• 전문가 요청 쿠폰 이벤트
PARTNER
검증된 파트너 제휴사 자료

하상주단대공정과 信古 경향 고대사 서술 (The Xia-Shang-Zhou Chronology Project and the Historiography of the “Believing in Antiquity")

36 페이지
기타파일
최초등록일 2025.05.31 최종저작일 2007.12
36P 미리보기
하상주단대공정과 信古 경향 고대사 서술
  • 미리보기

    서지정보

    · 발행기관 : 한국사학사학회
    · 수록지 정보 : 韓國史學史學報 / 16호 / 87 ~ 122페이지
    · 저자명 : 심재훈

    초록

    This paper introduces the Xia-Shang-Zhou Chronology Project(hereafter the Project) critically, pointing out the problematic historiography of the so-called “Believing in Antiquity"(xingu 信古) prevalent both in China and Korea. About 200 specialists in archaeology, astronomy, history and scientific dating participated in the Project to establish the chronology of the three ancient dynasties before the Gonghe(共和) interregnum in 841 B.C.
    As many domestic and foreign scholars have criticized the proposed chronology, the author also raises questions about the methodology of the Project. As for the Xia and early Shang periods, the Project depended too heavily on radiocarbon dates from several archaeological sites which are still in debate on their identification with Xia and Shang. Although the late Shang and the King Wu’s Conquest year might have been accepted, several key dates in the period such as the movement of King Pangeng(盤庚) to Yin(殷) in 1300 are nothing but speculative.
    Comparing the proposed Western Zhou chronology of the Project with those of the Western scholars, especially that of Edward Shaughnessy's, the author further finds critical mistakes in the “Chronological Table of Western Zhou Bronze Inscriptions" which is one of the most important bases for the Project. This derives from the intrinsic limitations we currently know about the Western Zhou calendar and the related records in transmitted texts.
    Thus, the proposed chronology from the Projects is like a house of cards. Since Western scholars utilized the same sources, despite their strict methodology and ingenious ideas especially regarding the Western Zhou, their studies cannot free from criticisms as well.
    Meanwhile, the current Chinese national projects for their ancient glory have been motivated to a certain degree by its historiographic tendency toward the “Believing in Antiquity." The great archaeological discoveries of recent decades led many leading Chinese scholars such as Li Xueqin and Li Ling to deny the strict scholarship of the “Doubting in Antiquity" and to trace early Chinese history even to the period of legendary Huangdi(黃帝).
    However, Qiu Xiqui and Shaughnessy, other leading scholars in China and the United States respectively, worry the new trend in that the bamboo strips from Guodian(郭店) and Shanghai Museum do not necessarily warrant the authenticity of the transmitted texts. They warn that the excessive reliance on the problematic texts such as the Ancient version of the Shangshu(古文尙書) would seriously damage the scholarship of early Chinese history. The Project is exactly the case their anxiety is warranted.
    Then, what is the situation in the historiography of ancient Korean history in Korea? The author points out serious problems in the first reign year of mythic Dnakun, 2333 B.C., which has recently been inserted as historical fact in the Korean high school history textbook. Noting that Korean scholars also have the similar problem of the “Believing in Antiquity", the author proposes to reflect the exaggerated scholarship of Old Choson in Korea.

    영어초록

    This paper introduces the Xia-Shang-Zhou Chronology Project(hereafter the Project) critically, pointing out the problematic historiography of the so-called “Believing in Antiquity"(xingu 信古) prevalent both in China and Korea. About 200 specialists in archaeology, astronomy, history and scientific dating participated in the Project to establish the chronology of the three ancient dynasties before the Gonghe(共和) interregnum in 841 B.C.
    As many domestic and foreign scholars have criticized the proposed chronology, the author also raises questions about the methodology of the Project. As for the Xia and early Shang periods, the Project depended too heavily on radiocarbon dates from several archaeological sites which are still in debate on their identification with Xia and Shang. Although the late Shang and the King Wu’s Conquest year might have been accepted, several key dates in the period such as the movement of King Pangeng(盤庚) to Yin(殷) in 1300 are nothing but speculative.
    Comparing the proposed Western Zhou chronology of the Project with those of the Western scholars, especially that of Edward Shaughnessy's, the author further finds critical mistakes in the “Chronological Table of Western Zhou Bronze Inscriptions" which is one of the most important bases for the Project. This derives from the intrinsic limitations we currently know about the Western Zhou calendar and the related records in transmitted texts.
    Thus, the proposed chronology from the Projects is like a house of cards. Since Western scholars utilized the same sources, despite their strict methodology and ingenious ideas especially regarding the Western Zhou, their studies cannot free from criticisms as well.
    Meanwhile, the current Chinese national projects for their ancient glory have been motivated to a certain degree by its historiographic tendency toward the “Believing in Antiquity." The great archaeological discoveries of recent decades led many leading Chinese scholars such as Li Xueqin and Li Ling to deny the strict scholarship of the “Doubting in Antiquity" and to trace early Chinese history even to the period of legendary Huangdi(黃帝).
    However, Qiu Xiqui and Shaughnessy, other leading scholars in China and the United States respectively, worry the new trend in that the bamboo strips from Guodian(郭店) and Shanghai Museum do not necessarily warrant the authenticity of the transmitted texts. They warn that the excessive reliance on the problematic texts such as the Ancient version of the Shangshu(古文尙書) would seriously damage the scholarship of early Chinese history. The Project is exactly the case their anxiety is warranted.
    Then, what is the situation in the historiography of ancient Korean history in Korea? The author points out serious problems in the first reign year of mythic Dnakun, 2333 B.C., which has recently been inserted as historical fact in the Korean high school history textbook. Noting that Korean scholars also have the similar problem of the “Believing in Antiquity", the author proposes to reflect the exaggerated scholarship of Old Choson in Korea.

    참고자료

    · 없음
  • 자주묻는질문의 답변을 확인해 주세요

    해피캠퍼스 FAQ 더보기

    꼭 알아주세요

    • 자료의 정보 및 내용의 진실성에 대하여 해피캠퍼스는 보증하지 않으며, 해당 정보 및 게시물 저작권과 기타 법적 책임은 자료 등록자에게 있습니다.
      자료 및 게시물 내용의 불법적 이용, 무단 전재∙배포는 금지되어 있습니다.
      저작권침해, 명예훼손 등 분쟁 요소 발견 시 고객센터의 저작권침해 신고센터를 이용해 주시기 바랍니다.
    • 해피캠퍼스는 구매자와 판매자 모두가 만족하는 서비스가 되도록 노력하고 있으며, 아래의 4가지 자료환불 조건을 꼭 확인해주시기 바랍니다.
      파일오류 중복자료 저작권 없음 설명과 실제 내용 불일치
      파일의 다운로드가 제대로 되지 않거나 파일형식에 맞는 프로그램으로 정상 작동하지 않는 경우 다른 자료와 70% 이상 내용이 일치하는 경우 (중복임을 확인할 수 있는 근거 필요함) 인터넷의 다른 사이트, 연구기관, 학교, 서적 등의 자료를 도용한 경우 자료의 설명과 실제 자료의 내용이 일치하지 않는 경우
문서 초안을 생성해주는 EasyAI
안녕하세요 해피캠퍼스의 20년의 운영 노하우를 이용하여 당신만의 초안을 만들어주는 EasyAI 입니다.
저는 아래와 같이 작업을 도와드립니다.
- 주제만 입력하면 AI가 방대한 정보를 재가공하여, 최적의 목차와 내용을 자동으로 만들어 드립니다.
- 장문의 콘텐츠를 쉽고 빠르게 작성해 드립니다.
- 스토어에서 무료 이용권를 계정별로 1회 발급 받을 수 있습니다. 지금 바로 체험해 보세요!
이런 주제들을 입력해 보세요.
- 유아에게 적합한 문학작품의 기준과 특성
- 한국인의 가치관 중에서 정신적 가치관을 이루는 것들을 문화적 문법으로 정리하고, 현대한국사회에서 일어나는 사건과 사고를 비교하여 자신의 의견으로 기술하세요
- 작별인사 독후감
해캠 AI 챗봇과 대화하기
챗봇으로 간편하게 상담해보세요.
2026년 03월 25일 수요일
AI 챗봇
안녕하세요. 해피캠퍼스 AI 챗봇입니다. 무엇이 궁금하신가요?
6:43 오전