國立故宮博物院 National Palace Museum (New window)
 
 
::: * Site Map │ 中 文 │ English │ 日本語  
::: * Introduction
     
  * Rites and Music:
Ritual Objects From Shang Dynasty
     
  * Worship and Warfare:
Clan Vessels and Weaponry During Shang and Zhou
     
  * The Newly Endowed Mandate:
Ritual Objects from Zhou Dynasty
     
  * The Elaborate Textual Repertoire:
Bronze Inscriptions from Western Zhou to the Spring and Autumn Period
     
  * Hegemons and Rivalries:
Ritual Vessels, Weapons, and Others during eastern zhou
     
  * The Glamorous New Age:
Bronzes from the Spring-and-Autumn to the Warring States Period
     
  * The Post-Bronze Age:
Bronzed from Qin to Han
     
  * A Colorful, Multicultural Presence:
Bronzes in the Frontier Style
     
  * Home
::: Title: The Elaborate Textual Repertoire: Bronze Inscriptions from Western Zhou to the Spring and Autumn Period  
 

Inscribing on bronzes, either by casting or engraving, is a characteristic of Chinese bronzes which makes them very uniquely different from those made in other cultures.

The rich textual repertoire debuted with mostly clan or ancestor names during Shang and early Zhou, and around the mid-period of Western Zhou increasingly adopted the theme of "For Descendents to Forever Cherish", which gradually developed into a standard finishing statement for many inscriptions. Other contents also abounded: chronicles of military actions, dowries in marital unions, ceremonies of conferment and endowment, contracts for land ceding, edicts and awards, and so on. They serve as original records vividly documenting what was done and said, delivered in the vocabulary and diction of the time.

The golden inscriptions are the end results of a series of processes which involve engraving, molding, and finally casting, of the handwritten originals; yet the cast texts still manage to reenact the superb calligraphy of the time. The calligraphic styles reflect the gradual development and forming of da zhuan (large seal script), evolving from powerful spontaneity of Shang and early Zhou, to solemn regularity during the mid-period, Wesernt Zhou, and to refined smoothness from late Western Zhou to early Spring and Autumn period. That more and more long texts appeared during mid to late Western Zhou is also a live illustration of Zhou's "elaborate textual repertoire" "preserved in golden inscriptions".

 
Hu wine vessel of Yin-gou Mid Western Zhou Dynasty (New window)
Hu wine vessel of Yin-gou
Mid Western Zhou Dynasty

c. 10th to 9th century B.C.E.
中銅457
h. 58.5 cm  w. 19.9 x 14.7 cm
 
Pan water vessel of San Late Western Zhou Dynasty (New window)
Pan water vessel of San
Late Western Zhou Dynasty

c. 9th century to 771 B.C.E.
故銅2376
h. 20.6 cm  w. 54.6 cm
 
     
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