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CHAPTER ONE





                The Ancient Chinese



                and Their Gods
















                China maintains a cultural tradition rich in ancient folklore and
                myths that are populated by gods and other supernatural beings.
                That is not surprising, considering how long Chinese civilization
                has existed. The country was the site of one of the four so-called
                cradles of human civilization. (The other three were in Egypt; In-
                dia; and Mesopotamia, now Iraq.)
                   The initial Chinese culture arose in the mid- to late 2000s BCE
                along the banks of the Yellow River, in northeastern China. At
                fi rst there were no large cities or kingdoms. Rather, most people
                dwelled in small farming villages erected on or beside the fertile
                soils the river had laid down over time in its wide valley. The gods
                these people worshipped and the myths surrounding them, if any,
                remain largely unclear.
                   The fi rst advanced civilization in China—featuring kingdoms
                ruled by emperors and their governments—appeared circa 1600
                BCE and over time spread to China’s other river valleys. Experts
                divide Chinese history thereafter into eras called dynasties. Each
                dynasty consisted of the reigns of a series of rulers from the same
                family line.
                   The fi rst dynasty—the Shang (ca. 1600–1050 BCE)—was cen-
                tered in the Yellow River’s valley. The Shang era witnessed the in-
                troduction of a number of social customs and religious rituals that



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