» Cyrus the Great (at Zoroastrian Heritage)
» Cyrus the Great - His Religion & Inspiration
» Cyrus the Great - Pasargadae, Capital (at Zoroastrian Heritage)
» Cyrus the Great - Information Sources
» Cyrus the Great - Xenophon's Cyropaedia (at Zoroastrian Heritage)
» Cyrus the Great - Hebrew Bible Quotes
» Cyrus Cylinder
» Cyrus Cylinder & its Discoverer Hormuzd Rassam
» Cyrus Cylinder - its Remarkable Discovery
» Cyrus Cylinder - Contents (Eduljee)
» Cyrus Cylinder - Translation (Rogers)
» Cyrus Cylinder - Translation (Finkel)
» Cyrus' Edict & the Chinese Cuneiform Bones
» Cyrus Cylinder - Talk by Neil MacGregor
In 1928, Xue Shenwei, a Chinese traditional doctor was shown two inscribed fossilized horse bones that bore a script that was unknown to him [and presumably to the then owner(s) of the artifacts as well].
Bone shaft found in China and inscribed in a cuneiform script. Image credit: Palace Museum, China and currently at CAIS |
Second bone shaft found in China and inscribed in a cuneiform script. Image credit: Palace Museum, China and currently at CAIS |
In 1966, during the Chinese Cultural Revolution, Xue buried the bones for safe keeping. Years later, when he thought the threat of the bones being confiscated or destroyed had passed, he dug up bones and in 1983, took them to the Palace Museum in Beijing' Forbidden City for examination and assessment. The inscription collection of the Palace Museum is the largest of its kind in China and Xue likely hoped that the museums curators and experts might be able to shed some light on the script. It was then that Xue learnt that the script on the bones was not a lost Chinese script, but cuneiform. In 1985, shortly before his demise, Xue donated the bones to the Museum naming the seller(s) from whom he had purchased the bones.
14th-12th cent. oracle (ox) bones from Xiaotun, China. Excavated in 1945. Currently part of the Schøyen Collection Image credit: Schøyen Collection |
Nearly all known Chinese oracle bones are from Xiaotun (also Yinxu or Yin Xu) located 3 km north-west of Anyang the ancient capital of the Late Shang Dynasty. Anyang itself is located in the northern province of Henan not far from the eastern terminus of the Silk Roads (the Aryan trade roads), namely, the cities of Zhengzhou and Luoyang. This region would have been very familiar to Iranian traders especially Sogdians who had colonies along the Silk Roads in China.
The oracle bones date to the reign of Wu Ding, who died around 1189 BCE. The oracular use of the bones involved the interpretation of pattern of cracks which appeared on the bones after subjecting them to heat via a heated metal rod. The text on the bones records the interpretation of the oracle and the date of its production. We make this note since the use of inscriptions on bones is very specific to one area of China known to ancient Iranian (Persian) traders and where they have been found in great abundance.]
Palace Museum specialist Wu Yuhong determined that the text on one of the bones bore similarities to the text on the Babylonian Cyrus Cylinder. That bone’s text contained one in every twenty of the Cyrus text’s cuneiform characters in correct order. As he could not identify the text on the other bone, the Palace Museum sent images of the script on the two bones to the British Museum for further study.
At this juncture in the narrative, we need to turn our attention to the ongoing analysis of the (incomplete) text contained on the Cyrus Cylinder found in Babylon. In 2009, Wilfred Lambert, a retired professor from Birmingham University and Irving Finkel, Curator of Cuneiform Collections at the British Museum, had determined that the text on some tablet fragments in the British Museum's possession, were part of Cyrus' proclamation. These fragments had been uncovered by Hormuzd Rassam in Dailem (a site near but separate from Babylon). Shortly after this discovery by Lambert, Irving Finkel, Assistant Keeper, Department of the Middle East, similarly identified another tablet fragment. Perhaps, now aware of the possibility that the text on the Cyrus Cylinder was not unique to the Babylon temple where the cylinder had been found - that it might have been only one instance of Cyrus' proclamation being distributed throughout Cyrus' empire - we read that Finkel re-examined the images of the Chinese bones. He now determined that the text on the second bone that had not been previously been connected to Cyrus, was also part of Cyrus' proclamation.
Finkel communicated his finding to the Palace Museum and at the same time requested better images of the text. The request prompted Chinese Assyriologist Dr. Yushu Gong to make a set of rubbings of the bone inscriptions using black wax (on white paper). The resulting contrast provided a more distinct representation of the script on the bones than had the previous photographs.
Rubbing of the bone with cuneiform script attributed to the edict of Cyrus Image credit: Palace Museum, China and currently at CAIS |
Rubbing of the bone with cuneiform script attributed to the edict of Cyrus Image credit: Palace Museum, China and currently at CAIS |
Rubbing of the bone with cuneiform script attributed to the edict of Cyrus Image credit: Palace Museum, China and currently at CAIS |
Irving Fenkel, Curator of Cuneiform Collections at the British Museum and a rubbing of a Chinese cuneiform inscribed horse-bone before him. |
If the writing on the bones was a forgery written by someone with no knowledge of the cuneiform script, one could reasonably expect a number of errors and even a made-up script. Regardless of the authenticity of the Chinese bones as a legitimately distributed copy of Cyrus' edict, whoever made the bone inscriptions would have had to have access to the Persian version of Cyrus' edict. This in itself is a further indication that Cyrus' edict was not limited to Babylon and for this reason alone, the text merits serious consideration as a copy of the edict that had been circulated throughout Cyrus' realm. That version could have been written not as a clay inscription, but on any substrate. It could have been carved on stone or written with ink on leather as well as parchment.
There wasn't sufficient time at the workshop for an in-depth analysis of the Chinese cuneiform bones. That would require further debate. Nevertheless, what was beginning to take hold was the concept that Cyrus' Cylinder was not just another foundation deposit - it was part of a larger distribution of Cyrus' edict. The corollary to this concept was that Cyrus had intended the edict to be a universal policy of governance throughout his empire. While there was some scepticism towards this concept expressed by a few of the workshop's participants, Finkel (whose opinion appears to have changed diametrically on this issue) believed that the evidence was "completely compelling."
Cyrus the Great & Cyrus Cylinder Series:
» Cyrus the Great (at Zoroastrian Heritage)
Cyrus the Great & Cyrus Cylinder Series:
» Cyrus the Great (at Zoroastrian Heritage)
» Cyrus the Great - His Religion & Inspiration
» Cyrus the Great - Pasargadae, Capital (at Zoroastrian Heritage)
» Cyrus the Great - Information Sources
» Cyrus the Great - Xenophon's Cyropaedia (at Zoroastrian Heritage)
» Cyrus the Great - Hebrew Bible Quotes
» Cyrus Cylinder
» Cyrus Cylinder & its Discoverer Hormuzd Rassam
» Cyrus Cylinder - its Remarkable Discovery
» Cyrus Cylinder - Contents (Eduljee)
» Cyrus Cylinder - Translation (Rogers)
» Cyrus Cylinder - Translation (Finkel)
» Cyrus' Edict & the Chinese Cuneiform Bones
» Cyrus Cylinder - Talk by Neil MacGregor
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