen R. Mackinnon & John Fairbank invariably failed to separate fondness for the Chinese revolution from fondness for Gong Peng, the Asian fetish who worked together with Anneliese Martens to infatuate American wartime reporters.
 
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1600-1046 BC 2
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   Escape from
   Hengyang by
  Qiong Yao













 
   

XIA-SHANG DYNASTIES


 
Paul Kennedy, in "The Rise & Fall Of The Great Powers", claimed that Europe's mountaineous geography had guarranteed the disunity and individuality of European nations, principalities and peoples. Then, is China lacking the mountains, gorges and deserts that should have precluded the "unification aspiration" of the Chinese people from a continuance? The geographical thesis marks Paul Kennedy's 600-page book invalid automatically. China, at least from the time of Confucius, repeatedly talked about the term "da [grand] yi [one] tong [unification]". What Confucius argued 2500 years ago was different from the unification agenda of kings or emperors: Confucius was talking about which month of the year should be treated as the first month on the "da [grand] tong [unification] li [calendar]" [i.e., a same term used by Ming Dynasty Emperors in distributing China's calendars to vassals including Japan & Ryukyu]. In Confucius times, Song Principality was using Shang Dynasty's calendar [Dec]; Jinn was using Xia Dynasty's Jan as the first month; Zhou court used Nov as the first month of the year; and vassal Qin adopted October as the first month of the year.
 
China had been a united country or possessed an inertia for unity because of the same origin of our people as well as the invention and adoption of pictographic form of written language. Further, Confucian school of thoughts upheld the ancient ancestor worship to the apex, leading to the blood affinity of clans and families, a phenomenon that continued till the 1960s when communist China destroyed all tombs, including that of my grandfather. Our civilization, born out of a mundane society, had survived the impacts and challenges as a result of the establishment of our ancestoral belief and morality systems and values. In past thousand years, our peoples and clans were used to saying that we, of same last name, were from the same family 500 years ago. From Song Dynasty onward, Prime Minister Fan Zhongyan, as a philanthropic activity, had provided a model of purchasing lands for the same clan members. Each and every member of the clan, after success in career or wealth, would usually return to the hometown to rebuild the family ancestral pilgrimage. In early 20th century, the father of diplomat Gu Weijun [i.e., Wellington Koo] did the same in buying large patches of lands on behalf of the Gu clan. After Taiwan opened the visitation to mainland China in 1988, hundreds of thousands of compatriots had visited mainland to do the same. My word of advice for our Chinese brothers: Love your cousins. As Zhang Bingling said, the clan affinity was from foetus & placenta. You, as an individual Chinese, could make a change in today's China by spreading the message of love and care for your fellow brothers. As another ancient Chinese saying goes, it takes 10 years to plant a tree and 100 years to raise a person. "Raising a person [i.e., an ordinary Chinese person]" is a task that should be undertaken from ground up inside of China. Only after restoring the baseline of China's societal foundations and values [which had been destroyed by the communist regime] would there be possibility of a resurrected Chinese Nation.


 
While we adopted some commonly-accepted starting and ending years for Xia, Shang and Zhou dynasties, authoritative Chinese historian viewpoint is that the earliest substantiated year happened to be the fourteen year long "interregnum" (i.e., "republican administrative period") during Western Zhou Dynasty, beginning from year 841 BC, the year when King Liwang of Zhou was ousted by the revolts of the Guoren (i.e., the civilians in the capital vs 'Yeren' the country people in the outskirts) and royal members of Zhou collectively administered the state affairs till King Xuanwang of Zhou was selected. As to reliable historical records, the oracle bones from Shang served the best example of underground records matching written records above-ground, while excavations from Xia are still under research and point to the fact that some writing system did exist in earlier Xia Dynasty. A Chinese research project which started in 1995 had been reported to have pushed the exact date to the year 2070 BC as the point of origin for Xia Dynasty. Stanford University scholar, David Nivision, had derived the date of 2026 BC, instead, as a result of his own independent studies.
 
The demarcation line between the dynasties of Xia-Shang-Zhou and the pre-history lies in the monopolization of power by the son of Lord Yu and his family. Prior to Xia Dynasty, various tribes, mainly under the two tribal groups of Hua and Yi, recommended their best men for leadership as the stories of Yao-Shun-Yu reflect. Starting from Xia, the sons or brothers of Xia king would assume exclusive power, instead. (Early dynasties, especially Shang Dynasty, did not strictly pass the power to their sons, but brothers. This is similar to the fashion as used by later nomads like the Huns and the Turks. Also to be noted is that all lords prior to Zhou Dynasty were entitled "Di" posthumously, meaning modern sense emperors or overlords. The lords from Zhou Dynasty humbly called themselves kings in respect for the earlier 'San Huang' and 'Wu Di'.)
 
Looking further up, prior to trio-saints of Yao, Shun and Yu, there are eight legendary overlords in Chinese history: They are 'San Huang' ['Three Huang'], namely, Fuxi, Yandi (Fiery Lord) and Huangdi (Yellow Lord), and 'Wu Di' or Five Di, namely, Shaohao (l. BC 2598 - 2515 ?), Zhuanxu (l. BC 2514 - 2437 ?), Gaoxin (l. BC 2436 - 2367 ?), Tangyao (Lord Yao, l. BC 2357 - 2258 ?) and Yushun (Lord Shun, reign 2257-2208 BC ?). Lord Huangdi (i.e., the Yellow Overlord, l. 2697 - 2599 BC?) was said to have possessed a chronicle official [Cangjie] who had first created Chinese characters. Like many Xia stories, the Cangjie characters remained a legend. According to Sima Qian, Chinese lords shared the same lineage: Lord Huangdi (Yellow Overlord) was the son of the tribe of Shaodian (disputed to be the name of a state rather than an person); Lord Huangdi had 25 sons, among whom 14 had established their own family names; one of his son is called Changyi, and Changyi's son, named Gaoyang, is Lord Zhuanxu; and Lord Yu (r. BC 2204-2195 ?) was said to be the grandson of Lord Zhuanxu as well as the father of the founder of Xia Dynasty. (Ban Gu of Latter Han Dynasty disputed the generation gap between Lord Zhuanxu and Lord Yu, stating that Gun was the fifth generation grandson of Lord Zhuanxu and that Lord Yu would be six generations away from Lord Zhuanxu.)
 
There is no doubt that a Xia dynasty existed before Shang Dynasty (1765 BC - 1122 BC) since Shang records described extensively events in prior dynasty. One history researcher commented that "to authenticate ancient records, one has to rely on ancient scholars for more accurate records than later scholars." Confucius compiled some records on basis of what he read about the classics that existed before his times, and Confucius commented that he still somehow had access to the ancient classics though he might not have truly understood the essence of those classics. Historians made repeated reference to Xia, Shang and Zhou as 'San Dai', namely, the Three Dynasties. Should Confucius believe in the so-called 'Three Dynasties' of Xia-Shang-Zhou, then the existence of a Xia Dynasty could not be negated.
 
Corroborations abound to point to various ancient saints: Lord Yu had travelled across the nine ancient prefectures. Later ruler, like Zhang Shi of Anterior Liang Dynasty, would claim that the Mingsha (echoing sand) Mountain and San-wei (three precarious) Mountain in Dunhuang of Gansu Province would be where Lord Yu had travelled the western-most. Lord Yu's Tributes, "Yu Gong", with descriptions of ancient nine prefectures, was cited for manufacturing nine bronze (copper?) utensils called 'ding' [cauldron]. The nine utensils passed on from dynasty to dynasty. Zhougong, i.e., Duke of Zhou, under the order of Zhou King Chengwang, fulfilled the wish of King Wuwang in building the city of Luoyi (Luoyang) and moved the nine utensils there. When both Xizhou-jun (Duke Wugong) and last Zhou King Nanwang passed away, the Zhou people fled to the east; Qin retrieved the nine cauldrons from the Zhou court, and shipped them to Xian'yang, with one [or all nine] "ding" accidentally dropped into Si-shui River. (Senior scholar, like Prof Wei Chu-Hsien, had doubts about bronze existance at the times of Lord Yu, but recent excavations did produce copper items in southern Shanxi Prov at the times of Lord Yu. Ancient classics, on the matter of Chu King Zhuangwang's inquiry into nine cauldrons, had deliberately avoided the nature of Lord Yu's cauldrons. Prof Wei Chu-Hsien speculated that it could be of pottery nature. However, there is a possibility that the nine cauldrons could have been repeatedly re-cast over the course of history.)
 
Another corroborating fact would be Lord Yu's tomb on Mount Kuaijishan in Shaoxing of today's Zhejiang Prov. One of the grandsons of Lord Yu was permanently assigned to the Kuaiji land to guard the tomb, and the later Yue Principality was said to have descended from this lineage. Japanese, whom history chronicles repeatedly likened to the tattoo natives of the Yangtze Delta, had an interesting name for one of their four islands, i.e., Kyushu, a name that literally means the "nine prefectures".
 
Later, Xia Dynasty remnants would survive as the Qi-guo statelet, located in today's Qi-xian county of Henan Prov. Qi-guo lineage continued onward through Shang and Zhou dynasties. Ancient proverb about a Qi-guo person worrying about the fall of skies would be related to this country. Another Xia remnant would be by the name of Chonghouhu statelet [i.e., Marquis Hu of Chong-guo Statelet] which was conquered by first Zhou King Wuwang by taking advantage of Chonghouhu people's following last Shang Lord Zhouwang's Shandong Peninsula campaign against Ren-fang-guo statelet to the east. [Scholar Wei Juxian claimed that Chonghouhu must have derived from Chong-bo, i.e., the tribe of Lord Yu's father.] Still more Xia remnants would probably survive as Yu-guo, Ji-guo and Tang-guo statelets in Shenxi/Shanxi provinces till Zhou Dynasty time period.

 
Zeng Guangdong, at regenerating-universe.org/Chain_of_DNA.htm, expounded his family's 5000 years old unbroken chain of DNA. Zeng stated that "the name of our clan, Zeng, may be traced to the time when Emperor [overlord] Shao Kang of Xia Dynasty created his second son Prince Qu Lie [as] the ruler of the State of Zeng ... about 1850 BC ... In the 6th year of Duke Siang [lord or Marquis Siang: common mistake in attributing clan title of gong to duke instead of grandpa] of the State of Lu, ... 567 BC... the Zeng State was plundered and destroyed by the State of Ju. The Prince of Zeng named Wu fled to the State of Lu and remained there in the service of Lu. He dropped the [ear] part (which denotes the domain) from our surname Zeng. This was the beginning of our surname becoming Zeng without the domain in the script, and it remains ever since. Four generations from Wu came Xi alias Dian ... and the 5th was the "Sage of Source", namely Zengcius or Zeng San [Zeng-zi]. Both father and son were students of Confucius, thus our family shines ever since ... " Zeng validated his clan history via excavation in 1978 of a tomb belonging to the Marquis Zeng-Yi-hou "who was buried in 433 BC at the old site of the State of Zeng in Hu Bei [Hebei] Province."
 
The lineage of history is cited repeatedly in China's 24 Histories. Shang Dynasty itself was made into the principality of Song by the succeeding Zhou Dynasty (1121 - 256 BC). Confucius at one time returned to his ancestral Song Statelet and spent considerable time studying the Shang "Li" [ritual or formality or system], which continued on in Song long after Shang's demise. (Some scholar, like Wei Chu-hsien and Wang Guowei, pointed to the existance of Song before Shang times and claimed that Song or Shang, pronounced in similar tone, could have meant for the same people.)
 
 
Xia Dynasty
 
The Xia Dynasty (about 2207-1766 BC) has been called the first dynasty. It was established by Qi(3), the son of Lord Yu. Lord Yu was the person famous for being the man who mastered the floods. Qi3 was born by a Tu-shan-shi woman, but Yu the Great dared not enter his home to see his new-born son while he was under Lord Shun's order to quell the flooding.
 
The name 'Xia', alternatively speaking, came from the title of Count Xia that Lord Yu received from Lord Yao as conferral of land in Yangdi. Yangdi or Yangcheng could be in Shanxi Prov or in Henan prov. In today's Dengfeng Municipality of Henan Prov, to the centerfold south of both Luoyang and Zhengzhou and further to the south of Dengfeng, there would be a Yu-zhou city, with Lord Yu's name inscribed. Scholar Liu Qiyu pointed out that it was not Lord Yu but Lord Yu's son Qi who would make Xia capital in Henan Prov after crossing the Yellow River to defeat the You-hu-shi Dong-yi people at Gan (i.e., today's Zhenzhou of Henan prov). Compromising theory would be to point out that 'yang' also meant for 'tang' in ancient times, and hence Yangcheng or Yangdi would be still located north of the Yellow River, somewhere in southern Shanxi Prov. Tian Changwu, the editor of "Hua Xia Civilization" anthology, compromised the issue of Lord Yu's point of origin by stating that Xia people might have two tribes, with i) father Gun developing in southern Shanxi Prov where they were previously subordinate to Lord Yao and ii) the son Lord Yu developing in western Henan Prov by means of an alliance with Lord Zhuanxu's tribe. Lord Yu, per Tian Changwu, adopted 'xuan yu' (snakeheaded fish, i.e., black fish) as the totem and developed in today's Dengfeng-Yuxian areas of western Henan Prov while his father Gun continued with the dragon totem. Tian Changwu further stated that Lord Yu's tribe would later absorb his father's native Xia people in southern Shanxi Prov. (The character 'Gun' was a combination of two words: black and fish. Senior scholar Wei Chu-Hsien pointed out that ancient Gun legends in "Shan Hai Jing" implied a possible migration of Gun people to American continents since Gun's body, after his execution death on feather mountain, turned into 'huang xiong' [American Brown Bear] in the water. More about Wei Chu-Hsien's research into ancient Chinese linkage to America is temporarily uploaded to ming.htm page)
Per "Shi Ji", Lord Yu, after mourning Lord Shun for three years, said goodbye to Lord Shun's son (Shangjun) and left Yangcheng for Pingyang. Vassals deserted Shangjun for Lord Yu. Lord Yu hence proclaimed the statelet of 'Xia-hou' and adopted the last name of 'Si4'. (Alternative surname and clan name records stated that it was Lord Yao who had confirmed the surnames onto his ministers including Yu [Xia ancestor], Xie [Shang ancestor], and Houji [Zhou ancestor] etc.)
 
Ten years later, Lord Yu died in Kuaiji (Shaoxing, Zhejiang Prov), near the mouth of the Yangtze Delta. Yi(4), a successor designated by Lord Yü, was given the job as an overlord. After three years of mourning, Yi(4) gave the post to Qi(3), the son of Lord Yu. Yi4 left for south of Songshan (often inter-exchangeable to the Chong character) Mountain of Henan Prov. [Note that ancient classics, i.e., Bamboo Annals, claimed that Qi(3) killed Yi(4).] When the Dong-yi tribes disobeyed Qi(3), Qi sent armies to defeat You-hu-shi clan at Gan (Zhenzhou of Henan Prov, but do note that ancient Gan-shui was closer to Luoyang of Henan Prov) and hence solidified Xia Dynasty rule.
 
Scholar Luo Xianglin claimed that Xia people had asserted control over the rest of people via two inventions: copper and citadel. Luo Xianglin cited ancient book "Yue [Yue principality] Jue [splendid] Shu [book]" [more likely meaning "Yue [Yue principality] Jue [extinct records] Shu [book]" per Wei Chu-hsien] in stating that in ancient times, Xuanyuan-shi, Shenong-shi & Hexu-shi utilized stone as weapon; Lord Huangdi utilized Jade as weapon; and in Xia times, Lord Yu utilized copper as weapon, hence piercing the Longmen [dragaon gate] Gorge of the Yellow River. ("Yue Jue Shu" distinction between Xuan-yuan-shi and Lord Huangdi also verified a possibility that Xuan-yuan-shi and Lord Huangdi were not the same person.) Luo Xianglin cited ancient books "Luu Shi Chun Qiu", "Tai Ping Yu Lan", "Huai Nan Zi" & "Wu Yue Chun Qiu" in stating that Gun, i.e., Lord Yu's father, first built a castle with a wall as high as nine 'ren' [1 'ren' being equivalent to 7 or 8 Chinese feet].
 
Hua/Xia Origin & Developments
As scholar Liu Qiyu pointed out, 'hua' and 'xia', pronounced the same way as [hwer] in Yangtze Delta dialects, would mean for the group of people dwelling to the north of the ancient South Yellow River Bend and to the east of the ancient West Yellow River Bend.

 
(Beware of morphology extrapolation of what I cited here as to the pronunciation of 'hua' and 'xia', i.e., common errors among non-Chinese enthusiats for Chinese history, with one such fallacy of equating 'hua' [slippery] to 'hua' [flowery] seen at http://encyclopedia.lockergnome.com/s/b/Huaguo. The Chinese character 'hua', similarly, was abused by non-Chinese enthusiats for Chinese history. Should Southern Liang Dynasty [AD 502-557], in inscriptions on Liang chih-kung-t'u, fail to speculate more on the "Hua-guo" [Avar or Hephthalites] other than a claim that it was possibly a country founded by the descendants of a Western Territory chieftan called "San-hua" [three slippery] who followed General Ban Yong of Han Dynasty in campaigns, then who are you to claim that this 'Hua' [slippery] was the same as China's Hua [flowery] or Zhou Dynasty's vassal "hua-guo"? )
Ancient West Yellow River Bend is the same as today's East Yellow River Bend. Ancient Yellow River Bend did not equate to today's inverse U-shaped course with the North Bend lying inside Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, but the U-shaped Bend with South Bend in southern Shanxi Prov and then a south-to-north turn in Hebei Province for exit into the sea.

 
Liu Qiyu's 1982 dissertation, on basis of "Gan Shi" (i.e., Oath of War at Gan) in "Shang Shu" (i.e., Remotely Ancient Histories), proposed the opposite movement of the Xia people, i.e., that the Xia people, the direct descendants of Huangdi the Yellow Overlord with dragon totem, originally dwelled in southern Shanxi Province and then expanded eastward and southward, across the South Bend, into today's Henan Province: Xia people, under Qi (Lord Yu's son), defeated the You-hu-shi Dong-yi people at the Battle of Gan, built cities and capital in today's Henan Prov, endured power struggles with Dong-yi people [led by Hou-yi and Han-zhuo], and stayed in Henan Prov for hundreds of years till Shang-tang's group of Dong-yi people expelled them. Liu Qiyu stated, on basis of the craftsmanship on potteries, that the Xia people's developments could be embodied by three stages of evolutions, i.e., Taosi (2400-1800 BC) of southwestern Shanxi Prov, Dongxiafeng (2200-1700 BC) of southeastern Shanxi Prov, and Erlitou Culture (1900-1500 BC) in Yanshi of Henan Prov. Liu Qiyu also noted that copper utensils were both discovered in Dongxiafeng and Yanshi Erlitou, stating that Erlitou Culture, dated the 3rd phase of Erlitou (Yanshi, Henan Prov), must have been under Xia people who in turn had received inputs from early cultures in Shanxi-Henan provinces. Liu Qiyu further pointed out that by the 4th phase, the Yanshi excavations pointed to the dilapidation of Xia palaces in this area as a result of attacks by Shang-tang Dong-yi people. Liu Qiyu always upheld the theory that Qi, Lord Yu's son, had his capital established at Xunyi, i.e., today's Yanshi of Henan Prov and the seat of Erlitou Culture. Liu Qiyu, to rebut the viewpoint that phases III & IV of Erlitou might belong to early Shang people, stated that it was the opposite way around, that is, the Xia people of III & IV phases of Erlitou influenced the Erligang 'shengwen' (i.e., jormon) potteries in Zhengzhou of Henan Prov. (See Stunning capital [Erlitou] of Xia Dynasty unearthed for details on the ongoing excavations since 1959.)
 
 
Chronology of Archaeological Discoveries (see prehistory.htm):

                                       ---------------------------------------------------------
                                          Yangshao Culture (4000-3000 BC)
                                       ---------------------------------------------------------

                     Banpo Type Type --> Dongzhuangcun Type --> Miaodigou Type --...--> Xiwangcun Type

       --------------------------------------------------------             --------------------------------------------------------------
        Miaodigou Culture II (3000-2500 BC)                 Longshan Culture Taosi Type (2500-1900 BC)
       --------------------------------------------------------             -------------------------------------------------------------

           Early Stage --> Middle Stage --> Late Stage                          Early Stage --> Middle Stage --> Late Stage

                                                                                           Taosi (2400-1800 BC)                     Dongxiafeng Type (2200-1700 BC)     

                                       ---------------------------------------------------------
                                                         Erlitou Culture
                                       ---------------------------------------------------------

                    Dongxiafeng Type Of Erlitou Culture (2200-1700 BC)         Yanshi Type of Erlitou Culture (1900-1500 BC)


 
There is no dispute as to Xia people's final demise in Henan Prov. Liu Qiyu validated the demise of Xia Dynasty in Henan Prov by citing the ancient statement that "Xia Dynasty ended when the Yi-shui and Luo-shui rivers ran dry".
 
After Shang Dynasty overthrew Xia, remnant Xia people fled northward and westward, and majority of them returned to their ancestral home in southern Shanxi Prov. (Wang Guowei speculated that some of those Xia people who fled northward and westward would become the Yuezhi (?) in the west and the Huns in the north. Note that Wang Guowei's speculation as to Yuezhi would throw the discussion into an ethnicity and race dispute. It is understandable that Wang Guowei might have blundered in early 20th century since Loulan mummies were not known at that time. I had expounded the You-yu-shi vs Yuezhi fallacy at hun.htm section and pointed out that You-yu-shi clan had continued on in Shenxi area till Qi Lord Huan'gong westward campaign against Bai-di barbarians in 651 BC.)
 
Scholar Luo Xianglin's Assertions
Scholar Luo Xianglin, in "History of Chinese Nationalities" (Chinese Culture Publishing Enterprise Co, Taipei, Taiwang, May 1953 edition), stated that ancient China possessed five tribal groups: Xia, Qiang, Di[1], Yi, and Man[2].
 
Per Luo Xianglin, Xia people first originated in Mt Minshan and upperstream River Min-jiang areas of Sichuan-Gansu provincial borderline. Xia people then split into two groups, with one going north to reach Wei-shui River and upperstream Han-shui River of Shenxi Prov and then east to Shanxi Prov by crossing the Yellow River.
 
The second group, per Luo Xianglin, went south to populate southern Chinese provinces as the 'Yue' people. Luo Xianglin's linking Yue people to Xia people was based on the common lexicon 'yue' which meant for excavated ancient "stone axe".
 
Xia Land = Zhong Guo (Central Statelet)
The 'Xia' people, in another sense, would also imply a more restrictive meaning for the people who dwelled in the land of Xi-rong (the Western Rong nomads) or Xi Yi (Western Aliens) or Xi Qiang (Western Qiang). Lord Yu was born in a place called 'Shiniu' (ancient Chang-mang statelet, between Sichuan, Henan and Shenxi provinces). Scholar Liu Qiyu tackled the issue of 'xi' or west. His validations pointed to the land of 'he qu' (i.e., the inflexion point of the Yellow River Bends) as the 'land of the west', i.e, later land between Qin and Jinn principalities. He also validated the ancient Chinese prefecture of 'ji-zhou' as equivalent to the ancient term 'zhong-guo' for China, and listed multiple ancient classics to lock down the land of original China as being the domain of southern Shanxi Prov. (Liu Qiyu pointed out that original places for Taiyuan and Jinyang etc would be in southern Shanxi Province, and that those cities did not get appropriated to northern Shanxi Prov until after Jinn Lord Daogong quelled various 'Di2' barbarian statelets in the north. Liu Qiyu further stated that after the split of Jinn into Haan-Zhao-Wei principalities, southernmost Wei statelet still got the privilege to be called Jinn due to the fact that Jinn historically inherited the ancient Xia land that was termed 'ji-zhou' the Ji4 prefecture or 'zhong-guo' the central statelet.)
 
Ancient classics, like "Zhan Guo Ce", "Shuo Wen", "Han Shu", paraphrased 'Xia' as meaning the central statelet. "Zhuang-zi", in the section on "Tian Di Bian" (i.e., article on heaven and earth), mentioned a dialogue between Zhunmang and Yuanfeng in regards to Zhuangmang's sailing into the East Sea and polarized 'zhongguo' (central statelet) and 'si hai' (four seas). Xu Hao, in comments on "Shuo Wen", stated that Yi & Di barbarians began to invade China at the times of Xia people and that then Chinese were hence named Xia-ren or Xia people. Liu Qiyu listed similar parallel antagonism of 'ji-zhou' and 'si hai' in "Chu Ci" (Chu Principality Poems) and "Huai Nan Zi" to validate the exact location of the land of 'Xia' as equivalent to ancient 'ji-zhou' prefecture, i.e., southern Shanxi Prov. Similarly, Liu Qiyu cited similar parallel antagonism of 'zhongguo' (central statelet) versus 'si yi' (four groups of barbarians) in "Zuo Zhuan" for same sense interpretation. (Note that Scholar Wang Zhonghan cited "Guan-zi" in stating that it would be around the middle of Warring States time period that Qi Principality editors adopted the terms of four barbarians as might have existed at the time of Guan-zi [Guan Zhong] of Spring & Autumn time period of Eastern Zhou Dynasty.)
 
Liu Qiyu pointed out that after the demise of Xia, whoever stayed in Shanxi/Shenxi provinces continued to call themselves 'Xia' people. First Zhou King Wenwang eulogized the eastward flowing of Feng-shui River to Lord Yu's accomplishment, and numerous Zhou Dynasty records stated that they were descendants of Xia Dynasty founder Lord Yu. Wei Principality, who inherited southermost Jinn land of southern Shanxi Prov, described themselves as "riding in Xia-chariots" and claiming to be "Xia King". A Qin Principality official also denoted himself as Xia-zi (i.e., son of Xia people) because his mother was a Qin-ren (i.e., Qin people), i.e., self-designated Xia people.
 
Xia Dynasty's Totem - Dragon
Scholar Gao Wei pointed out that the colored Pottery from Taosi Excavations of Longshan Culture, dated 2400-2500 BC approx, had shown a winding dragon. Almost all luxurious Taosi excavations in southern Shanxi Prov had produced a pottery with dragon totem. This would point to this place of excavation (i.e., southern Shanxi Prov) as the original site of the early Xia people. Xia Culture, having interactions with bird-totem Dong-yi people to the southeast, had posed an academic challenge as to the nature of ancient Chinese ethnicity. Consensus would be to treat the Longshan Culture in Shanxi and western Henan as equivalent to Xia Dynasty or at least 'xian xia' [i.e., Anterior Xia Dynasty]. Xia people, who later moved from Shanxi to Henan Prov and founded the dynasty of Xia, certainly brought with them the important dragon totem, a mark that would also be observed among the Huns of Mongolia and the Tungus of Manchuria for the thousands of years to come. (Chinese classics had mentioned two dragon-related clans, i.e., the Huan-long-shi clan during Lord Shun's reign and the Yu-long-shi clan during Xia Dynasty. Here, 'huan' meant for raising or husbandry, 'yu4' meant for driving or controlling, while 'long' meant for dragon. The dragon-totem Xia people were overthrown by the bird-totem [i.e., phoenix] Dong-yi people, i.e., the Shang people; however, the bird-totem Shang people, after a defeat in the hands of Zhou people, could have fled to Manchuria where they had historical connections with the Tungus people. Dragon totem, in combination with phoenix, would become China's national symbols.)
 
Xia people hence was taken as the original Mongoloid ethnic Chinese whose name was carried on for the next 4500 years as 'hua', 'xia' or 'huaxia'. To clarify the nature of Xia people further, I will cite Prof Wei Chu-Hsien's interpretaion of ancient classics "Shi-zi" (approx 338 BC works) in authenticating the ethnicity of Chinese in Xia land against the barbarians in four directions. Both "Shi-zi" and "Shan Hai Jing" stated that there were Guan-xiong-guo in the south, Chang-gu-guo (Chang-gong? long arm) in the west, Shen-mu-guo (deep eye socket) in the north, and eastern and northeaster statelets under Yuhu and Yujing [east-sea and north-sea seagods in the east and northeast per "Shan Hai Jing"]. Here, as a side note, I will, once and for all, settle the issues in regards to Huangdi or the Yellow Overlord, i.e., i) semantic error in translating the overlord for 'di4' into emperor; ii) Nordic racial supremacist appropriation in attaching Caucasian tag to Huangdi. "Shi-zi" and "Shan Hai Jing" records of deep eye socket people to the north of Huangdi was a corrobaration that Huangdi people were not of deep-socket eyes. (Shi-zi was the teacher of Qin Reformer Shang Yang, and he went into hiding in Sichuan Prov ? and completed the classics Shi-zi after Shang Yang was executed by Qin King Huiwenwang. As to ethnicity of 'Rong' people, I had expounded the ethnic nature of various Rong people in the hun.htm section, cleared the dispute in regards to the Rongs, and proven that Rong people, being mainly Sino-Tibetan speaking Qiangic people, shared the same blood-line with Xia Chinese but differred in 'Culture' such as cuisine, clothing, money and language.)
 
'Dong-yi' (Eastern Alien) & 'Xi-yi' (Western Alien)
History annals claim that Lord Shun was a Dong-yi and that Lord Yu was a Xi-yi. This could be interpreted as an ancient conventional way of 'birthplace naming'. (Sima Qian thought that Lord Yu was born in today's Yuxian County, Henan Province, but other ancient historians had claimed that Lord Yü came from the land of the Western Rong or Western Qiang tribe as Lord Yü was also named 'Rong-yu'.)
 
For thousands of years, Chinese used to claim ancestry place as their point of origin. This applies to Hakka people who, having dwelled in southern China for over one thousand year, still claimed northern Chinese prefectures as their point of origin. As a result of ancient Chinese ancestor worshipping, Chinese clans present a unique way of identification of surnames and Gene-tree Y-chromosome. Should we interpret 'Dong-yi' & 'Xi-yi' in this perspective, then there would be no dispute as to Lord Shun and Lord Yu sharing the same lineage and heritage as Huangdi the Yellow Lord even though Lord Shun was a Dong-yi and that Lord Yu was a Xi-yi.
 
Appropriation of Xia Name
On the West Yellow River Bend, there was the ancient Xiazhou Prefecture which still bears the ancient name of 'Xia'. Today, it is called 'Ning-xia Muslim Autonomous Region', with the 'xia' embedded inside. A city by the name of Lingwu still existed close to Ningxia's provincial capital, Yingchuan. There were numerous Xia statelets in Chinese history. The Huns at one time set up a kingdom called 'Xia', and the Tanguts proclaimed their 'Xixia' or Western Xia Dynasty as well. Xia [AD 407-431], set up by Helian Bobo of Tie-fu Huns, had derived its name from the fact that the Huns were recorded to be of Xiahou origin, namely, Xia Dynasty descendants. Helian Bobo, in his eulogy about the founding of Xia, traced his ancestors to Da Yu or Lord Yu. Tanguts, who were of Tuoba & Qiangic heritage, established their Western Xia in about the same place (around West and north Yellow River Bends) and in the same name. From this perspective, we could say that the 'Hua' or 'Xia' designation would be more of barbarian nature in the west than the later Shang Chinese who belonged to the 'Yi' people in the east.
 
Xia Chinese vs Huns, and Qiangic Tibetans vs Tokharai Yuezhi
Above, we mentioned Wang Guowei's possible blunder in attributing the remnants of Xia people to the Huns in the north and the Yuezhi in the west. More detailed accounts about Yuezhi would come after Zhang Qian's visit to Central Asia, unfortunately. "Gua Di Zhi" stated that Yuezhi country included ancient Liangzhou, Ganzhou, Suzhou, Yanzhou and Shazhou, i.e., today's Gansu and Shenxi Provinces. Hence there was the speculation that in the West Yellow River Bend area could also be found Yuezhi people, which might not be true. The place names like Liangzhou, Ganzhou, Suzhou, Yanzhou and Shazhou were all products of late Han Dynasty. "Gua Di Zhi" was a much later book that could have error in extrapolating the presence of Yuezhi beyond the Western Corridor. Further, some historian [maybe just me, after hiccup in my thoughts], who believed Yuezhi country more likely centered around Turpan [Urumqi] as evidenced by Lake Koko Nor [Lop Nur, i.e., Luobupo] mummies, had expressed doubts about Sima Qian's "Shi Ji" as far as the sentence in regards to Yuezhi's original dwelling place is concerned: Sima Qian claimed that Yuezhi, before the migration, lived between Qilian Mountain and Dunhuang hill, and that satellite Yuezhi statelets, after migrating to Central Asia, still adopted as their clan name ancient city of 'Zhaowu' [??? nowhere to be found on map].
 
http://www.taklamakan.org/allied_comm/commonv-1-8.html carried an article by Takla entitled "The Origins of Relations Between Tibet and Other Countries in Central Asia", stating that "according to the researches of Sir Aurel Stein [i.e., the arch thief of China's Dunhuang Grotto treasures] on the origins of the people of Khotan, most were the descendants of the Aryans. They also had in them Turkic and Tibetan blood, though the Tibetan blood was more pronounced. He discovered ancient documents at a place called Nye-yar in Khotan and he has stated that the script of these documents contained no Pali, Arabic (Muslim) or Turkic terminology. All were Tibetan terms and phrases." P.T. Takla stated further that "according to Wu Hriu(2), the facial features of the people of Khotan were dissimilar to those of the rest of the Horpa nomads of Drugu (Uighurs belonging to the Turkic people) and similar, to an extent, to the Chinese. Khotan in the north-west was called Li-yul by the ancient Tibetans. Since Khotan was territorially contiguous with Tibet, there are reasons to believe that the inhabitants of Khotan had originated from Tibet."
 
Tibetans, clearly the descendants of Sino-Tibetan-speaking Qiangic SanMiao people, had their influences reaching the southern Chinese Turkistan in addition to the He-xi Corridor [i.e., the corridor to the west of the western Yellow River Bend].
 
Concluding this episode, my unchanged belief is still that Sino-Tibetan-speaking Qiangic SanMiao people first reached the He-xi Corridor of Gansu Prov 4000 years ago and onward to Khotan area of southern Chinese Turkistan. Tokharai, possibly related to the Indo-Scythians, reached the areas of Lake Koko Nor and later Tunhuang Grotto thereafter. In the 3rd century BC, the Hun Chanyu ordered that his king attack the Yuezhi as a punishment for disturbing peace at the Chinese border. Majority of the Yuezhi fled to the region of Amu Daria river, and some fled across the mountains to live among Qiangic people in the south. Successors of the Huns, led by Helian Bobo of Tie-fu Huns, established a Xia Dynasty lasting through AD 407-431. Helian Bobo's acknowledgement and tracing of ancestry in a common origin as Chinese clearly spelled out the fact that it was the Mongoloid who had first raided to the west rather than the other way around.
 
Lord Yu's Domain
Scholar Chen Shaoli mentioned that it might not be a coincident that Henan's Yuxian County had possessed an ancient village called 'wang-cheng-gang', i.e., the hill of a king's castle.
 
However, Lord Yu was not restricted to the Yellow River Bend, and he was recorded to have travelled across the country. Sima Qian's Shi Ji, in the section on Xia Dynasty, systematically described the ancient nine Chinese prefectures in details, covering the grade or quality of soil, the minerals, animals, plants and agricultural products, the rivers and mountains, and the surrenders or tributes from the local prefecture to the central court (i.e., Chinese dynasties). The famous book, Shan Hai Jing, i.e., Records of Mountains and Seas, was the work of Lord Yu after he spent 13 years surveying the nation.
 
Scholar Hu Yueqian expounded on the marriage of Yu with a Tu-shan-shi woman. (I personally know someone carrying the Tu surname who had come from Hubei Prov.) Hu Yueqian speculated that Lord Yu must have lived close enough to Tu-shan Mountain, somewhere to the northeast of today's Shouchun or Huaiyuan County, Anhui Prov and on the east bank of Huai-shui River. Zuo Zhuan stated that tens of thousands of 'guo' or stateletes (tribes) had come to Mt. Tu-shan to pay respect to Yu after flood was successfully controled. This pointed to the fact that Lord Yu did have his dwelling south of the Yellow River, something that would conflict with Liu Qiyu's assertion that it would be Lord Yu's son who would later expand into Henan Prov. (Hu Yueqian validated Xia people's influence in Anhui Prov by means of an alliance with Tu-shan-shi tribe by citing the fact that last Xia King Jie, with his queen Meixi [a You-shi-shi woman], had fled to You-chao-hu Lake in Anhui Prov for seeking asylum while the remnant Xia nobles, forbidden from returning to You-chao or Caohu Lake, were relocated to Ruzhou [Jiaxian County of today's Henan Prov].)
 
In Today's Shaoxing, Zhejiang Province, namely, the ancient Kuaiji Commandary, there is a monument in remembrance of Lord Yu. Kuaijishan Mountain would be where Yu convened the vassals. Lord Yu was buried on Kuaijishan Mountain when he died. There was an ancient claim that during Song Dynasty, Kuaiji people, when rebuilding the Yu Pilgrimage, dug up some one hundred pieces of jade articles ('gui') that were considered instruments of power conferrals for vassals.
 
Sima Qian, in comments about the length of Min-Yue & Dong-Yue Statelets (see Vietnamese & Southerners section for details), said the 'Yue' People must have inherited Lord Yu's spirits. One claim would put all Yue people, i.e., Bai Yue or Hundred Yue Peoples, in the same lineage as Lord Yu's descendants. Min-Yue & Dong-Yue were related to so-called 'Gu-yue' or Ancient Yue Statelet located in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Prov. After Han Emperor Wudi defeated Min-Yue of Fuzhou and Dong-Ou or Eastern Ou (Dong-Yue) of Wenzhou, there existed a remnant statelet called Xi-Ou or Western Ou.

 
Also to be noted would be the fact that early Chinese history recorded that people from the ancient Wa Japan claimed that they were the descendants of 'Tai Bo' and called themselves by the ancient title of 'Da Fu'. Tai Bo wanted to yield the succession to his brother because the ancient mandate said that the son of Tai Bo's brother (Ji Li) would be the future lord of Zhou people. Ji Li's son would be Ji Chang, i.e., Zhou King Wenwang posthumously. The ancient books also recorded that Wa Japan must be situated to the east of Kuaiji Commandary. Chen Shou's San Guo Zhi recorded that the rice culture people living on the western coast of Japan around the 2nd-3rd centuries were recorded to have tattoos over their body, in a similar fashion to the Zhejiang people in Yantze Delta where the descendants of King Shaokang of Xia Dynasty (21-16th c. BC) had lived. (My speculation is that ancient Wa Japanese with Tai Bo lineage had been wiped out or assimilated into the later immigrants from Korea. An Zhimin, at carleton.ca/~bgordon/Rice/papers/zhimin84.htm , wrote about "EFFECT OF PREHISTORIC CULTURES OF THE LOWER YANGTZE RIVER ON ANCIENT JAPAN", with speculation about pre-Han-Dynasty contacts.)
 
Xia Chronology
Sima Qian's "Shi Ji" and the Bamboo Annals both cited the traditional saying that Xia Dynasty, with and without kingship, had lasted 471 years. Ban Gu's "Han Shu" stated that Xia-hou-shi, with 17 kings, had lasted 432 years. Scholar Huang Shilin cited the recent excavation of a Western Han Dynasty tomb in Mt Yinqueshan area, Linyi, Shandong and the discovery of ancient classics "Liu Tao" in rebutting the traditional view. "Liu Tao" historically claimed that Xia Dynasty possessed 31 kings from Yu to Jie. Scholar Huang Shilin hence concurred with Bamboo Annals' statement that Xia Dynasty possessed more years than Shang Dynasty though it recorded only 17 kings. By setting the Shang-tang overthrow of Xia King Jie in the 18th cent BC, Huang Shilin speculated that the start of Xia would be somewhere like 24th cent BC by adding up 629 years of the Shang Dynasty duration. ( The way to compromise different count of years, in my opinion, would probably be lying in the inclusion of anterior years or not. Scholar Kwang-chih Chang proposed in 1980s an emphasis on horizontal diagnosis of Xia-Shang-Zhou peoples instead of vertical, which was to acknowledge the existence of a certain 'Anterior Xia', 'Anterior Shang' and 'Anterior Zhou'. Scholar Hu Yueqian proposed that Xia studies must be built upon Shang studies because of the close relations between the two groups of people. )

 
Yu's son, Qi(3), founded Xia Dynasty. After Qi's death, his son, Taikang, succeeded him. Taikang made Zhenxun as his capital. However, Taikang was fond of hunting and did not take care of business. When Taikang went to south of Luo River for hunting, the tribal leader of the Yi people, Houyi (You-qiong-shi clan, a legendary figure famous for his long arms and shooting down the suns), staged a coup d'etat and lined up his forces on the northern bank of Luo River to force Taikang into exile. Five Taikang brothers and their mother made a song on the north bank of Luo, calling for the return of Taikang. Houyi made Taikang's brother (Zhongkang) a king. But Houyi, after Zhongkang's death, would stage another coup to overthrow Zhongkang's son, Xiang. Xiang fled to Shangqiu area for asylum under Zhen-guan & Zhen-xun tribes. Later, a general under Houyi, Hanzhuo, would usurp power by killing Houyi and usurped You-qiong-shi throne. Hanzhuo took over Houyi's woman and born two sons who were renowned for their strength. To prevent the Xia or Huaxia people from claiming power again, Hanzhuo would send one of his sons to kill Xiang by routing Zhen-guan & Zhen-xun tribes. Xiang's woman, of You-ren-guo [? You-nai-shi) clan, fled to her home and born Shaokang. Shaokang [l. 2118-2068 per Chu Bosi] would survive by escaping to the You-yu-shi tribe where the descendants of Lord Shun (another Yi tribe) lived. A Xia remnant minister, Mi, fled to You-ge-shi clan, and he organized forces and finally defeated Hanzhuo. Mi erected Shankang as the lord. Shaokang's son, Zhu, would first invent the shields to counter the sharp arrows from the Yi people who were renowned for hunting and shooting. Zhu's son would be Hui (Fen), Hui's son would be Mang, Mang's son would be Xie, Xie's son would be Buxiang, Buxiang's brother would be Jiong, and Jiong's son would be Jin. After Jin would be Buxiang's brother, Kongjia. Kongjia would be fond of 'gui shen' (ghosts and gods) and indulged himself lasciviously. Xia-hou-shi virtues declined, and vassals challenged the statelet. Kongjia's son would be Gao, Gao's son would be Fa, and Fa's son would be Lügui (Jie).
Xia Dynasty
21 - 16th cent BC
Qi
Taikang
Zhongkang
Xiang
Shaokang
Di Zhu
Di Kui (Fen)
Di Mang
Di Xie
Di Buxiang
Di Jiong
Di Jin
Di Kongjia
Di Gao
Di Fa
Di Lügui (Jie)

 
The above historical events pointed to the eastern Henan Prov and western Shandong Prov, traditional land of the Dong-yi people, as the theater of struggles between the Xia people and Dong-yi people. Last Xia King Jie himself was driven to Chao-hu Lake of Anhui Prov, to the southeast of Henan Prov.
 
After four hundreds of years, Xia Dynasty ended in 1766 BC in the hands of Jie who was said to have mistreated his people. The person who overthrew Jie would be called Shang-Tang [l. 1824-1753 BC per chu Bosi] , a tribal leader of the Yi people, whose ancestor (Xie, i.e., son of Lord Di-ku) had worked under Lord Yu in controlling the floods. Shang-tang's name was Luu, aka Tianyi.
 
Likewise, the ancestor of later Qin Empire served in the same rank as Xie in fighting the floods and hence was conferred the family name of 'Ying', with a water sign as part of the character. Research shows that ancestors of both Shang and Qin dynasties belonged to the same Yi tribal group.
 
Jie once called upon Shang-Tang and imprisoned him in Xiatai prison [located in Yangdi, Henan Prov] during the 42nd year reign, i.e., 1777 BC per Chu Bosi. Jie then released Shang-Tang. Shang-Tang rallied vassals, made oath of war [i.e., "Tang Shi"] at the outskirts of Mingtiao, and defeated Jie during the 53rd year reign of Jie or 18th year reign of Shang-tang. Shang-tang made Bo his capital. Jie, with his queen Meixi (a You-shi-shi woman), fled across the River to You-chao-hu Lake in Anhui Prov. 13 years later, i.e., 1753 BC per Chu Bosi, Shang-tang passed away.
 
The dynasty name of 'Xia' did not go away. There would ensue a short Hunnic dynasty called Xia, lasting through AD 407-431. The Huns claimed that they were the descendants of the Xiahou (namely, Xia descendants) people, and Uygurs claimed descendancy from Chunwei, the son of last Xia lord. Sima Qian mentioned that Jie was banished to Henan Province and died there years later. Jie's son took over his father's dowager queen and fled northward to become the ancestor of later Huns on the steppe. (Liu Qiyu pointed out that the Xia people, similar to Huns and Turks, had adopted the ancient 'concubine inheritance system', i.e., the successors of nobles or lords would take over their fathers' concubines and wives instead of forcing those women to be buried with their late husbands.) Still another dynasty would be the later Xixia Kingdom (i.e., Western Xia, AD 1032-1227) led by the Dangxiang (i.e., Tanguts). History recorded that there evolved eight Qiangic tribes by the time of Five Dynasties (AD 907-960), with one tribal group carrying the old Toba name. The Toba Qiangic people claimed that the founder of Xia Dynasty (21-16th c. BC) came from the Western Rong area, namely, the dwelling place of the Qiangs from the time of Lords Yao-Shun-Yu. Danggxiang's Xia could also derive from the title of Duke of Xiazhou Prefecture as conferred by Tang Dynasty's emperor.

 
 
Shang Dynasty
 
According to Sima Qian's Shi Ji, the ancestor of the Shang people was named Xie, a son of Lord Diku. Legend said that Xie was born after his mother, Jiandi (Yousong-shi woman, a statelet located in Yuncheng of Shanxi Prov), swallowed an egg of a black bird (swallow). Lord Yao conferred Xie the post of 'si tu' and the last name of 'Zi'. Lord Shun conferred Xie the land of Shang (later Shangluo County) for aiding Yu in flood control. Fourteen generation descendant would be Tang (Shang-Tang), also named 'Tian Yi' or 'Heavenly Yi'. (During Xia and Shang dynasties, the lords were called Wang or King, but named Di or modern sense overlord or emperor posthumously. Since 'Heaven' was considerd a Di, Shang-Tang was called 'Heavenly Yi'.) The character 'Tang(1)' means purging evils, literally speaking.
 
Shang-Tang was conferred the post of fang bo (i.e., leading vassal Count) by Xia king. At Xia-Shang times, vassals were designated by the character 'fang' (i.e., domain), including Gui-fang (steppe nomads) in the north (? most likely Shanxi Prov), Qiang-fang (Qiangic shephardS) in the west, Ji-fang (Xia remnants) in southern Shanxi Prov, and Ren-fang (human domain) on Shandong Peninsula in the east. Ancient title for 'Count' might not be of same level as that in Europe and should be higher than marquis in Shang-Zhou times. (Scholar Fu Sinian studied the bronze inscriptions, i.e., jin wen, from Zhou times and concluded that the ancient five rankings of duke, marquis, count, viscount, and baron did not conform with bronze inscriptions or classics such as Shang Shu or Shi Jing. Fu Sinian stated that duke-gong, count-bo, viscount-zi, and baron-nan were originally used within a royal family as rankings; governmentally, 'bo' or count was the leader of a conferred fief while 'hou' or marquis was for denoting the vassal guarding border posts.)
 
Shang-Tang first campaigned against Ge-bo (Count of Ge). Shang-Tang obtained a minister called Yi Yin (aka Yi Zhi) from You-xin-shi land after paying five [? three per Chu Bosi] visits to him. Shang-tang respectfully called Yi Yin by Ah Heng. When last Xia Dynasty King (Jie) was corrupt and lascivious, a vassal called Kunwu-shi rebelled. Shang-tang first assembled vassals and quelled Kunwu-shi rebellion, and then campaigned against Xia King Jie in the name of 'shang di' (i.e., Lord Highness). Shang-tang defeated Jie at the ruins of You-song (Yuncheng, Shanxi Prov); Jie fled to Mingtiao (ancient Puzhou prefecture) where he was defeated again by Shang-Tang; Shang-Tang continued on to defeat Jie at Sanchun (Dingtao or Jiyin of ancient Caozhou); and Jie fled to You-cao or Caohu Lake of Anhui Prov in the southeast. Ancient classics claimed that Shang-Tang had conducted altogether 11 major campaigns before he took over the overlordship of China. Scholar Luo Xianglin claimed that Shang people had asserted control over the Xia people via advanced weaponry: bows.
Shang Dynasty
16 - 11th cent BC
Ch'ˆng-t'ang (Tang)
Wai Bing
Zhong Ren
T'ai-chia (Tai Jia)
Wu-ling (Ao Ding)
T'ai-kˆng (Tai Geng)
Hsiao-chia (Xiao Jia)
Yung-chi (Yong Ji)
T'ai-wu (Tai Wu)
Chung-ting (Zhong Ding)
Wai-jˆn (Wai Ren)
Tsien-chia (He Dan Jia)
Tsu-yi (Zu Yi)
Tsu-hsin (Zu Xin)
Ch'iang-chia (Ao Jia)
Tsu-ting (Zu Ding)
Nan-kˆng (Nan Geng)
Hu-chia (Yang Jia)
P'an-kˆng (Pan Geng)
Hsiao-hsin (Xiao Xin)
Hsiao-yi (Xiao Yi)
Wu-ting (Wu Ding)
Tsu-kˆng (Zu Geng)
Tsu-chia (Zu Jia)
Lin-hsin (Lin Xin)
K'ang-tin (Geng Ding)
Wu-yi (Wu Yi)
Wˆn-wu-ting (Tai Ding)
Ti-yi (Yi Li))
Di Xin (Xin)

 
Xia Chinese remnants, in the opinion of Wang Zhonghan, would evolve into Gui-gang [ghost domain] barbarians who were to fight the Shang Dynasty for hundreds of years till being subdued and then acting as a vassal together with Zhou people's ancestor Count Xi-bo. For further discussions on Barbarians & Chinese, please refer to
Shang Dynasty passed the power to brothers mostly. The interesting thing about the overlords (Di4) of Shang Dynasty would be their using the names of 10 Celetial Stems for their given names, including jia, yi, bing, ding, wu, ji, geng, xin, ren, gui.
 
When Shang-Tang died, his son, Taiding, already died. Taiding's brother, Waibing, was selected. Three years later, Waibing's brother, Zhongren, was enthroned. 4 years later, Yi Yin selected Taiding's son, Taijia, as the 'Di' (overlord). During the third year of Taijia's rule, Yi Yin exiled the lord outside of the capital and took over reign as 'Shang Regent-Protector' for three years. After Taijia repented over his deeds, Yi Yin welcomed the Shang king back to the capital. Yi Yin wrote three sections of 'Taijia Mottos' to praise Taijia's virtues. Yi Yin named Taijia's imperial title as 'Tai Zong' (i.e., grand ancestor). Yi Yin died during the reign of Aoding (Taijia's son), and Shang Dynasty buried Yi Yin at 'Bo' the capital, using the lord rituals.
 
Alternative records, including "Zhu Shu Ji Nian" [Bamboo Annals], claimed that Taijia killed Yi Yin; however, excavations from Shang Ruins had exhibited a high respect for Yi Yin in the burial. Scholar Li Xueqin, in his dissertation on "Zhu Shu Ji Nan and Xia Dynasty", claimed that Bamboo Annals was biased in descriptions of usurpations & tyrants and might have fabricated historical events to serve the purpose of billegerant Warring States time period, with anti-history stories like Yi Yin's adultery with last Xia Lord Jie's queen Mei-xi or like Yi Yin's exiling Shang King Taijia for 7 years and subsequent Taijia's execution of Yi Yin as revenge. Li Xueqin stated that Shang oracle bones had high compliments for Yi Yin and Bamboo Annals was deliberately mutating history to serve the purpose of usurpation. Hence, Bamboo Annals' accounts of Xia King Qi's killing Yi or the usurpations of Shun vs Yao & Yu vs Shun should be questioned for its authenticity.
 
After Aoding will be brother Taigeng. Taigeng's son will be Xiaojia. Xiaojia's brother is Yongji. Vassals refused to pay respect to Yongji. Yongji's brother is Taiwu. Taiwu used Yi Yin's son, Yi She, as prime minister. Shang prestige improved, and vassals came to pay respect again. Taiwu was given imperial title as 'Zhong Zong' (i.e., middle ancestor).
 
Taiwu's son would be Zhongding. Zhongding relocated the capital to Ao (Aocang, Henan Prov). Brother Hedanjia was his prime minister. Zuyi (son of brother Hedanjia) moved to Geng (Gengxiang, Pishi-xian County, Henan Prov). After Lord Zhongding died, brother Wairen was enthroned. After Wairen would be brother Hedanjia. At the time of Lord Hedanjia, Shang Dynasty declined in prestige again. After Hedanjia would be son Zuyi. At the time of Lord Zuyi, Shang Dynasty rose in prestige. After Zuyi would be his son Zuxin. After Zuxin would be brother Aojia. After Aojia would be the son of brother Zuxin, i.e., Zuding. After Zuding would be son of brother Aojia, i.e., Nangeng. After Nangeng would be son of brother Zuding, i.e., Yangjia. At the time of Lord Yangjia, Shang Dynasty declined in prestige once again. Historians commented that Shang declined ever since Lord Zhongding due to the frequent deposing and usurpation of lords among brothers and nephews.
 
After Yangjia would be brother Pan'geng. Pan'geng crossed the Yellow River to the south and relocated the capital back to Bo (Yanshi, Henan), Shang-Tang's old city. Shang people had relocated their capital five times by then. The Shang Dynasty (1765 BC - 1134 BC) ruled parts of northern and central China. Shang people had altogether relocated their capital eight times, possibly related to the Yellow River flooding. (Cai Dongfan stated that the Yellow River was first worked on by Lord Yu and eight hundred years after, the Shang people began to experience the flooding again.) The dynasty moved its capitals in history, to modern Loyang, modern Zhengzhou, and finally to Anyang (called Yin at the time) under Pan'geng the 20th king. During the times of Shang-Tang, its capital city was located at Bo, today's Shangqiu, Henan Province. (Bo was the place where Diku, the father of Xie, had dwelled as the capital.)
 
After Pangeng would be brother Xiaoxin. At the time of Lord Xiaoxin, Shang Dynasty declined in prestige. After Xiaoxin would be brother Xiaoyi.
 
After Xiaoyi would be son Wuding (1324-1265 BC ?). Wuding was eager to look for saints to manage the country; Wuding did not talk much for three years; and Wuding located a saint by the name of Fu Sui in the wilderness and made him a prime minister. Shang prestige rose again. Wuding was entitled 'Gao Zong' (i.e., highest ancestor). Wuding's wife would be the famous female warrior of China, Fu Hao, who had led a campaign against ancient Tu-fang barbarians in the north (either on the northern steppe or still in Shanxi Prov. Fuhao, to campaign in the north, must have passed through Ji-fang, i.e., southern Shanxi Prov where Xia remnants dwelled.) Fu Hao was authenticated by the tomb excavation which was a result of a determination and a perception of a female archaeologist that something deep under Shang Ruins in Anyang must be lying. That turns out to be Fu Hao's tomb. Good websites about her would be:
 
http://www.span.com.au/100women/12.html
http://www.ayyx.com/e-fhm.htm
 
Interesting about her tomb would be bronze utensils made in Sichuan Province in the west. It shows the kind of close relations Shang people had with peoples in the perimeter. Also noted by Scholar Zhan Quanyou (The Culture of Nan-zhao & Da-li Statelets, 2002 edition, Sichuan People's Press, Chengdu, Sichuan) would be the fact that ancient Yunnan Prov people could be the sole supplier of tin for the bronze of Shang Dynasty and succeeding dynasties. We simply could not discount the ancient people's knowledge and contacts with each other. (In the section on China & America, we provided scholarly research into the possibility that Shang people might have migrated towards American continents after their defeat in the hands of Zhou Dynasty. Do note that Wei Chu-hsien, who attempted to validate an opposite movement of Yantze River Chinese towards the north and northwest by deciphering the literal meaning of the town of Wuxi [lietrally meaning "no tin"], had claimed that the tin of Shang Chinese came from a hill near Wuxi in Yangtze River mouth [where tin mine was exhausted in 3rd century BC], not from Southwestern China. Wei, who had contributions to the excavation of Liangzhu Culture in 1930s, did not get to know the Sanxingdui bronze culture in Sichuan Prov which apparently served as a venue for the tin of Southwest China to reach the Yellow River.)
 
After Wuding would be son Zugeng. After Zugeng would be brother Zujia. Zujia was lascivious and Shang declined again. After Zujia would be son Linxin. After Linxin would be brother Gengding. After Gengding would be son Wuyi. Wuyi relocated the capital to the north of the Yellow River; Lord Wuyi was despotic; and Wuyi, while hunting between Yellow River and Wei-shui River, was stricken and killed by lightening for his disdain of the Heaven. After Wuyi would be son Taiding. After Taiding would be son Yili. At the times of Yili, Shang declined. Yili's elder son was called Wei-zi (Qi2) who was not conferred the crown prince status because Wei-zi's mother was not of noble background. (Ancient classics, Suo Ying, claimed that the title of Wei[1] for Wei-zi was the conferred land of Wei[1] for the elder prince.) Junior son of Yili would be Xin, i.e., Lord Zhou4 (Zhouwang).
 
Cheng-Tang Revolution
Shang-Tang claimed that Lord Highness (Heaven) instructed him to campaign against Xia Lord Jie because of Jie's corruption, lasciviousness and cruelty. Later, Confucius would term it 'Cheng-Tang Revolution' or 'Shang-Tang Revolution', a word that would be used by Dr. Sun Yat-sen in his efforts at overthrowing Manchu rule. With the advice of Yi Yin, Shang-Tang successfully defeated Xia Dynasty and banished the last king of Xia, Jie, to today's Anhui Province. Jie's son would later flee to the northern plains to become ancestors of the Huns. Yi Yin would later live to the age of 100 years and he became mainly responsible for advising four Shang kings.
 
Pangeng the 20th king moved the capital to Anyang (called Yin at the time). After another eleven kings would come King Zhouwang of Shang Dynasty who finally lost his kingdom to the Zhou people, a tribe from the west, who dwelled in today's Shaanxi or Shenxi Province. The Shang people, unlike earlier Xia people, would be of the origin as the Eastern Yi people. The later Zhou people were said to have migrated to the west of China from the east as well. Qin's ancestor could be traced to Bo Yi under Lord Shun, and Bo Yi assisted Lord Yu in mastering the floods. Shang, Zhou and Qin peoples are all said to be from the east against the Xia people in the west.
The last Shang ruler, King Zhouwang, would be a despotic ruler. He killed one marquis (Jiu Hou) and Jiu Hou's daughter because the queen (Jiu Hou's daughter) was not lewd. Another marquis (Er Hou) was killed when he tried to protect Jiu Hou. Count Xibo (i.e., Ji Chang) sighed about the killings, and hence was imprisoned by Shang King Zhouwang. Shang King Zhouwang would kill Xibo's elder son, Boyikao, and made a dish out of Boyikao's flesh for Xibo to eat. Shang King Zhouwang laughed when Xibo ate it without knowing that it was his son's flesh. Xibo was set free only after Xibo's minister bribed Shang King Zhouwang by presenting a beauty.
 
Mandate Of Heaven
Prince Bigan, son of last Shang Lord Zhouwang, would be deposed for trying to admonish Zhouwang into correcting his deeds. When Count Xibo invaded two Shang vassals called the Qiguo Statelet and Mixu Statelet, Zu Yi, a Shang minister, expressed the worry that the 'Mandate Of Heaven' might change. Zhouwang rebutted Zu Yi, saying that the 'Mandate Of Heaven' was with him the minute he was born. After Xibo (Zhou King Wenwang) passed away, Zhou King Wuwang would rally eight hundred Shang vassals on the bank of the Yellow River, Mengjin. The vassals said to Wuwang, "Shang Lord Zhouwang could be campaigned against by now." Wuwang said, "You guys did not know the 'Mandate Of Heaven' yet."
 
Shang Lord Zhouwang's brother, Wei-zi, would flee the capital. Zhouwang's son, Prince Bigan, seeing the departure of Wei-zi, would try to pursuade Zhouwang again, but was ordered killed by Zhouwang to see whether Bigan's heart had 9 compartments as the saints were said to possess. Zhouwang's uncle, Prince Ji-zi, would pretend to have gone mentally ill, but he was still imprisoned by King Zhouwang. When Shang's chief music ministers, Tai Shi and Shao Shi, fled to Zhou with Shang's ritual instruments, Wuwang said it was time to campaign against Shang Lord Zhouwang. After losing the Battle of Muye, Shang Lord Zhouwang would commit suicide by setting his palace (Lutai, i.e., deer platform) on fire and jumping into fire at the time Wuwang of Zhou invaded Shang capital, Chaoge. Some historians disputed the records about the wars between Shang and Zhou since the dead and defeated would have no chance to let their side of the story be heard. Zhouwang's stories of tyranny and lasciviousness, together with his queen (Da Ji), would be the target of criticism in a popular mythic novel, Feng Shen Bang (List of Conferred Gods). His wife, together with the wife of last Xia Lord Jie in the past and the wife of King Youwang of Western Zhou Dynasty in the future, would be condemned as the "female disater water" that is ironically the immortal topic of all decadent dynasties in China's history.
 
Wei Chu-Hsien rephrased the Shang-Zhou story as follows: Last Shang Lord King Zhouwang campaigned against 'Ren-fang-guo' statelet on Shandong Peninsula. After defeating Ren-fang-guo, Zhouwang led a few soldiers back to the capital of Chaoge for lunar new year celebration. Upon hearing of Zhouwang's return with a light force, Zhou Lord Wuwang marched towards Shang capital within six days and nights and encountered Zhouwang at the outskirts of Muye where Zhou army defeated Shang's drunken soldiers. Shang King Zhouwang committed suicide. Zhou Lord Wuwang made Shang Prince Lufu inherit the Shang heritage and then went back to the west. After Wuwang died, Zhou Duke Zhougong assumed the post of a regent for Zhou King Chengwang. In old Shang capital area, Shang Prince Lufu died. Shang Prince Lufu's son, Prince Wugeng, conspired with the brothers of Zhou Wuwang in rebelling against Zhou Regent Zhougong. Zhougong defeated the rebellion and furthermore campaigned against Shang remnants who were left by Shang Lord Zhouwang on Shandong Peninsula's Ren-fang-guo statelet. Shang remnants hence fled towards two directions, one branch to Taiwan Island and the other branch to North America via the Bering Straits. Those Shang people who arrived in North America stationed two chieftans on the east and west sides of the Bering Straits and conferred onto the two chieftans the titles of east-sea and north-sea kings. The east-sea and north-sea kings would become the gods in revised book "Shan Hai Jing".
 
Scholar Luo Xianglin claimed that Zhou people had asserted control over the Shang people via advanced weaponry of chariots.
 
Shang & Zhou Relations
Often neglected would be the oracle or divination inscriptions on bronze utensils left by Zhou people at Mt Qishan. During the earlier reign of Shang Lord Aoding, Zhou people were often campaigned against by Shang Dynasty. But later on, Zhou began to submitt to Shang and assist Shang in numerous campaigns against barbarians in Shanxi Prov. Xu Zhuoyun cited Chen Mengjia's research in pointing out that Zhou Taiwang, during Shang Lord Wuyi's reign, relocated to Mt Qishan under the pressure of Doggy Rong; that Zhou lord Jili, during the 34th year reign of Shang King Wuyi, paid pilgrimage to Shang court; that Jili defeated Xiluo-Gui-rong barbarians and captured 20 Di[2] kings the next year on behalf of Shang court but Shang King Wuyi was killed by a lightening around the Wei-shui River; that Jili campaigned against Yanjing-rong but got defeated during the 2nd year reign of Shang King Taiding; that Jili, two years thereafter, defeated Yuwu-rong and received conferral as 'mu shi' (shephard chancellor) from Shang King; that Jili first campaigned against Shihu-rong during the 7th year reign of Shang King Taiding and against Yitu-rong during the 11th year reign; that Jili was killed by Shang King Wending (Taiding) thereafter; and that Zhou people began to attack Shang Dynasty during the 2nd year reign of Shang King Di-yi (Yili). Xu Zhuoyun speculated that Shang King most likely died in the hands of Zhou people rathern than a lightening in a similar coverup as later Zhou King Zhaowang's death on the Huai-shui River as a complication of conflict with southern barbarians. However, Shang-Zhou relationship had improved since Jili's successor, i.e., Zhou King Wenwang, had again married with Shang princess. Both the mother and the wife of Zhou King Wenwang, per scholar Fu Sinian, were princesses of Shang royal house. Zhou people were conferred the title of 'Xi Bo' (Count of the West) by Shang Dynasty King Zhouwang as a buffer state against the Western nomads.
 
Zhou King Wuwang's alliance against Shang pointed to the fact that Zhou people, by the timeframe of 1122 BC?, had basically surrounded the Shang people from north, west and south. Having belief and confidence in ancient Chinese interpretation of classics, I will list the following quote to corroborate the fact that Shang was already surrounded by Zhou people before its demise: Generalissimo Cao Cao of Latter Han Dynasty, when advised to usurp Han after murdering two Han empresses consecutively, stated that Zhou King Wenwang had refrained from taking over Shang even though Zhou had already acquired majority land and fiefs of Shang Dynasty.
 
Duke Song Wei-zi
King Wuwang of Zhou would initially allow Shang King Zhouwang's son, Wugeng, to stay on in the capital to continue Shang's family heredity. (Wei Juxian stated that Wugeng was the son of Shang Prince Lufu.) After the death of Zhou King Wuwang, Archduke Zhou assumed regency for the young nephew king. In the old Shang capital, Wugeng conspired with Zhou King Wuwang's brothers in a coup and hence got excecuted by Archduke Zhou. Archduke Zhou hence selected the elder brother of Zhouwang, Wei-zi, to inheritate the Shang family line in the land of Song as a duke ('Shang Gong', namely, highest ranking duke). After the death of Duke Song Wei-zi, Wei-zi's brother, Weizhong, inheritated the dukedom. Weizhong would be the an