Originally posted by Dida
First, note that the Chinese people never call themself Chinese. Chinese and hence China are English words and have no direct connection to what the Chinese call themselves.
In the dawn of Chinese culture, the Chinese call themselves Hua Xia. This group of people lived around the Yellow River Valley starting from 4000BC as we know of, and started to dominate the region after uniting with another group in east and defeating barbarians in the south. They are the direct ancesters of the race of people call "Han", which today made up 95% of China's population. Today, the word Hua Xia is used interchangably with Middle Kingdom (China). A significant aspect of China is its long cultural and national history. The Chinese people have shared a common culture longer than any other group on Earth. The Chinese writing system dates back almost 4,000 years.
First, note that the Chinese people never call themself Chinese. Chinese and hence China are English words and have no direct connection to what the Chinese call themselves.
In the dawn of Chinese culture, the Chinese call themselves Hua Xia. This group of people lived around the Yellow River Valley starting from 4000BC as we know of, and started to dominate the region after uniting with another group in east and defeating barbarians in the south. They are the direct ancesters of the race of people call "Han", which today made up 95% of China's population. Today, the word Hua Xia is used interchangably with Middle Kingdom (China). A significant aspect of China is its long cultural and national history. The Chinese people have shared a common culture longer than any other group on Earth. The Chinese writing system dates back almost 4,000 years.
Even if you consider all Chinese legends about Yellow Emperor(Huang Di), Shen Nong(the one who searched for edible plants) and Yu to be historically accurate, the Chinese(Hua Xia) history only reached 2500BC at most. If you only consider archeological evidences, then Chinese history really began with the Shang Dynasty around 1500BC. Excavations in Hemudu, Erlitou, and several other sites may show signs of civilizations as yearly as 4000BC, but which of these sites constitute the true origin of the later Chinese civilization? Whose language, alphabet, and religious belief would go on to dominate the others? And who first created a governmental organization that went beyond a single tribe?
For me, the Chinese civilization began under the Shang dynasty who was the first to give Chinese a state-level government, an alphabet, a religion, and an organized military. Shang defined the Chinese culture that would continue until this day. Still, even the earliest Shang time was 2000 years younger than 4000BC.
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