Xia dynasty

Xia
c. 2070 BC[a]c. 1600 BC[a]
Proposed location of the Xia dynasty
Proposed location of the Xia dynasty
Capital
GovernmentMonarchy
King 
History 
• Established
c. 2070 BC[a]
• Disestablished
c. 1600 BC[a]
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Three Sovereigns and Five Emperors
Shang dynasty
Today part ofChina
Xia
Chinese
Hanyu PinyinXià
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinXià
Bopomofoㄒㄧㄚˋ
Wade–GilesHsia4
Tongyong PinyinSià
Yale RomanizationSyà
MPS2Shià
IPA[ɕjâ]
Wu
RomanizationGho
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationHah
JyutpingHaa6
IPA[ha˨]
Southern Min
Tâi-lôHē (col.)
Hā (lit.)
Middle Chinese
Middle Chinese/ɦˠaX/
Old Chinese
Baxter–Sagart (2014)*[ɢ]ˤraʔ
Zhengzhang/*ɡraːʔ/

The Xia dynasty (/ʃiɑː/ SHEE-ə; Chinese: 夏朝; pinyin: Xià cháo; Wade–Giles: Hsia4-ch‘ao2) is the first dynasty in traditional Chinese historiography. According to tradition, it was established by the legendary figure Yu the Great, after Shun, the last of the Five Emperors, gave the throne to him.[1] In traditional historiography, the Xia was succeeded by the Shang dynasty.

There are no contemporaneous records of the Xia, who are not mentioned in the oldest Chinese texts, since the earliest oracle bone inscriptions date from the Late Shang period (13th century BC). The earliest mentions occur in the oldest chapters of the Book of Documents, which report speeches from the early Western Zhou period and are accepted by most scholars as dating from that time. The speeches justify the Zhou conquest of the Shang as the passing of the Mandate of Heaven and liken it to the succession of the Xia by the Shang. That political philosophy was promoted by the Confucian school in the Eastern Zhou period. The succession of dynasties was incorporated into the Bamboo Annals and the Records of the Grand Historian and became the official position of imperial historiography and ideology. Some scholars consider the Xia dynasty legendary or at least unsubstantiated, but others identify it with the archaeological Erlitou culture.

According to the traditional chronology, based upon calculations by Liu Xin, the Xia ruled between 2205 and 1766 BC. According to the chronology based on the "current text" Bamboo Annals, it ruled between 1989 and 1558 BC. Comparing the same text with dates of five-planet conjunctions, David Pankenier, supported by David Nivison, proposed dates of 1953 and 1555 BC.[2][3][4] The Xia–Shang–Zhou Chronology Project, commissioned by the Chinese government in 1996, proposed that the Xia existed between 2070 and 1600 BC.


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