Introduction

The Zhou conquest of the Shang in 1045 BC is widely recognised as a major turning point in Chinese history (Shaughnessy, 1999). Over the many centuries of Zhou prominence, the strength of their claims to authority underpinned state-building efforts down to China’s unification under the First Emperor of Qin in 221 BC. These claims were based ostensibly on the Mandate of Heaven and on the virtue of the first rulers, King Wu, and his father, King Wen, but underlying them was an astute political programme. Over the first one hundred and fifty years of their rule, the Zhou sent members of the royal Ji clan to found states (hereafter referred to as polities) across the Central Plains. At the same time, they also recruited clans with leaders who were not related to the Zhou to establish polities along the northern borders of the precious agricultural land in the Wei Valley and the Central Plains to the east.

During the late Shang period, the Zhou had themselves moved south. And, although we do not know their precise origin, early poems, attributed to the Zhou, indicate that they had moved from less fertile regions to the north, almost certainly from part of the Loess Plateau, north of the Wei River, into the agricultural land (Waley, 1954, pp. 241–243; Shaughnessy, 1999, p. 303). The polities along the northern edges of the agricultural land were important to protect the farmland and settlements, which the Zhou had captured, from people moving south. Far to the north were the horse herders in what is today Mongolia and Inner Mongolia. This was the potential danger. Horses and chariots had already been brought south over several hundred kilometres during the intermittent battles of the late Shang period (1250–1045 BC) (Rawson et al., 2020). Neither the Shang nor the Zhou were in direct contact with these horse owners on the Mongolian Plateau. Instead they were faced with the peoples who were, and who occupied the vast area of diverse landforms and environments, from west of Baoji in the Hexi Corridor to the Yan Mountains, north of Beijing, and beyond into present-day Liaoning province, over an area of more than two thousand kilometres from west to east. This immense region, often hundreds of kilometres north to south, was neither part of the steppe, joining the whole of Inner Asia, nor of the agricultural lands given the general name the Central Plains. Typical monuments and burials of the several identified steppe cultures on the Mongolia Plateau and in South Siberia are not found there, nor are the elite settlements of the Shang and the Zhou. Instead, the great diversity of land and climate supported many different groups of people, who tended to move south towards agricultural areas in the valleys, with better conditions for millet growing. If we look in more detail, in the west we find mountains and deserts, with oases threaded along the Hexi Corridor, leading east to the Wei valley and Baoji; in the centre is the Yellow River, running first to the Great Bend and then south, as it embraces the Loess Plateau and the deserts and rolling hills of the Ordos region. From here the land rises by degrees up to the Taihang Mountains, where the Fen River basins extend agricultural land northwards; in the east, the Central Plains are guarded by the Yan Mountains to their north (with modern Beijing towards the western edge). Further low land, north of the Yan Mountains, extends east along the Xar Moron and Luan Rivers.

This bridging area, whose occupants played significant roles throughout the history of early China, has been given various names and has been variously defined. An early designation was as the Northern Zone, with an emphasis on weapons and tools that could be compared with chance finds in Mongolia (Lin, 1986). Some authors regard the area as the frontier of Inner Asia, based on metallurgical culture patterns (Linduff et al., 2017). As the whole of the Arc (defined below) falls within modern China’s political boundaries, other scholars incorporate large parts of the area into the late Shang (c.1250–1045 BC) and Western Zhou (c. 1045–771 BC) spheres, without detailed environmental or political distinctions (Li, 2006; Sun, 2021; Yang et al., 2020). The comments have concentrated on the hybrid nature of the metalwork discovered in the Arc. Multiple combinations and variations of materials taken from north and south, especially tomb structures, ceramic types and horse tack, are typical of the whole Arc. In the 1980s, Tong Enzheng, working on the western extension of highland, southwest of the Hexi Corridor, named the whole area (in Chinese) banyuexing didai, which can be translated as ‘the crescent-shaped region’ (Tong, 1987). Tong recognised and described the distinctive diverse environments and climates and the many different responses to it of a wide variety of cultural groups. His regional definition is now widely accepted by Chinese scholars and here we adopt the concept, referring to the entire bridging region as ‘the Arc’. To the north and west is the Mongolian Plateau, which is often described as part of ‘Inner Asia’ and also often referred to as ‘the steppe’.

Not just in the Zhou period, but throughout China’s history, the peoples of the Arc have played important roles in the geo-politics of the settled states and dynasties. Through them, the horses of the pastoralists of the Mongolian plateau (which extends northwards into South Siberia to the Altai and the Sayan) and later their armies have, time and again, impacted the lives of the agriculturalist on the Central Plains. Diachronic climatic factors, especially the changing boundary of the Pacific Monsoon, influence this bridging area, and were key in determining how far north towards the Gobi region millet-based agriculture was possible before desert-like conditions started to prevail. In the period 2500–1500 BC, much of the region supported sedentary farming communities (Zhang et al., 2019), but from 1500 BC and sometimes earlier in some parts, a decline in rainfall caused people to leave their pastures or their settlements and move south. At times this tendency was encouraged by periods of greater moisture that allowed crossings over the Gobi (these were recurring events across the region over centuries: Huang et al., 2003).

Here we pay particular attention to three sub-regions of the Arc along (and within) the northern edge of the agricultural lands of the Central Plains, all of which have particularly well-documented cemeteries and can thus serve as representative case studies. These are (i) the sub-region around, and to the north and west of, present-day Baoji in the western Wei Valley, 150 km west of Xi’an, with important south-flowing rivers, the Qian and the Jing; (ii) the sub-region around, and to the north and east of, Beijing along the Xar Moron and Liao Rivers and (iii) the sub-region in the Fen River valley, south of the provincial capital of Shanxi at Taiyuan, and including Anyang to the east (Fig. 1). On the southern edges of these three sub-regions, not only did the Zhou establish polities with leaders from the royal Zhou clan, but at the same time they recognised polities with leaders from completely different clans (we shall term these ‘non-Ji clans’). The same practice of recruiting people of non-Ji clans was also followed across large parts of the Central Plains and was fundamental to achieving Zhou success (Khayutina, 2017a; Li, 2006). Yet, despite their claims to rule the whole broad agricultural territory of the Central Plains and more, Zhou control did not extend into the Arc and local areas of farmland were in fact controlled from widely-scattered centres, where local elite lineages dominated only their immediate surroundings.

Fig. 1
figure 1

Map with the Arc, the three sections, and major sites mentioned in the text (map drawn by Limin Huan)

The three discrete sub-regions we have chosen for study were of particular significance in the Western Zhou period, as all three provided buffers against intrusive movement southwards into agricultural areas during the centuries when the administrative centre was near present-day Xi’an (1045–771 BC). During the eighth century BC new invaders, named in vessel inscriptions and transmitted texts as either the Quanrong or the Xianyun, drove the Zhou from their centres near Xi’an to the secondary capital at Luoyang, demonstrating the need for some kind of enhanced defence.

Historical Overview 

By the time that the Zhou had conquered the Shang in c. 1045 BC, they had seemingly mastered the scribal use of Chinese characters and followed rituals of offerings to the ancestors made in bronze vessels, which would appear to have been part of their means of extending control over former Shang lands. Zhou interaction with their close northern neighbours—integrating them as polities within their ritual and military systems—was much more extensive than that of the late Shang. Some Shang outposts in the Loess Plateau have been found, and Shang bronze vessels have been found widely distributed in the Arc, having possibly been exchanged for horses (Cao, 2014). But there was, on present evidence, no systematic attempt under the late Shang to create a chain of allies on the borders of the Central Plains (Rawson et al., 2020), as the Zhou were to do.

From the ninth century BC, a period of wars began with the Quanrong in the western areas of the Arc, bringing to an end Zhou control of the Wei valley in the eighth century BC (Li, 2006). Separately, invasions by peoples from South Siberia and the Mongolian Plateau limited Zhou control of the north-eastern regions of the Arc around present-day Beijing. Thus the Western Zhou centuries, bookended by these two very different interactions with the peoples of the Arc, must be considered as very important phases of expansion, leading to the extension of control over the western and northern parts of the Central Plains.

The centuries of the Western Zhou were also an unusual time when non-Ji polities along the northern boundary of the Central Plains made a distinctive contribution to the success of the Zhou by providing horses and chariots for Zhou armies. Through the non-Ji association with the Zhou, as well as with polities on agricultural land, these non-Ji clans had interactions southwards with the Zhou and northwards with Inner Asia. They acquired sufficient wealth in some instances to create large cemeteries and substantial tombs for their leaders. Neither the tomb structures nor the vessel sets that they had acquired conform with Zhou practices. These many unusual weapons, shields and horse equipment show that several of these non-Ji clans shared, across a wide area, similar local weapons, which differed from those of the main Zhou leaders. From their weapons, chariot tools and (most especially) the horse equipment, we argue that the non-Ji clans were valued as fighters and for their skill in management of, or even for their supply of, horses from the north. Considering larger chronological patterning across later centuries, we infer that this contact continued as the searches for horses from the northwest were renewed over the centuries.

Horses in East Asia

The introduction of horses into the Central Plains, and relationships to the Mongolian Plateau, were essential to the early history of warfare in China. The Zhou and their allies were, themselves, skilled chariot drivers and drove, on occasion, four-horse chariots, requiring yet more horses and horse managers than the two-horse version.

Until fairly recently, many scholars presumed that the first East Asian horses were descendants of those discovered at Botai in Kazakhstan (Outram et al., 2009). However, renewed archaeogenetic study shows that the Botai horses were a different taxon, Equus przewalskii (Gaunitz et al., 2018), while dental features, once taken as evidence for horse transport on these animals, appear to have natural, non-anthropogenic causes (Taylor & Barrón-Ortiz, 2021). Instead, beginning in the early second millennium BC, the earliest domestic horses appear to spread eastwards from the Black Sea steppes and the trans-Ural region (Chechushkov & Epimakhov, 2018), where they appear to have been closely paired with chariots.

Available evidence suggests that the rise of the Zhou followed the proliferation of horse culture in the Mongolian steppes to the north. DNA sequencing of archaeological specimens indicates that the first horses to reach Mongolia were Equus caballus, the ancestor of the modern horse (Fages et al., 2019; Gaunitz et al., 2018; Librado & Orlando, 2021; Librado et al., 2021). Excavations at large stone burials/monuments, named khirigsuurs, reveal extensive use of horses in ritual deposits around these large stone-fenced structures in the landscape of the Plateau and surrounding regions by c. 1400 BC (Allard et al., 2007; Taylor et al., 2017, 2019). Recent work by Yuri Esin, collaborating with colleagues in Mongolia, and examining petroglyphs depicting chariots in the Khoid Tamir valley, has proposed a date for the widespread use of chariots and horses in Mongolia in the centuries prior to 1200 BC (Esin et al., 2021). Tall stelae, known as deer stones (Fig. 2), produced by the same culture also show engraved weapons (daggers, curved knives and shafted axes) and shields, along with curved hooks thought to have functioned as rein-holders for horse control, hanging from a belt around the stones (Fitzhugh, 2009, p. 185; Volkov, 2002). Horse silhouettes and, occasionally, chariot images are engraved on these stones, pointing to an important role for this culture in the dispersal of horses and chariots into East Asia.

Fig. 2
figure 2

Deer stones in Mongolia. a, b photos of a deer stone, Khovosgol Province, and its detail, showing steppe-type weapons attached to a belt (photos by Jessica Rawson); c drawing of a deer stone showing a rein holder (with two hooks) attached to a belt, Sharvartiin, Arkhangai aimak, Central Mongolia (after Volkov, 2002, pl. 5)

Osteological and pathological features suggest that horses of the Deer Stone-Khirigsuur (DSK) complex were regularly used for transport (Taylor & Tuvshinjargal, 2018; Taylor et al., 2015). While distinguishing between riding and chariots can be challenging, the imagery, archaeological context, and the unique osteological features found on these early horses suggest that chariots, rather than mounted riding, were the most important form of transport (Taylor et al., 2021). On the basis of indirect evidence such as human joint pathologies (Grupe et al., 2019; Wagner et al., 2011), some scholars have convincingly argued that horses from Mongolia and northwest China must have been ridden when managing horse herds as early as the second millennium BC (Grupe et al., 2019). However, to date, the earliest indisputable archaeozoological evidence for mounted horseback riding in East Asia, in the form of riding tack and equine pathologies, dates to the mid first millennium BC (Drews, 2004; Li et al., 2020).

The archaeological record of early horse use on the Mongolian Plateau is a key to the introduction of horse-drawn chariots to the late Shang at Anyang (Rawson et al., 2020). So-called ‘prone burials’ south-east of the main Plateau include horse remains dated to the late second millennium BC (Taylor et al., 2017). Artefacts from these burials provide important evidence on the origin of the Shang chariot and its horses (Rawson et al., 2020). In addition to grave goods offering evidence of cultural connections, this unique burial style links people from the Plateau with the first Chinese chariots: in a chariot pit at the cemetery of Dasikongcun, north of the Huan River at Anyang, the chariot driver was buried, like many others at the Shang capital, in a prone body position (Fig. 3). It may be that the Shang, as they began to acquire the chariot and its horses from the north, also engaged people from the same areas to manage horses, including the chariot drivers who, at death, were buried in a downward-facing position.

Fig. 3
figure 3

Plan of the chariot burial M226 at Dasikongcun, Anyang, c. 1200 BC, with the chariot driver buried prone (after Zhongguo, 2014, vol. 1, Fig. 416)

That the Zhou and their allies must have continued to source their horses from the north, either from the Mongolian Plateau or from further north and west, becomes clear if we look at the types of cheek-pieces used. During the late Shang and the first decades of Zhou military action, the principal horse harness made use of pairs of rectangular bronze cheek-pieces, with a single hole, two tubes, and a slit for a nose band. The use of bits is debated (Figs. 3 and 4) (Chechushkov et al., 2018; Littauer, 1969; Usachuk, 2010; Taylor et al., 2015, p. 287; Stepanova & Chugunov, 2019). The cheek-pieces were often, but not invariably, employed with a spiked liner, reproducing the impact of the oval or round bone cheek-pieces with rounded spikes found at Sintashta in the eastern Urals and other sites in the western steppe in the early second millennium. A relatively sudden change took place in the early tenth century BC, as the Zhou adopted rod-shaped versions in antler and bone, which had for long been common over a wide area including Ukraine and several other parts of Europe, Iran and the western and eastern steppe (Boroffka, 1998; Britnell, 1976; Podobed et al., 2014). This change suggests the arrival of new groups of people settling among the Ji and non-Ji clans and introducing this new form of harness. The Zhou were already perfectly equipped to cast bronze cheek-pieces; antler and bone were, after all, less durable than bronze, with which material they could be replaced. But new antler cheek- pieces continued to appear in the Central Plains, suggesting that new people and new horses joined the non-Ji clans, and even the Ji-clans, over several centuries that saw a constant demand for horses from the north (the significant environmental barriers to breeding strong horses on the Central Plains remained the limiting factor in any domestic supply).

Fig. 4
figure 4

Top Remains of the horse head in M226. The cheek-piece and spiked fitting are visible in the picture, attached at the bottom of the noseband; bottom bronze cheek-pieces with an example of a spiked liner (after Zhongguo, 2014, vol. 2, pls. 129:4; 130:3)

Other tools, found with charioteers buried at Anyang, and including rein hooks, curved knives, chisels and socketed axes, provide additional evidence of the first northern contacts. Significant numbers have been found south of the Mongolian Plateau, along the northern section of the upper Yellow River (Cao, 2014; Rawson et al., 2020; Yang & Liu, 1998). The curved knives vary: some carry animal heads, such as those depicted on deer stones; others resemble examples found in archaeological contexts in the Arc; yet others appear to have been cast at Anyang. Socketed axes, spade-like celts and chisels, required to repair the chariots, also match those found in mountainous regions of Inner Asia (Kuzmina, 2008, figs. 52–54).

Using three case studies, we show how people living alongside the Zhou polities of the Ji clan were major intermediaries in the transfer of horse management, and almost certainly also horses, to Zhou polities and settlements.

Case Studies in Three Regions of the Northern Edge of the Central Plains

Here we examine tombs from the three major sub-regions where the Arc meets the Central Plains and where potentially fine agricultural land adjoins the Loess Plateau and the mountains around Beijing (Fig. 1). Sites outside these defined case-study sub-regions are certainly also important, but we have concentrated on those with the most substantial cemeteries and which have been well documented (Sun, 2021). Following Shang use of horses for chariots, the earliest Zhou period tombs with horse equipment, dating to the eleventh and tenth centuries BC, are found around Baoji in Shaanxi and neighbouring eastern Gansu among polities of non-Ji clans. It is even more remarkable that it is here, in these tombs, that the very largest numbers of the earliest Zhou period ritual vessels have come to light. It is likely that the Zhou had long-term contacts with the Baoji district and they may even have entered the Central Plain here, driven (it is sometimes suggested) by climatic changes or (at least) by disastrous winter weather conditions (Huang et al., 2003). In this region four cemeteries were created by people who seem to have been allies of the Zhou. The most recently discovered is at Shigushan (with its associated bronzes at Daijiawan), with the two best known cemeteries of the non-Ji Yu lineage both on the river terraces of the Wei valley south of Baoji; further north and west there are cemeteries at Lingtai, also with claims to be occupied by a non-Ji lineage, and at Chongxin in eastern Gansu. At the same date as these cemeteries were founded, members of the Ji clan may have established the Rui polity to the north of Baoji (Khayutina, 2017a, pp. 308–311; Chen, 2015), and we here also compare tombs attributed to the Ji at Zhangjiapo, near Xi’an. Next in date, during the late eleventh and early tenth century BC, are tombs of the Yan polity of the Ji clan at Liulihe near Fangshan, southwest of central Beijing. At this locality, a small group or a clan, without a claim to any named polity, was buried at Baifu near the Jundushan Mountains. The most extensive cemeteries are those in the third area, where the Fen River joins the Yellow River as it flows south. At a point where several narrow agricultural basins lie surrounded by higher ground, two very large non-Ji polities appear, the Ba and the Peng, which endured for a period of around two centuries. They were named with Chinese characters, and thus we can presume that they were recognised and accepted by the Zhou. Not far from the Ba polity was the Jin polity of the Ji lineage, founded by a brother of the first Zhou King, Wu. Two Jin cemeteries have been excavated, one consisting of elite tombs at Tianma-Qucun, and the other of the ruling Jin lords, their spouses and chariot burials at Beizhao and Yangshe. Led by members of a further branch of the Ji lineage, the Rui polity, which had probably first been located near Baoji, moved to the area in the ninth century BC, occupying territory on the other side of the Yellow River at Hancheng. The cemetery there, at Liangdaicun, offers abundant information on the interaction of the royal Ji lineage with members of non-Ji polities (Rawson, 2013). Their visible cooperation will be contrasted with the situation that developed after the collapse of Zhou influence in the Wei valley in the eighth century BC. The period down to that point is traditionally known as the Western Zhou; following the movement to the secondary capital of Luoyang, the centuries down to the Qin unification are now called the Eastern Zhou (770–221 BC).

In our discussion of the three areas with cemeteries of the leaders of non-Ji clans, the following features or attributes are taken as defining the occupants as having backgrounds unlike those of the Ji lineage and their followers on the Central Plains. First and foremost are the structures and orientations of their tombs, which differ markedly from those of the Ji and their followers, which were oriented north–south, with the body of the tomb occupant in a supine body position. Moreover, the diversity of these structures indicates that the leaders of these polities did not come from one single region. Nor were they united in their use of weapons; some indeed show links with south-west China. Many of the weapons, such as mace-heads (Li, 2018), different forms of shafted or shaft-hole axes, mattocks, and curved knives have long been identified as typical of peoples in the so-called ‘Northern Zone’, across the centre of the Arc and on the eastern edges of Inner Asia (Yang et al., 2020), but these have rarely ever been examined within their full burial contexts. Shields are surprisingly prominent in some of these tombs. Occurring frequently, but not universally, are forged bronzes, helmets in bronze, bronze bosses (on tunics, leggings, or boots), bone or antler plates to form armour, and elaborate beaded ornaments. None of these are characteristic of the Central Plains and signal their owners’ contacts with Inner Asia. However, the size and complex structures of the tombs (adapting features used by the Ji clans) and the multitude of possessions made of bronze suggest that most clans had not recently moved from Inner Asia, but had already been established for long periods in more local parts of the Arc. All these tombs display either early square bronze cheek-pieces (Fig. 4) or horse harness with various different forms of the rod cheek-pieces, most prominently made of antler (which are central to the discussion here). With the exception of two small tombs at Liulihe, all tombs also include ritual vessels, probably cast at the main Zhou administrative or palace centres. These may have been acquired as booty, but were more probably gifts from the Zhou. These vessels are often of very high quality and many carry inscriptions naming former owners. Such vessels indicate that their new owners were recruited as allies or clients of the Zhou and were certainly not enemies; rather they had joined in the campaigns and enterprises of the Zhou. The importance of this political strategy for Zhou success cannot be overestimated.

The Western Wei River Valley and Southern Gansu

The two major cemeteries on the river terraces of the Wei Valley, south of Baoji, preserve unusual tomb structures. The tombs at Shigushan present niches on the secondary ledge which held large numbers of ritual vessels (Fig. 5) (Liu et al., 2013; Wang et al., 2016). The large southeast–northwest oriented tombs of the leaders of the Yu at three nearby cemeteries have space for a secondary burial of a female companion within them (Fig. 6) (Lu & Hu, 1988). Although both kinds of structure have the deep pits, coffins and secondary ledges typical of both Shang and Zhou tombs, neither is typical of the Central Plains. The earliest Yu tomb (Lu & Hu, 1988, pp. 17–35) and those at Shigushan, with the famous groups found in the early twentieth century nearby at Daijiawan (Chen, 2015), together preserved the largest number of mid- or late-eleventh century BC bronzes known to date. This phenomenon alone is very surprising, suggesting that the people in this region were politically or militarily influential and were rewarded at the time of the conquest and its immediate aftermath. The most elaborate of the bronzes were even cast at the Anyang foundry at Xiaomintun and must have come to the Baoji area either first as gifts to the Zhou, or as post-conquest gifts from the Zhou to their allies (Chen, 2015, pp. 482–485; Yue, 2006; Zhang, 2019). The numbers are far higher than those required for ceremonial banquets, notably those found in Shigushan M4 (Wang et al., 2016). A chronological sequence of ritual bronzes in the tombs of the Yu leaders shows us that their vessels followed almost precisely the changes in shape and design used in other major Zhou polities, confirming that the Yu remained in close contact with the Zhou down to near the end of the tenth century BC (Lu & Hu, 1988). Such sequences, seen also in the Fen Valley, confirm that these non-Ji polities were recognised and accepted within the Zhou realm over a long period and must have been courted as valuable allies or clients. Inscriptions on the bronze vessels in different cemeteries indicate that many had been made for earlier owners and were later, after the Zhou conquest, allocated to the leaders in the western Wei valley (Hwang, 2012). Some locally made bronzes in the tomb of the last leader, buried at Rujiazhuang, illustrate a relatively low level of local skill and contrastively serve to confirm that many of the other bronzes must have come from metropolitan workshops (Lu & Hu, 1988, pp. 366–371). We suggest that all the members of the small polities in the Baoji area were recruited for Zhou military forces in order to help attack the Shang, and were subsequently rewarded with land and bronze vessels as allies and clients.

Fig. 5
figure 5

Top plan of Shigushan tomb M3, Baoji, Shaanxi province, eleventh century BC (after Liu et al., 2013, figs. 3; 4); bottom cheek-pieces for nose bands and hooks with jingles (after Shanghai, 2014, Pls. 6; 82). These separate hooks differ from the standard Shang form where the hooks were joined with a curved bar

Fig. 6
figure 6

modified from Lu & Hu, 1988, fig. 34)

Plan of tomb M13 of Yu state at Zhuyuangou, Baoji, Shaanxi province, end of the eleventh to the tenth century BC (

In this case study, a particularly interesting item from Shigushan is a pair of hooks with jingles at each end (Fig. 5). At Anyang, such rein hooks were standardised in a form in which a curved bronze bar was cast with a hook at each end, and there is so far no evidence of this kind of variation in any Shang or Zhou tombs (Zhongguo, 2007, col. pls. 27, 28). However, almost identical items are depicted on deer stones in Mongolia, where charioteers appear to have used a wide range of hook styles—ranging from curved bronze bars similar to those at Anyang, to individual hook pairs like those at Shigushan. Deer stone carvings indicate that such hooks would have been attached to a person’s belt, and used as rein-holders (Fig. 2c). The Shigushan hooks imply that the deceased had connections with areas to the north, where a greater diversity of rein-holder type was used. The horse cheek-pieces in this tomb are the square type, with a slit for a nose band, and were used either without a bit or with one of an organic material (Fig. 5) (Liu et al., 2013, fig. 72:7). Spikes for an interior lining of a cheek-piece were found among the horse tack at Lingtai, where a horse head was buried in a niche in one of the tombs (Chu, 1977, figs. 2 & 15:4).

A highly significant form of horse cheek-piece was retrieved from an early tenth century BC Yu polity tomb, M7 (Fig. 7d; Lu & Hu, 1988, p. 123, fig. 97:2). Its curved top and three holes imitate in bronze a cheek-piece type widely used in antler or bone over an immense area. Antler cheek-pieces were used not only across South Siberia but also on the Mongolian Plateau during the early first millennium BC (Taylor et al., 2016, p. 557, Fig. 2). The central hole of the three in such rod-shaped cheek-pieces was aligned at right-angles to the upper and lower ones. The same pattern was reproduced in the bronze copies, indicating that the steppe-Inner Asian version provided the model. These narrow, slightly bowed check-pieces may have been tied to a bronze bit, or attached through the central hole to one of an organic material, or wrapped around an antler tine, with the bridle secured to the cheek-piece through an upper and lower hole. The type demonstrates extraordinarily widespread contacts and influences extending as far west as Ukraine and Europe (Fig. 7a, b), as far east as the Minusinsk Basin (Fig. 7c) and thence into the Arc, where the same form was employed by the non-Ji clan taking the name Ba, as detailed below (Amzarakov et al., 2015; Boroffka, 1998; Britnell, 1976; Podobed et al., 2014; Takahama, 2011).

Fig. 7
figure 7

Cheek-pieces of the narrow rod-like form used in the steppe, with versions in bronze from the Yu state, Baoji, Shaanxi province, tenth century BC. a Fortified settlement of Subotovo, Ukraine, eleventh to ninth century BC (after Podobed 2014, fig. 7:4); b Kordlar tepe, Iran, 1250–1050 BC (after Podobed 2014, figs. 1:3; 4); c Sayany-Pogranichnoye-4 (after Amzarakov et al., 2015, fig. 4); d bronze cheek-piece from Yu lineage tomb Rujiazhuang M1 (after Lu & Hu, 1988, fig. 97:2); e Bronze cheek-piece from the Yu lineage tomb Zhuyuangou M7, tenth century BC (after Takahama, 2020, fig. 7:1); f, g Bronze cheek-piece from the Rujiazhuang M1, late tenth century BC (after Lu & Hu, 1988, fig. 222: 1, 2)

Few of the weapons from Shigushan have yet been published, but materials from other sites in the region also clearly reflect the broader connections of this artefact category. Weapons common in the Arc, but not on the Central Plains, or further west, are generally referred to as belonging to the Northern Zone (Yang et al., 2020). Both the Yu tombs (Lu & Hu, 1988, figs. 59–62) and those at Lingtai (Chu, 1977, figs. 13:3, 4) contained a fine array of unusual axes, one with a head above its shaft in the Yu tomb M13; also present were a mace—a weapon type associated with the Arc (Li, 2018)—and a mattock. A curved axe was also found at Lingtai (Zhang, 2014). The Yu leaders each had a bird-headed staff for banners, and willow-leaf swords, which are the absolute earliest examples of swords or daggers in China. The leaders at Lingtai had curved knives instead, similar to those depicted on deer stones. At Yu we find beaded ornaments of carnelian and faience, similar to those known from South Siberia (Novozhenov, 2012, p. 18, fig. 1); they also contain bosses (Fig. 6), which were probably appliqués that originally attached to tunics, leggings or boots; some may have originally been components belonging to organic shields which do not survive archaeologically either (the probable presence of which is indicated by the survival of some large bronze rings). Shields were clearly valued by the people buried at Chongxin, where substantial bosses of forged bronze have been recorded (Gansusheng, 2009, pl. 5:1). Because forging was not used on the Central Plains at this date, these are also signs of contact with people in Inner Asia or even further west (Chen et al., 2015). Perhaps the most remarkable example is a greave of forged bronze in tomb M1 at Shigushan —a form of armour also completely foreign to the Central Plains (Liu et al., 2013, p. 13, fig. 15). Furthermore, the small rectangular bone plates that were used by the Chongxin peoples in constructing their body armour (Gansusheng, 2009, pl. 49) are similar to those found at Rostovka in Siberia (Matyushchenko & Sinitsyna, 1988). While the non-Ji clans flourished in the western Wei valley until towards the end of the tenth century BC, thereafter they appear to have abandoned use of bronze ritual vessels or may have moved elsewhere. By this time, another people, described by the Zhou as the Rong, had started to advance southward (Li, 2006, pp. 180–185).

To illustrate the impact of the new forms of antler cheek-piece introduced at a Ji-clan cemetery at Xi’an, we will look briefly at material excavated at Zhangjiapo (Grieß et al., 2010; Zhongguo, 1999). Three major tombs of the Jing lineage (a Ji clan) were installed in a large cemetery with numerous smaller tombs. Bridle cheek-pieces and bits in these tombs include many examples of both antler and bronze, dating to the tenth, ninth and even eighth centuries BC. Among the oldest at Zhangjiapo is a pair of circular cheek-pieces, representative of a style that, in the early tenth century BC, replaced its square precursors. The use of complex bronze bits (Fig. 8a) in tandem with these cheek-pieces also signals that an important shift had taken place in the way chariots were controlled. Quite a large number of antler cheek-pieces were also used at Zhangjiapo, with 26 found in one of the three major tombs that date to the ninth century BC (Fig. 8b). As all of these three tombs were equipped with chariots on their southern ramps, the owners were likely to have been drivers or owners of chariot teams and may have had extensive contacts with those non-Ji clans who, we suggest, were known to have been expert at managing horses. Another antler cheek-piece was found in a catacomb tomb, which is a burial-style typical of north-western clans (Falkenhausen, 2006, p. 207). The bronze cheek-pieces from Zhangjiapo are especially interesting as they take features of their designs from antler examples (including the cheek-piece on the left in Fig. 8e, from nearby Fengxi [Lu, 1987, fig. 16:3], a cemetery where attendants were also buried prone—a style that was common to the Mongolian Plateau during the late second millennium BC).

Fig. 8
figure 8

Horn and bronze cheeckpieces from Zhou dynastic cemeteries at Fengxi and Zhangjiapo, at Xi’an, Shaanxi province. a bonze cheek-pieces and bit, Zhangjiapo, tenth century BC (after Zhongguo, 1999, fig. 166); b–d horn cheek-pieces, Zhangjiapo tenth to eighth centuries BC (after Zhongguo, 1999, fig. 247); e bronze cheek-piece, Fengxi, tenth to ninth century BC (after Lu, 1987, fig. 16); f–h bronze cheek-pieces imitating antler ones, Zhangjiapo ninth to eighth century BC (after Zhongguo, 1999, fig. 167)

These examples from a cemetery of the Zhou clan illustrate the ways in which regional practices of horse management were introduced directly into the centre of the settlements and chariot troops of dynastic leaders by people with their own burial customs. And this practice ensured the continuity of two styles of cheek-piece: traditional northern examples in antler horn or bone alongside bronze ones developed out of the rod-shaped examples, often in a comma shape. The continuous use of both types suggests that new horses with new drivers familiar with the antler rod type were continually introduced among the polities, both of the Ji clan and of the non-Ji.

The Liulihe Cemeteries at Fangshan, Baifu in Hebei Province, and Zhangjiapo Near Xi’an

The Zhou had despatched high-ranking members of their clan, the Ji, to set up the polity of Yan to control the region around Fangshan. There, an important cemetery at Liulihe southwest of Beijing offers us further information (Beijingshi, 1995). Geographically, this was a sensitive area, as raiders or invaders could move into it both from the northeast, and over the Jundushan Mountains from the Mongolian Plateau in the northwest,. The cemetery at Liulihe probably dates to the end of the eleventh century and into the tenth century BC, making it later in date in general than the important tombs at Shigushan and the first tombs of the Yu lineage. Two tombs have revealed some fine bronzes, a few with inscriptions naming the Yan elites. Narrow willow-leaf swords, typical of the Yu and also of the southwest, were also found here, as were a few beaded ornaments. Moreover, as in the cemeteries in Baoji, the ritual vessels came from a variety of different owners (Hwang, 2012), suggesting that they were seized by the Zhou to then give to their new allies. The people buried in the smaller tombs were less highly ranked, and from their various body positions we can suggest that they had diverse regional backgrounds. The skeletons of the main occupants in M22 and M105 are fragmentary or have disappeared (Beijingshi, 1995, p. 15, fig. 9, p. 33, fig. 22). However, both include an attendant, buried prone, who was likely to be among the many people who had moved south from the Mongolian Plateau (Rawson et al., 2020), perhaps even in the Shang period (Ji & Zhang, 1993; Zhang & Zhai, 2016). Both the Liulihe tombs, where ritually killed prone attendants were found, also contained narrow, curved cheek-pieces with the three holes (Fig. 9a, b). In M22 a pair of cheek-pieces imitates antler or horn in bronze (Fig. 9d). The cheek-pieces in tomb M105 were made of antler (Fig. 9b), and further examples were found in the chariot pit at the site.

Fig. 9
figure 9

Yan polity, founded by the Zhou, Beijing, with tombs from the cemetery at Liulihe. a bronze cheek-piece from M22; b horn cheek-piece from M105; c bronze C-shaped cheek-piece from tomb M53; d photo of the cheek-pieces and the bit from M22 (after Beijingshi, 1995, figs. 133:3, 4; 146:1; pl. 86)

Several other types of cheek-pieces were found in the Liulihe tombs, probably selected by people from different traditions of horse management who contributed to the chariot forces over a period of a century or so, each with slightly different ideas of best practice and the best kit. One of these cheek-pieces is shaped like the crescent moon, and it too has three perforations (Fig. 9c); the type seems to have been especially popular in the northeast, and turns up alongside cheek-pieces made of antler in a small group of three unusual tombs at Baifu near the Yan Mountains (Fig. 10a) (Beijingshi, 1976; Linduff et al., 2017, pp. 91–95). These latter tombs must have belonged to a small non-Ji clan, whose support the Yan polity may have sought. As well as a large number of varied weapons, some in Zhou style and others typical of the Arc, two of the tomb owners, a man and a woman, had a bronze helmet each (Fig. 10b); a similar but earlier helmet was found at Liulin in Shanxi province on the northern Yellow River (Yang, 1981, pp. 211–212, pl. 4:5). Although bronze helmets have been found further north (Honeychurch, 2015, p. 131, fig. 5.11) it is likely that there people more commonly used leather for helmets and armour (which were also made in bone and antler). When the northerners, as described by Cao Dazhi, exchanged horses for bronze with the late Shang (Cao, 2014), they may have been encouraged to replicate popular steppe objects, like helmets and bridle equipment, in bronze. The woman buried at Baifu had animal-headed daggers and also had bronze bosses around her feet and legs, originally on her boots or leggings; as in the Yu tombs (Fig. 6); this constitutes a form of dress unknown in the Central Plains. On the other hand, bronze chariot fittings indicate that this group valued and managed chariots in the Zhou manner. In addition, the Baifu tombs included some bronze ritual vessels cast at metropolitan centres, and these had been acquired without doubt from the Zhou, either as booty or as gifts (Beijingshi, 1976, pl. 2).

Fig. 10
figure 10

a Plan of Baifu, Beijing, tomb M2; b two helmets from the site, tenth century BC (after Beijingshi, 1976, figs. 2; 10)

Another tomb of an individual from elsewhere was found at Liulihe. It has a most unusual structure, but one repeated at the Ba and Peng cemeteries in the central region of the Arc. The large rectangular tomb pit is about 7.7 m long and 5.3 m wide, with a coffin chamber at the centre. It has a slanting passage at each of the four corners (Fig. 11) (Liulihe, 1990, col. pl. 1). This very rare burial type has also been found in central southern China, which suggests that interactions with non-Ji clans from the Arc continued southwards, across several widely scattered regions (Hubeisheng et al., 2013). The Liulihe tomb was badly looted and the robbers left behind only the remains of shields and antler armour, which reinforce the interpretation that this was the tomb of a powerful outsider. The shields stood on the secondary ledge, against the inside wall of the tomb pit, and were decorated with bosses in the shape of human faces—some with aggressively sharp teeth. A bronze helmet, similar to those found at Baifu, was found in the tomb. Several very fine inscribed bronzes have been excavated; however, their long inscriptions, which refer to Zhou elite activity, are somewhat incongruous among other contents of the tomb, and it is possible that these were either second-hand gifts or booty.

Fig. 11
figure 11

Photo of tomb M1193 with four channels at the corners, Liulihe, Beijing, tenth century BC (after Liulihe, 1990, pl.1)

The Centre, the Fen River and the Yellow River at Hancheng

The politics in this central region, where the south-flowing Yellow River and its tributary, the Fen, form interlinked agricultural basins, were more complex than in the two other areas discussed (Fig. 1); this much is clear when we examine the cemeteries. Here, the long-term occupation of non-Ji clans as clients of the Zhou court probably continued down to the end of the Western Zhou period, and well into the eighth century BC. Two polities founded by members of the Zhou royal clan clearly acted as barriers to further movement south by peoples in the north. The most important was the Jin polity on the Fen River, founded by a brother of King Wu, who conquered the Shang. Even after the Zhou left their base in the Wei basin in eighth century BC, the Jin remained the dominant power here. Its two main excavated cemeteries include one of lower-level elites at Tianma-Qucun (Fig. 12), with tombs from the early tenth down to the eighth, or even the seventh century BC (Beijing & Shanxisheng, 2000), and a cemetery for the Jin leaders and their consorts at Beizhao, with a further pair at Yangshe (Li, 2006, pp. 84–88). The tombs at Beizhao of the late tenth or ninth centuries BC have been partly looted, but large tombs of the ninth and eighth centuries BC escaped the robbers. For Beizhao, we only have preliminary reports and thus little information on horse equipment, although undoubtedly the lords owned both chariots and horses, as they had large chariot pits. Another branch of the Ji, the leaders of the Rui state, moved, in the late ninth century BC, from their original home in the Baoji area to the west bank of the Yellow River, where one of their cemeteries has been identified at Liangdaicun (Shaanxisheng et al., 2010).

Fig. 12
figure 12

(modified from Beijing & Shanxisheng, 2000, vol. 2, figs. 470; 655)

a Plan of Tianma-Qucun tomb M6130, tenth to ninth century BC; b horn and bronze cheek-pieces from the tomb

More surprising have been the discoveries of two very large cemeteries for polities founded by non-Ji clans:the Ba at Dahekou in Yicheng county and the Peng at Hengbei village in Hengshui town (Rawson et al., 2020, fig. 19). The Ba occupied land east of the Jin polity, while the Peng polity was further south (Fig. 1). The tombs are generally orientated west–east and in the case of Peng some of the leaders were laid prone. Two of the most important tombs in these cemeteries (one in each) have the four slanting passages (Fig. 13), one at each corner, which we previously noted in an example at Liulihe (see previous section, Fig. 11). Both cemeteries are enormous, and the major tombs are extravagantly equipped, suggesting that the lords were very powerful and very probably exerted pressure on the Zhou. As the excavation of tomb M1 in the Ba cemetery, one of the earliest identified so far, is the most fully reported, we shall concentrate primarily on this example, while briefly referring to others (Xie et al., 2020a). This tomb is especially relevant here, as it includes clear evidence of the use of rod-shaped antler cheek-pieces and weaponry regarded as typical of the Northern Zone.

Fig. 13
figure 13

(modified from Xie et al., 2019, fig. 4)

Ba and Peng tomb outlines with passages, tenth century BC. Left tomb M1 at Dahekou (after Xie et al., 2020a, fig. 3); right tomb M2158 at Hengshui, Shanxi province

In addition to the four sloping passages, which are located high up the shaft, the Dahekou M1 tomb has eleven niches, similar to those at Shigushan (Fig. 5), above the secondary ledge around a central coffin chamber which held a single coffin (Fig. 14). Even more unusual are two lacquered wooden figures standing between the niches on the south side of the pit (Xie et al., 2020a, figs. 6; 7, upper plan). To date, these are the earliest examples of tomb figures in China. They may have provided an impetus to or model for the wooden attendant figures in a Rui polity tomb, M502, at Liangdaicun, which would indicate a form of cultural exchange between members of very different polities in the area (Shaanxisheng et al., 2010, pls. 52–54).

Fig. 14
figure 14

Plan Ba tomb with niches, M1, Dahekou, Shanxi province (modified from Xie et al., 2020a, figs. 6; 9; 10)

The Ba lord in M1 at Dahekou, as we saw from the tomb construction, shared a background with people buried both at Liulihe and at Shigushan near Baoji. He also owned weapons, including willow-leaf swords, shafted axes and a bird-headed staff, comparable with those employed in the Yu polity (Xie et al., 2020a, figs. 88, 91:4, 96, 98, 99, 101), as well as a curved axe, also seen at Lingtai (Zhang, 2014); and, as in the large tomb at Liulihe (Liulihe, 1990, p. 103, fig. 127), the tomb displays several large shields, in this case lacquered. The extraordinary number of bronze ritual vessels—71 in all—far exceeding the number required for standard ceremonial banquets, demonstrates close links with the Zhou court that the owner (or, at least those who buried him) wished to display to the Zhou, to his ancestors and to his clan. The vessels are of a very high quality, several having been cast with well-composed and written inscriptions. Such work is likely to have originated in metropolitan workshops under the direction of experienced overseers.

The tomb occupant had very evidently been a leader of chariots and horses. He was interred with 237 bronze chariot-fitting or horse-tack elements, as well as a significant number of bone and antler cheek-pieces. Some of the bronze cheek-pieces are rectangular in shape, with the loop for the nose band, mentioned earlier (Xie et al., 2020a, fig. 105:5). The deceased was buried with eight of these: four pairs (perhaps for a single chariot with four horses), representing late versions of the early type (Fig. 15a). But he also had 18 antler cheek-pieces with the usual pattern of three holes in two different planes, already discussed (Figs. 15b, 7a–c). One of his immediate descendants took up the new type of bronze cheek-piece cast in a comma shape derived from the antler rod form (Xie et al., 2018a, p. 251; Fig. 20). Additional contacts are suggested by the lord’s ownership of an archer’s thumb ring in bone (Fig. 16a) (Xie et al., 2020a, fig. 129:5). This archery tool must have been widely used, but probably more commonly took the form of a simple leather covering of the thumb and part of the hand. The Ba continued to occupy this area down to the eighth century BC, using both antler cheek-pieces and Zhou-style bronze tack throughout (Fig. 17, A8, B15) (Xie et al., 2020a; Zhu et al., 2019). While we will not discuss the Peng tombs in detail, we include them in our table of Ji and non-Ji burials (Table 1) to illustrate the strength in the Fen River basin of the non-Ji clans alongside their Ji contemporaries (Khayutina, 2017b).

Fig. 15
figure 15

Two types of cheek-pieces from Ba tomb M1, Dahekou, Shanxi province, tenth century BC. a in bronze for a noseband; b in antler (after Xie et al., 2020a, figs. 105:5; 128:5)

Fig. 16
figure 16

Two thumb rings. a bone from tomb M1, Dahekou, Shanxi province, tenth century BC (after Xie et al., 2020a, fig. 129:3); b jade from Liangdaicun, Shaanxi province, eighth century BC (Sun et al., 2007, fig. 27)

Fig. 17
figure 17

Development of cheek-pieces and bits in the Arc and in Central Plains. Type A: 1 Dahekou; 2 Tianma-Qucun; 3 Liulihe; 4 Zhangjaipo; 5 Baoji, Rujiazhuang; 6 Shaolingyuan; 7 Sanmenxia; 8 Dahekou; 9–11 Xiaoheishigou; 12–14 Jundushan; 15, 16 Zhaitouhe; Type B: 1, 2 Dasikong; 3 Shigushan; 4 Zhangjiapo; 5 Baoji, Zhuyuangou; 6 Fengxi; 7, 8 Baoji, Rujiazhuang; 9 Zhangjiapo; 10, 11 Pingdingshan; 12, 13 Luoyang; 14 Liangdaicun; 15 Dahekou; 16 Liangdaicun; 17, 18 Tianma-Qucun; 19 Bengbu; 20, 21 Marquis Yi of Zeng’s tomb

Table 1 Summary of the tombs and their contents, described in this paper, of both the Ji (bold) and non-Ji clans during the Western Zhou period

The high social value of horses in the region is also very clear in the tombs of the Rui lords of the Ji clan at Liangdaicun, whose period of greatest activity was in the ninth and eighth centuries BC. Many tombs display bronze horse armour along with small sections of bronze armour used for personal protection (Shaanxisheng et al., 2010, pls. 125–131). All of these pieces were forged rather than cast, using a technology that we have noted already as non-native to the Central Plains, and suggestive of technologies and customs introduced from further northwest (Chen et al., 2009). We can see that the lords of the Jin and Rui states, as well as their consorts, adopted some of the decorative items used by the Ba that were ultimately derived from the steppe (Novozhenov, 2012, p. 18; Fig. 1). These include hanging pendants in jade, carnelian and faience. The Ba lord in Dahekou M1 owned early examples of these (Xie et al., 2020a, pp. 275–281). More extravagant hangings with multiple types of beads and jades appear in many of the later tombs of the Ji clan members, not just in the Jin and Rui polities nearby, but also further east in the Guo and Ying polities along the Yellow River where it runs east (Henansheng & Pingdingshanshi, 2012; Henansheng & Sanmenxiashi, 1999). Here also we find antler and bone rod-shaped cheek-pieces as well as bronze ones (Fig. 17, B6).

A Rui lord of the eighth century BC at Liangdaicun also had archer thumb rings, but in gold and jade (Fig. 16b), and he and his consort had exceptionally ostentatious displays of beads and jades (Huang, 2013; Rawson, 2013). His numerous gold ornaments, as well as a gold belt (Sun et al., 2007) indicate a new taste for gold that was likely brought from the north by the Ba, among others (Xie et al., 2018b, pl. 40:3, 4). His possession of a belt in gold suggests an even closer relationship with more distant steppe lords who prized such display (Chugunov et al., 2010). This development is a very important sign of the growing exchanges with Inner Asia, as materials and technologies from the north reached the Central Plains, probably accompanying northern horses. In return, the Zhou cemented their relationships with fine ritual bronzes as part of this exchange. From the Han period (206 BC–AD 220), if not earlier, the search for horses led dynastic leaders to contribute much more in silk, lacquer and bronze, often presented as gifts (Twitchett & Loewe, 1986, p. 397, table 10; Hansen, 2012, p. 16). By the ninth and eighth centuries BC, the search for horses had become a conspicuous factor in the exchange of materials and technologies between Eurasia and the Central Plains.

Changes in the Ninth to the Fifth Century BC

The collapse of Zhou power in the Wei valley, which the Zhou left in the eighth century BC, followed a prolonged engagement with the Quanrong or the Xianyun in the Arc and was accompanied by upheavals in the court (Li, 2006, p. 274). In the difficult years of the second half of the ninth century BC attempts at stability had been marked by major changes instituted in the offerings made to to the ancestors, sometimes termed the Ritual Reform (Rawson, 1999); but the ritual changes were probably just one aspect of a much larger crisis, during which relationships between peoples of the Central Plains, the Arc, and the steppe shifted fundamentally (Li, 2006, pp. 187–194). Major cultural reorganisation had taken place in the north, bringing to an end the domination of the Deer Stone-Khirigsuur (DSK) cultural complex across the Mongolian Plateau (Honeychurch, 2014), and this was accompanied by what may have been the introduction of the first extensive mounted horseback riding into this area of the steppe (Taylor et al., 2017). Significant climate issues around 850 BC (van Geel et al., 2004) almost certainly encouraged southward movement. Attacks by people with chariots are recorded in bronze vessel inscriptions, and these exacerbated tensions among the polities on the Central Plains (Li, 2006, pp. 147–150). We can mark these cumulative changes not only in the Ritual Reform and Zhou departure from the Wei valley, but also in the phenomenon of large-scale movement of new peoples into the northeast: first those today named as belonging to the Upper Xiajiadian cultural group of the ninth to eighth centuries BC, known for their swords, mirrors and unusual horse tack (Linduff et al., 2017, pp. 104–118; Liu & Xu, 1975; Neimenggu & Ningchengxian, 2009); followed by people whose burials are known from cemeteries south of the Yan Mountains, on the slopes of the Jundushan, and which date to the seventh to fifth century BC (Beijingshi, 2010; Shulga, 2015). The tombs of both groups appear highly unusual and do not belong within Central Plains traditions (Fig. 18). Those of the Upper Xiajiadian are varied; many make use of stone structures, a typically northern Eurasian tradition (Gosden et al., 2019; Taylor et al., 2019) that is associated with early pastoralists, and used much earlier in the northeast over many millennia (Peterson & Lu, 2013). The high-ranking tombs at Jundushan, which are primarily laid east–west, are very different: they have a coffin at the centre of a broad sunken space, which narrows from a wide rear towards the other end, and was covered with stones. Importantly, these latter tombs include an array of animal heads, a longstanding funerary tradition linked with steppe cultures (Piggott, 1962). The occupants here obviously valued bronze animal plaques, with which they adorned their clothes and which they hung from their belts. Some of these interments preserve evidence of a bronze belt system involving double plaques with a slot through which a belt passed—a device widely used in South Siberia and the steppes of Kazakhstan. In some tombs, the belts carried simplified forms of the decoration seen among the belts at Arzhan 2 in the Tuva Republic. While those tombs have been described as belonging to a Scythian political empire (Taylor et al., 2020), we prefer to recognise pronounced material similarities as part of a shared culture and follow the term Scytho-Siberian, as used by Di Cosmo (2002, pp. 32–35; see also Beijingshi, 2010, vol. 3, p. 1230, fig. 721; Chugunov et al., 2010, pl. 29; Shulga, 2020; cf Taylor et al., 2020).

Fig. 18
figure 18

Comparison of tomb plans and cheek-pieces from three sites. Tomb plans: left Xiaoheishigou tomb M11 (after Nengmenggu and Ningchengxian 2009, fig. 284); right Jundushan tomb M18 (after Beijingshi, 2010, fig. 42); cheek-pieces and bits: a Arzhan 1, Tuva Republic (after Grjaznov, 1984, fig. 12:1); b, c Arzhan 2, Tuva Republic (after Chugunov et al., 2010, pls. 141:2; 142:9); d–f Xiaoheishigou  (after Neimenggu & Ningchengxian, 2009, figs. 285; 304; 321); g–k Jundushan (after Shulga, 2015, fig. 64)

The people carried daggers and axes. Bronze bits and cheek-pieces among the Upper Xiajiadian show varieties of improvisation and innovation in managing horses, perhaps stimulated by plentiful available bronze, and combined both bar-shaped and jointed metal bits with different kinds of cheek-pieces, including quite a number made of antler (Neimenggu & Ningchengxian, 2009, pp. 352–355) (Fig. 18d–f). At Jundushan, bronze bits with stirrup-shaped ends, paired with bronze or organic cheek-pieces (Shulga, 2015, fig. 23) (Fig. 18g–k), are of the same style found at Arzhan 1 and 2 (Fig. 18a–c) (Chugunov et al., 2010; Grjaznov, 1984). There, too, bronze bits were used with antler or bronze cheek-pieces to which they were tied (Horvath, 2020). Neither the people of the Upper Xiajiadian nor those at Jundushan were buried with chariot fittings, and we may conclude that they probably owned light carts and may also have been riders. In the light of the similarities of the belt plaques and the bits with those at Arzhan 1 and 2, it is likely that the people at Jundushan had strong connections with the Mongolian Plateau and South Siberia. That the Zhou adopted neither these stirrup-shaped bits, nor those of their predecessors among the Upper Xiajiadian people, is a sign that there was little or no exchange between these groups and the people on the Central Plains. This is an important contrast with the impact that earlier non-Ji clans had had among the Zhou polities. At the same time, ritual vessels in both tomb areas are very limited and seem to be random acquisitions; they do not offer sets for ceremonial banquets. Those that do appear may have been acquired by raiding, or the tomb occupants may have in life discovered several of the many vessel hoards that were buried in the area at the point when the power of the Yan polity was declining (Beidong, 1974; Qi, 1979). In other words, these regional groups, who had arrived in the northeast, had much less interaction with the Zhou and do not seem to have been either their clients or their allies.

Around the same time, over the ninth to seventh centuries BC, with steppe-related groups moving into the northeast, the Zhou polities made their own changes to horse equipment (Fig. 19), perhaps stimulated by these developments. From the late second millennium BC, the Zhou had switched from square cheek-pieces to circular ones, and then again to larger comma-shaped versions, with still others imitating antler (many of which are likely to have required the bits to be tied to the cheek-pieces: Fig. 7) (Shao & Shi, 2018, 2019; Wu, 2002). But, by around 850 BC, when the steppe peoples at Arzhan 1 started to use their stirrup-shaped bits (Grjaznov, 1984) and the Upper Xiajiadian people had already moved into the northeast, significant changes also appear in the cheek-pieces used among the polities on the Central Plains. Among the Jin at Tianma-Qucun, as well as in the Rui state, the ends of the bits used for tying them to the cheek-pieces were greatly enlarged, enabling narrow versions of the earlier cheek-pieces to be run through their centres (Takahama, 2020, fig. 9). This method of assembly is more stable and efficient than tying the cheek-pieces to the bit, which typically caused heavy wear on the connecting elements (Fig. 19). Simplified forms of cheek-pieces and bits (which only became popular elsewhere in Eurasia slightly later: Dietz, 2006) spread across the Zhou realm, and were widely used down to the end of the sixth century BC.

Fig. 19
figure 19

Development and spread of bronze cheek-pieces cast by Zhou, with cheek-pieces thrust through the loops of the bits. This simplification happened as the new types of bronze bit spread in the eastern steppe (Fig. 17). a Liangdaicun, Shaanxi province, eighth century BC (after Shaanxisheng et al., 2010, fig. 61:1); b Guojiamiao, Hubei province, eighth to seventh century BC (after Xiangfanshi et al., 2005, pl. 38:3); c, d Tianma-Qucun, Shanxi province eighth to seventh century BC (after Beijing & Shanxisheng, 2000, fig. 560); e Bengbu, Anhui province, sixth century BC (after Anhuisheng & Bengbushi, 2013, fig. 69:4)

Meanwhile, groups of non-Ji clans (who were given the umbrella name of Rong by the leaders of the central states) played an increasing role in the politics of the next few centuries on the Central Plains. They may have been the driving force that led to new efforts to acquire horses (Shaanxisheng et al., 2018). A new form of cheek-piece carved from bone or antler had been introduced with the larger bits. This now became standard (Figs. 19c, 20a), and it followed the new system, being inserted into the two end-loops of the bit, requiring only two holes, not three. Antler now often replaced the slender bronze cheek-piece, a clear change in fashion. Major tombs containing these include those of the Jin state (Shanxisheng & Taiyuanshi, 1996, fig. 62:2), those of many other high elite members of the central states, and also those of the powerful southern state of the Marquis Yi of Zeng at Sui County, dated to 433 BC (Fig. 20a).

Fig. 20
figure 20

Antler cheek-pieces. a from the tomb of the Marquis Yi of Zeng, 433 BC, Hubei province (photo by Jessica Rawson); b from Rong tombs at Zhaitouhe, Shaanxi province, fourth century BC (after Shaanxisheng et al., 2018, col. pl. 64)

It is very likely that the reversion to antler or bone cheek-pieces can be attributed to the members of the Rong, as they now formed small settlements or polities among the central states themselves. The few excavated tombs of the Rong show their own continued use of the Inner Asian forms of bone and antler cheek-pieces (Shaanxisheng et al., 2018, col. pls. 64, 65) (Fig. 20b). These cheek-pieces were also standard among the people who moved in from the north across the Arc at its northwestern end. A significant range of such horse equipment is found in their tombs in present-day Ningxia province (Xu et al., 1993). These changes, occurring from the ninth and eighth centuries BC onwards, were probably consequences of the widespread movement of people, many of them riders, who, unsettled by climatic/environmental change were attracted by the possibilities offered by the upheavals and uncertainties on the Central Plains. The Chinese histories, the Annals of the Spring and Autumn with the Zuo Zhuan commentary, give ample evidence that the Rong, and others named the Di, intervened in the almost continuous warfare, engaging in both alliances and attacks, and generally made use of the destabilisation that followed (Di Cosmo, 2002, pp. 108–116; Durrant et al., 2016).

Discussion

The relations of the agricultural peoples of the Central Plains with non-Ji clans were clearly complex, particularly during the first half of the Western Zhou period (c.1050–850 BC), and the burial record across the Arc region as a whole preserves evidence for high-status individuals from a number of different clans. The majority, as we have seen, had apparently been offered and had accepted large numbers of high-quality ritual vessels to, as we may surmise, cement relationships. These were gifts of huge material and symbolic value and suggest that the deceased were clients or allies of the Zhou. The management of such relationships appears to have differed across the three areas described (Fig. 1). The people in the western Wei valley appear to have been exceptionally well-rewarded. But the evidence we have to date from dynastic Zhou cemeteries at Liulihe, near Beijing, and Zhangjiapo, at Xi’an, is rather different. Here a variety of people were buried at both cemeteries, suggesting that they had been drawn into the society, or perhaps into the fighting forces, of the Zhou state. Alongside the Yan polity, the tombs at Baifu indicate that a very small clan had also moved in, perhaps independently, and had managed to receive or otherwise acquire ritual vessels. The cemeteries of the Ba and Peng in the central region of the Fen are of remarkable size, which seems likely to have been a consequence of their accommodation within the Zhou realm over a long period of time, as they were located not far from the major Jin polity (Khayutina, 2017b).

Despite their differences, these three sub-regional Arc groups shared some forms of tomb structure. In particular, they had the same types of weaponry, such as willow-leaf swords, shafted or shaft-hole axes, curved axes, and the bird-headed staff. A central factor in this exploration of new materials and technologies brought into central China was that the non-Ji clans, who arrived over many decades and even over nearly three hundred years, had their own direct contacts with areas here generally identified as being in Inner Asia. In all three groups of tombs discussed (Table 1), forged bronze, shields, bosses on leggings or boots, helmets, bone or antler plates for armour, and beaded ornaments indicate contacts with practices and technologies in distant regions of northern Inner Asia (Rawson, 2013).

Horse equipment offers evidence of at least four different moments of contact over time, mediated by the non-Ji clans, with the horse breeders of the north (Fig. 17).

  1. 1.

    At Baoji we see a clear moment of change from the early first stage, which had started in the late Shang, continuing with the use of square cheek-pieces with nose band slits (Fig. 5), to an innovation in the tenth century BC, with a bronze form of the rod antler cheek-pieces with three holes (Fig. 7d, e), which marks stage 2.

  2. 2.

    The tenth century BC must have been an important moment for new contacts with the steppe or the northern parts of the Arc, with antler and bone cheek-pieces employed also in the central area around Xi’an and the northeast. The narrow antler type with three holes dominated this second stage, with different modifications in bronze effectively adopting the outlines of the steppe cheek-pieces (Figs. 7d–g, 8e–h, 12b).

  3. 3.

    The third stage followed political and military upheavals that affected a large region from the late ninth century BC, and were concurrent with the Ritual Reform (Li, 2006, pp. 141–192). At this time, new invading groups brought bronze bits with stirrup-shaped ends to attach to cheek-pieces, as at Xiaoheshigou (Fig. 18d–f) and Jundushan (Fig. 18g–k). These are forms that are also known from South Siberia, especially at Arzhan (Fig. 18a–c). And within the Zhou polities a new arrangement drew the cheek-pieces through enlarged holes at the ends of the bit (Fig. 19).

  4. 4.

    The multiple political and social changes in the late ninth and eighth centuries BC set the stage for the upheavals of the Eastern Zhou period, when small groups of the Rong settled among the Zhou polities, introducing a new wave of interest in antler and bone cheek-pieces (Figs. 18c; 19).

As we summarise in Fig. 17 and Table 1, at all periods, some antler, bone, or occasionally wooden, cheek-pieces continued in use even though bronze ones were widely available on the Central Plains (Figs. 7, 17). As both antler and bronze examples were buried concurrently as late as the eighth century BC in the same cemetery, for example the Guo cemetery at Sanmenxia (Henansheng & Sanmenxiashi, 1999, p. 104, fig. 90, p. 204, fig. 155:1, p. 208, fig. 157:10) (Fig. 17 A7) or the Ba cemetery at Dahekou (Zhu et al., 2019, fig. 2:3, 4; Xie et al., 2020b, fig. 60:7) (Fig. 17 A8, B15), the antler cheek-pieces suggest that members of regional groups, familiar with such horse equipment, continued to be employed managing horses in several different polities.

Throughout these changes, we see that Zhou polities themselves also deliberately adopted or adapted northern types of horse equipment. At the same time, they presumably also acquired horses, and those who could manage horses and who had knowledge of horse breeding, raising, training, and care. In other words, the small technical details of the horse bridles and their relation to changes in horse management in Inner Asia and further west confirm Zhou interests in horses from the north and their reception of non-Ji clans, who brought horse equipment and horses trained up with such equipment. Bridles and the changing types of the cheek-pieces, especially those made from antler or horn, provide us archaeologically with significant proxies for contact with people from Inner Asia. It seems clear the such people must have interacted with non-Ji clans on the northern edges of the Central Plains, and were part of the system that guaranteed the arrival of northern horses. If we wish to see the developing relationships between the non-Ji clans and the Zhou in more transactional terms, we can summarise our argument as suggesting that the outsiders gained land and a wealth of bronze, and thus status, within the ritually-framed organisation of the agricultural basins; the Zhou dynastic leaders turned these potential enemies into allies and in doing so, they gained fighters and horses. Additional benefits included new materials and technological exchanges, with the introduction of gold, iron, forging and, in due course, a wide range of daggers, swords and mirrors, which arrived along with the drivers who brought the horses.

As in later periods of East Asian history (Di Cosmo et al., 2018), major changes in the climate and environment of desert and steppe regions, such as prolonged intervals of wetter conditions, might have regularly altered pastoral social and ecological dynamics, allowing people to move south from the steppe with greater ease. Climate and environmental stimuli for population movements across the steppe and the Arc are an interesting avenue for future inquiry, but they require much more study to elucidate the detail related to the cases laid out here (Di Cosmo, 2020; Huang et al., 2003). On present evidence, we see that people moved south periodically. As they did so, peoples from the Arc not only settled near the Central Plains but were also drawn into close association with early Zhou societies. We argue that the associations we have described were above all driven by Zhou need for strong horses for the following reasons.

The Central Plains, whose great agricultural abundance supported the dynasty, was not an ideal environment for herds of horses.Yet, from the numbers mentioned in bronzes inscriptions, we know that the activities of state demanded large numbers of the animals (Wu, 2013, Table 1). Having evolved in the periglacial grasslands, horses are adapted to the cold, dry conditions of the steppe. As they rely on sweating to maintain a suitable body temperature, the combination of high temperatures and high humidity can introduce serious health challenges, such as heat stress and colic (Diakakis & Tyrnenopoulou, 2018). In the summer, the Pacific Monsoon brings heavy rain across all of southern China, decreasing over the Central Plains and into the southern half of the Arc. The south is characterized by lakes and marshes, and large areas of paddy fields, with few areas of suitable habitat and high risk of insect-borne disease. In the Central Plains, some high humidity and severe temperatures pose another considerable threat to horse breeding. Today, around Xi’an (the early Zhou administrative centre), the July temperature may be 40° centigrade, with 100 mm of rainfall and an average humidity of over 70%. Under these conditions, would-be horse breeders may have faced high mortality and low fertility among their herds, especially by comparison with northern zones.

In addition to climate and environment, horse breeding in Central China also introduces nutritional deficiencies. Horses require certain minerals and vitamins. Among the best-studied of these is selenium, essential for muscle growth (Fonseca et al., 2016), a nutrient obtained through plant consumption, and determined by an area’s underlying geology. The geographical distribution of selenium has been carefully studied across modern China (Fig. 21) as it has significant impacts on human health (Li et al., 2014; Marek, 2019; Rayman, 2000). In south China, reasonable levels of selenium are available, as the heavy rains circulate minerals through the landscape (Sun et al., 2016), but this area is poorly suited to horse breeding for other environmental reasons. For the Central Plains, and extending north and south along the regions covered by the Monsoon, greater rain increases selenium availability, but this selenium is rapidly volatilised in the summer heat, encouraged by micro-organisms. Consequently, within the borders of modern-day China, only in the north and northwest areas (where the southern Monsoon generally does not reach and the summer temperatures as well as the humidity are lower), are lands with adequate selenium found. Areas with suitable selenium extend into the Mongolian Plateau and South Siberia, including the Altai Mountains, regions that boast extensive grasslands for pasture. The belt of land with lower rain and high volatilisation—which spans the heart of China’s early dynastic political and economic power base—therefore suffered from a chronic nutrient deficiency that may well have hampered efforts to breed strong horses. Another key limitation on horse breeding was agricultural land-use practices. In both the Shang and the Zhou, land across the Central Plains that was not crop farmed was marshy and prone to flooding, or covered in scrubland and forests. The population was not accustomed to joint farming of herded animals and crops and was, at all periods for which we have written evidence, reluctant to replace agriculture with pasture (Grass, 2019).

Fig. 21
figure 21

(modified by Limin Huan from Sun et al., 2016, fig. 1)

Distribution of soil selenium concentration (mg/kg) in modern China. The circled areas were favoured by later emperors for ranches

This covariance between climate, habitat, and nutritional deficiency introduced structural limitations on raising large herds of strong horses on the Central Plains. When faced by chariots and, later, cavalry from the north, the dynasties had either to seek horses from areas with better pasture in today’s regions of Mongolia, Inner Mongolia, the Ordos region and along the Hexi corridor and the higher lands of Xinjiang, or to try to create ranches in the northwest. This imbalance had large-scale geopolitical consequences: later historical texts document the extensive efforts made by Chinese states to acquire and pasture northern horses to fend off the mounted forces from northern Eurasia (Beckwith, 2009; Di Cosmo, 2002, pp. 83–90; Shulga, 2020; Hansen, 2012, pp. 80–82; Skaff, 2012, pp. 257–271; Tackett, 2017, pp. 78–80). For example, when the Ming emperors, in turn, were faced by continuous pressures from the Mongols, they attempted to persuade the peasants to herd horses; but the costs for peasants were too great and their horses were too weak. The emperors, as many before them, had to turn back to acquiring horses from the north (Brook, 2019, pp. 128–131; Grass, 2019).

The search for a continuous supply of horses from the north was initiated during the late Shang and Zhou dynasties and became a major aspect of warfare, as northerners from the Arc moved as clients or allies to lands on the northern edges of the Central Plains. Given the very different material cultures of the northerners, with their own contacts with Inner Asia, the horses that they brought were often managed with antler cheek-pieces in steppe style, accompanied by artefacts of gold, iron, forged bronze and beaded ornaments, technologies that were rapidly adopted and adapted by the Zhou polities (Rawson, 2013). Although from the ninth century BC, with its increasing climatic problems (van Geel et al., 2004), pressure on the Wei Valley by horse-owners from the north led to conflict and further incursions over the long term, dynastic leaders continued to seek horses from the north and especially the northwest. The development of prolonged, formalized conflicts with steppe groups from the Mongolian Plateau interrupted the important horse exchange across the Arc. As we know from the famous story of the blood-sweating horses of Ferghana (Kelekna, 2009, pp. 145–147), one of the motives of the Han move into the Western Regions (present-day Xinjiang) was to find not only allies but horses, so as to adequately respond to a major deficit caused by prolonged conflicts with the Xiongnu (Cooke, 2000). Such persistent, enduring demands for horses became the foundation of long-term exchanges, with silk, lacquer and metalwork offered to horse breeders outside of the hostile steppes, including Central Asia and the Himalaya. These exchanges helped catalyze important social and economic changes across China (Zhang et al., 2018).