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Zhou Dynasty

Key Terms

Mandate of Heaven

Ritual revolution

Well-field system

Shi, 士

Dynasty

A historical rule of a royal family.

Mandate of Heaven

  • Right to rule granted by heaven
  • Only one heaven, so there can be only one legitimate ruler
  • Right to rule based on the virtue of the ruler
  • Right to rule is not necessarily limited to one dynastic line

Ritual Revolution

  • Clear differentiation of authority and responsibility
  • The possession of certain ritual vessels mark political rank: sets, shapes, and decoration of bronzes become more stereotyped
  • Emphasize the use of ritual vessels for the ceremony
  • Inscriptions become longer
  • Decoration was more sober, with a trend towards abstraction

Western Zhou Dynasty

1122 - 771 BCE

The Zhou were originally a vassal state under the Shang, and later the Zhou overthrew the Shang and became the ruling dynasty.

Western Zhou’s capital was defeated in 771 BCE and moved to the Eastern Zhou.

Bronze Vessels

Presence of sets and diversity

Not likely for utility purposes due to the excessive weight and inconvenient for usage

Demonstrated a figure without a left foot, a punishment system for the slaves

The Land Distribution System

No private ownership of land, which all belongs to the king

Well-field system, Jingtian

Land divided into 9 equal parcels (8 families and a common plot)

Reinforce the concept that all land ultimately belongs to the state

Social value supports the equal distribution of land

Hoards, 771 BCE

The tribal people seized the capital and the king, who was killed

Eastern Zhou Dynasty

771 - 256 BCE

Loss of rulership of the majority of the region, except the region near the capital

  • Spring and Autumn Period: 722-481
  • Warring States Period: 403-221

The Warring States Period

Collapse of a stable multi-state alliance system

Priority: immediate interests of individual states

Ultimate solution: reunification through force rather than alliances

Present of food warming and refrigerating bronze objects

Shi, 士

Start developing in the Warring States Period

  • Philosophers, political advisors, professionals
  • See the decline of the hereditary aristocracy
  • Open military command and government service to common people
  • Rising importance of non-noble but capable ministers
  • The emergence of new broader ruling elite class, Shi