Food in Ancient China
This Element provides an overview of food and foodways in Ancient China, from the earliest humans (~500k BP) up to its historical beginnings: the foundation of the Zhou dynasty (at the start of the 1st millennium BCE). While textual data provides insights on food and diet during China's historical periods, archaeological data is the main source for studying the deep past and reconstructing what people ate, how they ate and with whom they ate it. This Element introduces the plants and animals that formed the building blocks of ancient diets and cuisines, as well as how they created localized lifeways and unifying constructs across ancient China. Foodways, how food was grown, prepared and consumed, was central in the development of differing social, economic and political realities, as it shaped ritual and burial practices, differentiated ethnic groups, solidified community ties and deepened or assuaged social inequalities.
Product details
December 2023Hardback
9781009475808
92 pages
235 × 156 × 10 mm
0.29kg
Not yet published - available from July 2025
Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The Deep Past: From Gatherer-Hunters to the First Farmers
- 3. The Rise and Development of Agricultural Societies
- 4. Into the Middle Neolithic (5000–3000 BCE): Food for New Thoughts
- 5. Interregional Interaction and Emerging Cities in the 3rd–2nd Millennia Bce
- 6. From Ancient to Early China: Some Concluding Thoughts
- Bibliography.