1 Introduction
In recent years, European archaeologists have begun to develop a new view of the Bronze Age, one which emphasises long-distance trade, transport and connectivity. Such ideas are not completely novel but, compared to even ten years ago, we have a much deeper understanding of how people, things and ideas were circulating. Studies of ancient DNA have shown that a large migration into central Europe from the western steppes occurred in the third millennium BC (Reference HaakHaak et al. 2015). Trade had long been considered an important element of the Bronze Age world. Reference ChildeChilde (1930) stressed that the production of bronze required the exchange of tin, lead and copper – metals which were only found in certain limited places – but new research has explored the social and cultural meanings of this trade. Reference VandkildeVandkilde (2016) coined the term bronzisation as a way to emphasise the processes by which bronze formed a transculture across Europe and beyond. A transculture can be understood as engagements with the world which encourage meanings transcending place of origin; those meanings can be quite different but share a certain unity in diversity (Reference VandkildeVandkilde 2014; Reference Autiero and CobbAutiero & Cobb 2021).
The darker side of Bronze Age society has also come into clearer focus. In a recent essay, Reference Molloy, Horn, Fagan, Fibiger, Hudson and TrundleMolloy and Horn (2020: 117) write that ‘The transformation of warfare in the Bronze Age was perhaps the most profound transformation in human history.’ They go on to explain how new weapons such as swords, shields and body armour established ways of fighting which remained little changed for millennia thereafter. These technical changes were associated with a new sociality of violence and it has been argued that warriors formed a type of Bronze Age ‘craft specialist’ (Reference MolloyMolloy 2017). Since 2008, excavations in the Tollense valley in north-east Germany have uncovered a Bronze Age battlefield dated to circa 1300–1250 BC and which involved fighting between as many as two thousand combatants, implying that armies already existed by the late second millennium BC (Reference Molloy, Horn, Fagan, Fibiger, Hudson and TrundleMolloy & Horn 2020: 134). Bronze cylinders found at Tollense may have been the personal belongings of a warrior who came from far to the south, suggesting that the battle was part of a supra-regional conflict (Reference Uhlig, Krüger, Lidke, Jantzen, Lorenz, Ialongo and TerbergerUhlig et al. 2019). A stable isotope study also found evidence for a diverse, non-local group of warriors at Tollense (Reference Price, Frei, Brinker, Lidke, Terberger, Frei and JantzenPrice et al. 2019). Growing violence in Bronze Age Europe may have been associated with the spread of steppe pastoralists (Reference SchroederSchroeder et al. 2019), leading New Scientist magazine to ask: ‘were the Yamnaya the most murderous people in history?’ (Reference BarrasBarras 2019).
New ideas about long-distance interaction during the Bronze Age recall debates some years ago over ancient world systems (Reference FrankFrank 1993; Reference SherrattSherratt 1993; Reference RatnagarRatnagar 2001). In my previous research I also made use of world systems theory (Reference HudsonHudson 1999, 2004). However, while previous writings on ancient world systems saw core/periphery relations as determining economic dependency and ‘underdevelopment’, the relationship between core and periphery in the Bronze Age seems to be much more fluid than originally conceived. The fact that sources of tin, copper and lead were limited – and geographically marginal to centres of power in the Near East and eastern Mediterranean – gave the ‘barbarians’ of the periphery a new dynamism. In some regions, the economic power of the periphery continued long after the Bronze Age and Reference ScottScott (2017) has dubbed the period from the Bronze Age until around 1600 the ‘Golden Age of the Barbarians’. I use the term ‘barbarian niche’ to emphasise the new opportunities for trade available to non-state peoples from the Bronze Age onwards (Reference HudsonHudson 2019, Reference Hudson, Robbeets and Savelyev2020a).
The ‘barbarian niche’ is a deliberately tongue-in-cheek way of thinking about a more interconnected and ‘democratic’ Bronze Age, and is thus also a critique of state-centric views of the past. The idea of the barbarian niche suggests broad similarities in historical processes across Eurasia through the presence of what we might call the ‘meta-barbarian’. But to what extent can ‘bronzisation’ and other concepts developed by European archaeologists actually be applied outside Europe? In this Element I argue that many of the same processes of bronzisation were also at work in eastern Eurasia. This argument is provisional and perhaps at times provocative. In adopting a comparative approach, my intention is not to force East Asia into a European framework. The European research discussed here is itself new and sometimes controversial. Nevertheless, this Element proposes that the historical development of many societies in East Asia from the third millennium BC can be approached as part of a broad, Eurasia-wide process of bronzisation.
1.1 Bronze Transformations
One way to begin to explain the perspective adopted here is to note that bronze often engendered ‘creative translations’ in material culture, expressions which are not easily interpreted through standard typological frameworks (Reference Kristiansen and LarssonKristiansen & Larsson 2005: 13; Reference Sofaer, Jørgensen, Choyke, Fokkens and HardingSofaer, Jørgensen & Choyke 2013). Skeuomorphs – whereby an artefact fabricated in one medium is made to evoke the physical properties of another – are a common Bronze Age phenomenon. Such skeuomorphs should not be seen as inferior or uninventive; often they displayed great artistic creativity and, in this sense, ‘bronzisation’ was not just about bronze. In China, Shang elites made jade weapons which mimicked bronze yet retained the ‘native’ power of jade (Reference RawsonRawson 2017). In Korea, Japan and the Russian Far East, polished stone daggers, which clearly follow metal prototypes, appear before bronze itself. In fact, East Asian societies such as Mumun Korea (1300–400 BC) and Yayoi Japan (1000 BC–AD 250) seem to follow Bronze Age historical trajectories without possessing bronze in their earlier stages.Footnote 1 During the Yayoi, material culture sometimes incorporates designs from the preceding Neolithic Jōmon, one example being decorative patterns on bronze bells. This is usually understood as reflecting the continuing influence of Jōmon tradition (Reference 70ShitaraShitara 2014a), but a broader view would be to see Yayoi appropriation of the Jōmon as a new type of transculture, especially as some decorative designs on Final Jōmon pottery already seem to reflect continental influence (Reference Hudson, Bausch, Robbeets, Li, White and GilaizeauHudson et al. 2021).
In addition to material translations, in European archaeology the expanding world of the Bronze Age has been discussed in terms of trade, warrior aristocracies, pastoralism, migrations, maritime economies, religious institutions and new disease vectors. In this Element I focus particularly on two aspects of this complex transformation – trading/maritime dynamics and warrior aristocracies. As noted already, trade and the international division of labour grew in importance as bronze became the ‘economic motor’ of a new Eurasian economy (Kristiansen 2018). Trade required political institutions which allowed safe travel over ever greater distances. Trade and travelling are clearly linked to warriors in Bronze Age rock art in Europe (Reference Ling, Toreld, Horn and KristiansenLing & Toreld 2018). In East Asia, a system of long-distance travel is clear from texts like the Wei zhi, a section of which describes western Japan. This Chinese text has received attention mostly for its confusing directions to the kingdom of Yamatai, which supposedly controlled part of Japan at the time (Reference YoungYoung 1958; Reference KidderKidder 2007). Less often remarked upon is how it portrays a world in which traders and envoys could apparently move smoothly across vast areas. While the Wei zhi itself dates to the third century AD, the system of travel it describes must have been established much earlier.
The sea was crucial for Bronze Age communications and sailing technologies played a major role in the new connectivities (Reference Broodbank, Anderson, Barrett and BoyleBroodbank 2010). Less attention has been given to fishing and other economic uses of the sea. In Atlantic Europe, it is argued, there was a sudden decline in the exploitation of marine foods from the onset of the Neolithic (Reference Richards, Schulting and HedgesRichards, Schulting & Hedges 2003; Reference Cramp, Jones, Sheridan, Smyth, Whelton, Mulville, Sharples and EvershedCramp et al. 2014). While there are certainly exceptions to this trend – for example, excavations on Molène island off Brittany have produced evidence for an Early Bronze Age settlement which combined farming, fishing and exchange (Reference Pailler, Meller, Friedriech, Küßner, Stäuble and RischPailler et al. 2019) – a similar argument is sometimes made for parts of East Asia. For example, the Jōmon cultures of Japan are well known for their high dependence on the sea, but a significant decline in fishing with the arrival of cereal farming in the archipelago at the beginning of the first millennium BC has been noted (cf. Reference HudsonHudson 2019, Reference Hudson, Autiero and Cobb2021a, in press). However, there was a new trend towards more specialised use of the sea and marine resources in at least parts of East Asia from the third millennium BC. Furthermore, we should not assume that fishing groups never engaged in farming themselves. For too long, archaeologists in East Asia and elsewhere have focussed on ‘peasant farmers’ (Reference ZvelebilZvelebil 1995; Reference AminoAmino 2012) but, as discussed below, there is a need to consider alternative models, including what Reference Ling, Earle and KristiansenLing and colleagues (2018) have called the ‘maritime mode of production’ as discussed in section 2.1.
The recent publication of the Cambridge World History of Violence has provided a new, global perspective on this topic, but Bronze Age East Asia is thinly covered in these volumes and in this Element I want to take the opportunity to discuss the region in more depth. Building on Reference Hudson, Schulting, Gilaizeau, Fagan, Fibiger, Hudson and TrundleHudson and colleagues (2020), I discuss warfare and violence in Bronze Age Japan in a more comparative framework.
This Element is not an attempt at a synthesis of Bronze Age East Asia. Rather, the text explores maritime and warrior dynamics in Island East Asia in a comparative framework and provides a new ‘framing’ for the issues it discusses. Given the space limitations of the Element format, the arguments made here are provisional and designed to provoke debate. The author is currently writing a longer work in which a more detailed theoretical basis for these ideas will be presented.
1.2 Bronze Age East Asia: Some Orientations
There are two rather different ways of defining the Bronze Age in East Asia and indeed elsewhere. The traditional way is to look at when bronze actually began to be used in each regional sequence. In some parts of eastern Eurasia this can be quite late. In Korea and Japan, for example, bronze appears around the eighth and fourth centuries BC, respectively (Reference Rhee, Aikens, Choi and RoRhee et al. 2007: 413; Reference BarnesBarnes 2015; Reference FujioFujio 2015: 110). In some places, bronze is introduced at more or less the same time as iron, giving rise to terms like ‘Palaeometal Age’ in the Russian Far East or ‘Metal Age’ in Island Southeast Asia.
Another approach is to adopt a more standardised framework incorporating Eurasia as a whole. If the Bronze Age in the Near East began in the late fourth millennium BC and if bronze appeared in western China by 2800 BC (Gansu Provincial Cultural Relics Work Team et al. 1984), then might it not make sense to use the same periodisation even if some local areas had not yet adopted bronzeworking? In this approach the Bronze Age becomes a ‘world historical epoch’ (Reference Kristiansen, Fowler, Harding and HofmanKristiansen 2015). In my view this perspective makes a great deal of sense, even for the Japanese islands. While Japan remained one of the most isolated parts of Eurasia in the third millennium BC, many of the changes which occurred there from that time can be understood as a reaction to the Bronze Age as a world historical epoch (Reference Hudson, Bausch, Robbeets, Li, White and GilaizeauHudson et al. 2021).
On a regional scale, the problem of time/space classification is nicely illustrated by debates over Yayoi Japan. In an influential book titled Two Other Japanese Cultures, Reference FujimotoFujimoto (1988) attempted to classify the prehistoric cultures of Hokkaido and Okinawa as different but still ‘Japanese’. At the time, this was an important statement supporting a ‘multicultural’ identity. Fujimoto proposed three cultural zones located in the north, centre and south of the archipelago; these were separated by intermediate areas which he termed bokashi or ‘fuzzy’ zones (cf. Reference BattenBatten 2003: 72–3). Fujimoto’s approach was taken up by Reference FujioFujio (2013), who defined the Yayoi as a culture based on irrigated wet-rice farming and maintained through ‘Yayoi rituals’. Such definitions assume that wet-rice agriculture is the necessary basis of a ‘central’ Japanese culture. In my view, the great diversity and dynamism of the Yayoi period can be better understood through an approach which places the whole archipelago – and indeed its mainland connections – within the same frame of analysis. A similar perspective on Bronze Age China is adopted by Reference Campbell, Jaffe, Kim, Sturm and JaangCampbell and colleagues (2021).
Of course it would be unhelpful to insist that one of these two approaches to periodisation is necessarily superior to the other; both describe aspects of the same historical reality. As in medieval studies (Reference JervisJervis 2017), there is a need for a multi-scalar perspective which considers both the local and the global. Reference Sherratt, Wilkinson, Sherratt and BennetSherratt (2011: 4) reminds us that ‘It is the privilege of archaeology to deal with all scales of phenomena, from the global to the local, over timescales from the momentary to the long term.’ Furthermore, given our imperfect knowledge of the archaeological record, it can be hard to distinguish between the two approaches. When I was an undergraduate in the 1980s, for example, there was considerable excitement about early dates for bronze in Southeast Asia. Excavations in the mid-1970s at Ban Chiang in Thailand had produced radiocarbon dates which seemed to suggest that bronze had reached mainland Southeast Asia as early as 2000 BC. Reference White and HamiltonWhite and Hamilton (2009) have proposed that this reflects a separate ancestry from bronze in China and can be connected with the Seima–Turbino horizon distributed from Finland to the Altai. A reanalysis found that the early Ban Chiang dates are unreliable, concluding that bronze reached mainland Southeast Asia only around 1000 BC in a context of trade with China in cowrie shells and turtle plastrons (Reference Higham, Higham and KijngamHigham, Higham & Kijngam 2011). The most recent overview of the bronze chronology of north-east Thailand argues that there is now ‘near universal acceptance’ for this short chronology (Reference Higham and CawteHigham & Cawte 2021). The details of this debate will perhaps continue to be discussed but retain important implications for a broader historical interpretation.
A further problem is how we approach the end of the Bronze Age and the transition to the Iron Age. The term ‘Iron Age’ is rarely used in East Asian archaeology. This is sometimes because there is a very short period after the arrival of bronze before iron is also adopted. In the Primorye province of the Russian Far East, for instance, bronze was introduced around 900 BC and iron some four centuries later around 500 BC (Reference Popov, Zhushchikhovskaya and NikitinPopov, Zhushchikhovskaya & Nikitin 2019). In Europe, the Iron Age saw a move away from long-distance trade and a new tension between local autonomy and control (Reference KristiansenKristiansen 1998; Reference CunliffeCunliffe 2008). To some extent the same trend can be seen in East Asia. In the Warring States era (475–221 BC), the Chinese state attempted to prohibit the export of iron to outlying ‘barbarians’ yet the metal nevertheless spread to Korea and Japan through various non-state actors (Reference BarnesBarnes 2007: 65–7). One might say that Japanese society became more autonomous once iron deposits in the archipelago were widely exploited. That did not occur, however, until the late sixth century AD (Reference FujioFujio 2000: 97; Reference Matsugi, Knopf, Steinhaus and FukunagaMatsugi 2018); before then, the inhabitants of the Japanese islands obtained iron from the Korean peninsula in a trading system which, in its economic structure, was little changed from the Bronze Age. Furthermore, the period when Japan became metallurgically autonomous was one when it was increasingly influenced by new religious and political ideas, notably Confucianism, Buddhism and Taoism (Reference BarnesBarnes 2014; Reference Bauer and FridayBauer 2017; Reference Deal and FridayDeal 2017). The mix of these international ideologies with changing patterns of political and economic centralisation and decentralisation lends the period encompassing Japan’s Kofun and ‘classical’ (Nara–Heian) ages more similarities with what Reference Di Cosmo, Maas, Di Cosmo and MaasDi Cosmo and Maas (2018) call ‘Eurasian Late Antiquity’ than with the west Eurasian Iron Age.
However one approaches the periodisation of the Bronze Age in East Asia, there now seems little question that metallurgy spread from west to east across the steppes and neighbouring regions of Inner Eurasia (Reference ChernykhChernykh 1992; Reference Linduff and MeiLinduff & Mei 2009; Reference Liu and ChenLi & Chen 2012). The societies of the central plains of the Yellow River basin adopted bronze from that corridor zone but changed the steppe tradition in significant ways (Reference RawsonRawson 2017). While the Shang dynasty developed its distinctive bronze culture in the second millennium BC, the bronzeworking traditions of the northern steppe continued to spread east, influencing Korea and Japan. Despite some relatively small typological differences, many bronze swords and spearheads found in the Korean peninsula and the Japanese islands share close similarities across a very wide area of northern Eurasia (cf. Reference KobayashiKobayashi 2014; Reference MatsumotoMatsumoto 2021). From mainland centres in southern China and Vietnam, bronze spread into Island Southeast Asia, most dramatically in the shape of Dong Son drums which reached as far south as Papua and Timor (Reference Oliveira, O’Connor and BellwoodOliveira, O’Connor & Bellwood 2019). Dating of these drums, which may have been reused for long periods, is often insecure but they were still in use in the first millennium AD.
A major difference between the Bronze Ages of west and east Eurasia relates to the original relationship between centre and periphery. In the west, urban centres in the Near East expanded their connections with the European ‘periphery’ in their search for raw materials, transforming the societies of both regions. In eastern Eurasia, bronze was first introduced via the Inner Eurasian ‘periphery’ and then adopted – and often reinterpreted – by the ‘core’ states of the central plains (Reference RawsonRawson 2017). Island East Asia – the string of islands off the east coast of the mainland from Sakhalin down to Taiwan – seems to have followed a similar pattern of bronzisation, being first influenced by the Inner Eurasian periphery through Korea and only later by the Chinese core. This historical structure means that Island East Asia is an important region for understanding Bronze Age dynamics in eastern Eurasia.
2 Trade, Transculture and Maritime Connectivities
The Imazu site in Aomori, northern Japan has produced a three-legged jar from a Final Jōmon layer. The top of the vessel is damaged but it has a remaining height of only 11.4 cm. The jar has cord marking and red paint and belongs to the Ōbora C2 type of the Final phase Kamegaoka culture (Reference Shintani and OkadaShintani & Okada 1986) (Figure 3). Radiocarbon dates on charred material from other Ōbora C2 sherds at Imazu have returned results of 1430–1396 and 1419–1383 cal BC, though a marine reservoir effect may make these dates a few centuries older than their absolute age (Reference Horiuchi, Miyata, Kamijo, Cramp and EvershedHoriuchi et al. 2015).
Tripods of the same shape as the Imazu jar are found in northern China after about 2500 BC (Reference Wagner, Tarasov, Renfrew and BahnWagner & Tarasov 2014). A variety of tripod forms are known from ancient China, but the more functional tripods served to boil water to steam cereals. The miniature size of the Imazu vessel rules out such a function. Tripods were rarely found in the Korean Bronze Age (Reference Nelson, Gosden and HatherNelson 1999: 161) and An (Reference Nelson, Gosden and Hather1991) regards the Imazu tripod as a direct imitation of a Chinese vessel. Three more tripods from the same period found at other sites in Aomori may similarly have been influenced by continental Bronze Age contacts (Reference Hudson, Bausch, Robbeets, Li, White and GilaizeauHudson et al. 2021). A possible connection with long-distance trade is suggested by salt-making pottery found at Imazu. Kamegaoka-style pottery sherds have been discovered from as far south as Okinawa, more than 2,000 km from the northern Tohoku heartland of the culture (Reference ShitaraShitara 2018). The Ireibaru site on Okinawa (Figure 1) has also produced jade from Niigata in a Final Jōmon context.
The Kamegaoka people were participating in exchange networks over very long distances and with very different cultures. Many archaeologists have, however, assumed that it was only with the arrival of rice in south-west Japan that the Jōmon was opened to the outside and began to change. We might call this the ‘Sleeping Beauty’ model of the Jōmon world. Reference ShitaraShitara (2014b: 8) imagines the reaction of Jōmon villagers in northern Honshu upon hearing about rice and other crops being grown in the west of the archipelago:
[A] number of young people assembled a crew for a boat and packed it with trade goods such as masterpieces of pottery, red lacquered with intricate designs. Rowing against the current on rough seas they headed west.
The place they eventually reached was a settlement called Sasai on the plain of … Fukuoka. It was their first time to visit that place and the scene they saw was of rice paddy fields built by tall outsiders who were working in a friendly fashion with local people who – to judge from their faces – were their own comrades.
Shitara’s story takes it as a given that the Jōmon people from the far north were country ‘bumpkins’ who had their eyes suddenly opened to civilisation by seeing and, later in the story, tasting rice. These were, however, the same Kamegaoka people who were imitating pottery from the Chinese mainland rather than just from the Korean peninsula, even if their knowledge of ‘Chinese’ pottery may have been obtained second-hand. Presumably they already knew all about about rice – even if they had decided not to grow it themselves. In total contrast to traditional ‘rice-centred’ views of Japanese history, it is such complex processes of reception and resistance which can be said to characterise bronzisation.
In many parts of Northeast Asia, millet farming initially spread overland within Neolithic cultural contexts, reaching Korea and the Primorye by the fourth millennium BC (Reference Li, Ning, Zhushchikhovskaya, Hudson and RobbeetsLi et al. 2020). Around the same time, millet farmers in the Yellow River basin began to take up rice and many sites of the Yangshao culture have evidence for both millet and rice cultivation (Reference Stevens and FullerStevens & Fuller 2017). In the middle Yangtze, millet was adopted by some rice-farming societies, as for example at Chengtoushan (Reference Nasu, Gu, Momohara and YasudaNasu et al. 2012). In the Bronze Age, however, agricultural expansions changed completely with the addition of a maritime component.
Across Eurasia, the Bronze Age saw dynamic changes in food and farming. West Asian crops such as wheat and barley spread to East Asia while eastern millets spread west through Central Asia (Reference SpenglerSpengler 2019). As well as cereals, other plants such as cannabis spread along the new trans-Eurasian networks (Reference Long, Wagner, Demske, Leipe and TarasovLong et al. 2017; Reference RenRen et al. 2021). This Bronze Age ‘food globalisation’ often involved a fundamental reorganisation of agriculture through multicropping and longer use of the farming year (Reference Liu, Jones, Matuzeviciute, Hunt, Lister, An, Przelomska, Kneale, Zhao and JonesLiu et al. 2019). From the second millennium BC, the new crops began to spread to Korea and Japan. While broomcorn and foxtail millet had been grown in Korea since the fourth millennium BC, it was only through the combination of the five cereals (the two millets, rice, barley and wheat) that full-scale agriculture eventually reached the Japanese archipelago in the first millennium BC – much later than almost everywhere else in temperate Eurasia.
Notwithstanding critiques such as Reference Jaffe, Flad, Boivin and FrachettiJaffe and Flad (2018), the concept of ‘food globalisation’ provides some useful perspectives on economic trends in Bronze Age Eurasia. Nevertheless there were important discontinuities across the continent. Reference Sherratt, Hodder, Isaac and HammondSherratt’s (1981) concept of the ‘secondary products revolution’ proposed that from the Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Ages, domestic animals began to be exploited for milk, wool and traction. We now know that these innovations did not all develop at the same time, but by the later Bronze Age a combination of milking, wool production and animal traction for ploughing, transport and warfare were key elements in a new economic system, enabling expansion into previously marginal environments (Reference GreenfieldGreenfield 2010). In East Asia, secondary products were adopted in a much more variable fashion, often influenced by regional differences in political control (Reference Brunson, He and DaiBrunson et al. 2016). While inland areas such as Mongolia began to utilise milking around 3000 BC (Reference WilkinWilkin et al. 2020) and animal traction by the end of the second millennium BC (Reference Taylor, Bayarsaikhan and TuvshinjargalTaylor et al. 2015), in Island East Asia the process was much slower. In Japan, for example, horses were not introduced until the late fourth century AD (Reference SasakiSasaki 2018).
2.1 Express Trains and Slow Boats: The Sea and Bronze Age Farming Dispersals
The role of maritime voyaging in farming dispersals has been much discussed in Southeast Asian archaeology. Similar expansions also occurred in Northeast Asia, beginning in the Neolithic but taking off in the Bronze Age. Even if all of the populations involved did not possess bronze in the early stages, it makes sense to consider these movements as part of a broad trend towards new Bronze Age connectivities.
Recent research suggests that both inland and maritime dispersals were important in the spread of rice and millets to southern China and mainland Southeast Asia (Zhang & Hung 2010; Reference Stevens and FullerStevens & Fuller 2017; Higham 2019). Rice and both foxtail and broomcorn millet were found in Taiwan by the third millennium BC (Reference Qin, Fuller, Wu and RolettQin & Fuller 2019). Farming populations then crossed from Taiwan to the northern Philippines around 2200 BC. In Island Southeast Asia, rice and millets were abandoned in favour of local crops such as bananas, breadfruit, taro and yams, but the Austronesian peoples nevertheless began a huge maritime dispersal which eventually took them and their changing food production systems across the Pacific as far as Hawai‘i and Easter Island as well as west to Madagascar (Reference BulbeckBulbeck 2008; Reference BellwoodBellwood 2013; Reference Spriggs, Kristiansen, Lindkvist and MyrdalSpriggs 2018). Inland Inner Eurasia was the primary route for the continental east–west dispersal of cereals in the Late Neolithic and Bronze Ages (Reference SpenglerSpengler 2019). The suggestion that wheat may have spread to China via a maritime route has less support (Reference Long, Leipe, Jin, Wagner, Guo, Schröder and TarasovLong et al. 2018). In Northeast Asia, there was a massive seaborne migration of farmers from Korea to the Japanese islands, a migration which began in the first millennium BC but continued until at least AD 700. As a result of this population movement, the modern Japanese retain only about 10 per cent hunter-gatherer (Jōmon) ancestry (Reference Kanzawa-KiriyamaKanzawa-Kiriyama et al. 2017; Robbeets et al. 2021; Reference WangWang et al. 2021), a lower proportion than in many European countries (cf. Reference HaakHaak et al. 2015).
If maritime farming dispersals were thus a key motif in Bronze Age – or Bronze Age equivalent – societies in/from East Asia, the speed of those dispersals varied enormously. Agriculture reached Korea a little earlier than Taiwan. From the end of the third millennium BC, the movement of farmers from Taiwan quickly gathered pace and by around 900 BC Austronesian populations had reached Tonga and Samoa. After a long pause, the settlement of the islands of eastern Polynesia then occurred around AD 1000 (Reference BellwoodBellwood 2013: 196). From Easter Island to Madagascar, Austronesian migrations covered a distance of some 22,000 km (Reference BellwoodBellwood 2013: 199). While noting the problem of different interpretations of the migratory pause in western Polynesia, Reference DiamondDiamond (1988) has called this the ‘express train’ model. In Northeast Asia, maritime farming dispersals also alternated between phases of expansion and stasis but the overall tempo was much slower. Though present in southern Korea by 3500 BC, farming did not cross the 200 km-wide Tsushima straits to Japan until after 1000 BC. Several centuries of both maritime and inland agricultural dispersals in the main islands of Japan then followed (Reference de Boer, Yang, Kawagoe and Barnesde Boer et al. 2020). The Ryukyu islands between Kyushu and Taiwan, however, were not settled by farmers until around AD 1000 (Reference Takamiya, Hudson, Yonenobu, Kurozumi and ToizumiTakamiya et al. 2016) – roughly the same time when Polynesians were voyaging to Hawai‘i, Easter Island and New Zealand. The southern Ryukyu islands – only just over 100 km north of Taiwan – were thus first occupied by farmers at around the same date as eastern Polynesia.
The maritime dispersal of farmers raises important theoretical questions in East Asian archaeology. Reference Qin, Fuller, Wu and RolettQin and Fuller (2019) argue that, in contrast to millet farmers, early wet-rice cultivators absorbed population growth through in situ intensification of production rather than by geographical expansion. They propose that rice farmers of the lower Yangtze exploited inland wetlands but engaged in little maritime activity. These arguments are surprising because many earlier researchers placed great emphasis on the maritime dispersal of rice. Japanese folklorist Kunio Yanagita (1875–1962) even developed a whole ‘Ocean Road’ theory to explain the spread of rice to Japan, though this is now discredited by archaeological research (Reference TakamiyaTakamiya 2001). Qin and Fuller’s interpretation may be reasonable for the lower Yangtze because that area already possessed extensive areas of coastal wetlands during the Neolithic. South of the Yangtze, a shortage of suitable wetlands may have delayed the spread of wet-rice farming and encouraged seafaring from around 3000 BC (Reference Rolett, Zheng and YueRolett et al. 2011). By contrast, in the Bronze Age, and especially after 1000 BC, the growth of deltaic and coastal plains in southern China and mainland Southeast Asia permitted a major expansion of rice farmers (Reference Ma, Rolett, Zheng and ZongMa et al. 2020).
Rice began to spread north of the Yangtze from at least 4000 BC (Reference Stevens and FullerStevens & Fuller 2017). Most Neolithic rice from northern China comes from inland locations, suggesting rain-fed agriculture. In the Late Neolithic Longshan culture after 2600 BC, rice is found at several sites on the Shandong peninsula (Reference Crawford, Underhill, Zhao, Lee, Feinman, Nicholas, Luan, Yu, Fang and CaiCrawford et al. 2005; Reference d’Alpoim Guedes, Jin and Bocinskyd’Alpoim Guedes 2015). From Shandong, rice is thought to have spread around the Bohai Sea to Liaodong and on to Korea by the late second millennium BC (Reference AhnAhn 2010; Reference MiyamotoMiyamoto 2019). Although there is little or no evidence for wet-rice farming in north-eastern Chinese sites at this time, in Korea, wet-rice paddy fields are known at several Bronze Age sites, including Okhyŏn, where a series of fields had a surface area of 2–3 m2 each (Reference AhnAhn 2010; Reference Lee and HodosLee 2017). A few centuries later, rice reached Japan, where paddy fields are known from the Initial Yayoi phase (Reference MizoguchiMizoguchi 2013: 89–92). Not all agriculture in Bronze Age Japan relied on wet rice; many so-called dry fields for cultivating millets and other crops have also been found. Yet there is no question that a maritime component was involved in the spread of rice. The Japanese archipelago is perhaps the only place in the world where wet-rice agriculture spread by sea as a fully integrated system with all of its elements clearly in place from the beginning.
The relationship between maritime and land farming dispersals in Bronze Age Japan is nevertheless complex. As mentioned already, it has been argued that fishing was a minor activity in Yayoi farming villages. Carp aquaculture, known in China as early as eight thousand years ago, was also found in Yayoi Japan, having presumably diffused with rice farming (Reference Nakajima, Hudson, Uchiyama, Makibayashi and ZhangNakajima et al. 2019). At the same time, there is evidence for specialised marine activities. In Hokkaido, there was an emphasis on large benthic fish, especially Pleuronectinae and bastard halibut (Paralichthys olivaceus), as well as swordfish (Reference TakaseTakase 2019). Abalone became a common trade item down the Sea of Japan and it has been suggested that fishing groups from Kyushu made summer voyages up to Rebun island to catch abalone (see Reference Hudson, Autiero and CobbHudson 2021a, in press). Tropical shells from Okinawa were traded with Kyushu but also carried as far north as Usu-moshiri in southern Hokkaido. The Bronze Age saw a major expansion in salt production in Europe and East Asia (Reference Flad, Zhu, Wang, Chen, von Falkenhausen, Sun and LiFlad et al. 2005; Reference von Falkenhausenvon Falkenhausen 2006; Reference HardingHarding 2021) and Japan was no exception to that trend. During the second and first millennia BC, salt was made by boiling seawater in special pots along the Pacific coast of Honshu north of modern Tokyo. After cereal farming was introduced into western Japan, this Jōmon salt-making tradition became limited to the area around Sendai Bay until a new focus of production appeared in the Seto Inland Sea after 400 BC (Reference Kawashima, Brigand and WellerKawashima 2015).
Two important sites for understanding the relationship between maritime activity and farming dispersals in Bronze Age Japan are located in Aomori prefecture, the same region which produced the tripods discussed earlier in this Element. Both sites have remains of rice paddy fields: the Sunazawa paddies date back to the early fourth century BC, with Tareyanagi being slightly later (Aomori 1985; Hirosaki 1999). Both of these sites are located at a latitude of about 40° N, making them the most northerly prehistoric paddy fields from anywhere in the world. In the 1980s, it was proposed that rice farmers from Kyushu had ‘leapfrogged’ by boat up the Sea of Japan to establish the communities at Sunazawa and Tareyanagi (cf. Reference Hudson and BarnesHudson 1990). New research has questioned this interpretation. It has been suggested that the Early Yayoi Ongagawa–style pottery found in northern Honshu was only ‘imitating’ that found in Kyushu (Reference TakaseTakase 2017), an interpretation consistent with the concept of bronzisation. Since the artefacts excavated at Sunazawa do not include the stone or wooden agricultural tools found in western Japan, Reference FujioFujio (2015, Reference Autiero and Cobb2021) has proposed that local hunter-gatherers began paddy rice agriculture without the involvement of rice farmers from the outside. Given the difficulties in transferring the complicated technology of rice paddy fields without personal experience, this seems unlikely.Footnote 2 Reference SegawaSegawa (2017: 80–1) notes that the early rice cultivation at Sunazawa was established at about the same time as the abalone processing site at Hamanaka 2 on Rebun island, and suggests that the two developments may have been connected.
The relationship between societies of the sea and the land in Bronze Age Japan thus remains unclear in many respects. In part, this is due to the long-standing Confucian emphasis on rice farming as the hallowed pillar of Japanese civilisation, a bias which has marginalised the peoples of the sea. There is a large literature about the formation of ‘mountain’ or ‘fishing’ villages during the Yayoi period, but those communities are defined by their lack of rice cultivation, a condition which supposedly forced them to obtain rice through relations of social dependence with farming villages. Such views derive more from assumptions based on modern folklore or the history of the early modern Tokugawa era (1600–1868) than on evidence-based analyses of the Yayoi.
Some of the clearest evidence for maritime activity in the Yayoi comes from islands in the Tsushima straits between Korea and Japan. In its description of Tsushima and Iki, the Wei zhi noted the islanders ‘travel by boat to buy grain in markets to the north and south’ (Reference KidderKidder 2007: 12). Sites on Iki island such as Karakami and Haru-no-tsuji have produced a rich, ‘international’ material culture including Chinese coins, Lelang pottery from the Han dynasty commandery in northern Korea, a three-winged bronze arrowhead (probably a crossbow bolt) (Figure 4) and even bones from Japan’s earliest domesticated cat (Reference SeyockSeyock 2003; Reference TakesueTakesue 2009).Footnote 3 Haru-no-tsuji also has Japan’s oldest known harbour.Trading connections between Kyushu and Korea at this time are clear from Yayoi pottery and Chinese coins – presumably used in exchange – found at Nŭkto on the south-east coast of Korea dating from the fourth century BC to the first century AD (Reference Choy and RichardsChoy & Richards 2009).
Recent research has shown that standardised weights and measures were already in use in Yayoi Japan from at least the fourth century BC (Morimoto 2012; Reference FujioFujio 2015). Yayoi balance weights seem to be most common at proto-urban sites in the Osaka–Kyoto region such as Kamei and Ikegami-sone, but are also known from Haru-no-tsuji. These weights are made of stone and are mostly rectangular in shape. Without suggesting a direct connection, the Yayoi weights are very similar in form to those from the Bronze Age Mediterranean (compare Reference HayamaHayama 2020: 85 with Reference IalongoIalongo 2018: 111). Balance weights, which are known from the third millennium BC in the Near East and eastern Mediterranean, imply the shared quantification of economic value over wide areas (Reference IalongoIalongo 2018; Reference RahmstorfRahmstorf 2019).
A further facet of trade in Yayoi society relates to new findings of inkstones which suggest that writing was already in use in Bronze Age Japan, centuries earlier than previously thought. Several examples of imported Chinese artefacts with writing – including coins, bronze mirrors and the gold seal given by the Han emperor to the king of Na in Kyushu – are known from the first century AD.Footnote 4 Later, the Japanese started to copy inscriptions on mirrors, but it is sometimes argued that these attempts were primarily decorative (cf. Reference SeeleySeeley 1991: 12–13). By contrast, the ‘earliest texts of Japanese origin which show a clear understanding of the function of writing as a visual linguistic record’ are said to date from the fifth century AD (Reference SeeleySeeley 1991: 16). New research on inkstones appears to change this understanding completely. Flat stone inkstones similar to Han Chinese prototypes and sometimes with traces of black or red ink have been reported from more than 170 Yayoi and Kofun sites, with the earliest examples dating back to the second century BC (Reference YanagitaYanagita 2020). Although there are around ten Late Yayoi–Early Kofun pots with inscribed Chinese characters, other written texts are not known from the Yayoi period. Takeo Kusumi (personal communication) suggests that cloth or wood may have been used for Yayoi documents, perhaps borrowing a similar technology to that used for the silk manuscripts found at the famous Former Han tomb of Mawangdui.
Historian Yoshihiko Reference AminoAmino (2012) showed that ‘farmers’ in premodern Japan sometimes also engaged in specialised long-distance shipping and commerce. Amino’s research focussed on the medieval and early modern periods; the social relations structuring maritime communities in the Bronze Age might have been quite different again, but there is a need to think about how farming articulated with other economic activities. The common narrative that wet-rice agriculture was the single hallowed path to Japanese culture is clearly false. Across Island East Asia, trade required boats, which needed large investments in time and money. Reference AminoAmino (2012: 13–16) has discussed how wealthy merchants of the early modern Tokugawa period financed large boats to trade up the Sea of Japan. These merchants did not own land or produce taxable crops. Despite their wealth, in the agrarian-centred class system of the Tokugawa they were called by derogatory terms such as atamafuri (‘head shakers’) or mizunomi (‘water drinkers’). In Bronze Age Japan, if chiefs wanted bronze, they needed boats, and the relationship between agrarian and maritime economies was probably more favourable for those who could finance boatbuilding and trade. Using Bronze Age and Viking examples from Scandinavia, Reference Ling, Earle and KristiansenLing and colleagues (2018) posit a ‘maritime mode of production’ as a way of modelling decentralised maritime confederacies based on raiding and trading as well as agropastoralism. It seems to me that this model might also be appropriate for understanding Bronze Age Japan. Some years ago, Reference LedyardLedyard (1975) used the term ‘thalassocracy of Wa’ to refer to early Japan. Although, to my knowledge, Ledyard never developed this proposal in detail, it shares a similar outlook with the ‘maritime mode of production’ and with work by Reference SeyockSeyock (2003, Reference Seyock2004) and Reference TakesueTakesue (2009) on maritime links across the Tsushima straits.
2.2 Boats and Maritime Technology
The Bronze Age saw a revolution in maritime technology. In the Mediterranean, long-distance voyaging began at first using canoes but with sailing ships growing in importance (Reference Broodbank, Wilkinson, Sherratt and BennetBroodbank 2011: 31). A similar increase in voyaging is known in East Asia from the same time period. In the waters around Japan, there is clear evidence that many small islands such as those in the Okinawa archipelago, the Kurils and Rebun and Rishiri were visited more frequently during the Late Jōmon phase (c.2500–1250 BC) (Reference Fitzhugh, Gjesfjeld, Brown, Hudson and ShawFitzhugh et al. 2016; Reference Takamiya, Hudson, Yonenobu, Kurozumi and ToizumiTakamiya et al. 2016; Reference Hudson, Bausch, Robbeets, Li, White and GilaizeauHudson et al. 2021). The Izu islands south of Tokyo may have been one exception to this trend; according to Reference OdaOda (1990), sites there are most common circa six thousand to five thousand years ago, whereas the Late–Final Jōmon saw a decline in site numbers. This trend is confirmed by more recent research despite the discovery of a Late Jōmon ritual stone pavement at Tabara on Niijima island, a site which I helped excavate in the late 1980s. By the middle of the first millennium BC, however, people of the Yayoi culture were once again voyaging to and settling in the Izu islands (Reference SugiyamaSugiyama 2014).
The increase in marine voyaging around Japan from the Late Jōmon may reflect more patchy access to resources, in turn encouraging riskier, prestige-oriented trading and raiding (cf. Reference Fitzhugh, Kennett, Anderson, Barrett and BoyleFitzhugh & Kennett 2010). One of the riskiest marine activities at this time was shark hunting. A Final Jōmon pot from Yama-no-kami (Nagano) with an incised drawing of a hammerhead shark may be the oldest depiction of a shark from anywhere in the world (Reference White, Burgess, Nakatsukasa, Hudson, Pouncett, Kusaka, Yoneda, Yamada and SchultingWhite et al. 2021). Shark teeth are common in many sites in the Japanese archipelago and southern Korea at this time. Nagabaka on Miyako island (Okinawa) has produced thirty-nine shark teeth, many with artificial perforations, dating from the second millennium BC to the early first millennium AD (Figure 5). Most of these teeth from Nagabaka are from tiger sharks (Galeocerdo cuvier). The potential dangers associated with shark hunting are demonstrated by an unusual find from Tsukumo shell midden (Okayama). Skeleton No. 24 from the Tsukumo cemetery is missing his right leg and left hand and has at least 790 perimortem traumatic lesions characteristic of a shark attack (Reference White, Burgess, Nakatsukasa, Hudson, Pouncett, Kusaka, Yoneda, Yamada and SchultingWhite et al. 2021). The skeleton was radiocarbon dated to 1370–1010 cal BC.
In the Near East, sails first appear from the late fourth millennium BC and were widely used in the Bronze Age, although in Scandinavia, sails were not adopted until much later (Reference Westerdahl, Barrett and GibbonWesterdahl 2015). There are a number of drawings of boats on Yayoi pottery and bronze bells. Most of these show oars and include quite large vessels, with between four and as many as eighty-one rowers, although the fact that boats with large numbers of oars – such as the central boat from Arao-minami (Figure 6) – often have unequal numbers on the two sides may suggest the intention was simply to draw a large vessel. The smaller boats at each end of the central vessel on the Arao-minami drawing are usually reconstructed as having sails (Reference Habu, Anderson, Barrett and BoyleHabu 2010: 166). Although Reference Woo, Byington, Sasaki and BaleWoo (2018: 191–3) employs incised drawings of boats on tomb figurines (haniwa) from the Higashi-tonozuka tumulus (Nara) to argue against the use of sails at this time, those drawings show boats with oars but with a central post with ‘banners’ flowing in the wind. It is hard to say definitively that the Higashi-tonozuka drawings represent sails rather than banners; yet the action of the wind is clearly shown and it is plausible that these pictures were drawn to represent sails on the high seas. Cotton began to be used for sails in Japan from the fifteenth century (Reference Nagahara and YamamuraNagahara & Yamamura 1988: 93–4). Prior to that, hemp, flax and woven grass mats were presumably used, unlike in Europe where wool was probably used for sails from the Bronze Age. In Hokkaido, twined grass mats were still used for sails by the Ainu in the early modern period (Reference TezukaTezuka 1998).
Boats also played an important role in the symbolic world of Bronze Age Japan. A pot from Inayoshi (Tottori) depicts a small boat with four or five rowers wearing elaborate feather-like headdresses and a sun circle positioned above (Figure 7). Similar ship and sun motifs are known from rock art in Fugoppe cave (Hokkaido), perhaps dating to around the first century AD, and from Mezurashikuzuka, Gorōyama and other Kofun tombs in Kyushu (Reference ZancanZancan 2013; Reference Hudson, Autiero and CobbHudson 2021a). Ships with warriors wearing feather headdresses are also known from Dong Son bronzes in Southeast Asia (Reference Oliveira, O’Connor and BellwoodOliveira et al. 2019). In the Near East and Europe, representations of ships and the sun, sometimes with horses or birds in association, have been analysed as part of a widely shared mythology relating to the journey of the sun from night into day (Reference Kristiansen and LarssonKristiansen & Larsson 2005). It is unclear if similar ideas spread to East Asia, or if the Yayoi and Dong Son representations are pure coincidence.
2.3 Trade and the Bronze Economy
Notwithstanding recent advances in research, many aspects of the metal trade in Bronze Age East Asia remain poorly understood. We still don’t know enough about sources of tin, copper and lead in the region. Africa has even been suggested as a source for Shang bronzes with highly radiogenic lead isotopes (Reference Sun, Zhang, Guo, Li, Jiang, Zartman and ZhangSun et al. 2016). Though this African proposal has been critiqued (Reference Liu, Chen, Rehren, Mei, Chen, Liu and KillickLiu et al. 2018), the source of the radiogenic lead used in Shang bronzes remains unknown. However, several ore sources across China were exploited in the Bronze Age and the overall picture appears to be one of exchange between multiple regional centres (Reference Chen, Mei, Rehren and ZhaoChen et al. 2016).
Japan has large deposits of many metals including copper, iron, silver and gold. In later times, these deposits were extensively exploited. At the end of the sixteenth century, Japan is said to have been producing one-third of the world’s silver (Reference Nagahara and YamamuraNagahara & Yamamura 1988: 82). Fluctuations in Japanese silver exports to China have even been proposed as a factor leading to the fall of the Ming dynasty (Reference AtwellAtwell 2005). The Shoku Nihongi, a text completed in AD 797, records the joy of the central court upon receiving copper mined in Musashi province near modern Tokyo in 708. An imperial edict announced, ‘It is Our opinion that this is a Treasure made manifest because the Gods that dwell in Heaven and the Gods that dwell on Earth have deigned to enrich and bless us’ (Reference SansomSansom 1924: 17). The name of the reign–era was immediately changed to Wadō (‘Japanese copper’), tax exemptions were announced for Musashi, certain (unspecified) criminals were given an amnesty and rewards were bestowed ‘upon aged people and persons who have displayed the virtues of filial piety or connubial faithfulness’ (Reference SansomSansom 1924: 17). While Musashi was nominally under the control of the Yamato kingdom, it is interesting to note the generous measures employed to secure its support. Some four decades later, a large gold mine in Mutsu province in north-east Honshu was also being exploited and Japan became a major source of gold for China, where deposits of that metal were relatively rare (Reference von Verschuervon Verschuer 2006: 65–6). Iron production began in several regions of the archipelago in the sixth century AD (Reference Matsugi, Knopf, Steinhaus and FukunagaMatsugi 2018). During the Bronze Age, however, Japan and the rest of Island East Asia did not produce raw materials for metal production and all bronze was imported, although by the second century BC some weapons were being cast in Kyushu using imported bronze (Reference Iwanaga, Byington, Sasaki and BaleIwanaga 2018).
Compared to many parts of Europe and the central plains of China, bronze tools and weapons were rare in Yayoi Japan (Reference SaharaSahara 1987a: 282). How did people in the Japanese islands pay for bronze imports? What was traded instead? Using textual sources and inscriptions, Reference NanbaNanba (2016) calculated that around the time of the Former Han emperor Wu (reigned 141–87 BC), a kilogramme of bronze was exchanged within China for around three hundred wuzhu coins. This was the equivalent of 150 litres of unhulled grain. A slave, by contrast, cost the equivalent of 50–60 kg of bronze. Though no direct evidence exists, Japanese archaeologists assume that the price of bronze carried to Japan could have been ten or more times higher than in China (Reference NanbaNanba 2016; Reference Kitajima and HōjōKitajima 2019: 153). As possible goods carried from Japan in exchange for bronze, suggestions have included cereals, cloth, marine products, lumber and slaves. The high price of slaves in China suggests that captives from the Japanese islands would have been highly sought after. The Hou Han shu records that a king in Japan sent 160 slaves (shengkou) to the Han emperor in the second century AD (Reference KidderKidder 2007: 26).Footnote 5 Given that the agricultural economy was more productive in China, cereals are perhaps an unlikely trade item though they cannot be ruled out; few premodern states would turn down extra grain when available. Textile production was also more advanced on the continent but various brocades, dyed cloth and animal furs were given as diplomatic gifts by the Yamato court from at least the seventh century (Reference AstonAston 1972). Amber and agate are also mentioned in the Nihon shoki (AD 720) as royal gifts. Timber is known to have been traded to China by the thirteenth century (Reference von Verschuervon Verschuer 2006: 69–70) and probably has a longer history. Marine products such as abalone may have been exchanged at an early stage. Okinawa has been suggested as a source for the cowrie shells found in many Bronze Age sites in China but recent studies have concluded that the cowrie species found in Chinese sites were not common in the Ryukyus (Reference PearsonPearson 2013: 127).
The ancient Chinese were further interested in Japan as a mysterious land of immortality. An alchemist named Xu Fu, sent by the First Emperor of the Qin dynasty (221–207 BC) to find this country, had initially returned to China empty-handed, whereupon he made up a story about a Sea God leading him to a place where an official with a bronze face and a dragon body showed him a palace with the plants of longevity. Access to that palace would require extra gifts of ‘young boys, virgins, and craftsmen of every kind’. According to the story, Xu Fu’s wish was granted and he returned with the gifts but then stayed in Japan (Wang 2005: 8). Chinese literati also saw Japan as a mystical land located near the source of the sun. The Tang writer Xu Ning sent off a Japanese envoy with a poem, the beginning of which is paraphrased by Reference SchaferSchafer (1989: 393) as ‘Your homeland is at the limit of the world we know, Beyond even Fu-sang, the land of the sun. Thence you came to the seat of our glorious Sun.’
Despite the high value of bronze in Yayoi Japan, it was often deposited in hoards. Yayoi hoards include bronze bells (dōtaku) and weapons. As in Europe, there is a large literature on the meaning of these hoards. Bells are often assumed to have been linked with rituals related to rice cultivation and to have served to cement communal solidarity (see Reference HudsonHudson 1992: 153–5 for a discussion of some classic theories). By contrast, Reference KuwabaraKuwabara (1995) argued that hoards were a way of making bronze scarce to increase the political status of elites. The ethnologist Reference ŌbayashiŌbayashi (1975) speculated that hoards were connected to the worship of weapons, a custom which he believed had entered Japan from the northern steppes. A further possible explanation for weapon hoards might be related to warrior sociality. If Bronze Age warriors can be assumed to have negotiated liminal positions with respect to their communities (Reference Ling, Cornell, Chacon and MendozaLing & Cornell 2017), a further possible explanation for weapon hoards might be related to the shedding of warrior identity – whether temporarily or otherwise – through what Reference Anderson, Horn and KristiansenAnderson (2018: 223) calls ‘post-conflict cleaning rituals’. The placement of Yayoi bronze hoards on hillsides outside agricultural communities may support this idea. Non-utilitarian weapons may have been used in hoards to symbolise a ‘post-conflict’ status. The fact that most warriors seem to have been buried in cemeteries in their own towns or villages suggests means of sociality whereby warriors could return to the community.
The largest bronze hoard known from Japan was found in the 1980s at Kōjindani (Shimane) and contained 358 swords, sixteen spearheads and six bells (Reference PiggottPiggott 1989). These objects had been produced over several centuries and buried in the latter part of the Middle Yayoi (Shimane Board of Education 1996), a phase now usually dated to the last four centuries of the first millennium BC. Though smaller than some hoards found in Europe – four thousand bronze axes were found at Maure-de-Bretagne in north-west France, for example (Reference BriardBriard 1965) – Kōjindani is nevertheless much larger than other hoards from Japan. A decade later, another hoard of thirty-nine bronze bells was found at Kamo-iwakura, three kilometres from Kōjindani (Reference TorranceTorrance 2016). The Kōjindani hoard is situated in the old province of Izumo on the Sea of Japan coast, a region known both for close connections with the Korean peninsula and for its political role in the Bronze Age archipelago (Reference de Boer, Yang, Kawagoe and Barnesde Boer et al. 2020). Reference Wengrow, Wilkinson and BennetWengrow (2011) has built on Childe to note that bronze hoards in Europe are often situated along routes of long-distance trade. In this reading, hoards are less about local communities and more related to transcultural connections. While many archaeologists have explored the role of local elites in hoard depositions in the Yayoi (e.g., Reference AdachiAdachi 2011), the evidence from Izumo may also be consistent with Wengrow’s interpretation. Reference Wengrow, Wilkinson and BennetWengrow (2011) goes on to make a distinction between ‘sacrificial’ and ‘archival’ economies. The presence of standardised weights and measures and inkstones in Bronze Age Japan shows that the economy had developed ‘archival’ elements. At the same time, there remained a ‘sacrificial’ side in bronze hoards as well as in the Wei zhi account of ‘abstainers’ used on voyages to China. On such missions, the text explains, ‘there is always one man who does not comb his hair, does not remove the lice, lets his clothes become dirty, does not eat meat, and does not get near women’. If the journey is successful, he is given ‘slaves and valuable things’, but ‘if disease or injuries occur’, he is killed (Reference KidderKidder 2007: 15). More research is needed, but given the different geographical distribution of hoards around the Seto Inland Sea summarised by Reference BarnesBarnes (2015: 325–6), it is possible that ‘archival’ economies were initially common in Kyushu and the western Inland Sea whereas ‘sacrificial’ economies dominated the eastern Inland Sea.
2.4 Bronze Age Demographic Change in East Asia
The period from the end of the Neolithic to the Bronze Age saw major demographic changes in Europe. The fact that remarkably similar changes also occurred in East Asia suggests that the underlying causal mechanisms may have been common to many Eurasian societies at this time.
From the beginning of the Neolithic, more sedentary lifestyles had led to population growth as part of the ‘Neolithic Demographic Transition’ (Reference Bocquet-AppelBocquet-Appel 2011). In East Asia, early sedentism was associated with pottery and, in northern areas, the widespread use of semi-subterranean pit houses. In many parts of Northeast Asia, sedentism developed before farming (Reference PearsonPearson 2006; Reference Shelach-Lavi, Teng, Goldsmith, Wachtel, Stevens, Marder, Wan, Wu, Tu, Shavit, Polissar, Xu and FullerShelach-Lavi et al. 2019). As cereal farming became more important, the type of agriculture engaged in by Neolithic East Asian societies affected their demographic patterns. Wet-rice farmers, who had invested time and labour in elaborate paddy fields, tended to stay in one place, absorbing population growth through extra labour inputs. Millet farmers, by contrast, usually adopted a more dispersed or expansionary settlement pattern (Reference Qin, Fuller, Wu and RolettQin & Fuller 2019). Within millet farming societies in northern China, community structure was also influenced by different risk-buffering strategies resulting from environmental conditions (Reference Drennan, Peterson and BerreyDrennan et al. 2020).
Neolithic population growth could be subject to fluctuations due to climate, disease, or the low resilience of early farming systems (Reference Shennan, Downey, Timpson, Edinborough, Colledge, Kerig, Manning and ThomasShennan et al. 2013; Reference Stevens and FullerStevens & Fuller 2012). During the transitional period from the Neolithic to the Bronze Age, one particular population crash known as the ‘Late Neolithic decline’ took place, which was found in several regions of Eurasia. Climate change, the immigration of steppe pastoralists and trade have been suggested as possible causes of this decline (Reference Kristiansen, Fowler, Harding and HofmanKristiansen 2015), but recent findings of plague (Yersinia pestis) from Sweden in an individual dated 5040–4867 BP (Reference Rascovan, Sjögren, Kristiansen, Nielsen, Willerslev, Desnues and RasmussenRascovan et al. 2019) and in two individuals dated to 4556 and 4430 BP from Lake Baikal (Reference YuYu et al. 2020) show that there is also a need to reconsider the role of epidemic disease. The Neolithic had forced humans, plants and animals into new intimacies. Reference ScottScott (2017) calls Neolithic villages ‘multi-species resettlement camps’ and has summarised the evidence for new zoonotic diseases and declining human health. The economic and social interactions of the Bronze Age brought Eurasian societies into ever closer contact, ideas and artistic styles spread with peoples and languages, and epidemic diseases such as plague began to spread further across Eurasia, ‘piggybacking’ on new trade networks.
In the Late Neolithic, a population crash occurred in parts of East Asia. In China, there was no overall decline but a complex, asynchronous pattern (Reference Jaffe and HeinJaffe & Hein, 2021), which Reference Hosner, Wagner, Tarasov, Chen and LeipeHosner and colleagues (2016) speculate may reflect the impact of plague. In Korea, radiocarbon proxy data suggest a population drop around 4800 cal BP (Reference Oh, Conte, Kang, Kim and HwangOh et al. 2017). In Japan, a population decline in the third millennium BC was first analysed by Koyama (1978), who concluded that population levels dropped almost 40 per cent across Kyushu, Shikoku and Honshu as a whole, and by almost 60 per cent in central Honshu. Later research, looking in more detail at particular regional sequences in Japan, has supported the trends identified by Koyama (Reference ImamuraImamura 1996: 95–6; Reference HudsonHudson 1999: 140; Reference 69SekineSekine 2014; Reference Crema, Habu, Kobayashi and MadellaCrema et al. 2016; Reference Crema and KobayashiCrema & Kobayashi 2020). Reference Crema and KobayashiCrema and Kobayashi (2020) date the start of the population crash in central Honshu to around 2900 BC. Epidemic disease was already suggested as a possible cause of the Late Neolithic decline in Japan by Reference Oikawa and KoyamaOikawa and Koyama (1981) and Reference KidderKidder (1995, Reference Kidder2007). Given the new biomolecular analyses of Y. pestis, there is a need for similar studies to explore the role of plague in Late Neolithic and Bronze Age East Asia.
Following the Late Neolithic decline, the Bronze Age itself saw a large population increase in Europe but an apparent decline in the Near East (Reference Müller, Kradow and WłodarczakMüller 2013). Bronze Age East Asia saw large population increases in China (Reference Hosner, Wagner, Tarasov, Chen and LeipeHosner et al. 2016), Korea (Reference Oh, Conte, Kang, Kim and HwangOh et al. 2017) and Japan (Koyama 1978). Crops were moved beyond previous ecological boundaries and there was a significant expansion in arable land (Reference Liu, Jones, Matuzeviciute, Hunt, Lister, An, Przelomska, Kneale, Zhao and JonesLiu et al. 2019). Urbanisation developed, especially in northern China, where some cities may have housed up to half a million people by the first millennium BC (Reference von Falkenhausen, Marcus and Sabloffvon Falkenhausen 2008).
2.5 Alaska, Australia and the Ryukyus: The Frontiers of the Eurasian Bronze Age
A focus on trade, connectivities and bronzisation raises the problem of the geographical frontiers of the Bronze Age world. Methodologically, this is a difficult question. On one hand, archaeologists have sometimes been overly keen to link distant peoples and places, often without proper evaluation of dating, yet at the same time there is no doubt that certain regions have been neglected in debates over ancient globalisations (Reference Boivin and FrachettiBoivin & Frachetti 2018; Reference Spriggs, Kristiansen, Lindkvist and MyrdalSpriggs 2018). Bronzisation, it can be argued, began to impact the Japanese islands from as early as the third millennium BC (Reference Hudson, Bausch, Robbeets, Li, White and GilaizeauHudson et al. 2021), but what were the geographical limits of that process? Here I briefly consider this question by examining Alaska, Australia and the Ryukyu islands.
As recently summarised by Reference Dyakonov, Pestereva, Stepanov and MasonDyakonov and colleagues (2019), bronze appears very early in Siberia, probably reaching the middle reaches of the Lena river by the end of the third millennium BC. By the early second millennium, there is evidence for bronze casting in Yakutia and a mould for casting bronze, dated circa 1000 BC, has been found some 50 km from the Chukchi Sea. Iron also appeared very early, with iron artefacts present in Yakutia by perhaps 800 BC and on the Sea of Okhotsk coast by at least the end of the first millennium BC. These metals seem to have spread across the northern forest zone, which, as noted by Reference Uchiyama, Gillam, Savelyev and NingUchiyama and colleagues (2020), is an underappreciated belt of connectivity across ancient Eurasia (Figure 8). Although metals reached eastern Siberia very early, there are only two bronze finds in Alaska, only one of which is dated (to around AD 1200) (Reference Dyakonov, Pestereva, Stepanov and MasonDyakonov et al. 2019). The Bering Straits thus seem to have formed the north-eastern frontier of the expanding world of the Eurasian Bronze Age, perhaps because there were no trade goods in Alaska which could not also be found in Siberia. In later centuries, iron was traded into Alaska and used for the ornate walrus ivory carving associated with the Old Bering Strait culture, which began around AD 300 but reached its peak florescence circa 650–1250 (Reference Mason and RasicMason & Rasic 2019). Since the early work of Reference LauferLaufer (1913), it has been suggested that trade in walrus ivory brought the Bering Straits into the Eurasian world system (Mason 2009); artefacts made of walrus ivory are also found in the Okhotsk culture of Hokkaido (c.AD 500–1200) and Reference KikuchiKikuchi (2004: 117–25) makes a similar proposal for the Sea of Okhotsk region.
Moving south, in Island Southeast Asia, we can recognise two phases of heightened interaction with mainland Eurasia: the period between 2000 and 1000 BC saw the spread of Neolithic lifeways, while bronze and, to a lesser extent, iron reached the region from around 300 to 100 BC (Reference Spriggs, Kristiansen, Lindkvist and MyrdalSpriggs 2018), although the bronze axes from Gua Harimau in Sumatra may date from slightly earlier (Reference BellwoodBellwood 2017: 313). The dispersal of Austronesian populations through Island Southeast Asia and beyond has sometimes been debated in terms of a stark choice between Neolithic farming versus maritime trade (Reference BulbeckBulbeck 2008). Given the Bronze Age time frame of this dispersal, I find it more useful to think in terms of a combination of farming and trade.
Island Southeast Asia certainly experienced major social and economic changes at this time, but what about Australia? Did it remain totally isolated from the transformations of the Eurasian Bronze Age? Important changes in the archaeological record of Australia after around 2000 BC have, in fact, been recognised for some time. Population sizes seem to have grown after 2000 BC (Hiscock 2008). Backed artefacts (microliths) and edge-ground axes spread widely across many areas of Australia in the second and first millennia BC, reflecting new connectivities over the continent (Reference Hiscock, Maloney and HodosHiscock & Maloney 2017). Recent research shows the dingo was introduced at this time from Island Southeast Asia, although a New Guinea origin has also been suggested (Reference Ardalan, Oskarsson, Natanaelsson, Wilton, Ahmadian and SavolainenArdalan et al. 2012). A direct radiocarbon date on a dingo bone from Madura Cave on the southern Nullarbor Plain has produced a result of about 1300 BC (Figure 1). The authors of that study suggest the dingo was probably introduced to Australia quite soon before that and spread very rapidly across the continent (Reference Balme, O’Connor and FallonBalme et al. 2018). Evidence for offshore island visitation and settlement suggests increased maritime activity around Australia from the late third millennium BC (Reference BowdlerBowdler 1995; Reference Sim and WallisSim & Wallis 2008). Finally, the linguistic record seems to show a very widespread dispersal of Pama–Nyungan languages, probably beginning in the middle-to-late Holocene (Reference Evans, Jones, McConvell and EvansEvans & Jones 1997; Reference Bouckaert, Bowern and AtkinsonBouckaert et al. 2018). Debate continues over biological evidence that a new population may have reached Australia at this time (Reference BellwoodBellwood 2013: 119–21). While the precise context remains unclear, it remains a reasonable hypothesis that Bronze Age transformations in Eurasia and into Island Southeast Asia had some secondary or ‘knock-on’ impacts on Australia.
Both Alaska and Australia lay outside the Eurasian Bronze Age system, though were perhaps not totally isolated from that world. These cases are interesting but hardly surprising. Much more unexpected is the Bronze Age status of the Ryukyu islands. The Ryukyu archipelago stretches some 1,300 km between Kyushu and Taiwan. Geographically speaking, it can be considered central to Island East Asia, a position it certainly fulfilled during the medieval era when a trading state based on Okinawa island traded widely across East and Southeast Asia (Reference PearsonPearson 2013; Reference SmitsSmits 2019). Yet during the period considered in this Element, the Ryukyus maintained a quite different historical trajectory. As far as we know, the southern Ryukyu islands from Yonaguni to Miyako remained totally isolated until the start of the second millennium AD. Although Yonaguni is only 110 km from Taiwan, and according to Reference Kinoshita, Wu and RolettKinoshita (2019a) the high mountains of Taiwan are visible from Yonaguni, neither rice or millets spread north from Taiwan, and the same is true of bronze, which was present on Taiwan by 400 BC (Reference Hung and ChaoHung & Chao 2016). Nephrite artefacts from Taiwan were widely distributed across Southeast Asia in the Bronze Age (Reference Hung, Iizuka, Bellwood, Nguyen, Bellina, Silapanth, Dizon, Santiago, Datan and MantonHung et al. 2007), but none have been found in the Ryukyus. The central and northern islands of the Ryukyu chain, by contrast, were in frequent contact with Japan. In the periodisation frequently employed by Okinawan archaeologists, the prehistoric ‘Shell Mound period’ is divided, around 600 BC, into Early and Late stages based on links with the Yayoi cultures of Kyushu. A long-distance trade in tropical shells developed at this time and, according to Reference Kinoshita, Wu and RolettKinoshita (2019a: 326), persisted until the seventh century AD. However, this trade network appears to have had little long-lasting impact on the societies of the Okinawa and Amami islands (Table 1).
Archaeological features of the Late Shell Mound phase (Okinawa and Amami) | Connections with Yayoi Kyushu/Bronze Age East Asia |
---|---|
Settlements move from terraces to coastal areas | Suggests new focus on the sea and maritime links |
Stone tool assemblages little changed from previous phase | Implies few changes in subsistence and food processing |
Ceramic decoration becomes plainer | Mirrors similar changes in western Japan since the Late Jōmon |
Ceramic vessels become larger | Possibly reflects increased use of Scaridae and other large fish1 |
Imported Yayoi pottery | Dozens of vessels imported, primarily to Okinawa island (Reference Shinzato and TakamiyaShinzato 2018) |
Metal artefacts | Bronze: mirror fragment; sword hilt fragment; arrowhead. Iron: fragments of axes and other tools; iron fishhook (from Tanegashima); Warring States knife-shaped coins (mingdaoqian) |
Coral cist burials | Probable influence from stone cists in Kyushu |
Note: 1 This interpretation is from Reference Kinoshita and FujioKinoshita (2019b), but it should be noted that the Late Neolithic cultures of the southern Ryukyus made extensive use of Scaridae (parrotfish) without possessing any pottery at all.
Rice and other cereals are reasonable candidates for commodities exchanged to the Ryukyus from Kyushu. While many archaeologists have assumed that the shell trade would have led to the onset of agriculture in the Ryukyu islands, this was not the case. We have little concrete evidence for goods traded into Okinawa at this time, though cloth, silk and rice wine have been proposed as possibilities. Thanks to the work of archaeobotanist Hiroto Takamiya, the Okinawa and Amami islands have the best sequence of directly dated plant remains from anywhere in Japan. Takamiya’s work has shown that wild plants such as nuts (Casatanopsis sieboldii, Actinidia rufa, Machilus thunbergii) and grape (Vitis sp.) were exclusively consumed until the end of the first millennium AD. After that, a combination of cereals (foxtail millet, wheat, barley and rice) spread to Amami from the eighth century, to Okinawa from the tenth, and then to the previously isolated southern Ryukyus from the twelfth (Reference Takamiya, Hudson, Yonenobu, Kurozumi and ToizumiTakamiya et al. 2016). Domesticated animals (pigs, cattle, horses, goats and chickens) spread south to the islands at the same time (Reference ToizumiToizumi 2018). Historical linguists have argued that Ryukyuan, a sister language of Japanese, dispersed with farming (Reference Pellard, Heinrich, Miyara and ShimojiPellard 2015).
The tropical shells brought to Kyushu in the Yayoi period were made into bracelets whose angular forms recall bronze and yet whose colour resembles white jade. These artefacts can be considered as examples of ‘creative translation’ from one medium to another (cf. Reference Sofaer, Jørgensen, Choyke, Fokkens and HardingSofaer et al. 2013). Writing about Bronze Age China, Reference CampbellCampbell (2020) notes that these materials would originally have been ‘white, bright, and, or, lustrous – all qualities associated with the spirits in later texts’. In Japan, shell artefacts were later copied in bronze and there is even a wooden replica of a shell bracelet from Karako-kagi (Nara) (Reference PearsonPearson 1990: 919). Shell bracelets were traded from Okinawa to north-west Kyushu from the beginning of the Yayoi, centuries before bronze became common in the Japanese archaeological record (Reference Nakazono, Matsumoto, Bessho and TomiiNakazono 2011: 51). It is unclear whether shells were chosen as a replacement material because bronze was so expensive to obtain, especially in the first half of the Yayoi period. Alternatively, perhaps Okinawan shells mirrored or ‘stood in’ for bronze while originating from even more exotic sources and cycles of production. Of course, shell artefacts served – like bronze – to reinforce the status of Yayoi elites, but either way the Yayoi shell trade in my view presupposes some knowledge of bronze as a desirable material.
Yayoi pots were transported to Okinawa from Kyushu, mostly from the Satsuma peninsula (Reference Nakazono, Matsumoto, Bessho and TomiiNakazono 2011; Reference Shinzato and TakamiyaShinzato 2018). That Yayoi pottery in Okinawa had a certain value can be deduced from the fact that it was often repaired when cracked. The mainland Japanese, by contrast, were less interested in Okinawan products except for shells, and only one Okinawan pot has been found on Kyushu. This pot was reported at the Takahashi site on the Satsuma peninsula (Kagoshima), a settlement which Reference Nakazono, Matsumoto, Bessho and TomiiNakazono (2011) regards as a major shell trade entrepôt. Aside from pottery, only a handful of exotic objects reached Okinawa at this time. These include glass beads, spindle whorls, coins, fragments of iron axes, a piece of the hilt of a bronze sword, a fragment of a Han bronze mirror and Lelang pottery (Reference Nakazono, Matsumoto, Bessho and TomiiNakazono 2011). Three-winged bronze arrowheads of Han crossbow style have been found at Uken and Uza-no-hamayabaru on Okinawa (Ashiya Board of Education 2007). Many of these artefacts can be linked with the East Asian mainland, raising the possibility that they were imported directly rather than via Kyushu, although no ordinary Chinese or Korean ceramics have been excavated from these Okinawan sites.
In summary, it is very hard to situate the Ryukyus in the East Asian Bronze Age. On one hand, there was very developed maritime trade and voyaging but, on the other, there was little apparent desire by the Ryukyuans to participate in the Bronze Age world system. Reference Kinoshita and FujioKinoshita (2019b: 34) writes that for the Ryukyuans, ‘neither cereals or the new materials [bronze] were attractive enough for them to become partial to’ and she concludes that behind their reluctance to accept Yayoi culture were the stable resources of the coral reefs. To play on the title of Reference Kristiansen and LarssonKristiansen and Larsson (2005), the Ryukyus at this time seem to be a case of travels without transformation.
3 Bronze and Warrior Aristocracies in the Japanese Islands
European archaeologists have proposed that ‘the Bronze Age represents the global emergence of a militarized society with a martial culture materialized in a package of new, efficient weapons that remained in use for millennia to come’ (Reference Horn, Kristiansen, Horn and KristiansenHorn & Kristiansen 2018: 1, emphasis added). While this proposal makes sense for Europe and the Near East, to what extent can it also be applied to East Asia? In this section, I use the Japanese islands as a case study to explore this problem.
Until the 1980s, the Bronze Age Yayoi period in Japan was widely regarded as a ‘peaceful, non-military, shamanistic and ceremonially religious’ society (Reference EgamiEgami 1964: 44). This was contrasted with the warlike ‘Horseriders’ of the following Kofun era under the assumption that violence and warfare were introduced to Japan from the outside. The discovery of sites such as Yoshinogari (Saga) changed this understanding and, over the past three decades, the Yayoi has come to be seen as the period marking the advent of full-scale warfare in the archipelago. At the same time, however, many scholars continue to emphasise the ‘ritual’ aspects of Yayoi society. Almost all Japanese books on the Yayoi structure their discussion of bronze around ritual rather than warfare. Yayoi specialist Shinichirō Fujio is not unusual in making the broader argument that Bronze Age Japan differed significantly from western Eurasia in terms of war and weapons: ‘From the perspective of world history’, he writes, ‘in the West bronze was used for sharp weapons (arms) but in the East Asian world centred on China, it was used for ritual objects’ (Reference FujioFujio 2015: 110).Footnote 6 Such claims recall those of Reference ChangChang (1983, Reference Chang and Lamberg-Karlovsky1989) who stressed the political role of ritual and shamanism in Bronze Age China. Yet there is little question that ‘warfare was an integral and essential part of the religious system’ in Bronze Age China (Reference Yates, Raaflaub and RosensteinYates 1999: 9; see also Reference Yuan and FladYuan & Flad 2005; Reference CampbellCampbell 2018; Reference Sanft, Fagan, Fibiger, Hudson and TrundleSanft 2020). How, then, should we characterise the relationships between violence, ritual and society in the Japanese archipelago?
3.1 The Violence of Rice
In my own earlier work, I have also been guilty of overemphasising the ritual aspects of Yayoi violence. In a 1992 essay on Yayoi ritual and religion – a paper which after some thirty years unfortunately remains the most detailed treatment of its topic in English – I discussed the so-called hunting design bronze mirror from Gunma prefecture, which is thought to date to the third century AD (illustrated and discussed in Reference HudsonHudson 1992: 147–50). This mirror has two concentric bands of decoration. In the inner band, four human figures are interspersed with deer; two of the figures carry shields (or possibly bows) and spears or halberds, one holds a jar aloft, while the fourth has its empty hands upraised. The outer band has ten figures, eight of whom are armed with shields and swords, one with a shield and spear/halberd, and one again stands with arms upraised. In my earlier essay, I followed Shitara’s (1991) interpretation that this mirror depicts mock warfare as part of a seasonal round of agricultural rituals.
Deer are the most common animal depicted in Yayoi art (Figure 9). Though dating some five hundred years after the end of the Yayoi, the eighth-century Harima fudoki is frequently used to link deer with rice through the story of rice seeds germinating after being planted in the fresh blood of a deer (Reference PalmerPalmer 2015). The deer on the Gunma mirror have different-sized antlers, and small circles located above the animals may represent the movement of the sun or moon, both features perhaps suggesting a seasonal round related to cultivation. Alternatively, deer can be seen as a symbol of the wild and thus the bravery and heroism required as part of the warrior ethos. The two figures with upraised arms would seem to be examples of adorants or ‘persons performing an act of adoration or invocation to a higher being’ (Reference MaringerMaringer 1979: 215). Johannes Maringer, a German prehistorian who taught archaeology in Japan in the 1950s, noted that such adorants are common in prehistoric art around the world. This also helps us to understand the fact that the adorants on the Gunma mirror only have three fingers on each hand since the gesture of prayer adopted by the adorant is often depicted by an emphasis on outstretched fingers. Of the examples illustrated by Reference MaringerMaringer (1979), an urn from the Caucasus has an adorant hunter with three fingers like the Gunma mirror. Another Yayoi example is an incised sherd from Shimizukaze (Nara) where the adorant has a drawing of a deer on its torso (Figure 10a).Footnote 7
Interpretation of the Gunma mirror – and indeed other Bronze Age art from Japan – is difficult, but in contrast to my earlier work, I would today be more inclined to approach it from the framework of violence rather than agricultural ceremonies. This distinction is not, of course, an absolute one; in the ancient world, violence and warfare always involved ritual aspects and it is difficult to separate the two (Reference CampbellCampbell 2018; Reference Fagan, Fibiger, Hudson and TrundleFagan et al. 2020). Rituals were polyvalent. Reference Armit, Fagan, Fibiger, Hudson and TrundleArmit (2020: 442) notes that ritual can be seen as a formalisation of important aspects of life. This formalisation is often enacted through performance: for instance, headhunting in Iron Age Europe could have been associated with a desire to ensure the fertility of crops and the community. In Bronze Age China, warfare was connected to both hunting and agriculture (Reference Yates, Raaflaub and RosensteinYates 1999: 14). From this perspective, the major problem with the Japanese literature is its insistence on trying to separate the ritual from the non-ritual aspects of Bronze Age violence, a separation which stems in part from the strong Marxist tradition in early post-war Japanese archaeology (cf. Reference Kaner and InsollKaner 2011).
Let us look briefly at two examples of the role of shamanism in framing Yayoi ritual and violence, one an artistic depiction and one an actual skeleton. Reference TerasawaTerasawa (2000: 104) interprets a human figure on a small ceramic bell-shaped object found at Kawayori-yoshihara (Saga), which probably dates to the first century BC, as a ‘shaman’. The figure has what may be a feather headdress; a sword is carried at the waist and a shield and halberd are held in the hands (Figure 10b). To the right of the figure, an oval object is possibly a depiction of a bronze bell. To the left, three lines may represent arrows piercing an animal such as a deer or wild boar. In the second example, at Doigahama (Yamaguchi), a headless male skeleton had been shot with thirteen stone arrowheads. Two shark teeth found with the skeleton are also possible arrowheads. According to Reference MatsushitaMatsushita (1994: 46), the presence of two Sinustrombus latissimus shell bracelets and the ‘overkill’ associated with his death identify this individual as a shaman. Matsushita’s argument is that a ritual leader of the community was sacrificed by his own group members because of the transgressive danger he represented. In these and other examples, the possibility that ‘shamanistic’ figures were involved in warfare is not totally dismissed. Yet there is no more evidence to suggest the discoveries from Kawayori-yoshihara or Doigahama represent ritual specialists rather than professional warriors. Other finds of Yayoi skeletons subjected to ‘overkill’ include a male with seventeen arrowheads from the Shinpō site in Kobe; since this individual was buried in a row with two other males, Reference MatsugiMatsugi (2001: 30) argues all three were killed in combat at the same time.
As noted earlier in this Element, Japanese archaeologists have regarded the Yayoi as part of an East Asian Bronze Age culture centred on ritual objects and ‘ritualised’ weapons. Reference Chang and Lamberg-KarlovskyChang (1989) saw this as a different pattern from the ancient Near East where bronze was also used for tools of production. Reference RawsonRawson (2017) extends this approach by proposing three aspects of ‘reception and resistance’ to bronze technology in the central plains of the Yellow River. The first was that bronze was used primarily for vessels rather than weapons. Chinese bronze vessels were elaborate and could be extremely large. The heaviest surviving example weighs 875 kg – the largest bronze vessel cast anywhere in the ancient world (Reference Shelach-LaviShelach-Lavi 2015: 212). By weight, this vessel alone is equivalent to almost half of all bronze excavated from Yayoi Japan by the 1980s, according to estimates published by Reference SaharaSahara (1987a: 282). Second, chariots were adopted from the steppes by 1300 BC, but Chinese armies did not adopt northern or steppe patterns of combat based on an ethos of individual valour. Third, jade weapons in elite burials replaced the bronze weapons which usually accompanied the peoples of the steppes in their graves. Bronze Age China therefore had several aspects which seem to emphasise the ritual side of society, yet warfare and violence were still defining features of the period with numerous finds of bronze weapons in the archaeological record. Moreover, new research has critiqued the traditional emphasis on bronze as centrally distributed prestige goods and emphasised increasing commercialisation in Bronze Age China (Reference Campbell, Jaffe, Kim, Sturm and JaangCampbell et al. 2021).
With the exception of chariots, the Yayoi cultures of Bronze Age Japan were more receptive to the bronze culture of the steppes than the central plains. Bronze was used for weapons and bells, but not for vessels. Bronze weapons were frequent grave goods in Yayoi elite tombs where they were often found with bronze mirrors. The first bronze mirrors in Japan were imported from Korea and were of northern type. By the latter part of the Yayoi, Chinese bronze mirrors became common and were frequently exchanged within political networks (Reference EdwardsEdwards 1999). Even during the essentially Iron Age Early Kofun period (AD 250–400), bronze mirrors remained the main symbol of political authority until replaced by iron armour in the fifth century (Reference Sasaki and FridaySasaki 2017: 68). However, Chinese influence on the use of Yayoi halberds cannot be ruled out (Reference MatsugiMatsugi 2001: 57; Reference KobayashiKobayashi 2017).
A rich record of drawings on Yayoi pots and bronze bells has been much debated. A number of these drawings include figures with shields, halberds and other weapons. There are several examples of two or three warriors who appear to be engaged in combat. A jar from Shimizukaze (Nara) has two human figures each holding shields and halberds (Reference KobayashiKobayashi 2017: 138). Other warriors are associated with deer and birds, requiring a broader symbolic interpretation. Such an analysis is beyond the scope of the present Element, but I argue that we must not lose sight of the underlying violence intrinsic to warriors and their depiction in Yayoi society. Figure 11 shows one of the most interesting yet mysterious art works from the Yayoi. There are two overlapping drawings (Reference KobayashiKobayashi 2017: 139). On the left is a human figure with a shield and a short halberd. The shield was rubbed out and a deer and two bird-shaped figures were then drawn at right with deeper lines. The larger bird appears to be mounting or even copulating with the deer; a human wearing a bird costume is one possible interpretation of this drawing. While the broader meaning remains unclear, there is a need for further research which integrates questions of ritual and violence in Yayoi society.
3.2 Weapons and Warfare in Bronze Age Japan
Evidence for warfare in Bronze Age Japan derives from a wide range of materials including skeletal trauma, weapons, fortifications, burials, artistic depictions and texts. Although levels of violence in the Neolithic Jōmon period continue to be debated (Reference Nakao, Tamura, Arimatsu, Nakagawa, Matsumoto and MatsugiNakao et al. 2016; Reference Hudson, Schulting, Gilaizeau, Fagan, Fibiger, Hudson and TrundleHudson et al. 2020), by any criteria there is abundant evidence for warfare in the Yayoi. A recent compilation based on existing reports found that more than 3 per cent of skeletons from Yayoi Japan have evidence of skeletal violence (Reference Nakagawa, Nakao, Tamura, Arimatsu, Matsumoto and MatsugiNakagawa et al. 2017). This is likely to be an underestimate since new bioarchaeological protocols for violent trauma have been developed in recent years (Reference Schulting and FibigerSchulting & Fibiger 2012).
As elsewhere in Eurasia, the Bronze Age saw the introduction of a totally new set of weapons into Japan. Swords, spears, shields, helmets and armour provided the main military accoutrements in Japan until the sixteenth century, when guns began to transform warfare (Reference ChaseChase 2003). The major difference in terms of weaponry between Japan and many other parts of Bronze Age Eurasia was the absence of the chariot in the archipelago. Chariots were widely used across Eurasia for a thousand years from around 1700 to 700 BC (Reference AnthonyAnthony 2007: 18). In the central plains of northern China, chariots were introduced by the thirteenth century BC (Reference RawsonRawson 2017) and were probably present in Mongolia by around the same time (Reference Esin, Magail, Gantulga and Yeruul-ErdeneEsin et al. 2021). Chariots are found in Liaoning province in north-east China (Reference ShaughnessyShaughnessy 1988: 190), but never spread beyond to the forested or mountainous regions of Northeast Asia. In Japan, horses were only introduced in the late fourth century AD, when the age of the chariot was long past.
The first Yayoi-period weapons were polished stone daggers and arrowheads of Korean style found at the earliest rice-growing sites in northern Kyushu such as Nabatake (Saga). At Shinmachi (Fukuoka), an Initial Yayoi grave contained a mature male who had been shot from behind with a polished stone arrowhead. Although this dolmen burial shows continental influence in its mortuary style, the skeleton itself is morphologically similar to the Jōmon populations who had long lived in the region. One interpretation of this find might thus be a local hunter-gatherer attacked by incoming farmers. A more complex situation is, however, suggested by the discovery of human teeth from another, younger individual in a pit inside the grave, a find which suggests that the Shinmachi people may have engaged in headhunting (Reference MatsugiMatsugi 2001: 27–8).
Villages enclosed by ditches and fences were introduced from the Korean peninsula at the beginning of the Yayoi period (Reference Arbousse-BastideArbousse-Bastide 2005; Reference MizoguchiMizoguchi 2013). At Itazuke (Fukuoka), a V-shaped ditch 1.5–4.5 m wide and 0.7–2.3 m deep encircled a settlement measuring 81 by 110 m. Some Yayoi sites have earthen banks along the ditches and excavations at Asahi (Aichi) have shown that wooden stakes and barricades were also used (Reference TanakaTanaka 1991: 20–3).
Enclosed villages and stone weapons spread east up the archipelago together with rice farming. In the Osaka–Kyoto region, polished stone weapons were replaced by a chipped stone technology but the shape of the daggers and arrowheads still followed Korean prototypes (Reference MatsugiMatsugi 2001: 30). In other words, chipped stone weapons imitated polished stone weapons which themselves imitated bronze, a further example of the ‘creative translations’ of bronzisation.
Around 400 BC, bronze swords, halberds and spearheads began to be introduced to Kyushu. Of the three weapons, swords were the most popular, followed next by halberds; bronze spearheads seem to have been less widely used. In terms of absolute numbers, stone weapons remained more common than bronze but are found mainly from settlement remains and were rarely buried in warrior graves. Evidence for the actual use of bronze swords includes a sword tip found embedded in the skull of a mature female from Neshiko (Nagasaki) (Reference MatsugiMatsugi 2001: 46). After a period of only three or four centuries, iron weapons also appeared in Japan. Again, the sword appears to have been the weapon of choice. As iron became more common, bronze weapons – as well as bronze bells – were transformed into increasingly oversized and ‘ritualised’ objects. By the third century AD, iron had replaced bronze and stone weapons.
Even as iron gained ground in Yayoi Japan, however, bronze arrowheads became common from the first century AD, a change which, according to Reference MatsugiMatsugi (2001: 73), may reflect the influence of Han China, presumably through its commandery at Lelang in Korea. A mould for casting bronze arrowheads has been found at Sugu-okamoto (Fukuoka). Most Yayoi bronze arrowheads are small: less than 4 cm long and around 3 g in weight. Some Japanese scholars once thought that they were too small to have been used in actual warfare, but several skeletons with such arrowheads deeply embedded in the bone have been found at Aoya-kamijichi (Tottori) (Reference MatsugiMatsugi 2001: 74). Bronze arrowheads of similar size are known in Europe. The 134 bronze arrowheads found at the Late Bronze Age Wrocław–Widawa site in Poland had lengths ranging between 2.8 and 4.8 cm (Reference Baron, Puziewicz, Nowak, Sych, Miazga and ZiobroBaron et al. 2020). In China, small bronze arrowheads were also used with crossbows, which were in use by at least the fourth century BC (Reference WrightWright 2005). In Japan, a Yayoi-period crossbow part has been found at Himebaranishi (Shimane), although the excavation report concludes that, since it appears less practical than examples from Han China, it was probably a crossbow-shaped ritual artefact (Reference AdachiAdachi 1999: 126). Even if this interpretation were correct, however, it would imply that the Yayoi people were familiar with actual crossbows. More than ten three-winged bronze crossbow bolts are known from Yayoi sites located in Okinawa, Nagasaki, Fukuoka, Kagawa and Shimane prefectures (Ashiya Board of Education 2007) (Figure 4).
3.2.1 Organising Warfare
From the late seventh century AD, the Japanese court started to establish a military system based on Tang China (Reference FarrisFarris 1995). Prior to that, we know very little about how warfare in the Japanese archipelago was organised and conducted. Reference MatsugiMatsugi (2001: 47–8) suggests that separate units based on weapons (archers, etc) did not exist in the Yayoi; instead, warriors combined different weapons as available or appropriate. The problem with this interpretation is that many Bronze Age weapons, including swords and shields, would have required special training to be used effectively (Reference Molloy, Horn, Fagan, Fibiger, Hudson and TrundleMolloy & Horn 2020). Wooden daggers which follow bronze prototypes – some very closely – have been found at Yayoi sites such as Minamikata (Okayama). Reference MizoguchiMizoguchi (2013: 133–4) regards these as ritual objects but conflates clear weapon-shaped objects with mysterious wooden artefacts of unknown function. Even if these artefacts were found discarded together, we cannot assume that they were necessarily used in the same context. In my view, it is likely that the weapon-shaped wooden objects were used for military training.
Shields, one of the most important inventions of the Bronze Age, were rectangular and made of wood, sometimes covered in lacquer. Yayoi art suggests that shields were at least sometimes held in the hand and used with swords or, more commonly, with halberds.Footnote 8 As well as shields, several examples of organic body armour have been found at Yayoi sites including Minamikata, Sasai (Fukuoka) and Iba (Shizuoka) (Reference BarnesRyan & Barnes 2014). Wooden cuirasses painted with red and black lacquer had geometric patterns perhaps designed to frighten opponents (Reference TanakaTanaka 1991: 50). In Europe, it is often assumed that bronze cuirasses developed from organic prototypes, although none of the latter have survived (Reference MödlingerMödlinger 2017: 172–3). In Japan, by contrast, no bronze cuirasses are known, perhaps because the metal was so scarce. In the Kofun period, iron armour became common and 530 iron cuirasses are reported from Japan (Reference BarnesRyan & Barnes 2014: 4).
In the early centuries of the Yayoi period, we know from sourcing studies of the lithic materials used to make stone weapons that most conflicts occurred within regional zones such as Kyushu (Reference MatsugiMatsugi 2001: 38–41). Since bronze was imported and sometimes recast, the scale of conflict becomes harder to evaluate over time. By the third century AD, Chinese accounts of the land of Wa (Japan) mention that ‘For some seventy or eighty years … there were disturbances and warfare’ (Reference Tsunoda and GoodrichTsunoda & Goodrich 1951). After this unrest, the Wa people are said to have been unified under a queen Pimiko (or Himiko in modern Japanese). Increasing political unification in third-century Japan is often linked to the ritual role of bronze in symbolising power. Reference Sahara and TsuboiSahara (1987b: 50) proposed that Yayoi bronze weapons originally followed continental shapes and had sharp edges, but over time ‘weapons to kill with’ became ceremonial ‘weapons to look at’. This argument is based on the appearance of weapons with wider, unsharpened blades and spearheads which cannot be hafted because casting debris is still found in the socket. A wide blade does not, in itself, mean that a weapon is impractical – in fact, a wider blade makes it easier to inflict deeper cuts on an opponent (Reference Gener, Horn and KristiansenGener 2018: 141–2) – but the Yayoi examples discussed by Sahara and others develop into highly impractical objects. Although perhaps less pronounced than in Japan, southern Korea also saw an increased ‘ritualisation’ of bronze weapons. However, Reference Iwanaga, Byington, Sasaki and BaleIwanaga (2018) proposes a fundamental difference between the two regions. In Korea, he argues, bronze was not used for the type of communal rituals which worked towards the consensual social integration of large areas of western Japan. In Iwanaga’s reading, as compared to Japan, peninsular politics were marked by greater conflict between early kingdoms and he explains this by the fact that iron spread more rapidly in Korea, leading to more decentralised politics (Reference Iwanaga, Byington, Sasaki and BaleIwanaga 2018: 108). Iwanaga’s ideas about the role of metals in generating political (de)centralisation are interesting; nevertheless, he perhaps relies too much on the unwarranted assumption that – compared to the more ‘political’ Koreans – early Japan formed a ‘natural’ community.
Japanese archaeologists emphasise rice agriculture and associated conflicts over land and water as the fundamental cause of Bronze Age violence; trade with Eurasia and its warrior cultures is rarely considered as a contributing factor. Yet Yayoi warfare clearly developed in the context of close links with the Korean peninsula and cannot only be seen as a natural result of the internal contradictions of agricultural societies in isolation from any broader historical context. This is an area where further research is warranted. Sites such as Haru-no-tsuji site on Iki island may provide some support for this hypothesis. The Wei zhi notes that both Tsushima and Iki relied on trade to support poor agricultural production. The fact that the large Yayoi town at Haru-no-tsuji has defensive ditches implies that violence was connected to maritime trade as well as agricultural production.
3.3 Warriors As Heroes?
In European archaeology, Bronze Age warriors have been seen as semi-professional groups who engaged in extensive preparation and training, yet also as symbolically heroic figures governed by particular etiquettes of appearance and behaviour (Reference TreherneTreherne 1995; Kristiansen 1999; Reference Kristiansen and LarssonKristiansen & Larsson 2005; Schulting 2013). Similarities between Bronze Age warriors and the Homeric epics have been noted (Vandkilde 2006).
In East Asia, a rather different type of Bronze Age warrior ethos has been discussed for China. Reference Keightley and SiebersKeightley (1993) argued that individual hand-to-hand combat using swords was not important to Bronze Age Chinese elites and noted that the early Chinese classics contain no heroic warrior tales like the Iliad. The Shang seem to have adopted the weapons but not the tactics of the steppes (Reference RawsonRawson 2015, Reference Rawson2017). What, then, about Japan? Did Bronze Age Japan follow the Chinese style of elite warrior culture or another pattern?
In the Middle Ages, there are many heroic warrior narratives from Japan, the most famous being the Tale of the Heike. In 1948, historian Shō Ishimoda published an influential essay in which he argued that Hegel’s ‘Heroic Age’ had also existed in ancient Japan. Ishimoda’s ‘Heroic Age’ was a critique of the emperor system and attempted to show that power in ancient Japan did not automatically derive from the imperial line but rather from conflicts between local elites. This critique retains its resonance against the background of reactionary scholars who combine support for the emperor system with an insistence that Japan has been uniquely peaceful in world history, an idea that can be traced back to the writings of Motoori Norinaga (1730–1801) (see Reference HudsonHudson 2021b). For reasons discussed in an important historiographic essay by Reference IsomaeIsomae (2002), the debate over Japan’s ancient ‘Heroic Age’ went out of fashion after the 1950s, though it was briefly revived by Reference MatsugiMatsugi (2001).
When we look at the earliest Japanese records, military exploits are frequently narrated in terms of underhand subterfuge – sometimes with a homoerotic subtext – rather than as a professional or heroic struggle. For instance, the Kojiki recounts how eighty Tsuchigumo or ‘Earth Spiders’ – a people who resisted the Yamato kingdom and who perhaps lived in pit houses – were murdered at a banquet given by the mythical ruler Jimmu (Reference PhilippiPhilippi 1969: 174–7). The legendary prince Yamato-takeru, the most famous warrior in the early texts, who has been described as an ‘Arthurian hero’ by Reference LittletonLittleton (1995), dressed as a girl in order to kill two Kumaso brothers during a feast, the younger brother being stabbed in the buttocks while making his escape (Reference PhilippiPhilippi 1969: 234–5).Footnote 9 Later, Yamato-takeru pledged friendship with a local warrior in Izumo on the Sea of Japan, only to kill him after switching swords after bathing together. When attacking the Kumaso in southern Kyushu, an advisor to Emperor Keikō devised a plan whereby two beautiful daughters of a Kumaso chief were enticed to Keikō’s camp by ‘valuable presents’. Once in the camp, ‘The Emperor straightway had intercourse with [one of the daughters], and made a show of affection for her.’ The girl then returned home with strong saké. While her father slept after drinking this saké, the daughter cut his bowstring, allowing him to be killed by the soldiers who had accompanied her. In a note no doubt added to appease Confucian sensibilities, the Nihon shoki claims that Keikō was ‘provoked by such excessively unfilial conduct and put [the daughter] to death’ (Reference AstonAston 1972: I, 195–6).
These stories cannot be read literally. However, the implication that the Yamato kingdom found it difficult to subjugate populations away from the alluvial plains unless it resorted to ‘underhand’ methods has a ring of truth. In the early Japanese texts, the violent exploits of the Yamato heroes are unconvincingly combined with attempts to stress the moral superiority of the court in Chinese (Confucian) terms. Yet early Chinese texts also emphasise the ‘underhand’ use of swords in ambushes and assassinations (Reference RawsonRawson 2017), raising the question of intertextual influences in early Japanese descriptions of violence.
In a much-cited paper, Reference TreherneTreherne (1995) argued that Bronze Age warriors in Europe followed a masculine ethos which involved relationships of honour, patronage and reciprocity, the shared consumption of alcohol and ideals of bodily decoration and grooming. While it would be wrong to force Yayoi Japan into the same mould, there are nevertheless some interesting parallels which may help us to think about the Yayoi in a new way. For Treherne, bronze mirrors were part of a culture of warrior beauty and were associated with other toilet articles such as combs, razors, tweezers and tattooing awls. The Wei zhi account of the ‘abstainer’ mentioned earlier shows that the combing of hair and care of bodily appearance was a social norm, at least in the third century. Bronze mirrors are one of the key artefacts in Yayoi archaeology. Usually seen as ritual objects linked to elite culture and to the later ‘imperial regalia’, there has been little discussion of the possible cosmetic as opposed to the political use of bronze mirrors.Footnote 10 Tattoos are mentioned in the Wei zhi and are also depicted on Yayoi pottery. A Late Yayoi jar from Kametsuka (Aichi) has a tattooed human face incised on one side. Similar designs are known from Yayoi sites in Yamaguchi and Kagawa prefectures. The intricate tattoo patterns depicted on these pots were no doubt designed to be seen. Yayoi facial tattoos would have required some type of toilet articles to shave the face and perhaps parts of the head.Footnote 11 Aside from mirrors, however, there are few examples of bronze personal ornaments in Yayoi Japan, unlike in the northern steppe zone, where such items are more common.
There has so far been little discussion of the possibility of professional warriors or mercenaries in the Yayoi. Later historical texts contain some relevant comments in this respect. For example, the Nihon shoki describes how in the reign of King Ōjin, ‘The fishermen [ama, literally ‘sea people’] of several places clamoured noisily, and would not obey the Imperial command.’ While Ōjin is a legendary ruler, it seems likely this description reflects frequent resistance by these ‘sea people’. The same text shows that ‘fishermen’ could became mercenaries, as when the ama from Awaji island served a local warlord against the court (Reference AstonAston 1972: I, 305–6).
Kyushu-type bronze swords and spearheads are found in Korea, raising the possibility that warriors from Japan crossed over to the peninsula (Reference Iwanaga, Byington, Sasaki and BaleIwanaga 2018: 110–14), perhaps as mercenaries. This mercenary interpretation is complicated by the fact that some of the Japanese weapons that reached Korea were of non-utilitarian form. Yet, as one reviewer of this Element pointed out, the weapons were part of a broader trade across the Tsushima Straits, and I suggest that warriors of some sort would have been needed to protect that trade. This question relates to one of the most controversial issues in the ancient history of Northeast Asia. Early Japanese chronicles mention the ‘Mimana Nihonfu’ or ‘Japanese government office in Mimana’. Many pre-war historians saw Mimana (or Imna in modern Korean) as a colonial outpost of the Japanese state. Given the violent history of later Japanese invasions and annexation of the peninsula (1592–8 and 1910–45), Korean scholars such as Park (2018: 134) are reluctant to call Imna a colony, but accept its status as an ‘administrative office’ for envoys from the archipelago. While a detailed analysis of this thorny problem is beyond the scope of this Element, it seems clear that warriors from the Japanese islands were active on the Korean peninsula in some capacity by at least the fourth century AD. These warriors cannot necessarily be called ‘Japanese’, a term which might imply they were part of an official army of the Yamato state. An inscription on a memorial stele to the Koguryŏ king Kwanggaet’o, erected in 414 in what is now Jilin province in north-east China, uses the term pronounced Wa in Japanese (Korean wae, Chinese wo) (Reference SzczesniakSzczesniak 1951; Reference HudsonHudson 1989). Although Park (2018: 142) insists that the Wa are to be linked with Japan’s central polity located in Nara, the reality was probably much more fluid. Based on an analysis of the twelfth-century Silla pon’gi, Reference HatadaHatada (1979) argued that the Wa were pirates based in northern Kyushu. This may also be a too limited view. Piracy and trade probably alternated with episodes of more sustained warfare, perhaps focussed on controlling trading entrepôts, resulting in a Wa diaspora on the peninsula which likely comprised a diverse mix of warriors, traders, craftspeople and official envoys from various kingdoms in the archipelago. Interestingly, the opposite possibility of ‘Korean’ warriors employed in the archipelago is rarely if ever considered. Writing about the fifth to sixth centuries AD, Reference Kameda, Byington, Sasaki and BaleKameda (2018) argues that groups from the Korean peninsula were employed by chiefs in Okayama on the Seto Inland Sea to produce iron, fabricate tools and supervise maritime transport. If this was the case, then warriors would have been needed to protect that trade and this pattern plausibly dates back to the Bronze Age. Against a background of political competition between regional kingdoms in Yayoi and Kofun Japan, hiring warrior specialists from the peninsula would no doubt have been an attractive option.
4 Bronze Age Island East Asia and the Rise of the Barbarian Niche
Childe (1950) proposed that the Bronze Age marked a decisive shift to an urban and commercial civilisation. Notwithstanding critiques such as Reference JenningsJennings (2016), many historians and archaeologists have followed Childe’s approach, with the result that ‘areas that do not display these Bronze Age urbanised “civilisational” attributes tend to get marginalised’ (Reference Rowlands, Fuller, Kristiansen, Lindkvist and MyrdalRowlands & Fuller 2018: 173). A common response has been to engage in what Reference Spriggs, Kristiansen, Lindkvist and MyrdalSpriggs (2018) calls ‘urban-state envy’ – boosting or exaggerating the evidence for early civilisations. In Japan, there have even been claims of a ‘Jōmon civilisation’ (cf. Reference Habu, Fawcett, Habu, Fawcett and MatsunagaHabu & Fawcett 2008; Reference HudsonHudson 2021b). Using a different perspective, Reference Rowlands, Fuller, Kristiansen, Lindkvist and MyrdalRowlands and Fuller (2018) regard the focus on the Bronze Age as misplaced, and propose a re-evaluation of the Neolithic for Africa and other parts of the Global South.
If Bronze Age societies typically formed civilisations, however, they also had what Reference ScottScott (2017: 248–52) calls their ‘dark twins’ in the shape of barbarian societies, a relationship articulated by Reference LattimoreLattimore (1962) and by classical writers such as Strabo (Reference Horden and PurcellHorden & Purcell 2000: 157). The underlying political economy is nicely summarised by Reference Liu, Chen, Rehren, Mei, Chen, Liu and KillickLiu and colleagues (2018: 105): ‘Most major Bronze Age civilizations developed in the catchments of large rivers that were sustaining a high population density through intensive agriculture. These areas, however, are almost always devoid of mineral resources, which are typically exposed only in mountainous areas, remote from the centres of agricultural civilization. Thus, these centres were dependent on distant areas to provide their strategically important metals, primarily copper, tin and gold, but also lead and silver.’ As well as metals, Bronze Age East Asia developed extensive trade in salt, textiles (silk), slaves, jade, amber, shells, bronze weapons and mirrors, and perhaps timber. While various elements of the macro-regional division of labour in East Asia remain unclear, I have termed these dynamic changes the ‘secondary people’s revolution’ (Reference Hudson, Robbeets and SavelyevHudson 2020a).
The present Element has focussed especially on areas of eastern Eurasia which were slow to develop the Childean traits of Bronze Age civilisation. From Reference ScottScott (2017), I borrow the term barbarian to refer to peoples on the margins of the alluvial civilisations of East Asia. Most of this Element has focussed on Island East Asia – the islands off the east coast of Eurasia from Taiwan to the Kurils. From the perspective of the mainland ‘core’ states, these islands were remote, mountainous lands which lay beyond the reasonable possibility of conquest given the technologies of the time. Even in the thirteenth century, Mongol armies failed in their attacks on Kyushu and had considerable difficulty in subduing the Ainu on Sakhalin. Within Island East Asia, a series of mini-states developed in the alluvial plains of western Japan and then – in the Middle Ages – the Kantō region around modern Tokyo. These mini-states were surrounded by ungovernable ‘barbarian’ societies of the seas and mountains. In order to emphasise its own coreness, the ancient Japanese state adopted or invented Chinese-style names and categories such as tennō (‘emperor’) and its own barbarians of the four cardinal directions (Reference HudsonHudson 1999; Reference BattenBatten 2003; Reference AminoAmino 2012). To the extent that these Japanese conceits followed proper Confucian precepts – and the Japanese kings payed tribute – they were generally accepted by the Chinese, who were far more concerned with non-state actors. For chiefs and kings in the archipelago, participation in the Chinese tributary system provided material gifts such as bronze mirrors, but ‘what the Japanese leaders were really after was the official Chinese recognition such gifts implied, which reinforced their legitimacy at home and helped them consolidate their rule’ (Reference Batten and FridayBatten 2012: 92).
Building on previous studies such as Reference YüYü (1967) and Reference Di CosmoDi Cosmo (2002), Reference BarnesBarnes (2007) has analysed how Han and Wei China impacted the Japanese islands between the second century BC and the third century AD. In 108 BC, the Han invaded northern Korea and established a commandery at Lelang near modern P’yŏngyang (Byington 2014). Designed initially to limit the power of steppe barbarians to threaten China, this invasion brought some Japanese kingdoms into the Han tributary network by AD 57 (Reference BarnesBarnes 2007: 5). However, the real growth of state power in Japan occurred after the fall of the Wei in 265 led to a power vacuum in Korea and to competition between the kingdoms of the peninsula and the archipelago. The Kofun period began exactly at this time when Japan was no longer mentioned in Chinese dynastic records for almost two centuries between 266 and 421.
The insularity of Island East Asia worked both for and against the barbarian condition. Japan was one of the barbarian ‘stars’ in premodern East Asia, the principal home to the wakō, a shifting category of raiders and traders. Wakō included Koreans and Chinese, yet ‘Japanese tended to serve as a common language among wakō, and most of their bases were in Japan because of the absence of strong central authority there until the end of the sixteenth century’ (Reference SmitsSmits 2019: 40). The Kwanggaet’o stele suggests wakō raiding (broadly interpreted) may stretch back to at least the fourth century AD. Taiwan saw short-lived colonial outposts of Dutch and Spanish rule in the seventeenth century, but Aboriginal Austronesians and various Chinese and Japanese pirates maintained a decentralised tribal society there until the Japanese colonisation of 1895–1945. Outside powers only managed to ‘open’ Japan from the mid-nineteenth century and the American occupation from 1945 to 1952 (or 1972 in the case of Okinawa) was the first time the archipelago was controlled by a foreign power. The northern islands of Hokkaido, Sakhalin and the Kurils were not directly colonised by Japan and Russia until the nineteenth century. Prior to its industrial settler colonialism, Japan attempted to exploit these islands around the Sea of Okhotsk through long-distance trade, yet the Ainu maintained a vigorous trading diaspora until the seventeenth century. The wakō and the Ainu were two of the most successful non-state actors in premodern Island East Asia. However, insularity also meant that the possibilities for Island East Asian groups to feed off states were more limited than those available to the nomadic societies of Inner Eurasia.
In comparing civilisation and its barbarian ‘twin’, I do not mean to suggest that either condition was fixed or rigid; both conditions could encompass considerable variation (see e.g. Reference Hudson, Robbeets and SavelyevHudson 2020a; Reference Campbell, Jaffe, Kim, Sturm and JaangCampbell et al. 2021). The fluid dialectic between civilisation and barbarian analysed by scholars such as Barnes, Di Cosmo, Smits and Yü is rejected by the neo-Toynbeean proponents of Japanese ‘civilisation theory’ (cf. Reference Morris-SuzukiMorris-Suzuki 1993; Reference HudsonHudson 2021b). A key figure in that movement, archaeologist Yoshinori Reference YasudaYasuda (2008), portrays the East Asian Bronze Age as a ‘clash of civilisations’, claiming that an ‘invasion of the wheat/foxtail millet cultivating and pastoral people’ into northern China led to the collapse of civilisation in the Yangtze region and to migrations by rice farmers to the south and east. Such ideas resemble those of earlier generations of scholars writing about ‘Aryan’ invasions (cf. Reference AnthonyAnthony 2007; Reference DemouleDemoule 2014), yet Yasuda takes the argument to even greater extremes, insisting that the history of East Asia since 2000 BC has been one of the ‘oppression and destruction of the rice-cultivating piscatory people’s “civilization of beauty and compassion” by the wheat/barley/millet-cultivating pastoral people’s “civilization of force and conflict”’ (Reference Yasuda and YasudaYasuda 2013: 462). The research summarised in this Element points to a very different set of conclusions. West Eurasian domesticated crops and animals certainly had a major impact on East Asia in the Bronze Age, but evidence from ancient DNA suggests there was no large-scale migration by western pastoralists into the eastern steppes or beyond (Reference DamgaardDamgaard et al. 2018; Reference JeongJeong et al. 2020). Local populations in East Asia themselves actively adopted the new foods and technologies. Population movements certainly occurred within the East Asian region, but these were primarily migrations by peoples who had lived there since at least the Neolithic (Reference NingNing et al. 2020). There were no opposing rice or wheat/millet ‘civilisations’ as proposed by Yasuda. While these crops did originate in different places, they began to spread in the Neolithic and by the Bronze Age had become integrated into increasingly ‘globalised’ multicropping systems. This is nowhere clearer than in the Japanese islands where cereal agriculture only developed through the adoption of a diverse suite of Eurasian crops and animals. Another clear conclusion is that rice farmers in East Asia were not fishers. While carp aquaculture began as early as eight thousand years ago and by the Bronze Age was probably widely associated with rice paddy fields, carp likely provided a relatively minor addition to the diet.Footnote 12 The evidence from Japan shows that more intensive fishing was carried out by specialist maritime groups who traded fish, shellfish and salt with farmers. Finally, the analysis of violence in the Japanese islands in Section 3 of this Element clearly demonstrates that rice farmers cannot be categorised as exemplars of a peaceful ‘civilisation of beauty and compassion’!
More broadly, the Bronze Age was a time of new, transcultural identities rather than fixed civilisations in the Victorian mode. As argued by Reference VandkildeVandkilde (2016), bronzisation can be understood as a type of premodern globalisation. Here, I have stressed certain similarities found across Eurasia but I have also noted that the process of bronzisation engendered differences or what Reference RawsonRawson (2017) calls ‘reception and resistance’. Among other things, this perspective suggests a quite different interpretation of Japanese prehistory than commonly presented. Many scholars assume that in the Neolithic the archipelago was home to a single cultural horizon known as the Jōmon. While there is certainly debate over the details, the same Jōmon label is usually applied to the whole archipelago – except for Okinawa, where the terms ‘Ryukyu Jōmon’ or ‘Shell Mound period’ are also used. In the Bronze Age, by contrast, it is assumed that several different cultures evolved, breaking up the previous cultural unity of the islands. As discussed earlier in this Element, the presence or absence of wet-rice farming is used to separate the cultures of Hokkaido and Okinawa from the ‘mainstream’ of the Japanese historical experience. In my view, however, the complete opposite interpretation is more appropriate. In the Jōmon, there was a loosely connected series of ‘Neolithicities’ (Reference Fuller and CarreteroFuller & Carretero 2018) found across the archipelago. The Bronze Age, by contrast, was the first time when all of Japan from Okinawa up to Rebun island was really connected in the same expanding world. The cultures and societies of Bronze Age ‘Japan’ were not the same but were participating in one connected world.
4.1 Niche Construction and the Barbarian
Critics of James Scott’s Against the Grain have argued that he replaces traditional metanarratives of the rise of the state with an equally simplistic or ‘flat’ counter-narrative of what we might call the meta-barbarian. A series of essays in this vein, mostly by Americanist archaeologists, was published in 2019 in the Cambridge Archaeological Journal. Reference ScottScott (2019: 720–1) himself accepts that the people he glosses as ‘barbarian’ encompass a wide range of shifting economies, relations with neighbouring states and ecologies. In this Element, I have tried to make some preliminary observations about the time and space of the barbarian condition. Using the work of Kristiansen, Vandkilde and others, I have emphasised the role of the Bronze Age in generating the first barbarian economies. As noted already, this raises the question of whether or not barbarians sensu Scott can be said to exist in places such as Africa which remained ‘outside’ the Bronze Age (cf. Reference Rowlands, Fuller, Kristiansen, Lindkvist and MyrdalRowlands & Fuller 2018). This is a question for further research but, given the role of the state in spawning resistance from non-state actors, a reasonable hypothesis is that the barbarian was ultimately a global phenomenon.
Recent archaeology has paid growing attention to how our species has impacted the world through construction of a ‘human niche’ (Reference Rowley-Conwy and LaytonRowley-Conwy & Layton 2011; Reference EllisEllis 2015; Reference Boivin, Zeder, Fuller, Crowther, Larson, Erlandson, Denham and PetragliaBoivin et al. 2016). In East Asia, as elsewhere, research has focussed on major environmental turning points such as the Neolithic, urbanisation and industrialisation (Reference 53Bleed and MatsuiBleed & Matsui 2010; Reference Aikens and LeeAikens & Lee 2013; Reference Hudson and SchugHudson 2020b; Reference Storozum, Qin, Wang and LiuStorozum et al. 2020). Less attention has been given to the Bronze Age, but the expansion in Eurasian trade networks from the third millennium BC onwards was associated with new environmental adaptations including steppe pastoralism and milking cultures. Domesticated cereals and animals became increasingly globalised. Deforestation was associated with metal production, urbanisation and pastoralism (Reference ChewChew 2001; Reference Kristiansen, Hornborg and CrumleyKristiansen 2006). These new economic activities represented a significant expansion and intensification of human niche construction. Barbarians – in the sense used here – relied on this Bronze Age economic infrastructure in order to expand their niche. The barbarian niche relied above all on trade; Reference Horden and PurcellHorden and Purcell (2000: 158) quip that markets were as important as muscle. In his environmental history of China, Elvin (2004: 25) claims that ‘Barbarians were good for the environment,’ but the extent to which the barbarian niche really slowed environmental degradation as compared to neighbouring civilisations is a question for future research.
Finally, it is important to note that barbarian cannot be simply equated with state-centric views of uncultured or brutish people. Barbarian does not mean artistic sensibilities were inferior. Several examples of Bronze Age art in Japan have been examined in this Element. While Neolithic Japan is known for its highly imaginative and abstract art found on Jōmon pots and figurines, in the Yayoi pictorial art became almost entirely figurative. In both its style and contents (warriors, animals, ships), Yayoi art displays striking similarities to Bronze Age art from Europe. These similarities do not necessarily mean that there were direct influences between the two regions; rather, the convergence is perhaps to be understood as part of a shared process of bronzisation. In this respect it is interesting to note experimental work finding that whereas social isolation leads to greater abstraction in art, social contact encourages figurative styles which are transparent to outsiders (Reference Granito, Tehrani, Kendall and Scott-PhillipsGranito et al. 2019).
Section 3 of this Element discussed evidence for violence and warriors in Bronze Age Japan. It is clear that the Japanese islands were a violent place during the Yayoi period, but we need to remember that violence is a historically contingent phenomenon (Reference Dwyer, Damousi, Fagan, Fibiger, Hudson and TrundleDwyer & Damousi 2020). Although it is difficult to analyse past experiences of violence without texts, we must assume that Yayoi and other barbarian societies developed various meanings and critiques of those experiences. Since at least Elias’ 1939 work The Civilising Process, an influential strand in social theory has argued that from the Enlightenment era the state – aka ‘civilisation’ – has controlled and ultimately reduced violence (Reference EliasElias 1994; Reference PinkerPinker 2011). Recent research has nuanced this narrative (Reference SkodaSkoda 2013; Reference CarrollCarroll 2017; Reference DwyerDwyer 2017; Reference FibigerFibiger 2018). If the barbarian can be understood as a position vis-à-vis the state, then violence was less a default condition and more a part of the ‘art of not being governed’ (Reference ScottScott 2009).
As noted in the Introduction, several arguments in this Element have been provisional, provocative and probably controversial. My main objective has been to use comparative archaeology to suggest that the historical evolution of East Asia from the third millennium BC to the beginning of the first millennium AD was part of a Eurasia-wide process of bronzisation. I have adopted James Scott’s usage of the term ‘barbarian’ to attempt to recentre (or re-marginalise) those Bronze Age peoples who lived in positions of resistance to the increasingly powerful alluvial grain states of East Asia. While aspects of my thesis will no doubt be disputed, my hope is that this Element will nevertheless provide an approach to ancient East Asia which goes beyond the nation-state and points towards a more fluid and dynamic Eurasian history.
Acknowledgements
I thank Rowan Flad and Erica Brindley for inviting me to write this Element. As well as the series editors, two anonymous reviewers provided detailed and much-appreciated comments on the text. I also thank Peter Bellwood, John Breen, Seiji Kobayashi and Takeo Kusumi for replying to questions about aspects of the manuscript and Junzō Uchiyama for preparing many of the illustrations.
Over the years, many teachers, friends, students and colleagues – some sadly no longer with us – have contributed in various ways to the ideas developed here. I would especially like to thank Yoshihiko Amino, Bruce Batten, Ilona Bausch, Andrej Bekeš, Izumi Braddick, Miha Budja, Walter Edwards, Garrett Fagan, Linda Fibiger, Ben Fitzhugh, Dorian Fuller, Simon Kaner, Takamune Kawashima, J. Edward Kidder, Toshihiko Kikuchi, Kristian Kristiansen, Takehiko Matsugi, Naoko Matsumoto, Kōji Mizoguchi, Tessa Morris-Suzuki, Masaaki Okita, Seiji Nakayama, Igor de Rachewiltz, Rick Schulting, Takurō Segawa, Mathew Spriggs, Hiroto Takamiya and Alyssa White. In Jena, I am grateful to my colleagues at the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, in particular to Martine Robbeets and Nicole Boivin for providing such a welcoming work environment. Last but not least, I thank Danièle for her critical Renaissance eye and support.
The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement No. 646612).
I dedicate this Element to my teachers who gave me a Eurasian perspective: K. N. Chaudhuri, Gina Barnes and Peter Bellwood.
Erica Fox Brindley
Pennsylvania State University
Erica Fox Brindley is Professor and Head in the Department of Asian Studies at Pennsylvania State University. She is the author of three books, co-editor of several volumes, and the recipient of the ACLS Ryskamp Fellowship and Humboldt Fellowship. Her research focuses on the history of the self, knowledge, music, and identity in ancient China, as well as on the history of the Yue/Viet cultures from southern China and Vietnam.
Rowan Kimon Flad
Harvard University
Rowan Kimon Flad is the John E. Hudson Professor of Archaeology in the Department of Anthropology at Harvard University. He has authored two books and over 50 articles, edited several volumes, and served as editor of Asian Perspectives. His archaeological research focuses on economic and ritual activity, interregional interaction, and technological and environmental change, in the late Neolithic and early Bronze Ages of the Sichuan Basin and the Upper Yellow River valley regions of China.
About the Series
Elements in Ancient East Asia contains multi-disciplinary contributions focusing on the history and culture of East Asia in ancient times. Its framework extends beyond anachronistic, nation-based conceptions of the past, following instead the contours of Asian sub-regions and their interconnections with each other. Within the series there are five thematic groups: ‘Sources’, which includes excavated texts and other new sources of data; ‘Environments’, exploring interaction zones of ancient East Asia and long-distance connections; ‘Institutions’, including the state and its military; ‘People’, including family, gender, class, and the individual and ‘Ideas’, concerning religion and philosophy, as well as the arts and sciences. The series presents the latest findings and strikingly new perspectives on the ancient world in East Asia.