Ancestors The Story of China


Ancestors

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China is the oldest nation on earth.

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For thousands of years its rulers believed their task was to keep

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human society in balance with the eternal order of the universe.

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The emperor who achieved that harmony would receive

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the mandate of heaven, blessed by the ancestors.

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But in the late 19th century the collision with the West shook

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China to its core.

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In midwinter 1899, the emperor came here to the Altar of Heaven

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in Beijing to ask the ancestors for support in China's hour of crisis,

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as the empire crumbled in the face of rebellion and foreign armies.

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It was the last time the ritual was performed.

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Here, just before dawn on the winter solstice...

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..the emperor prostrated himself before the powers of the universe.

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He performed rituals that they believed went back

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5,000 years to the Yellow Emperor, the mythical first founder of China.

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He made a report to the ancestors about the state of the empire.

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But that winter of 1899...

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China faced disaster.

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The following year, 1900, China was plunged into catastrophe

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with rebellion, flood and famine...

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..foreign aggression...

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..and the new century saw swiftly the fall of the Empire,

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short-lived republic, Communist revolution

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and then the insane madness of the Cultural Revolution.

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But despite the tragedies of the 20th century,

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the Chinese people have come through.

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Today China is writing its own story once more, under a new mandate.

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So long the greatest civilisation on earth, China is rising again.

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It's a great time to be looking at the events which have shaped

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the history of China and the ideals which have made its culture

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so distinctive and so brilliant for so long.

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Every year in spring millions of Chinese people

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set off on the journey home.

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It's the time of the Qingming Festival,

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the festival of light,

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when, since ancient times, the Chinese have honoured the ancestors.

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I'm heading down to the city of Wuxi

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for a very special occasion, a family reunion.

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For the last 30 years Chinese people have grown up in a consumer society.

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After the break with Communism, China has been on a headlong

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rush into the future.

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But there's a deeper China, for as new freedoms beckon,

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the people themselves are reaching back to the things

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that have mattered most to them in their history.

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And for the Chinese people, identity begins with the family.

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Sometimes the new proves less enticing than was first thought

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and the old far more durable than anyone had ever imagined.

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This is the Qin family of Wuxi.

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BIRDS CHIRP

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It's dawn on the day of the ancestors, what the Chinese call

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Tomb-Sweeping Day.

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And the Qin family gather at the grave of their

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founding ancestor, Qin Guan,

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a poet who lived 1,000 years ago.

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They have come from all over China

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and further afield to make their own report to the ancestors.

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To tell them how the family is doing

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and how the ancestors and their values still live on in us.

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As the ancients used to say, repaying our roots.

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Amazing scene, isn't it?

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It recalls the whole of Chinese history over the last 100 years,

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wars, revolutions, famines, families broken up

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and cast to the four winds, and yet they come back with this

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kind of homing instinct, almost, to the tomb of the founder,

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as if everything can be reconstituted again.

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These rituals were banned in the Communist era

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and the grave was lost after the Cultural Revolution of the 1960s.

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But when the revolutionary time drew to a close, Frank Ching

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and his sister came searching for the tomb.

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Back in 1982, when I found that gravestone,

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none of these things existed.

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When I first sought it out I was like a blank slate,

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I didn't know what existed.

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It's really very exciting that this is happening.

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I certainly never expected anything like this to happen

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when I started my own journey of discovery.

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Like everyone in China, the Qin family have experienced

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dizzying change since the end of empire.

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From colonial subjects to emigres seeking a better life,

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Communist revolutionaries on the long march with Chairman Mao

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and even glamour on the Shanghai stage.

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Their family story mirrors the story of the nation.

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And now the meaning of that history is flooding back.

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THEY TOAST

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I'm going to regret this.

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So the Chinese people have found again the warmth of home...

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..after the vast and terrifying dislocation of the mid-20th century

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when for a time China turned its back on its past.

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The Qin family, like the nation itself,

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are seeking a renewed identity,

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a distinctively Chinese way forward, anchored in the Chinese past.

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And that past goes back thousands of years.

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China is the oldest continuous state on earth.

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There are no historical texts that describe its birth

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but later myths and traditions take us to

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the Yellow River plain that gave China its name, Zhonggou,

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the middle land.

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And here you can still reach back to those beginnings.

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This is a rural fair at an ancient temple,

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closed down in the Communist era.

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I'm at a great farmers festival in the plain of the Yellow River

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with a million people all around me.

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And these vast crowds have come to celebrate an ancient myth

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that tells of the origins of the Chinese people.

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As in many ancient cultures, it's the women who have treasured

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the tales and handed them down.

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How much?

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Three?

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Especially the tale of the mother goddess of the Chinese people,

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Nuwa.

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Little dog. It's great, isn't it?

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This whole great festival is to two ancient gods in Chinese mythology,

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Fuxi, the male god, and Nuwa, the female god.

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And she's famous because she created humanity out of the yellow mud

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of the Yellow River. And the mud

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that was left over she made dogs and chickens, according to the myth.

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These myths have been handed down for over 4,000 years.

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And they contain a crucial idea,

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the uniqueness of Chinese ethnic identity.

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China is a huge and diverse country, with so many languages and cultures.

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But the vast majority of its people see themselves as Han Chinese,

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part of the biggest tribe in the world.

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The myths also tell us about the origins of the Chinese state...

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..by the banks of the Yellow River.

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All four of the great old world civilisations

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began on rivers -

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the Nile, the Euphrates, the Indus

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and the Yellow River.

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China alone has come down until today.

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It was the ability to harness the waters of the river

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for irrigation that enabled ancient people to feed bigger and bigger

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populations and eventually to create cities and make civilisation.

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But where the rising of the Nile, for example, was predictable

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to the day and seen by the Egyptians as a joyful and benign

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source of life, the Yellow River here in China has been a destroyer.

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The killer of millions in its great floods throughout Chinese history,

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right up to the 20th century.

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And so the beginnings of Chinese history, the control of the river

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and its environment, lay at the very heart of political power.

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And the tale of the king who tamed the mighty Yellow River

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and claimed the right to rule the hundreds of tribes

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along its banks became a myth still told by today's storytellers.

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THUNDER RUMBLES

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Look at this.

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THUNDER RUMBLES

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This is a Ming Dynasty temple that was built in the 1520s

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but on a very, very ancient terrace.

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And that is King Yu.

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Historians have always thought the tale of King Yu was just a myth,

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but the recent find of a bronze bowl nearly 3,000 years old

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engraved with his story proves the tale goes back to the Bronze Age.

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The legend says that King Yu was the founder of China's first

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dynasty 4,000 years ago.

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They were called the Xia

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and they came from the middle plain of the middle land,

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here in Henan.

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And at the village of Erlitou,

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traditions survived until modern times

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that this had been the seat of China's first rulers.

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SHE SPEAKS OWN LANGUAGE

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The most ancient site in the world?

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No? Incredible!

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Ancient Greece, ancient Iraq, ancient Egypt...

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Wherever you look, some memory survives on site.

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Here, towns first emerged out of China's myriad Stone Age villages.

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Huangdi, the Yellow Emperor, the original Emperor of China.

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Under these wheat fields the archaeologists excavated

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a settlement which had thousands of people

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and a huge walled enclosure.

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Inside it were pillared halls,

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palaces from different periods between 2000 and 1500 BC.

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They stood on rammed earth platforms, one of them

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with a triple gate, the pattern of all later Chinese royal cities.

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The Xia are still a mystery.

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But here at Erlitou

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archaeologists have found tantalizing clues -

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pottery, bronze casting and most intriguing of all a burial with

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a sceptre made of 2,000 pieces of turquoise in the shape of a dragon,

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the symbol of royalty all the way through Chinese civilisation.

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Whether the Xia were China's first dynasty

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and whether this was their capital is still not known

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and that's because we lack the key evidence - writing.

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Do you think that this was the capital of the Xia

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or what do you think?

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THEY LAUGH

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Difficult question.

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If it this was the capital of the Xia, for the Chinese,

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myth would become history,

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for they would have found the root of the Chinese state.

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As it is, though, we now have to leap forward

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to around 1200 BC

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to find China's first historical rulers, the Shang Dynasty.

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And we know about the Shang because they have left us

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the first Chinese writing.

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The modern discovery of the Shang is one of the most exciting

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stories in world archaeology.

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And it began by chance in one of those storehouses of age-old

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Chinese wisdom, a traditional pharmacy...

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..where beliefs and practices going back into prehistory

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have come down to us today.

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And the clues to the mystery of the Shang, unbelievably,

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were found inside a packet of over-the-counter medicine.

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The story goes like this - 1899, Chinese scholar called Wang Yirong,

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who was the Chancellor of the Imperial Academy in Beijing,

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a great scholar and a collector of ancient bronzes.

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He was interested in the earliest Chinese writing systems.

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He falls ill with malaria and his local pharmacy, just like this one,

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delivers a series of ingredients which include...

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dragon bones.

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These were animal bones... Just like this, they use them today.

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..which you ground up and boiled and drank to alleviate the fever.

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When he opened the packet, to his amazement,

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this is what he saw.

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Some of the bones were inscribed with what he could see were primitive

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forms of the old writing that he knew from the inscriptions on his bronzes.

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And eventually these dragon bones were traced back to a little place in

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the lower valley of the Yellow River, a country town called Anyang.

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At Anyang, Chinese archaeologists made their greatest discovery.

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Huge tombs of the last Shang kings with mass human sacrifice

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and crucially, written texts on oracle bones.

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1928 they finally found the location and they started the excavation.

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From the excavation they found nearly 30,000 oracle bones...

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..documenting divination performed on behalf of nine late Shang kings.

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-I love all the portraits of the people.

-Yes, yes.

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There is something so optimistic about their faces.

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They thought that their task is to prove that Chinese history was true.

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Epoch-making, in world archaeology, really.

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Absolutely, yes.

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-Now we knew that they were historical.

-Yes.

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Anyang was the final capital of the Shang Dynasty.

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They ruled for 500 years, controlling the whole of central China.

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The first Chinese state.

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Their authority rested on force but was validated by divination.

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The Shang kings and their diviners burned cracks in tortoise shells

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or cow bones to speak to the ancestors.

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So basically, they chose one piece of bone or shell

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and then they drilled some holes,

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and then they heat up these holes with some special plants

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and then these will create some cracks,

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and then they look at the pattern of these cracks.

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-And the cracks come the other side, is that right?

-Yes.

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And then they can read these patterns and make their predictions

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about whether these divinations are auspicious or it is

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actually against the will of the ancestral spirits,

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so they should not be carrying out the activity they were asking for.

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-So the diviners are asking for the favour of the ancestral spirits.

-Yes.

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So basically it's their special way to communicate with their ancestors.

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-The ancestors are the key people in their mental universe.

-Yes.

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Fantastic.

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Basically, in every aspect of their society, including, for instance,

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the harvest. This one is even about praying for rain.

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Rain and water would be a big part of their concerns

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living in the Yellow River plain, I suppose.

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Yes, for agricultural society it is absolutely crucial.

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And unlike the hieroglyphs of ancient Egypt or the cuneiform

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of Babylonia, the archaeologists had no need of a key to decipher them

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for they could see at once that the signs on the oracle bones were

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the direct ancestors of today's Chinese writing.

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That's the character for rain in modern language.

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And in oracle bones it's like this...

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With three drops, so essentially it's the same idea, fundamentally.

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-This rain character is characterised by these raindrops.

-Yeah, yeah.

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Out of these prehistoric pictographs came the modern Chinese script

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with its tens of thousands of signs.

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So through their script the Chinese people are uniquely connected

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to their deep past

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and its ways of thinking.

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More so than any other

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culture on earth.

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There seem to be... Is this fanciful?

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There seem to be themes that we trace all the way through Chinese history -

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the reverence for the ancestors, the divination,

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the control of writing and writing as a source of power. Is that fair?

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I agree.

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I think communication or interaction between the ancestral spirit

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and the acquisition of social power is

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indeed a recurrent theme throughout Chinese history.

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So power came from the ancestors.

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In the oracle bones there is a sacred place.

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It has the same name as the dynasty, Shang.

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This is not like the shopping malls of Shanghai, that's for sure.

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And the archaeologists now turn to a little town in Henan

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with a tantalizing name.

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Shangqiu, the mound or ruins of Shang.

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We are now inside the Ming Dynasty city.

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This was built in 1511, the previous one destroyed by floods.

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Lots more underneath it, of course.

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What's fascinating is it's still called Shangqiu, the ruins of Shang.

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So was this the ancestral place of China's first great dynasty?

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HE LAUGHS

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That question has intrigued Chinese archaeologists

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since their first explorations here in the 1930s.

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But the Bronze Age layers here are 30 feet deep in Yellow River silt.

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Recently, though, geophysical surveys and test cores have detected

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the outline of a much earlier city underneath the town.

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And the clues to what it was were in the oracle bones found at Anyang.

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In the 1930s a Chinese scholar called Dong Zuobin

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worked on the Bronze Age inscriptions

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scratched into the oracle bones from the Shang Dynasty.

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Thousand upon thousand of them,

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and through the 1930s, when China was driven by civil war

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and Japanese invasion, he worked transcribing these inscriptions

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in what, I suppose, you could call self-effacing loyalty

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to the Chinese past while the catastrophes

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of the modern world surrounded him.

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You see there his transcription of one

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of the turtle shells with all the splits and the inscriptions on them.

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And he worked out the order of the Shang kings and their calendar

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and their rituals and their journeys.

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What he discovered was that the kings came back to do special rituals

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at the city called Shang.

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That was here. Its name meant

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"the place where the ancestors were worshiped".

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So state and ancestors were tied together.

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And amazingly, cults and legends about the Shang

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still survive here at a mysterious temple at the edge of town.

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The Mound of Shang, it's a great artificial hill.

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The legends say this mound was built before the Great Flood,

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that here mankind first got fire, stolen from the gods.

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And tradition also said

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this had been a kind of observatory where

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the Shang kings watched the stars that protected their dynasty.

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Because they believed that the stars were powers in heaven

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and if we understood them properly

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then we'd know best how to run our kingdom.

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So the oracle bones and the later myths are clues to early Chinese

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beliefs about society and the cosmos.

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Divination, ritual and writing were the basis of state power.

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For their sacred ceremonies they cast beautiful bronzes to hold food

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and wine offerings to the ancestral spirits, which were

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consumed at the royal feasts.

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Some of them bear the symbols of the different lineages

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of the royal and noble families.

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Like the ancient Egyptians

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and Sumerians, the Shang practised human sacrifice.

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The oracle bones list the victims.

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They were captives from the subject peoples the Shang ruled,

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killed as offerings to the powers of nature,

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as the Shang diviners asked the ancestors in heaven for guidance,

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anxiously watching the stars

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for omens of auspiciousness

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and omens of disaster.

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To them, time, as revealed in the movements of the stars

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and planets, was a truly portentous dimension,

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full of danger as well as auspiciousness,

0:31:420:31:45

and especially for the rulers, for they knew that in time

0:31:450:31:50

the planets would reveal heaven's judgment on their earthly rule.

0:31:500:31:57

That brings us to one of the key ideas in early Chinese thought,

0:31:570:32:02

the Mandate of Heaven.

0:32:020:32:04

The early Chinese believed their rulers should protect the people,

0:32:110:32:15

keeping harmony with the order of heaven.

0:32:150:32:19

It was said the first Shang king

0:32:190:32:21

had even offered himself as a sacrifice in time of drought.

0:32:210:32:25

But legend said the last Shang king was so depraved

0:32:310:32:34

and cruel that heaven withdrew its mandate, and it gave a sign.

0:32:340:32:40

Five planets came together in the rarest of conjunctions.

0:32:400:32:45

'As this happens only once every 516 years, we can pin down the very day.'

0:32:470:32:54

-So you can follow any single planet?

-Yes.

-It's just...wonderful.

0:32:540:32:59

'We asked the Beijing Planetarium to work out the exact

0:33:020:33:05

'date of the omen and to show us the night sky at that moment.'

0:33:050:33:10

So it's what historians always want to do, is actually

0:33:110:33:14

go back in time - Mr Liu can do it for us.

0:33:140:33:17

He can actually take us back to late May 1058 BC on his computer system,

0:33:170:33:24

which is 1059 BC on historians' calculations.

0:33:240:33:28

This time, this place, the sky... you can see them.

0:33:320:33:36

'The tribes who lived under the Shang tyranny saw the sign

0:33:380:33:42

'and made an alliance under a man known for his virtue,

0:33:420:33:46

'King Wen of the Zhou.'

0:33:460:33:49

This five-planet conjunction happens once every 516 years

0:33:490:33:53

but that moment was the closest that has ever happened in human history

0:33:530:33:59

and at that time the early Chinese chronicles say...

0:33:590:34:03

-VOICEOVER:

-..when the five planets gather in the constellation

0:34:030:34:06

called the Chamber

0:34:060:34:09

a great vermillion bird landed on the altar

0:34:090:34:14

of the earth on Mount Qi.

0:34:140:34:16

In its beak was a jade sceptre, and it spoke, saying,

0:34:200:34:25

"Heaven has commanded that the King...

0:34:250:34:28

"..of the Zhou should overthrow the King of the Shang

0:34:280:34:33

"and take the kingdom."

0:34:330:34:35

BATTLE CRIES

0:34:350:34:38

In the final battle, the wicked Shang king saw his subjects had

0:34:440:34:48

turned against him.

0:34:480:34:49

So he burned his palace with his treasures and his concubines

0:34:520:34:55

and put on his jade suit and walked into the fire.

0:34:550:35:00

And so the ancestors passed the mandate to the King of the Zhou.

0:35:040:35:09

And he laid down the pattern of rule for future ages.

0:35:090:35:12

Rulers must be virtuous and keep harmony between humanity

0:35:120:35:17

and the cosmos by observing the rites and the music of the heavens.

0:35:170:35:23

RELIGIOUS MUSIC PLAYS

0:35:230:35:25

And, amazingly, some of the ritual traditions of the Zhou have

0:35:260:35:29

come down to us today.

0:35:290:35:31

China's oldest religion is Taoism.

0:35:340:35:37

In their ceremonies and their music the Taoists,

0:35:380:35:41

the "seekers after the Way",

0:35:410:35:43

are a living link with these ancient ideas

0:35:430:35:46

about the relation of the kingdoms of earth and heaven.

0:35:460:35:50

CHANTING

0:35:500:35:52

And these very ancient customs and beliefs are still

0:36:290:36:33

held in affection and practised by the ordinary Chinese people today.

0:36:330:36:38

In later times the Zhou came to be seen as model rulers,

0:37:030:37:07

fulfilling heaven's mandate.

0:37:070:37:10

But China's fate throughout its history

0:37:120:37:15

has been to fragment in times of crisis.

0:37:150:37:18

HE SCREAMS

0:37:210:37:23

Eventually Zhou power disintegrated.

0:37:230:37:26

And the heartland of China descended into chaos.

0:37:270:37:31

Across the middle land, feuding kings and warlords fought for supremacy.

0:37:350:37:41

Surrounded by their armies, even in death.

0:37:460:37:49

Amazing sight, isn't it?

0:38:000:38:02

This is one of more than a dozen chariot burial pits that have

0:38:020:38:06

been uncovered in the middle of Luoyang in the last few years.

0:38:060:38:09

This with excavated in 2003 during the modern building boom.

0:38:090:38:14

There's 18 chariots and their horses here,

0:38:160:38:19

associated with the tombs of the Kings of the Eastern Zhou.

0:38:190:38:23

It's the world of Achilles and Hector

0:38:240:38:27

in more than just the military hardware.

0:38:270:38:31

Politically, just like Agamemnon, the kings here in the central plain

0:38:310:38:35

of China depended on the co-operation of vassal states, smaller kingdoms.

0:38:350:38:41

Sometimes more than 100 of them.

0:38:410:38:44

But these were rivals fighting each other,

0:38:440:38:47

just like the Greek heroes

0:38:470:38:48

sacking cities and enslaving their populations.

0:38:480:38:52

So political instability, warfare and violence were endemic.

0:38:520:38:57

And for that reason, perhaps, this is the time

0:38:570:39:00

when a ferment of ideas grows about the nature of kingship,

0:39:000:39:04

the function of states, duties, obligation and morality.

0:39:040:39:11

Out of this begins the first golden age of Chinese philosophy.

0:39:110:39:16

Right across the Old World in the sixth century BC,

0:39:190:39:22

thinkers and rulers were debating these ideas.

0:39:220:39:26

A new age of human thought had dawned, what we call the Axis Age.

0:39:270:39:34

The Greek philosophers, the Old Testament prophets,

0:39:360:39:39

the Buddha in India, all of them were wrestling with

0:39:390:39:42

ideas about conscience and social justice

0:39:420:39:46

and human autonomy.

0:39:460:39:48

How can a king be just in violent times?

0:39:510:39:55

What is law and what is virtue?

0:39:550:39:58

Here in China it was said 100 schools bloomed.

0:39:590:40:03

And the most famous thinker came from an obscure state in eastern China.

0:40:080:40:13

He was descended from a family of Shang diviners, oracle-bone crackers.

0:40:160:40:21

And his obsession was not the inner life

0:40:220:40:24

but how we act in the public world.

0:40:240:40:26

Small-town China, but what a small town.

0:40:270:40:33

Because this place, Qufu,

0:40:330:40:35

has nearly 3,000 years of continuity, life on this spot.

0:40:350:40:39

And it gave birth to one of the most influential figures

0:40:400:40:43

in the history of the world,

0:40:430:40:45

Confucius.

0:40:450:40:46

Ni hao.

0:40:530:40:54

Confucius lived in a time of cultural and political crisis.

0:40:540:40:58

China divided into many small states that were always

0:40:580:41:02

fighting each other and sometimes even divided in themselves,

0:41:020:41:06

like this one, the state of Lu, whose capital was Qufu.

0:41:060:41:11

Confucius rose eventually to a quite high ministerial job

0:41:160:41:22

in which he played a crucial role...

0:41:220:41:24

..brokering a peace deal between three feuding clans

0:41:250:41:29

and persuading them to demolish their fortifications

0:41:290:41:33

and acknowledge the duke here as their lord.

0:41:330:41:36

And that kind of experience gave him

0:41:360:41:38

the idea of his mission, which was nothing less than to restore

0:41:380:41:42

civilisation by teaching rulers to be virtuous.

0:41:420:41:47

Confucius had a very clear vision.

0:41:500:41:52

There is definitely this sense of passion in him

0:41:520:41:55

that he wants to be recognised.

0:41:550:41:58

He wants to contribute to the social order of society and

0:41:590:42:03

he wants to make sure that ritual practices are followed very closely.

0:42:030:42:08

Confucius was very keen on the idea of humaneness, or benevolence,

0:42:100:42:15

and that the ruler set a direct example for the people to follow.

0:42:150:42:21

There's a very lively metaphor in the Analects

0:42:240:42:26

when the character of the ruler is compared to the wind

0:42:260:42:30

and the character of the ordinary people is compared to the grass,

0:42:300:42:34

so it's said that when the wind blows the grass naturally bends.

0:42:340:42:40

Like Socrates or the Buddha, his sayings were turned into a book

0:42:400:42:43

after his death by his disciples.

0:42:430:42:46

The Analects. Horrible word, isn't it?

0:42:460:42:49

What a mouthful. It means the sort of quotations from...

0:42:490:42:53

but really it should be called the conversations of Confucius,

0:42:530:42:57

cos that's what it really is.

0:42:570:42:58

It's his sayings,

0:42:580:43:00

and it's been said that no book in the history of the world,

0:43:000:43:04

even the Bible, has exerted

0:43:040:43:06

so much influence for such a long period on so many people.

0:43:060:43:11

That's Confucius's little blue book.

0:43:140:43:16

-18?

-18.

-18, OK, great.

0:43:170:43:20

'The Analects would become China's guide

0:43:210:43:24

'to the principles of good government.'

0:43:240:43:27

He says that if you govern people by cheng -

0:43:280:43:33

it could be translated as "law" or "punishment" -

0:43:330:43:37

then you get people who have no sense of shame.

0:43:370:43:41

You get order but people don't really know what they're doing wrong.

0:43:410:43:48

But then if you govern by de -

0:43:480:43:50

a sense of virtue, morality - then people have a sense of shame

0:43:500:43:56

and with that idea it's implied that they will have moral progress as well.

0:43:560:44:01

It's a very old idea in the story of China

0:44:040:44:07

that the basis of all government

0:44:070:44:09

is not law but established morality.

0:44:090:44:13

And the key end - to preserve the state.

0:44:130:44:17

In the West we tend to think of Confucius

0:44:230:44:26

as an archconservative, a bit pious and a bit pompous.

0:44:260:44:30

But without virtue he thought any rule

0:44:320:44:34

is morally bankrupt and should be resisted, even until death.

0:44:340:44:40

He travelled the roads of China like some intellectual

0:44:410:44:45

trouble-shooter, trying to sell China's local rulers his new deal.

0:44:450:44:50

At his tomb I met a group of Confucian teachers from Korea.

0:44:550:44:59

These gentlemen are not priests, they're scholars.

0:45:010:45:04

And what they're doing is not so much religion as ritual.

0:45:050:45:09

An active reverence for the old master

0:45:110:45:13

and his ideal of universal brotherhood.

0:45:130:45:17

Bowing before his tombstone, which was smashed to pieces

0:45:210:45:26

by the Communist Red Guards only 50 years ago

0:45:260:45:29

but is now restored.

0:45:290:45:31

Ah, very good question!

0:45:430:45:45

We are interested in the history of China and Confucius is

0:45:450:45:49

so important that that is why we are here.

0:45:490:45:52

THEY ALL SPEAK

0:45:520:45:53

HE SPEAKS OWN LANGUAGE

0:46:030:46:05

Confucius is covering all over the world...love.

0:46:060:46:11

Should spread all over the world. Not just individual.

0:46:110:46:16

-Love, benevolence, courtesy...

-Courtesy.

-..good manners.

0:46:160:46:20

These are the way society works,

0:46:200:46:22

-when society works well, in Confucius's idea.

-Yeah, yeah, yeah.

0:46:220:46:26

Confucius was condemned during the Communist revolution as

0:46:290:46:32

the embodiment of old ideas and old customs.

0:46:320:46:35

But now, once more, he's a national treasure,

0:46:350:46:38

praised by the government for his stress on social values,

0:46:380:46:42

though not so much perhaps for his insistence that it is

0:46:420:46:46

the intellectual's duty to speak truth to power.

0:46:460:46:49

But in both he's a symbol of the Chinese way.

0:46:510:46:55

Very good! Oh, very good! Xie xie!

0:47:020:47:07

Thank you very much! Fantastic!

0:47:080:47:10

Confucius was not an innovator, he was

0:47:180:47:21

the distiller, the crystalliser of an already ancient tradition.

0:47:210:47:27

The idea of the virtuous ruler.

0:47:270:47:30

Of filial piety, of ritual and ceremony as the glue that

0:47:300:47:34

bound society together and the overruling power of education.

0:47:340:47:40

Those are the values that still underlie Chinese values today.

0:47:400:47:45

And South Asian values from Korea and Japan

0:47:450:47:49

all the way down to Vietnam.

0:47:490:47:52

What a legacy.

0:47:520:47:53

But the truth is in his own lifetime Confucius was a complete failure.

0:48:020:48:07

No ruler bought into his manifesto for change.

0:48:070:48:10

After his death in 469 BC the warring states fought each other

0:48:100:48:16

for two more centuries until the fall of the last of the Zhou.

0:48:160:48:21

And when their end came

0:48:250:48:27

no-one was listening to arguments about morality

0:48:270:48:30

but only the claims of violence and war.

0:48:300:48:34

BATTLE CRIES

0:48:380:48:40

And one of those warring states was the Qin.

0:48:410:48:44

Through military conquest they swallowed up the Zhou

0:48:460:48:49

and the other states of the Yellow River plain.

0:48:490:48:52

And in 221 BC they proclaimed their leader

0:48:570:49:01

the First Emperor of all China...

0:49:010:49:03

..Qin Shi Huangdi.

0:49:060:49:07

The First Emperor imposed his own revolutionary political system

0:49:220:49:26

on the conquered lands.

0:49:260:49:28

Dispossessing the old aristocracies, creating an enormous captive

0:49:290:49:34

labour force to build his new state, the Qin.

0:49:340:49:38

That's the source of the name China used today by the outside world,

0:49:380:49:44

although not by the Chinese themselves.

0:49:440:49:46

Qin Shi Huangdi built the first Great Wall.

0:49:540:49:58

He made a new road system linking the 36 military provinces.

0:49:580:50:03

For tax and commerce the weights and measures were standardised.

0:50:030:50:07

There was to be a uniform coinage.

0:50:070:50:09

And the Chinese script itself was simplified so the Emperor's

0:50:120:50:16

will could be conveyed right down to the local magistrates,

0:50:160:50:21

who administered a population of more than 30 million people.

0:50:210:50:25

Almost a third of the world.

0:50:260:50:28

And the key to the Qin Emperor's power was the army.

0:50:370:50:41

It was the image of the empire - discipline, obedience, hierarchy.

0:50:450:50:51

With their mass-produced bronze weapons and mechanical crossbows

0:50:530:50:58

there'd been nothing like this in the whole of history.

0:50:580:51:01

Infantry, archers and cavalry and charioteers,

0:51:050:51:11

so that's really the battle formation of the Qin Dynasty.

0:51:110:51:15

So...how Qin...how the First Emperor

0:51:150:51:18

conquered the other states, used his military troops.

0:51:180:51:22

-Frightening actually!

-Yeah.

-When you're faced with them like this!

0:51:220:51:26

One of the most amazing discoveries ever, isn't it, really?

0:51:260:51:29

-Yeah.

-And more recently you've discovered pits, not with warriors

0:51:290:51:34

but with other people attached to the court.

0:51:340:51:37

We found terracotta acrobats, terracotta musicians

0:51:370:51:42

and actually bronze birds, bronze chariots.

0:51:420:51:46

All part of the whole tomb complex.

0:51:480:51:50

They serve the Emperor in his afterlife.

0:51:500:51:53

This pit is one of nearly 200, large and small, found so far.

0:51:570:52:03

The more the archaeologists look, the more they find.

0:52:030:52:07

I think we are very similar to the doctor.

0:52:120:52:14

The only difference is our patient is different.

0:52:140:52:18

'Paranoid to the end, the Emperor took no chances,

0:52:190:52:23

'magically protected by his army even in the afterlife.'

0:52:230:52:27

Do we know what rank he was in the army?

0:52:290:52:32

No, he's a normal soldier.

0:52:320:52:34

You can tell that by the headdress and the armour?

0:52:340:52:37

Depends on his armour and depends on his...his troops,

0:52:370:52:44

because general has more detail,

0:52:440:52:47

-more...

-Posh clothes.

-Yeah.

0:52:470:52:49

More...

0:52:530:52:55

-Yeah! More...

-A stern look of command, hasn't he?

0:52:550:53:00

We've all become so familiar with the images of the Terracotta Army.

0:53:070:53:11

So familiar perhaps that it's easy to forget their significance

0:53:110:53:14

in the history of China and of the world.

0:53:140:53:17

How this vast and diverse area became one state,

0:53:200:53:25

that's one of the great themes of our story.

0:53:250:53:28

As we've already seen, it began a long time before,

0:53:280:53:32

with the Xia and Shang Dynasties,

0:53:320:53:34

but without the Qin Emperor, whose army is

0:53:340:53:38

arrayed before us now, it might never have happened.

0:53:380:53:42

The beginnings of China as a unitary state, as the world's first

0:53:420:53:47

bureaucratic, centralised empire, begin with Qin Shi Huangdi.

0:53:470:53:53

But the First Emperor's rule over China was brief, just 11 years,

0:53:560:54:01

his son's even briefer,

0:54:010:54:03

their hated regime overthrown by a rebellion led by

0:54:030:54:07

the peasant Liu Bang, who founded the dynasty

0:54:070:54:11

after whom the Chinese still name themselves today,

0:54:110:54:14

the Han.

0:54:140:54:16

FIREWORKS EXPLODE

0:54:160:54:18

HE YELLS

0:54:240:54:25

And for all the wars and revolutions, the triumphs

0:55:270:55:30

and tragedies that would follow, the idea will never be lost

0:55:300:55:34

that China, a land of so many peoples and cultures,

0:55:340:55:37

is a single state and a single civilisation.

0:55:370:55:41

Still today the Chinese call themselves Han.

0:55:430:55:46

They speak of "our Han culture" and "Han speech".

0:55:470:55:50

As if one great tribe.

0:55:520:55:54

A tribe with many stories but one great story - China itself.

0:55:550:56:01

And at the very heart of the story the link between the state

0:56:040:56:09

and the family and the ancestors.

0:56:090:56:12

Over the next 2,000 years these values will run under

0:56:130:56:18

the surface of the great river of Chinese history.

0:56:180:56:21

Often tested, sometimes seemingly broken, but still

0:56:220:56:26

passed on across even the tyrannies and cruelties of the 20th century.

0:56:260:56:32

At the Temple of Nuwa, the mother goddess of the Chinese people,

0:56:360:56:40

the pilgrims are gathering again to give thanks to the ancestors.

0:56:400:56:44

This prayer ceremony was last done 100 years ago

0:56:520:56:55

at the end of the empire.

0:56:550:56:57

Now the rituals are brought back to life for today's people,

0:56:570:57:01

recreated with words from sacred books over 2,000 years old.

0:57:010:57:06

It's a symbol of today's China.

0:57:060:57:09

After the ravages of the 20th century

0:57:090:57:13

the Chinese people's belief in their history as a source of strength,

0:57:130:57:17

not weakness, has returned.

0:57:170:57:19

The ideas that nourished their identity for so long handed down now

0:57:200:57:25

into an ever more competent and expansive Chinese future.

0:57:250:57:29

With a new text, may our country's great traditions be

0:57:310:57:35

passed down once more from generation to generation.

0:57:350:57:41

So that's the first part of this great adventure, the story of China.

0:58:080:58:13

And this is just the beginning.

0:58:140:58:16

In the next chapter of the story, China goes out to the world in

0:58:160:58:21

one of the greatest epochs in world civilisation, the Tang Dynasty.

0:58:210:58:25

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