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Subsistence and survival along the medieval long-wall system of northern China and Mongolia: A zooarchaeological and historical perspective

Tikvah Steiner, Gideon Shelach-Lavi, Johannes S. Lotze, Zhidong Zhang, Amartuvshin Chunag, Angaragdulguun Gantumur, Rivka Rabinovich

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The medieval wall and trench system of China and Mongolia covers ∼4000 km and consists of a series of rammed-earth walls, ditches, and hundreds of associated structures. This was not a unified system but rather different sections that were built by different political entities and perhaps for different purposes between ca. 1000 to 1220 CE. Among those lines, the earliest is the northernmost section dated to the period of the Liao empire (916–1125 CE). It is located deep in the sparsely populated steppe of today's northeastern Mongolia (Dornod Province) as well as in parts of China and Russia. Recent excavations at Site 23 along the northern line revealed a rich and well-preserved faunal assemblage from a midden pit dated towards the end of the Liao empire (ca. 1050 CE). Common Mongolian domesticates sheep, goat, horse, cow, and dog were identified, as well as wild species: gazelle, rabbit, mustelids, large raptors, and fish, including Amur catfish. Based on bone fusion, size, and teeth eruption, many of the sheep/goat bones and dogs belong to very young animals under six months. Historical texts, such as the Liaoshi (Liao history) and Qidan guozhi (Records of the Kitan empire), were the only source of knowledge available regarding human-animal relations, as very little is known of subsistence practices during the Liao period from faunal analysis in itself. The historical record documents aspects of Liao-era animal husbandry, hunting, fishing, and imperial diplomatic/tributary animal exchange between the Liao governors and local tribes. Through integration of textual evidence and the excavated faunal material, we can interpret the subsistence activities of a distinct Liao frontier garrison for the first time, going beyond the often-generic descriptions of the historical record which pertain more to the elite than the common people. This analysis allows us a glimpse behind the texts at the varied and flexible economic practices taking place deep in the Mongolian steppe.

Original languageEnglish
Article number100639
JournalArchaeological Research in Asia
Volume43
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2025

Keywords

  • Liao empire/dynasty
  • Medieval
  • Mongolia
  • Pastoralism
  • Zooarchaeology

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Archaeology
  • Archaeology

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