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China: Shang Dynasty characters on fragments of an oracle bone dating between 1600 and 1050 BCE. British Library, Or. 7694/1516

China: Shang Dynasty characters on fragments of an oracle bone dating between 1600 and 1050 BCE. British Library, Or. 7694/1516

Oracle bones (Chinese: jiagu) are pieces of ox scapula or turtle plastron, which were used for pyromancy – a form of divination – in ancient China, mainly during the late Shang dynasty. Scapulimancy is the correct term if ox scapulae were used for the divination; plastromancy if turtle plastrons were used.

The oracle bones bear the earliest known significant corpus of ancient Chinese writing and contain important historical information such as the complete royal genealogy of the Shang dynasty. When they were discovered and deciphered in the early twentieth century, these records confirmed the existence of the Shang, which some scholars had until then doubted.

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