Litcius/Paper detail

Social hierarchy and the choice of metal recycling at Anyang, the last capital of Bronze Age Shang China

Ruiliang Liu, A. Mark Pollard, Qin Cao, Cheng Liu, Victoria A. Sainsbury, Philly Howarth, Peter Bray, Limin Huan, Bohao Yao, Yuting Fu, Jigen Tang

2020Scientific Reports41 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Anyang, the last capital of the Chinese Shang dynasty, became one of the largest metal consumers in Eurasia during the second millennium BCE. However, it remains unclear how Anyang people managed to sustain such a large supply of metal. By considering the chemical analysis of bronze objects within archaeological contexts, this paper shows that the casting and circulation of metal at Anyang was effectively governed by social hierarchy. Objects belonging to the high elites such as Fuhao, particularly the bronze ritual vessels, were made by carefully controlled alloying practice (primary) using very pure copper, whereas the lower elites only had access to bronzes made by secondary alloying practice and copper with more impurities. Such contrasts allow scholars to identify those objects which are less likely to have been made by mixing and recycling, which has very important implications for the chemical and isotopic determination of provenance for future studies.

Topics & Concepts

ChinaSocial hierarchyBronze AgeHierarchyBronzeSocial capitalArchaeologyAncient historyGeographyHistoryEconomicsSociologyEthnologySocial scienceMarket economyArchaeology and ancient environmental studiesHistorical and Cultural Archaeology StudiesCultural Heritage Management and Preservation