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Exploring Complexity in Bronze Age Exchange Networks by Revisiting the Bronze Mirrors of Central Asia and China

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 November 2023

Rebecca O'Sullivan
Affiliation:
Department of Pre- and Early Historic Archaeology University of Bonn Brühler Straße 7 53119 Bonn Germany Email: rebecca.osullivan@uni-bonn.de
Huiqiu Shao
Affiliation:
Collaborative Research Centre for Archaeology of the Silk Road Northwest University 1 Xuefu Boulevard Chang'an District Xi'an City 710127 PR China Email: shaohq@nwu.edu.cn
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Abstract

The ever-growing body of research on trans-Eurasian exchange during the third–first millennium bce continues to improve understanding of mechanisms that facilitated the movement of objects, materials, ideas, and even people. However, whether bronze mirrors in Central Asia and China represent the exchange of technological knowledge or movement of the objects themselves remains unresolved, as researchers require extensive knowledge of huge quantities of data generated during the Soviet Central Asia campaigns of the mid twentieth century. The often confusing, impenetrable excavation reports, combined with required knowledge of Chinese, Russian and English, have caused much confusion about dates and contexts. This article presents and compares data published in Russian and Chinese reports. By clarifying the chronology for mirrors in Central Asia and China, we challenge simplistic theories of object diffusion and spread that persist in studies of trans-Eurasian exchange. We argue that the early second-millennium bce appearance of mirrors in western and northwestern China resulted from different exchange mechanisms specific to each local socio-cultural context. This demonstrates not only the complexity of interactions at the group and individual levels, but also how these factors can be integrated with data-driven analyses to explore the role they played in large-scale Bronze Age exchange networks.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research
Figure 0

Figure 1. The three main types of bronze mirror found in central and eastern Eurasia from the third millennium bce. (a) mirror with handle, Sokoluk, Kyrgyzstan, early first millennium bce; (b) disc mirror, Burial 102 km along the Tejen-Serakhs road, Turkmenistan, early third millennium bce; (c) disc mirror with loop on the reverse side, Burial 1, Muminabad, Uzbekistan, mid to late second millennium bce. (After Kuz'mina 1966, pls XIII.9, XIII.11 & XIII.7.)

Figure 1

Figure 2. Mirror finds in Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, and Kyrgyzstan from the late fourth to late third millennium bce.

Figure 2

Figure 3. Mirrors in southern Central Asia for the period early to mid second millennium bce.

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Figure 4. Mirrors in southern Central Asia for the period mid to late second millennium bce.

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Figure 5. Mirrors in Xinjiang, Qinghai, Gansu, and Ningxia provinces for the period early to late second millennium bce.

Figure 5

Figure 6. (a) disc mirror with loop from Gamatai (M25:6). Two holes were drilled into the edge, presumably after the central loop broke (after Qinghai sheng wenwu kaogu yanjiusuo and Beijing daxue kaogu wenbo xueyuan 2015, fig. 116); (a) disc mirror with loop from Tianshanbeilu, Phase 4 (after Lü et al.2001, fig. 18.1).

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Figure 7. Mirrors in northwestern and western China for the early to mid first millennium bce.

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Figure 8. Mirrors in the Central Plain and neighbouring areas for the period mid second to mid first millennium bce. (1) Nanzhihui xicun; (2) Qingong 1 hao damu; (3) Baoji City outskirts; (4) Wangjiazui; (5) Liujia beituhao; (6) Huangdui; (7) Huangjiahe; (8) Bailong; (9) Beilu.

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Figure 9. Mirrors with loops from the Shang and Zhou dynasties. (a) late Shang, Yinxu, M5:41 (after Jaang 2011, fig. 7); (b) late Shang, Yinxu, M5:786 (after Zhongguo shehui kexueyuan kaogu yanjiusuo 1980, fig. 65.1); (c) late Shang, Yinxu, M5:45 (after Zhongguo shehui kexueyuan kaogu yanjiusuo 1980, fig. 65.2); (d) the so-called ‘olive-shape’ loop, early Western Zhou, Huangdui, 95FHM60:7 (after Luo & Wei 2005, fig. 29); (e) late Shang to early Western Zhou, Xiaweiluo, M1:19 (after Xie et al.2006, fig. 30.3); (f) early Western Zhou, Baifu, M3:30 (after Beijing shi wenwu guanli chu 1976, fig. 20.4).

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Table 1. Chronology of major archaeological cultures in southern Siberia, northern Central Asia and northern Xinjiang during the second millennium bce.

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