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The Yueshi culture () was an archaeological culture in the region of eastern China, dated from 1900 to 1500 BC. It spanned the period from the to the early . In the Shandong area, it followed the period (c. 2600–1900 BC) and was later replaced by the (identified with the historical ).


Geographical range
Yueshi culture sites have been found in , eastern , and north province. It is named after the at Dongyueshi (East Yueshi) Village in , Shandong. More than 340 Yueshi sites have been identified in Shandong, but this was still a considerable decline from the previous Shandong .

Yueshi was contemporary with the and the early , both located to its west. The Tai-Yi Mountains () region in central Shandong is the core area of Yueshi, but as the Erligang state (commonly identified with the early ) expanded, Yueshi declined and retreated to the Shandong Peninsula in the east.

In the Shandong area, in and Qianzhangda in were the first regional centers established by the Erligang culture. The ruling elites apparently consisted of the Erligang peoples, which eventually came to dominate the area culturally. In the Daxinzhuang area, the early Shang and Yueshi pottery traditions coexisted in the same archaeological contexts, suggesting that these two cultures were living side by side.

The Panmiao (潘庙) site in , eastern Henan has a Yueshi culture component dating to the early Bronze Age period (c. 1900–1450 BC). Prior to that, there was Longshan period occupation in this area. Excavations: Panmiao 潘庙 Boston University College of Arts & Sciences – International Center for East Asian Archaeology & Cultural History


Characteristics
Yueshi culture saw a relative decline of cultural development. Groups of settlements were dissolved and the highly developed pottery technology of the Shandong Longshan culture was lost. Yueshi style of ding-dou type vessels were also present in the Longshan culture, but many other vessel types of these cultures are different.Wei, Qiaowei. " Yueshi Culture (岳石文化), by Fang Hui" (review of ), Harvard-Yenching Institute. The bronze finds of the Yueshi mostly consist of small, portable items. Bronze vessels are not found. Thus, the deterioration of Yueshi ceramics cannot be explained by the wider use of bronze.

Yueshi culture could be compared to the contemporaneous Lower Xiajiadian culture in Liaoning, the Shuangtuozi culture of the Liaodong Peninsula, and the Dianjiangtai culture in Rongyang, Henan Province.


Identification with the Dongyi
In the early 11th century BC, inscriptions refer to campaigns by the late king against the Rénfāng (人方), a group occupying the area of southern Shandong and northern Jiangsu. Scholars often identify the Renfang with the ("Eastern barbarians") mentioned in later documents, and thus many Chinese archaeologists apply the historical name "Dongyi" to the archaeological Yueshi culture. Other scholars, such as Fang Hui, consider this identification problematic because of the high frequency of migrations in prehistoric populations of the region.


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