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Old Sinitic *Mag, Old Persian Maguš, and English “Magician”

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 March 2015

Victor H. Mair*
Affiliation:
Dept. of Oriental Studies, U. of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104

Abstract

The 1980 discovery at Chou-yüan (site of an important Western Chou palace complex) of two small human heads with Caucasoid features sculpted from mollusk shell raises questions concerning East-West contact during the early Chou period (roughly eighth century B.C.E.). A similar head from Anyang dating to about half a millennium earlier suggests that the contact was of long standing and that it centered in the Shang and Chou courts. On top of one of the Chou heads is engraved the oracle bone form of the graph for wu, namely , identifying the figure as a ritual specialist. Normally wu is translated as “shaman,” but it is here proposed that “mage” be adopted as a more accurate equivalent. Various types of evidence are adduced in support of this proposal, including the Old Sinitic reconstruction of wu, i.e., *mag, which indicates a direct linkage with Old Persian maguš, the original source of Magianism.

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Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Study of Early China 1990

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