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Using Sequential Relations of Day-Dates to Determine the Temporal Scope of Western Zhou Lunar Phase Terms

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 August 2014

Abstract

The meaning of the lunar phase terms in bronze inscriptions is a difficult problem in Western Zhou chronology. Scholars have attempted to discover their meanings by various means, including philological and textual analysis and by dating the inscriptions to specific historical contexts and to the reigns of particular kings. But because there are a number of uncertainties about the early texts, the reigns to which bronze vessels belong, as well as the lengths of reign of the Western Zhou kings, several different interpretations of lunar phases still persist. The present article presents a method which avoids the questions of historical date and reign length, and instead investigates the possible range of meaning of each lunar phase term by means of the relational constraints imposed by the calendar dates themselves. Seven groups of materials were selected, each having two or more lunar phases and calendar dates so their separation in days could be calculated. Within each group of inscriptions arithmetic constraints then make it possible to establish the range of days to which the lunar phase term could possibly refer. The results obtained from the seven groups are all consistent: jishengba and jisiba ought to refer to the waxing and waning halves of the month, respectively. Chuji refers to certain days at the beginning of the month, probably the first occurrence of the auspicious heavenly stems (gan 干).

金文月相詞語的含義是西周年代學研究的一個難題。學者或通過訓詁 學和古文獻學的方法、或通過將材料放入具體的王世和歷史年代的方 法,試圖找到其真正的含義。但因早期文獻、銅器所屬王世和西周王 年本身都有諸多不確定性,因此金文月相詞語的含義至今仍聚訟紛 紜。本文設計一種方法,避開每件銅器屬於哪個王世以及每個王在位 的歷史年代的問題,由曆日的相對限制關係探討各個月相詞語在當時 可能包含的範圍。具體做法是選擇 7 組材料——其中有 4 組只包含一件 銅器,另外 3 組包含多件銅器——每一組都含有兩個或兩個以上的月相 和曆日,各曆日之間相距的日數可以計算出來。通過同一組材料中多 個曆日的相互限制關係,可以確定其中月相詞語的可能範圍。7 組材 料得到的結果互相洽合:既生霸和既死霸的範圍當分別包含一個月的 上半月和下半月,初吉是一個月前面的若干日,大約是指初幹吉日。

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Study of Early China 2011

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References

1. Guowei, Wang 王國維, “Shengba siba kao” 生霸死霸考, in Guantang jilin 觀堂集林 (Beijing: Zhonghua, 1959), 1926Google Scholar.

2. See Zhengbo, Ye 叶正渤, “Ershi Shiji yilai xizhou jinwen yuexiang wenti yanjiu zongshu” 20 世紀以來西周金文月相問題研究綜述, Xuzhou shifan daxue xuebao (Zhexue shehui kexue ban), 30.5 (2004), 913Google Scholar.

3. These four vessel inscriptions were first suggested to me by Professor Li Xueqin 李學勤 who advised me to analyze lunar phase terms using the methodology adopted here. Jin Hou Su zhong was found in 1996; see Chengyuan, Ma 馬承源, “Jin Hou Su bianzhong” 晉侯蘇編鐘, Shanghai bowuguan jikan 上海博物館集刊 7 (1996)Google Scholar. For the Jing fang ding, see Xueqin, Li 李學勤, “Jing fang ding yu Zhou Zhaowang liri” 靜方鼎與周昭王 曆日, in Xia shang zhou niandaixue zhaji 夏商周年代學劄記 (Shenyang: Liao ning daxue, 1999), 2230Google Scholar. Hu ding was found in mid-Qing, and first recorded in Ruan Yuan's 阮元 Ji gu zhai zhong ding yi qi kuan shi 積古齋鐘鼎彝器款識. Zuoce Hu you was first published in Mengjia, Chen 陳夢家, “Xizhou tongqi duandai (2)” 西周銅器斷代 (二), Kaogu xuebao 10 (1955), 69142Google Scholar, which dated the vessel to King Cheng's reign.

4. The name of the maker of these vessels unearthed in Yangjia village, Meixian, in 2003 was initially interpreted as “Lai ding” 逨鼎. Subsequently, Li Xueqin held that they should be identified as “Zuo ding” 佐鼎. His explanation is given in n. 8 below. Here I follow Li.

5. In the “four-phase” hypothesis, jiwang refers to days 16–23, in the “four fixed- days” hypothesis jiwang refers to the day immediately after full moon, and in the “bisection plus two short periods” hypothesis jiwang refers to several days after the full moon. See Ye, “Ershi shiji yilai xizhou jinwen yuexiang wenti yanjiu zongshu.”

6. Peiyu, Zhang 張培瑜, Meidong, Chen 陳美東, Shuren, Bo 薄樹人, Tiezhu, Hu 胡鐵 珠, Zhongguo gudai lifa 中國古代曆法 (Beijing: Zhongguo kexue lishu, 2008), 192204Google Scholar.

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8. Hu ding contains three paragraphs, each narrating the details of a lawsuit. The first paragraph begins with, “It being the King's 1st year, 6th month, jiwang, day yihai (12)” 惟王元年六月既望乙亥; the second paragraph begins with, “It being the King's 4th month, jishengba, the chen was at dingyou (34)” 惟王四月既生霸辰在丁酉; and the third paragraph begins with “formerly” 昔. Wang Guowei proposed that the two dates are in the same year, the second one being three months earlier than the first one, with an intercalary month between them; see Wang, “Shengba siba kao.” Guo Moruo 郭沫若 suggested that the second date might be in the second year of the same king; see Guo, Liang Zhou jinwenci daxi 兩周金文辭大系. Dong Zuobin 董作賓 also held this view; see Dong, , “Sifen yi yue shuo bianzheng” 四分一月說辨正, Dong Zuobin xiansheng quanji jiabian 董作賓先生全集甲編 (Taipei: Yiwen, 1977), 122Google Scholar. Li Xueqin thought that the two days were in the same year; see Li, , “Lun Hu ding jiqi fanying de Xizhou zhidu” 論曶鼎及其反映的西周制度, Zhongguo shi yanjiu 1 (1985), 95102Google Scholar. More recently, Li suggested to me the possibility that the second date is one year earlier than the first; i.e., in the last year of the former king.

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10. Based on analysis of ancient texts and inscriptions, Wang reached the conclusion that:

初吉,謂自一日至七八日也;二曰既生霸,謂自八九日以降至於十四五日 也;三曰既望,謂十五六日以後至二十二三日;四曰既死霸,謂自二十三 日以後至於晦也

chuji refers to the period from the first to the seventh or eighth day of a month, jishengba refers to the period from the eighth or ninth day to the fourteenth or fifteenth day, jiwang refers to the period from the fifteenth or sixteenth to the twenty-second or twenty-third day, and jisiba refers to the period from the twenty-third to the last day of the lunar month

See Wang, “Shengba siba kao.”

11. For example, David S. Nivison, “The Dates of Western Chou.”

12. Jing Bing 景冰 made a comparison of the two dates on the Zuo Ce Hu you in which he made two assumptions: either (i) jiwang is a specific day between the 12th and 17th days (taking the first appearance of the lunar crescent as the beginning of the month); or (ii) jiwang is a period of days between the 12th day (taking the first appear- ance of the lunar crescent as the beginning of the month) and the 30th day (taking new moon day as the beginning of the month). His result for the possible range for the day gengwu (7) within jishengba was that it could be either between the 8th–13th day in the first case or between the 8th–26th in the second case. See Jing, , “Xi Zhou jinwen zhong jishi shuyu—chuji, jiwang, jishengba, jisiba de yanjiu” 西周金文中紀時術語–––初吉、既 望、既生霸、既死霸的研究, Ziran kexueshi yanjiu 18.1 (1999), 5568Google Scholar. The major differ- ence between the present article and Jing's study is that here jiwang is held to refer to a period of days following the full moon, from the sixteenth to the twenty-first, taking the new moon day as the beginning of the month.

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17. Li Xueqin, “Jing fang ding yu Zhou Zhao Wang liri.”

18. xiaozu, Zhongguo tianwenxue shi zhengli yanjiu, Zhongguo tianwenxue shi 中國 天文學史 (Beijing: Kexue chubanshe, 1981), 2021Google Scholar.

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