The Late Shang economy was predominantly agricultural. Since transportation was limited, most bulk goods were consumed locally, and only high-value items were gifted or traded over long distances. Pottery was produced locally throughout the North China Plain, but specialist crafts were concentrated in the workshops of the capital, drawing on raw materials from the countryside and further afield.
Agriculture The staple crop was
millet, which had been widely cultivated in northern China since Neolithic times. The main varieties were
foxtail millet and
broomcorn millet. The planting, care and harvesting of the crop was a major concern in divinations. Millet was also fermented to make a drink usually described as "wine", but technically an
ale.
Hemp was grown and woven for textiles. The Shang also cultivated
mulberries and practised
sericulture. Most farming tools were made of wood or stone, including wooden ploughs, shovels of stone, shell or bone, and sickles of shell or stone. A small number of bronze tools have been found, with picks more common than axes. Both animal and human waste were used to fertilize the fields. Although the Shang built a system of drainage ditches around the ritual centre at Xiaotun, there is no evidence of large-scale use of irrigation for agriculture. The inscriptions focus on sufficient rainfall for the crops, while also expressing a fear of flooding. More than 7% of bone inscriptions were concerned with the weather, with many mentions of winds, rain and thunderstorms. Summers in modern Anyang feature torrential bursts of rainfall, especially in July, triggered when the
East Asian Monsoon collides with cold air from the
Loess Plateau on the eastern slopes of the
Taihang Mountains. From late April to early June the region is buffeted by unpredictable and occasionally damaging winds. During the Late Shang period, summers in the Anyang area were only about warmer than at present, and might be expected to have had similar weather. In contrast, Late Shang winters were warmer and thus milder and wetter than in modern times. This is confirmed by several inscriptions referring to rain and even thunderstorms in the winter months. It is likely that the growing season was longer in Late Shang times, beginning as early as January or February. Divinations relating to planting are recorded between late December and mid-February, and a few dated appeals to the powers for rain (crucial for newly planted and sprouting crops) occur early in the year. The Yellow River plain to the east and south of Anyang may have received even more rain than the area of the capital. At that time, most of northern China was covered with deciduous broadleaf forests, in which large animals such as elephants, rhinoceros and tigers roamed. Inscriptions refer to organizing labour to clear lands for farming. Kings often combined their frequent hunts with surveying and clearing new lands to be opened. The connection is reflected in the extension of the noun 'field' to a verb 'hunt' (take to the field) in inscriptions from period III. The Shang kept cattle, sheep, pigs, dogs and horses. Many inscriptions describe sacrifices of large numbers of cattle, sheep, pigs and dogs, which were presumably consumed in ritual feasts by the Shang elite. Horses were used to draw chariots for royal hunts and as command vehicles on military expeditions. Many royal burials at Anyang feature sacrificial horses, often together with chariots.
Industries , at , is the heaviest ancient bronze object found anywhere in the world. As well as a political and ritual centre, Yinxu was also a centre of craft production. Artisans were clustered in highly specialized production zones in different parts of the site. Their lodgings appear to have been of better quality than those of the common people, suggesting a higher status. Some workshops, particularly those producing bronze or worked jade, appear to have been under direct royal control.
Bronze The best-known craft of the Shang was the production of bronze objects. Bronze and the
piece-mould process were used from the Erlitou culture, and continued with increasing sophistication and volume of production up to the Late Shang period. The main items produced were ritual vessels, weapons, tools and chariot fittings. Many types of ritual vessel were produced, the most common being the wine goblet and the pouring vessel, which were often found paired. Next most numerous were various kinds of cauldron. These vessels were decorated with intricate motifs, requiring extensive labour from a variety of highly skilled artisans. Towards the end of the period (Yinxu IV), artisans tended to focus on a smaller number of vessel types and decorative styles. Vessels produced at Yinxu have been found in elite burials within Yinxu and also across the North China Plain and the adjacent regions to the west. Many of these vessels bear brief inscriptions, often just clan insignia. Longer inscriptions tend to come from the Yinxu IV period. A wide variety of bronze weapons were produced by the Yinxu foundries, many of whose designs were influenced by Yangtze cultures or northern cultures. Elaborately decorated weapons often signified status within Shang society. Some graves featured axes that were too heavy for use in combat and probably awarded as a mark of military command. A small proportion of bronze implements were tools, usually lacking decoration and used for woodworking rather than farming. The foundries also produced various fittings for the chariots used by the elite for hunting and as military command vehicles. Handheld bronze bells, in height, have also been found, sometimes in sets of three with matching decoration but random pitch relationship. Six bronze foundries have been found at Yinxu, though they may not all have been operating at the same time. One of these, located south of the temple-palace complex, operated throughout the period. The largest centre of bronze production consisted of two foundries apart in the West Zone of the Yinxu site, which operated in the second half of the period. The volume of bronze production under the Late Shang was many times greater that at Zhengzhou and without parallel elsewhere in the ancient world. For example, the mid-sized tomb of Fu Hao contained of bronze objects, and it seems likely that the looted royal tombs originally contained many times as much bronze, exemplified by isolated finds such as the
Houmuwu Ding. The sheer volume of production implies considerable mobilization of labour and specialization. The huge amount of metals required were obtained from other regions, especially the middle Yangtze, with some from distant northeastern Yunnan.
Ceramics Large amounts of grey-ware pottery, produced from local clays, were used for a variety of purposes at all levels of society. Vessel designs and decoration were directly descended from Erlitou and Erligang pottery, with some elements traceable back to the Henan
Longshan culture. These vessels were produced across the North China Plain and regions to the west, with variations in each area. The most common type was the , a tripod cooking pot. Shang workshops also produced much smaller amounts of luxury white pottery, richly decorated with motifs similar to those found on bronze and other artifacts. The clay from which they were made is found in the Anyang area, but the workshops that produced them have not been identified. The pottery workshops also produced the moulds and crucibles used for casting bronze.
Bone and ivory Chinese use of worked bone objects peaked in the Late Shang period. Extensive bone working took place both in households and in large specialized workshops. One workshop, in the eastern part of the settlement, has been systematically excavated, with a single trench on the site yielding of worked and unworked bones. The most common products were decorative pins, awls and arrowheads. More than 20 times more arrowheads of bone have been found than those of bronze. Other items include flat plates, tubes,
ocarinas and handles. Many elite tombs feature fine objects carved from the ivory of elephants and boars.
Stone working Various kinds of stone were available from the foothills of the
Taihang Mountains just to the west of Anyang. The most common stone products were knives and sickles. A workshop excavated in Xiaotun yielded thousands of
slate sickles, some unfinished, suggesting mass production organized by the state. Stone axes and shovels were also common. Many workshops produced finely carved decorative and ritual objects of
marble and
jade. A small workshop within the temple-palace complex produced a variety of sculpted jade objects. Sculptures featured human figures and both real and mythical animals. All known examples of marble sculpture were found in royal tombs. Many jade objects were found in the tomb of Fu Hao. Decorated limestone
sounding stones have been recovered from several tombs.
Trade As of the 2010s, archaeological investigation of exchange networks was in its infancy, and many details remain unclear. However, it is clear that the capital required a continuous supply of materials of many kinds, some of which may have been exchanged for products of the Yinxu workshops. The bronze foundries of Yinxu required huge amounts of metal, most of which was sourced from the Yangtze region, with additional sources in Shandong and the Qinling mountains. Most bronzes from phases I and II contain high-radiogenic
lead, with the proportion reducing in phase III and then disappearing. This unusual type appears to have originated from northeastern Yunnan. It is also common in bronzes from
Sanxingdui in northern Sichuan, and also bronzes from the upper
Han River valley from the same period, suggesting that the Late Shang obtained metals from Sanxingdui via the upper Han valley. Thin
stoneware vessels found around Anyang, some
glazed, were probably imported from the Yangtze region. Over 30 high-temperature kilns producing nearly identical wares have been found at the Dongtiaoxi site in northern
Zhejiang. Similar wares were produced by the
Wucheng culture in the
Gan River valley. Some evidence suggests experimentation with these techniques at various northern sites to meet the elite demand for these vessels. Many
cowrie shells have been found among the grave goods of elite tombs. Based on interpretations of Western Zhou inscriptions, many scholars have argued that they were a form of money, but direct evidence is lacking and the issue is still disputed. Whether markets existed in the Late Shang period is similarly disputed. == Legacy ==