ORDOS
CULTURE
Bronze
statuette of a man, Ordos, 3-1st century BCE. British Museum
The
Ordos people were located at the doorstep of Qin China, and were
just east of the Yuezhi in the 3rd century BCE
The
Ordos culture was a culture occupying a region centered on the Ordos
Loop (modern Inner Mongolia, China) during the Bronze and early
Iron Age from the 6th to 2nd centuries BCE. The Ordos culture is
known for significant finds of Scythian art and is thought to represent
either the easternmost extension of Indo-European Eurasian nomads,
such as the Saka, or to represent a culture formed by Turkic peoples.
Under the Qin and Han dynasties, from the 6th to 2nd centuries BCE,
the area came under at least nominal control of contemporaneous
Chinese states.
Background
:
Equestrian nomads from the north-west occupied the area previously
settled by the Zhukaigou culture from the 6th to the 2nd century
BCE before being driven away by the Xiongnu. The Ordos Plateau was
covered by grass, bushes, and trees and was sufficiently watered
by numerous rivers and streams to produce rich grazing lands. At
the time, it contained the best pasture lands on the Asian Steppe.
However, it has now mostly turned to the Ordos Desert through a
combination of overgrazing and climatic change.[citation needed]
Characteristics
:
The Ordos are mainly known from their skeletal remains and artifacts.
The Ordos culture of about 500 BCE to 100 CE is known for its "Ordos
bronzes", blade weapons, finials for tent-poles, horse gear,
and small plaques and fittings for clothes and horse harness, using
animal style decoration with relationships both with the Scythian
art of regions much further west, and also Chinese art. Its relationship
with the Xiongnu is controversial; for some scholars they are the
same and for others different. Many buried metal artefacts have
emerged on the surface of the land as a result of the progressive
desertification of the region.
The
Ordos are thought to be the easternmost of the Iranian peoples of
the Eurasian Steppe, just to the east of the better-known Yuezhi,
also an Indo-European people. Because the people represented in
archaeological finds tend to display Europoid features, also earlier
noted by Otto J. Maenchen-Helfen, Iaroslav Lebedynsky suggests the
Ordos culture had "a Scythian affinity". Other scholars
have associated it with the Yuezhi. The weapons found in tombs throughout
the steppes of the Ordos are very close to those of the Scythians
and Saka. A Turkic origin is also suggested by some historians.
Contact
with neighbouring peoples :
While the ethnolinguistic origins and character of the Ordos culture
are unknown, the population appears to have been significantly influenced
either by Indo-European cultures, or by Turkic peoples. However,
the art of the Ordos culture appears to have influenced that of
the Donghu people, a Mongolic-speaking nomadic tribe located to
the east, suggesting that the two had close ties. (The Donghu may
also have been connected to a people known as the Northern Di in
Chinese annals.
The
Ordos population was also in contact – and reportedly often
at war – with the pre-Han and Han peoples. The Ordos culture
covered, geographically, regions later occupied by the Han, including
areas just north of the later Great Wall of China and straddling
the northernmost hook of the Yellow River.
To
the west of the Ordos culture was another Indo-European people,
the Yuezhi, although nothing is known of relations between the two.
(The Yuezhi were later vanquished by the Xiongnu and Wusun, who
reportedly drove them westward, out of China; a subgroup of the
Yuezhi is widely believed to have migrated to South Central Asia,
where it constituted the ruling elite of the Kushan Empire.)
Appearance
of the Xiongnu :
Horse
attacked by tiger, Ordos, 4th-1st century BCE
In Chinese accounts, the Xiongnu first appear at Ordos in the Yi
Zhou Shu and Classic of Mountains and Seas during the Warring States
period before it was occupied by the states of Qin and Zhao. It
is generally thought to be their homeland; however, when exactly
they came to occupy the region is unclear and archaeological finds
suggest it might have been much earlier than traditionally thought.
As
the Xiongnu expanded southward into Yuezhi territory around 160
BCE under Modun, the Yuezhi in turn defeated the Sakas and pushed
them away at Issyk Kul. It is thought the Xiongnu also occupied
the Ordos area during the same period, when they came in direct
contact with the Chinese. From there, the Xiongnu conducted numerous
devastating raids into Chinese territory (167, 158, 142, 129 BCE).
The
Han–Xiongnu War began with Emperor Wu of Han, and the Han
colonized the area of the Ordos as the commandery of Shuofang in
127 BCE. Prior to this campaign, there were already earlier commanderies
established by Qin and Zhao before they were overrun by the Xiongnu
in 209 BCE.
Artifacts
:
Ordos bronzes from the British Museum (Asian Gallery) :
Bronze pole top, Ordos, 6th – 5th century BCE
Silver
horse, Ordos, 4th – 1st century BCE
Belt
buckle, Ordos, 3rd – 1st century BCE
Ordos
bronze horses, 5th – 3rd century BCE
Source
:
https://en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/Ordos_culture