October 9 1999 - January 9 2000


















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When the Dragon Was Young...
The exhibition began with a brief exploration of the Neolithic,
Bronze and Iron Age roots of societies in the Manchurian region.
Heilongjiang's western border is with Inner Mongolia making for a
dichotomy in the province's history. This involved nomadic Mongol
ancestors to the west, whose lifestyle contrasted with the majority
of other peoples in northeastern China. The latter peoples were early
and continuously involved in settled village lifeways that involved
agriculture (especially domesticated pigs and millet growing) or
intensive fishing. Some scholars have observed that these settled
peoples were more predisposed to take up Chinese ways as they
formed conquest dynasties.
Heilongjiang's Neolithic period was represented by artifacts
such as the extraordinarily finely chipped stone points from the
Angangxi Culture (as much as 6,000 years of age),
a deftly made pottery pig from the Yinggeling site that is more than
3,000 years old, an early jade ornament from the Yabuli site,
and various ceramics.
The gradual onset of the Bronze Age in northeastern China
was treated with ceramics (including a three legged li
style vessel) and bronze artifacts, including bronze casts of
tigers and deer of the Donghu and Xianbei cultures
ancestral to later Mongolian peoples. Iron Age artifacts included
a beautiful, duck-shaped vessel in burnished red ware
and an oracle bone likely used in shamanistic practices.
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[ Introduction ]
[ When the Dragon was Young ]
[ The Black Dragon Rises ]
[ The Dragon Comes Forth ]
[ The Dragon Commands ]
[ Background ]
[ Dragon Bytes ]
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Copyright © 1999-2006 Royal Alberta Museum
Last Review/Update -- October 12 2006
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