The Shuangdun Signs and the Origins of Chinese Writing
When the origins of Chinese writing are discussed, attention almost always turns to the oracle bones of the Shang dynasty. Yet thousands of years before characters were carved onto turtle plastrons, surprisingly complex symbolic systems already existed. One of the most fascinating among them is the set known as the Shuangdun signs.
More than 600 engraved signs
One of the most striking discoveries at the site was the presence of more than 600 incised symbols, carved mainly on the outer base of ring-footed pottery bowls, and to a lesser extent on pedestal vessels. Archaeologists have classified these signs into two broad categories:
- Pictographic, with around 110 recognizable representations
- Geometric, composed of single, double, or multiple lines
Among the pictographic motifs are the sun, fish, pigs, deer, silkworms, leaves, and other elements drawn from the natural environment.
From image to symbol
What truly matters is not only the number of signs, but what they reveal about the minds of the people who created them some 7,000 years ago. On the one hand, we find realistic depictions of animals and plants, probably used for basic record-keeping. Alongside these, however, appear abstract lines and simplifications, indicating a crucial transition: from figurative images to symbols, and from the concrete to the abstract.
Moreover, some signs combine geometric elements with recognizable figures, a remarkable cognitive leap that suggests a shift from simple expressions to compound representations, much closer to a writing system.
Among the most interesting examples are the fish sign, represented both as a single line and in multi-line structures; the pig sign, sometimes shown in motion and in other cases combined with the image of a house; and similar composite forms.
A system spread across a wide territory
These signs do not appear to be decorative. Their repetition and standardization point to a shared and intelligible system within a community. In fact, the Shuangdun signs are not an isolated phenomenon. Very similar markings have been found at nearby sites and at others further south in the lower Yangtze River basin.
Across this broad geographical area, pictorial styles and symbolic systems display notable consistency, suggesting a common cultural tradition and long-term transmission over time.
For this reason, many archaeologists argue that these signs already fulfilled functions characteristic of writing, even if they were not yet full characters in the strict sense. Taken together, the Shuangdun signs force us to rethink the map of the origins of writing. The Huai River valley thus emerges as one of the great cultural laboratories in which ideas took shape that would, millennia later, become Chinese writing.
Chinese culture had a multifocal origin
The Shuangdun site, located near the present-day city of Bengbu in Anhui Province, was discovered in 1985 during a cultural heritage survey. Covering approximately 1.2 hectares, it has been excavated in several archaeological campaigns since 1992. These excavations revealed a Neolithic culture that filled an important gap in China’s cultural history.
While decades ago it was commonly argued that Chinese civilization arose solely in the Yellow River basin, and later that it had a dual origin in the Yellow and Yangtze river valleys, an increasingly accepted view today is that of a multifocal origin. Different cultures influenced one another in different ways at different historical moments. Hongshan, Hemudu, Liangzhu, and many other cultures all appear to have contributed, in diverse ways, to the formation of Chinese civilization.
Further reading:
Chinese characters: An easy learning based on their etymology and evolution
About me: I have spent 30 years in China, much of the time traveling and studying this country’s culture. My most popular research focuses on Chinese characters (Chinese Characters: An Easy Learning Method Based on Their Etymology and Evolution), Matriarchy in China (there is a book with this title), and minority cultures (The Naxi of Southwest China).
Last posts
The Horse God as One of the Most Popular Deities in China
The Horse God as One of the Most Popular Deities in China If a visitor goes to the Great Wall at Juyongguan, the section closest to Beijing and one of the most historically significant, and takes the time to explore the complex of structures carefully—a...
Geckos and the “Mark of Chastity” in Imperial China: History, Symbolism, and Cultural Context
Geckos and the “Mark of Chastity” in Imperial China: History, Symbolism, and Cultural Context Across the long span of imperial Chinese history, the gecko occupied a surprisingly prominent place in discussions of female chastity, bodily integrity, and the regulation of...
Why It Is Necessary to Study Suicide in Chinese Culture
Why It Is Necessary to Study Suicide in Chinese Culture While drafting new chapters for my Brief History of China, cases of suicide kept appearing in the most diverse circumstances. Ministers and wives who allowed themselves to be buried alive to accompany kings to...
The true origin of the Great Wall
The true origin of the Great wall, as seen in Nicola Di Cosmo (The Origins of the Great Wall. Silk Road Journal. 1993). Generally speaking, the political discourse about foreigners in pre-imperial China tends to justify expansion and conquest, which is exactly what...
Parnashavari: The Tibetan Goddess of Medicine
Parnashavari: The Tibetan Goddess of Medicine Within the complex symbolism of Tibetan deities and protectors, I like to look for distinctive details that allow us to identify a figure the moment we see them in a temple. One of the goddesses who makes this task...
The Smallpox Goddess (Doushen)
The Smallpox Goddess (Doushen) The Smallpox Goddess (Doushen 痘神) is part of a group of goddesses whose primary role was the protection of children. In the final years of the imperial era, they operated under the authority of Bixia Yuanjun, the daughter of the Emperor...









