Geographical Location: Xin’gan County, Jiangxi Province
Period: About 12th century BC
Excavated in 1989
Significance: It has disclosed the features of the bronze civilization and burial systems of the nobles in the Yangtze River valley during the Shang Dynasty.
Introduction
Xingan(新干Xīn’gàn)Tomb, a large Shang tomb at Xingan, Jiangxi Province, which is famous for its bronze culture. Up to now, about 1,361 pieces of relics like bronze, pottery, stoneware and jade have been unearthed, among which 475 pieces are ritual bronzes.
Among the vessels from this tomb, the Ding vessels account for more than half of the total. Comparison with their counterparts in the Zhengzhou Erligang phase and the Anyang Yin period shows that the bronzes from Xingan distinctly differ from those in the Central Plains, as the main vessel type at Xingan is the Ding, and in the Central Plains, the Gu and Jue wine vessels.
The Xingan Ding has a variety of forms, with the flat-legged Ding constituting the major group, thus suggesting that this subtype might have developed first in the south. The Xingan Ding often bears tiger-shaped decorations on its two handles, and this seems to be an indication of totemism among the local ethnic groups. Chronologically, the Xingan Ding roughly corresponds to the late Zhengzhou Erligang Period in ancient China.