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Fragment of oracle bone

approx. 1300-1050 BCE

Asian Art Museum

Asian Art Museum
San Francisco, United States

Oracle Bones
While bronze vessels were the most visible implements used in the ancestor rites of the Shang dynasty, it was through oracle bones that actual communication with ancestors took place. These bones, primarily the shoulder blades of cattle and the undershells of turtles, were dried and had holes drilled in them at regular intervals.
A question was directed to an ancestor by applying a hot poker to these holes to make the surface crack. A specialist, usually a king or a member of a ruling family, would then read the appearance of the cracks to obtain the ancestor’s response. Both the question—in positive and negative forms—and the results were written on the surface of the oracle bone.
A vast “library” of these bones has been found near the Shang capital of Anyang in Henan province. More than forty-five thousand of them have been published so far. Most foretell births, deaths, rainfall, good harvests, the outcome of hunts and battles, and the meanings of dreams.

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  • Title: Fragment of oracle bone
  • Date Created: approx. 1300-1050 BCE
  • Location Created: China; Henan province
  • Physical Dimensions: W. 7/8 in x L. 3 3/4 in, W. 2.2 cm x L. 9.5 cm
  • Rights: Public Domain
  • Medium: Probably cattle bone
  • Credit Line: Asian Art Museum, The Avery Brundage Collection, B60M501
Asian Art Museum

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