Shang (c. 1750 - c. 1040 BC)
There are three things to know about the Shang: one, they were
the most advanced bronze-working civilization in the world; two,
Shang remains provide the earliest and most complete record of Chinese
writing (there are a few Neolithic pots that have a few characters
scratched on them; however, a few characters do not a complete writing
system make), scratched out on the shoulder blades of pigs for oracular
purposes; and three, they were quite possibly the most blood-thirsty
pre-modern civilization. They liked human sacrifice -- a lot. If
a king died, then more than one hundred slaves would join him in
the grave. Some of them would be beheaded first. Some of them were
just thrown in still alive. Later dynasties replaced the humans
with terra-cotta figures, resulting in things like the underground
army. They also did things like human sacrifice for building consecrations
and other ceremonial events. The Shang had a very odd system of
succession: instead of a patrilineal system where power was passed
from father to son, the kingship passed from elder brother to younger
brother, and when there were no more brothers, then to the oldest
maternal nephew.
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