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Origin of Chinese Characters
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Cang Jie |
The chracters believed to have been written by Cang
Jie |
According to modern researchers, the ancestors of the Chinese people tied
knots in rope to record events. Later, they adopted sharp weapons to inscribe
signs, and developed the earliest form of Chinese characters. Archeologists have
found inscribed signs on Neolithic pottery shards in Banpo
Village in Shaanxi
Province. These signs, dating back to some 6,000 years ago, were possibly
the seeds of later Chinese characters.
Inscribed signs, a little younger than those found in Banpo Village, were
also found on pottery along the lower reaches of the Yellow
River. There, archeologists found a sign with shapes of the moon and a
five-peak mountain underneath a circle. Experts in ancient characters say the
pictograph symbolizes the interval in which the moon disappears and the sun
rises. Mythology researchers have another interpretation. Their understanding is
that the moon shape symbolizes the red clouds as the sun rises, and thus the
picture portrays a sunrise
over the sea.
Most of the signs inscribed on pottery were painted red, creating an imposing
and mysterious impression. The hypothesis is that pictographs were used in
sacrificial rituals dedicated to the sunrise or as prayers for good harvests.
They were inscribed in an orderly way, and the strokes are full of strength.
Similar signs and designs have been found in other regions in China, indicating
they had become generally recognized. These are the earliest symbols, or
pictographs, in China and are more than 5,000 years old.
In Qinghai
Province in western China, pottery objects of approximately the same period
and inscribed with images of birds, insects and animals have been unearthed.
These, too, are regarded as pictographs. According to philologist Tang Lan,
Chinese characters originated from pictures; the older the characters, the more
they look like pictures. Since pictures have no fixed forms, the ancient Chinese
characters were generally free in form.
Xu Shen, a philologist of the Han
Dynasty (206B.C.--A.D.220), divided Chinese characters into six categories.
Modern scholars have since reduced them to three types, of which the
pictographic character is one. The picture signs are the embryos of both calligraphy
and painting, which gave rise to the Chinese saying that calligraphy and
painting have the same origin. At first, the pictographic characters differed
from region to region. As time went by, however, they become more standardized,
abstract and united, and the earliest Chinese written language, Jiaguwen (shell
and bone writing) appeared.
Author: Jessie
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