Shang Jia

Shang Jia
上甲
Shang grapheme for Shàngjiǎ 上甲 (Supreme Ancestor)
Leader of the Predynastic Shang
SuccessorBao Yi (报乙)
PredecessorWang Hai (王亥)

Shang Jia (上甲), also known as Shang Jia Wei (上甲微), is one of the 14 predynastic Shang Kings cyted on Shiji. He was workshiped by the Shang kings as a spirit of the sun.

History

According to the Shang family tree, Shang Jia was a pre-dynastic ancestor of the Shang.[1] He is listed on Shiji as one of the 14 Predynastic Shang kings, being the son of Wang Hai (王亥) and the father of Bao Yi (报乙).[2]: 229

Shang Jia cult

According to the sinologist Li Feng, he was probably important for the raise of Shang people to power, as he was the "first pre-dynastic ancestor to whom the late Shang kings made frequent sacrificial offerings".[1] He was the first of the Shang descendents to be called with one of the 10 cyclical hanzis, symbolizing the day of the week he was workshiped.[3] The cult of Shang Jia grew on the year si (ਘ), and all the kings claimed to be his direct ancestor.[4] He was the spirit of the sun[5] and deemed to be very powerful, as he was one of the oldest descendents of the kings. Sacrifices for him were made for wars and harvests.[6]

References

  1. ^ a b Feng, Li (2013). Early China: A Social and Cultural History (PDF). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 54–55. ISBN 978-0-521-71981-0.
  2. ^ Childs-Johnson, Elizabeth (2020). The Oxford Handbook of Early China. Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-932837-6.
  3. ^ Allan, Sarah (1981). "Sons of suns: myth and totemism in early China". Bulletin of SOAS (2). Cambridge University Press: 290–326. doi:10.1017/S0041977X00138984.
  4. ^ Goldin, Paul R. (2017). "Some Shang Antecedents of Later Chinese Ideology and Culture". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 137 (1). American Oriental Society: 121–127. doi:10.7817/jameroriesoci.137.1.0121. JSTOR 10.7817/jameroriesoci.137.1.0121.
  5. ^ Childs-Johnson, Elizabeth (2018). "Urban daemons of early Shang: Urbanism in ancient China". Archaeological Research in Asia. 14. Elsevier: 135–150. doi:10.1016/j.ara.2016.08.001.
  6. ^ Youngsun, Back (2017). "Who Answered the Shang Diviner?: The Nature of Shang Divination" (PDF). Journal of Confucian Philosophy and Culture. 27. Sungkyunkwan University.