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Fu Jing (Shang dynasty)

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Fu Jing
婦妌
Enlarged replica of the houmuwu ding with Fu Jing's temple name listed.
Enlarged replica of the houmuwu ding with Fu Jing's temple name listed.
Queen of Shang dynasty
Burial
SpouseWu Ding
IssueZu Geng
Zu Jia
Full name
Posthumous name
Bi Wujing (妣戊妌)
Temple name
Houmuwu (后母戊)

Fu Jing was a Shang dynasty queen of Wu Ding and recipient of the Houmuwu sacrificial vessel.[1]

Name

A Bronze Age wine vessel
The Houmuwu Sacrificial Vessel

The name Fu Jing comes from the title fu () "consort," and her given name. This is what was used during her life, around the time of Wu Ding's reign.

Fu Jing is posthumously referred to in later oracle bones as Bi Wu (妣戊) or Bi Wujing (妣戊妌) in the context of ancestor veneration, as a form of posthumous name:[2][1][3]

惟妣戊妌小𫳅王受祐[4]
Is it Lady Wu Jing who we should perform a small sacrifice of domesticated lambs to, and if so, will the ruler receive protection?

The bi () part of the name is a title for any deceased ancestress.[5][6] Given that wu () is a Heavenly Stem, this name heavily implies that sacrifices to Fu Jing must have occurred on the fifth day of the ten-day week, similar to other members of royalty.[7] Finally, the jing appears to have been her given name.[5][6]

The hou () "queen" part of the Houmuwu ding is disputed, and has been alternatively interpreted as si () "to offer," on the basis of the "queen" meaning not appearing during the Shang period yet. If read in this way, the phrase becomes "to offer to Mother Wu," resulting in an identical temple name Mother () + Day of Sacrifice (a Heavenly Stem) structure to "Mu Xin," Fu Hao's name.[8][9]

Biography

Although Wu Ding reportedly had over 60 wives, he had only three queens: Fu Jing, Fu Hao, and Fu Shi (婦嬕).[1][10] Like Wu Ding's other wives, Fu Jing participated in military expeditions,[11] reflected in inscriptions discussing whether to call her for an invasion against the Longfang:

貞勿呼婦妌伐龍方[12]
Charge: Should we not call Fu Jing to invade the Longfang?

Fu Jing would also perform divination for the state.[11]

丁末卜X婦妌侑X賓X[13]
On the dingwei day, plastromancy was performed. [Charge]: Should Fu Jing perform a you-sacrifice[a] [for?] Bin [unknown]?

Some of the divinations Fu Jing conducted focused on procuring millet, so Zheng Zhenxiang has suggested that she was responsible for agricultural management.[1]

甲寅卜古貞婦妌受黍年[14]
On the jiayin day, plastromancy was performed. Gu charges: Will Fu Jing receive a good millet harvest?

癸酉卜𬆩貞婦妌不其受黍年二月[15]
On the guiyou day, plastromancy was performed. Nan charges: May Fu Jing not receive a millet harvest? Second month.

Several divinations were made by Nan and Zheng towards whether or not a pregnancy would go well, similar to Fu Hao.

壬午卜𬆩貞婦妌娩嘉[16]
On the renwu day, plastromancy was performed. Nan charges: When Fu Jing gives birth, will it be a fortunate one?

X卜爭貞婦妌娩嘉王𰉏曰其惟庚娩嘉旬辛X婦妌娩允嘉二月[17]
On [...] day, plastromancy was performed. Zheng charges: Will Fu Jing's pregnancy be a fortunate one? The King (Wu Ding) prognosticates: It may be the geng day where the pregnancy is auspicious; 10 days later, on a xin day, Fu Jing gave birth; Indeed, it was a fortunate one! Second month.

Death

After Fu Jing's death, either Zu Jia or Zu Geng commissioned the production of the Houmuwu ding in her memory. It is generally believed to be Zu Geng, on a kinship basis, as the son generation usually use mu () in ancestor veneration, whereas later generations use bi ().[9][8]

Proposed tomb

Chiang Kai-shek examining the Houmuwu ding.

The Houmuwu ding was unearthed by villagers in 1939, but was reburied due to an ongoing war before being dug up again in 1946. Upon the spot being reinvestigated by archaeologists, the tomb now labelled 84AWBM260 was discovered.[18] The tomb is large, with a single ramp, a smaller tomb, and several sacrificial pits, but had been badly robbed.[19][20][21] While the evidence is circumstantial, Uchida and Mizoguchi note that the position appears to denote respect towards M1400. If this were the tomb of Wu Ding, it would make sense for this tomb to be Fu Jing's in-context.[22]

See also

Notes

  1. Sacrifice wherein an ancestor is beckoned to eat with the Shang

References

  1. Huang 黄, Qian 茜 (10 March 2016). "中国最早女将妇好墓首博特展:揭秘华夏首位女英雄" [Special exhibition of the tomb of Fu Hao, China's earliest female general: uncovering the first female hero of China]. Tencent (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 30 July 2017. Retrieved 29 July 2017.
  2. 小屯南地甲骨 4023.1
  3. Cheng Gao 程告. 《考古發現與古代姓氏制度》、 《先秦人名的幾個問題》讀解. 清華大學. https://www.ctwx.tsinghua.edu.cn/__local/6/4C/AB/D792465EECA71676D163467091E_9E03A7EE_12EE2D.pdf?e=.pdf
  4. 小屯南地甲骨 4023.3
  5. 趙林 Zhao Lin. 2011. 商代親屬稱謂制度之研究 [A Study on the Kinship Nomenclature System of the Shang China]. https://irlib.pccu.edu.tw/bitstream/987654321/16295/1/992410H034.pdf
  6. 趙林 Zhao Lin. 2011. 殷契釋親論商代的親屬稱謂及親屬組織制度 [The Shang Chinese Kinship System]. 上海古籍出版社 [Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House].
  7. Wu 吳, Junde 俊德 (2016). "商王日名來源析辨" [Analysis of the Origin of the Name of the King of Shang]. 儒學研究論叢 (in Chinese). 7. Taiwan: 83–109.
  8. 黄锦前. 2024. 司母戊鼎究竟如何称呼. CSSN. https://www.cssn.cn/skgz/bwyc/202408/t20240816_5772306.shtml
  9. Zeng 曾, Wenqing 文清 (1993). 关于"司母戊""司母辛"大方鼎的"司"字质疑 [On the question of the si character on the Simuwu-Simuxin great square ding]. Huaihua Shizhuan Xuebao (in Chinese). 21 (4): 71–73.
  10. Boileau, Gilles. 2023. Shang dynasty's “nine generations chaos” and the reign of Wu Ding: towards a unilineal line of transmission of royal power. Bulletin of SOAS, Volume 86, Issue 2. pp. 293 - 315 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0041977X23000277
  11. Zhou 周, Ying 英 (2014). "中国古代女性阅读史分期述略" [A brief introduction to the stages of Ancient Chinese women's written histories]. Xinshi Jitu Shiguan (in Chinese) (8): 75–78.
  12. 甲骨文合集 06585正
  13. 甲骨文合集 2722
  14. 甲骨文合集 09968正.3
  15. 甲骨文合集 09976正.2
  16. 甲骨文合集 14314.1
  17. 甲骨文合集 09976正.2
  18. 黄锦前。 2024。 司母戊鼎究竟如何称呼。 CSSN。 https://www.cssn.cn/skgz/bwyc/202408/t20240816_5772306.shtml
  19. Gilles, B. THE PRINCE OF HUAYUANZHUANG 花園莊, ZU JIA 祖甲, AND THE SUCCESSION OF WU DING 武丁: ALLIANCE AND CRISIS. Early China, Volume 46, September 2023, pp. 79 - 130 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/eac.2023.1
  20. Li Xueqin. 谈新出现的妇妌爵 [On the newly discovered jue of Fu Jing]. Wenbo (in Chinese) (3): 13–14.
  21. Zeng Wenqing (曾文清) (1993). 关于"司母戊""司母辛"大方鼎的"司"字质疑 [On the question of the si character on the Simuwu-Simuxin great square ding]. Huaihua Shizhuan Xuebao (in Chinese). 21 (4): 71–73.
  22. Koji Mizoguchi and Junko Uchida, “The Anyang Xibeigang Shang royal tombs revisited: a social archaeological approach,” Antiquity 92.363 (2018): 709–723 https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/antiquity/article/anyang-xibeigang-shang-royal-tombs-revisited-a-social-archaeological-approach/0007EB51D8BEC4CD027D48249CB791FD