A Sanpan Shan Chariot Ornament and the Xiangrui Design in
Transcription
A Sanpan Shan Chariot Ornament and the Xiangrui Design in
A Sanpan Shan Chariot Ornament and the Xiangrui Design in Western Han Art Author(s): Wu Hung Reviewed work(s): Source: Archives of Asian Art, Vol. 37 (1984), pp. 38-59 Published by: University of Hawai'i Press for the Asia Society Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/20111143 . Accessed: 19/12/2011 18:10 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org. University of Hawai'i Press and Asia Society are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Archives of Asian Art. http://www.jstor.org A Sanpan Shan Chariot Ornament and the inWestern Han Art Xiangrui Design Wu Hung Harvard University 1965 the cultural relics team of Hebei province in the People's Republic of China three excavated THE DATE In at Sanpan Shan,a county. Dingxianb in of the Cultural Revolution the advance tombs large With the following year, however, rials along with the relevant the unearthed records were storeroom in a provincial attended unknown remained virtually They This and was mate fittings to a carriage.6 dence and relevant left un derive a fairly manufacture, of persons concerned with directly one of their handling until ten years later, when a chariot ornament, the artifacts from these tombs, was in the United selected for exhibition States.1 cording are located small number This was the first tions was these excava to the public; in the words of Li Xueqin,c "this particular work of art shown Professor won time an item from of many exhibitions during both in China and abroad"2 (Fig. ia). is signifi Inmy opinion, this chariot ornament art history cant for the study of Chinese in two the admiration has pointed out, it respects. First, as Shi Shuqing^ skill in gold and silver demonstrates outstanding It could be said that in the chariot of bronze.3 inlay ornament this special technique its apex reached a in the that began following long development this piece and Autumn Second, Spring period.4 a art Han motif that dynasty epitomizes popular may This ars, be called art motif such focused the xiangruie (good omen) design. has been discussed schol by various as Laufer on Eastern and Hay asi, who have each variations of the Western Han xiangrui design.5 To my knowledge, no one Han has studied the Western ever, Han itself. This matter article will of the Sanpan discuss how design and subject what ornament, the date Shan chariot to the people ofthat the xiangrui signified design this and time, how design related to their customs artistic realization. ideas, and this motif's 38 to a set of chariot belonged a canopy to used join the handle of From pertinent evi archaeological ornament chariot to gather dust. to all but the THE OWNER AND historical clear we documents, can idea of the date and place of its as of the status of its owner. as well ac and M122, (Mi20, M121, to the designation of the Hebei^ Museum) The three tombs side by side from east to west, facing south.7 High earthen tumuli were built on top of its name, each grave, the place giving Sanpan Shan, which tomb means "three has a wooden is further divided objects, funerary Since deceased.8 circular mounds." chamber in a vertical Each pit that into parts, the front containing the back, the body of the this kind of wooden chamber and Han in Hebei prov typical of the Western later replaced by the brick tomb during ince, was this feature of the San the Eastern Han period,9 tomb, pan Shan probable Lunu,B a valuable tombs provides date of their construction. DaoyuanV Shuijing were this kingdom to Li According county.10 of four the of Zhuj princes in the vicinity buried of the capital.n Archaeological Three all located tombs, been to the the capital of the ancient Zhongshan*1 was state during the Han dynasty, lo feudatory in Dingxian cated have clue identified finds confirm his report. in suburbs as the tombs of Dingxian, of Prince Huaik (d. 55 b.c.), Prince Jian1 (d. A.D. 90), and Prince Mum In tomb (d. A.D. 174) of the Zhongshan.12 two seals were M120 of the Sanpan Shan tombs, names found bearing of Liu the Jiaojun11 and Liu Zhanshi.0 stamped Another In tomb M121 clay that bears tomb, M122, was found a piece of the royal title Zhongshan. two bronze vessels yielded of which family, These finds indicate in four scenes. This kind of inlaid pictorial figures work skillful cut highly requires costly materials, an and ting and inlay techniques, extraordinary amount of meticulous To date we know of work. to the royal fam belonged state. For identifying the per ily of Zhongshan sons buried a passage in these tombs, in the Shui in the collec only one similar chariot ornament, tion of Tokyo Art Institute (Fig. 2).20 Since the two works has almost identical mo decor of these inscribed the characters with (the royal house of Zhongshan). of the Han^ ily name royal Zhongshan that these one was three lineage. Zhongshan Liu was NeifuP the fam tombs a valuable record: "The Kor jing Zhu provides runs to River flow eastward continues and north since no of Bai tu.s The the earlier tomb of Prince (of Zhong Kang? son of Prince lies to the south. It can shan), Qing,u as a group of three tombs built side be identified now known as by side."13 The ancient Ko River, runs north of the the Tangv River, Shan Sanpan correlation has led the author of tombs.14 This to believe certain tifs and shares venture I would the times), that this kind of inlaid pictorial decora 100 in used around the mainly period opinion tion was of the as indicated the Sanpan Shan Dingxian that lie east of the present Baitu tombs village to Prince Kang's From tomb belonged family.15 is the largest of the three, came the which M122, pan Shan belonging most The motif Zhi elaborate that chariot the including fittings, in this article. These facts may piece discussed was that this the of Prince tomb suggest Kang who was buried in 90 b.c.16 The other himself, tombs may be those of his wife and son.17 So far eight of the graves of five generations of rulers have been in found Hebei Zhongshan province.18 graves, when number As shown a by of of the prince died, a large often buried together a elaborate one. From highly him, including historical records and from of the Zhangshan princes, of elaborate chariot was This prince.19 royal one had the study of the tombs know that this type we a status of the symbol a that when former means chariot was prince's another contents Zhongshan chariots was with royal the buried with its owner, for his successor. The to be made ornament under particular a set of to longs extremely here be consideration elaborate chariot Its date tings from the tomb of Prince Kang. to fall between be estimated no and 90 b.c., rule. years of Prince Kang's Differing in the found from all other chariot fit can the ornaments of Zhongshan the princes, Shan piece is a complete pic torial composition, inlaid with skillfully gold, sil and creates that ver, turquoise, gems, successfully decor tombs of the Sanpan mountains, plants, and 125 human and animal and characteristics, in artifacts have been found comparable or later graves of Zhongshan princes some of the finest these graves contain (though inlaid work b.c., artistic the date of the tomb by to Prince Kang at San of Zhongshan state. THE XIANGRUI ment of the decor has been DESIGN on Shan orna the Sanpan the hunting design.21 Similar have also been called animal designs. decorations are not com It ismy belief that these appellations even accurate because the designs pletely though consist of differs from called animals that of States Warring Iwill pressed, their meaning of the designs and hunters, the hunting a new idea is ex period. Because as xiangrui. to this motif refer refer Xiangrui people of the Han to certain phenomena that the as expres dynasty interpreted sions of the will of Heaven. For example, if beau came to rest on tiful birds of multicolored feathers roof, if the emperor found a qilinx (uni a hunt, or if one stalk of wheat had during ears of grain, to mean it was understood the palace corn) many that Heaven peror's omens rule. Good and governed his coun enlightened to the auspicious In contrast the xiangrui other natural considered people phenomena, was emperor try well. Han on the em its blessing indicated that the ruling had bestowed to represent such as eclipses or big gusts of wind, This view of natural dissatisfaction.22 Heaven's phenomena already existed nasty, during especially at that time evil omens mentioned. Q/waa) The records before the QinY Zhou.2 the Eastern were more and Autumn Spring solar eclipses dy But and frequently Annals (Chun earthquakes 39 Fig. i (a). Chariot ornament, bronze inlaidwith gold and Dingxian, 40 silver. Hebei Excavated province, from tomb M122 in 1965. at Fig. The i(b-e). and drawings Gongheguo Wu Press, same. Drawings of decoration. Photograph reprinted with permission from Zonghua Renmin chutu wenwu 1973), pi. zhanlan: 85. zhanpin xuanji (Beijing: Wen Fig. motifs i(f). The encircled. same. Drawings of decoration, with central Fig. i(g). The same. Drawings of decoration, with mountain forms reinforced in black. Fig. i (f, g) reprinted with permission from A Selection ofArchaeological Finds of thePeople's Republic of China (Beijing: Wen Wu Press, 1976), pi. 66. 41 2. Chariot Fig. from ornament, of the collection Art Tokyo Institute. Reprinted with permission from Geijutsu Daigaku Z?hin zuroku (Tokyo: The Tokyo Art pi. a hundred about times as signs of bad political due to the times, perhaps By Han state and its the newly unified effort to legitimize abounded. xiangrui ruling power, of the and moral principles The political system conditions.23 Han of concept of the mandate he received Heaven's When rested on the basic Heaven mandate, ther of (tian mingab). an emperor all earth under became Heaven. could give orders emperor could give orders to children, 42 sovereign Thereafter, and fa the to ministers, fathers men to women, and so forth until pleted.24 between Heaven The the entire first Institute, 1978), vol. 5, 7. social structure link in this social was structure, the most com that and Emperor, difficult the most was to cement link in the chain of im to justify. As Hea and portant with people on to communicate ven was believed of xian the appearances earth through xiangrui, grui seemed the first the most Zhongshu,ac Dong theorist of the Han dynasty, official prominent a is about to rise to power, stated, "When King omen will appear first."25 beautiful signs of good relationships. As thus Dong "tablets xiangrui bearing the first imperial saw many rep Em considered ruler Every that "le xiangrui the mystical geese, plant glossy ganoderma, stones from the sky, mysterious rays of tripods, stars, cloudless thunder, falling light, rainbows, grew immortal bluebirds, sparrows, a yellow dragon; a bronze figure and tiger, sweet; and so on.29 During hair; dew was Wang ?more time, all kinds of xiangrui Mang's appeared a five-year than 700 omens within pe important to the Emperor The elephant, white here Came like jade dew . . . Heaven And drinks luminescent spring water. This elephant reveals Heaven's will, Bringing happiness to human beings Above the yellow dragon flies another . . .33 a horse, winged was said to have xiangrui. Emperor Wu horses twice.34 He winged seen a As xiangrui. himself reveals: the west. from It eats the morning From wild and so on.28 During Emperor Xuan's reign, phoe as times in nixes different places, appeared fifty well as did white five-colored storks, geese, godly an to be dedicated poem to historical xian the important records, cording awhite uni rule included grui of Emperor Wu's red corn-like horses, beast, birds, flying flying wrote about each of these xiangrui in praise mandate. In the first he wrote: poems of Heaven's red-breasted Tai-yiai has given the horse of Heaven? Moist with crimson sweat, foaming russet spittle A will and spirit wondrous and strange? the floating clouds, darkened it races Trampling aloft. oh this horse has leapt ten thousand And with what can it be paired? The dragon its companion.35 And riod.30 ifwe Only can we period examine such understand in that ideas prevalent the meaning of the de is This ornament signs of this chariot ornament. into divided In four each evenly registers. register or group of one figure, center forms the figures, of the composition. Each of these four centers a different quarter occupies of the tube and thus forms of the circular At the end of the second . . .The surface a is in the exact center of the design, al on it in the the appears though right reproduction, to ornament. the of the The yellow pictured right was most the because dragon important xiangrui in the Han xiangrui the dragon sym conception the emperor, and yellow of the Han dynasty. The was the chosen of a appearance the manifest and yellow dragon signified destiny essential of the Han dynasty. vitality Following at the dragon tail the left of the appears (whose reproduction) is a white elephant. On its back sit he wrote: of Heaven has come The horse of Heaven has come Mediator for the dragon He travels to the gates of Heaven And looks on the Terrace of Jade.36 a conscious dragon horse li,aJ Open the far gates Raise up my body I go to Kunlun.ak spiral (see Fig. if). to en intended arrangement to enjoy the ornament able people from every side. In the upper register (Fig. ib) the yellow This was color their court. of xiangrui his reign. Appearances gitimized" of the rule their reached height during Emperor Ac and Xuan,aB Wu,af Wang Mang.ah Emperor bolized that they may from the south.31 snail-shaped resent minorities and nakedness indicate During to the southwest time, a small country peror Wu's once by sending paid tribute to the Han Emperor an it was the elephant arrived elephant.32 When dynasty important xiangrui in Cheng of a yellow the appearance dragon the rule of Emperor Wen.ae27 jiad county during as the From then on, the yellow dragon was taken lights, awhite Their drivers. naked of the Han was of the Han symbol after Emperor Wen three coiffures mandate."26 heavenly The called These in the fuller meaning corroborate poems in the first register. Besides the scene portrayed the dragon, and heavenly there horse, elephant, are also an immortal rabbits and driver of a flying chariot ancient The in recorded by two deer. All were texts as good omens.37 a second register depicts hunting episode. drawn In a lush mountain an archer turns back to valley, take aim at a tiger. The meaning of this scene will in the Hunting be discussed below Scene section of this article. 43 The significance now consider, of the third register, which we centers on a crane with its head a camel back, followed by crane is one of the most The white turned (see Fig. auspicious that once when It is recorded in history was sacrifices making birds. Emperor Wu saw a flock of white edict id). of crane. He a issued he special as sacred cranes white to Heaven recognizing beings Thus down the role of the by Heaven.38 crane in this register may be as white interpreted to that of the yellow in identical the first dragon sent both represent the will of Heaven register. They and lead the other auspicious beasts sent from trib utary states also aweird tail, called portant to the emperor. In this register there is a bird's head and beast with leopard's a feilian.al xiangrui beast was This an im the Han during worshiped also dy The fourth a its huge bird, all the surround features register singing, while outspread, ing birds and animals dance to its song (see Fig. the Han dynasty, this bird, called the ie). During wings was believed (the majestic fengan bird), weifengam as the to have divine powers.40 Just dragon was as the king of all beasts, so was the feng regarded It was of all birds. thought generally by "The weifeng always accompanied appeared cort of innumerable animals and birds. that a an es feng is eight feet high and followed by flocks of iri descent birds" 10,000 line numbering the four directions."41 and "birds the feng from up facing inHan records These notations scene could be about the in this register. the relationship between Shi Shuqing points of royal hunting these scenes and the description In my in Sima Xiangru'sao Fu*P42 Changyang these opinion, the ceremonial are more scenes attributed songs of like illustrations to Emperor Wu: In autumn The flying dragon soars to Heaven The auspicious elephant brings good fortune Li Qiacl commented: envoys to pay "This means respect and Came here The red wild Came thick from like jade the West. geese and fast. ... that the barbarians tribute." The elephant, white 44 xiangrui!"43 can be found descriptions lines. The only difference between . . . . in many Similar Sanpan same wishes ?the of and by pictures that xiangrui explain Imust of product the scenes de songs lies in the medium are expressed in the other. the rulers in one words other and on the in these royal ceremonial Shan chariot ornament scribed the fanciful were by neither the of a few imagination em nor were cal perors, part of a policy they merely to manipulate culated beliefs. A strong popular was In no in xiangrui belief b.c., widespread. a sacrifice went to to offer Mount Wu Emperor Tai.as He ordered and rare birds special animals to Mount to be brought Tai. It far away as if many seemed Mount Tai from omens good Heaven.44 At had the come time, to Sima of Emperor Wu the Grand Historian (and who wrote the Shi Jizv) of Sima Qian,au not able to take part in this ritual sacrifice at Tan,at father was Mount Tai and had so angry him made his death, he to remain in Loyang.aw This that he fell ill and died. Before clasped murmured fearfully, great ritual performed a miserable fate! What in grief and "I could not go to see this a What by the Emperor. histo fate!" The modern his son's hand writes that "in reading Chieh-kangax after a lapse of 2,000 years, we Sima Tan's words and we can find his faith and sorrow convincing rian Ku deduce out sent commented: Shiguar from nasty.39 king "This means that [the em and peror] acquired elephant chariots from the West an abundance of red wild geese from the East?what Yan Wu's that thought the were important shared of Emperor of that pe by people aspects riod."45 Whenever era name of an important the reigning xiangrui the appeared was changed, dynasty cel country sung, and the whole songs were in theory xiangrui were both ebrated.46 Although of communica and the medium the intermediary new tion between ally Heaven ameans and earth, of dialogue issued an edict they were actu an people. When "A linaY uni declaring, among emperor corn and a feng bird have appeared near the capi texts have emerged from the Yellow tal; divine the he was and Loaz Rivers," informing actually people that the empire was being managed well 3. Bronze Fig. Gansu province, inWuwei, excavated horse," "heavenly in 1969. Reprinted with from permission Ch?ka jimin ky?wakoku shiruku r?do bunmotsu ten (Tokyo: Yomiuri Shimbunsha, 1979), no one and therefore if the people pi. 72. should make Or, started gossiping themselves, among A gone wrong. huge tree to saying, "Something's a stream of black water fell over; the east suddenly out of the ground in the west," what meant is a bungler. "The Emperor was, really aminister reign is about to collapse."48 When had done something that the emperor wrong, they His gushed ascended "Since you've simply, have had earthquakes, landslides, in the winter. You thunder summer, think about this!"49 These in Han logues he the throne said we were felt in the frost had better dia characteristic of the xian times. The popularity use of xian the widespread explains grui decorations. omni It is fair to say that such images were on the Han present dynasty?whether during grui idiom chariots, bronze burners, toilet mirrors boxes, for daily use, incense wine sets, goblets, liquor or tombs. Many houses, highly regarded works Even animals. the com of art portray xiangrui mon this of decoration for type people adopted their coarse ceramic ware (Figs. 3-6). that the por The people of that time believed trayal of xiangrui daily use would xiangrui. auspicious Fengchan This omen shu^ images on clothes and objects of invoke the appearance of real practice was (faruiba).50 in the Shiji, called the invoking to According Emperor Wu the was in Youyu, excavated vessel, in 1962. with Reprinted chutu wenwu Gongheguo province, hua Renmin pi. zun 4. Bronze Fig. trouble.47 permission zhanlan: Shanxi from zhanpin Zhong xuanji, 84. necromancers advised by communicate their with divine that if he wanted beings he should on images to have of daily use; not appear. portrayed objects the divine beings would to build a "cloud Wu was Emperor persuaded the breath chariot."51 This anecdote helps explain in Han of the xiangrui designs dynasty. popularity otherwise, It also the function of the Sanpan suggests what have chariot might been. possibly The development of the xiangrui idea reveals a Shan shift in thought from the Warring significant to Han In the the Warring States period dynasty. States period and even earlier, people and sometimes mentioned in Heaven as indicated However, of Heaven is distant; by the saying, the way of man also believed xiangrui.52 "The way is close at as took people the people of this period in their ideas. In their art, of departure activities often human such as portrayed hand,"53 the point they scenes and sacrifices. This hunting, as in the Han; the concept of Heaven changed of the sumed amuch more active role in the minds people seemed its will. of war, and dominated as if Heaven People more were rationalized of their constantly their own thinking. It expressing as existence 45 5. Bronzesword. Fig. Reprinted with permis sion from Zheng Zhenduo, Weidade Yishu Chuantong tulu (Shanghai, Shanghai Publishing Co., 1955), vol. based on the mandate as the tangible of Heaven and took xiangrui mandates. sign of intangible MOUNTAINS AND 10. 1, pi. CLOUDS An role of the xiangrui in Han important concept was culture that of broadening the perspective of art. It led the Han people to cast their eyes upon nature. The tastic, bizarre environment animals was these fan surrounding not the temple but jun lands. People must have and distant gles, valleys, of events felt the importance the temples. Among mountains and cloud happening outside the many aspects of nature, were most breath (yunqibc) two natural were These prominent. phenomena also the most in the xiangrui features prevalent design of the Sanpan Shan chariot as well. of other Han art works ornament and the Han people worshiped many moun During could be roughly into three classified tains, which as The first known the Five kind, categories. Yue,Dd North, China. nese The Fig. 6. Pottery hu vessel, from the George Crofts collec tion. Reprinted with permission from Chinese Art in the Royal Ontario Museum (Toronto: The Royal Ontario Museum, 46 1972), pi. 8. occupied South, Itwas the four East, cardinal directions? and West?and the Center in the Yue mountains that the Chi received of Heaven.54 emperor second kind were the mandate the Xian believed Mountains), commonly islands of Penglaibfm the Eastern find these three islands one could Shanbe to be Sea. of (Immortal the three If one could become immor tal. As for the Shen third, Shanb? itwas generally believed Mountains), and exotic animals inhabited people were tains, which with rocks, grotesque It is this last precipices. that provided the Mountains, the Mystical type, these moun and craggy trees, gnarled covered (Mystical that strange for the xiangrui design. inspiration is rooted The concept of theMystical Mountains one in two traditions, inherited from earlier times. of the Immortal Mountains Just as the concept was in the region of Yanbn and Qibl popularized the States the idea of during Warring periods,55 Mountains in the Mystical had already developed Re the state of ChubJ during the Eastern Zhou. tradition as barbarians cognized by the orthodox of the South, the people,of to have Chu been appeared of their fanci Many describe numerous Shan Haijing^ as well mountains the gods fantasies have found source second stems concept as from of the Mystical the realities Mountains of Han life itself. tory of his empire. His western to Tashkent in Central Asia. stretched boundary his military After acquired tortoise shells the Han victories, and rhinoceros of the south, Dawanbm emperor cloth (xibubl) from the Pearl Cliffs flying horses and exotic grapes from in the west. Shu^n Xiyu It is also zhuanbo recorded that following in the his vic came lumbering from the giant elephants west and red geese flew in from the east, glittering iridescent feathers, dragons, fish pearls, wenjia,bP tories horses that sweat birds dogs, blood, lions, events must These have the Han served the strange people about in the Shan Hai greatly inspired For example, the Han there was to substantiate stories fing was such story. There to a Fire Moun tain in the south thirty li long and fifty liwide trees. Rats cov burning incessantly hairs two feet long and as fine as silk ered with In the fire, the rats lived in the burning forest. covered were with out red, doused the fire, they were the rats died. Their of water with then be woven into huowan.60 If white. hair could Knowledge the makers us understand of such of xian why a to world be of fan creating grui designs the basis of these flights of tasy. By understanding on the other hand, we can see that imagination, fantasies contained realistic factors. many realm and worldly immortal two elements, fantasy in the pictorial and reality, decoration to or they read must have and imagination. people's a kind of xiangrui called are mingled of together the Shanpan Shan ornament. chariot Besides animals and mountains, the xiangrui also had for people special regard (cloud yunqi which forms the third breath), important subject of the chariot design. The pre-Qin concept of qibs was close the vitality man body. to a philosophical concept symbolizing in the cosmos inherent and in the hu the people However, more tangible illustrations preferred an observable became Qi gradually in Han times of these ideas. phenomenon of it an important occupation. va could distinguish "qi-watchers" and the observation Professional riations in the shape which ferocious "exotic abounded: gigantic things can hardly in from all One directions."57 poured the impact their sudden appearance had imagine on the local of Central China. people parochial heard have events, the forty-three years of his reign, the Em in peror Wu made use of the strength accumulated to double the early years of the dynasty the terri eyes, told one their the xiangrui During Han signal from Heaven, important stories about its origins. Dongfang colorful many was to Emperor minister said Wu, Shuo,br These design. The a good omen and but they invented the west from seemed them.56 These into their way tion of huowan tales helps imaginative. especially in the book ful stories recorded mystical and demons who inhabited a flame-resistant cloth. We can now huowan,bcl58 in fact, asbestos.59 Han say that this material was, were much more in their ex imaginative people the acquisi They not only considered planations. signified specific in the shape of pavilions, mals.61 One particularly yun.bt quite It "looked find This color of clouds, Qi appeared boats, and ani the qing special qi was like smoke and not quite banners, like fine, is an apt description on many all of phenomena. like clouds, but strands."62 that we not and cloud-patterned intertwining of the forms Han deco rations (Figs. 7, 8). Furthermore, people believed one should that when for searching something first seek its qi.63 47 The Han people The immortality. after. As recorded necromancers out were obsessed with was immortal the idea of much qi sought sent in the Shiji, Emperor Wu to sea to look for the immortal re Islands. When they returned, they that Penglai was not far away, but they had to reach the islands because to of a failure Penglai ported failed spot Penglai's qi. Emperor Wu was so impressed with this report that he set up an official position for a "Deputy Qi Diviner" (Wangqi zuohoubu) was who to stay on the seashore and peer out after day, waiting for the islands' qi sea day to to appear.64 the appearance of xiangrui was al un ways accompanied by qi. A bronze tripod was earthed during Emperor Wu's recog reign In addition, as a xiangrui from Heaven. The emperor out to accompany himself went the tripod as it was at a into the capital. On the journey, brought (where the chariot orna place called Zhongshan nized 1 at excavated from tomb no. 7. Coffin Mawangdui, Fig. Hunan from the collection of the Hunan Museum. province, with from 7, 8, 10, 14, 15 reprinted permission Figs. no hakubutsukan Kodansha, 1981); vol. 2, (Tokyo: Ch?goku pi. was ment 75 excavated) and enshrouded peared entourage Zhibv of a gust of clouds ap yellow the tripod as the Emperor's back to the capital.65 In Liyue proceeded the Han Shu it is mentioned that when a xiangrui in the form of a Emperor Wu captured red serpent itwas also accompanied by a canopy we of yellow clouds.66 Once understand the par ticular significance of qi and that of the combina tion Han of cloud we will of Han pects i. The Han and xiangrui patterns during be able to clarify the following art: cloud decorative bronze as the most popular not only on It appeared but also on clothes, vessels, pattern motif. and the became lacquer and tomb paintings (Figs. 7, 8). are animals accompa always xiangrui as seen on the bronze rhi nied by cloud patterns, entire body is covered whose noceros, by these furniture, 2. The coffins, also patterns (Fig. 9). They cious deer in the decoration Mawangduibwtombno. 3. The reason why shaped incense-burner) of art was that the smoke 8. Silk Fig. the collection excavated permission from 48 of from the Hunan Ch?goku tomb Museum. no. i atMawangdui, with Reprinted no hakubutsukan vol. 2, pi. from 105. that would surround of the auspi the coffin from 1 (Fig. 10). the boshanlubx became an (mountain form important incense-burners then envelope produced the xiangrui thus provid on the Mystical Mountains, most of Mag the vivid combined ing expressions icalMountains, and yunqi xiangrui, (Fig. 11). carved THE HUNTING The second SCENE in the Sanpan Shan chariot scene; a mounted register a hunting ornament depicts arms extended, turns back to take archer, with aim at a tiger (see Fig. i c). The effect it produces is from that of the Warring States quite different scenes. The bronzes of War the hunting pictorial ring and one a strong sense of scale combat between man and States period give of fierce intensity, beast and between hunted, is not the beast beasts; it is also on the offensive. only ferocity of The the struggle is portrayed through short, segmented lines (Fig. 12). The emphasis of the Han dynasty on on the other hand, is focused scenes, hunting the gracefulness of the riders and the fluidity of no trace of intense struggle. is lines. There It al most a theatrical performance resembles in its ele 9. Bronze Fig. excavated rhinoceros, in 1963, province from the collection in Xingping, of Shaanxi the Museum of Chinese History. Reprinted with permission from Ch?goku no (Kyoto: bijutsu Tan K?sha, 1982), vol. 5, pi. 76. con in the impressions dissimilarity scenes two the of these veyed by hunting periods a difference in the values reflects upon placed in States Han the and the Warring hunting periods. In neither period did the aristocracy in engage gance. The In the for economic mainly purposes.67 a States period, hunting had military Warring sig In the Zuo Zhuan^Y we find the follow nificance. hunting a minister of the ing comment by Zang Xibo,bz State of Lu,ca on hunting. all "Hunting during an four seasons of the year is affair of important the state for neuvers and ma it provides in military practice can order and disci help maintain are If hunting the troops. activities pline among carried on continuously for three years, will surely become powerful."68 According counts activities of large-scale hunting time, plans real warfare. involved and strategies The degree was were devised in one participating hunting expeditions. During of a boar, the Prince was of thrown verity his from his foot in to be rescued to this description, of hunting reflect none that characterize Fig. io. Coffin excavated from tomb no. i atMawangdui. Reprinted with permission from Ch?goku no hakubutsukan, vol. 2, pi. 78. of the Prince large-scale in the hunt while by his attendants.70 In sharp contrast records that these beast. With carriage by the enraged and the shoes Prince had lost, jured and danger of as if for and danger intensity to that of real combat.69 of Qi dynasty to ac of comparable In the Zuo Zhuan there is an account pursuit a state the Han of the se the earlier ac counts. The works of some of the noted literary as Sima such period, Xiangru's and Ban Gu'scc Liangdu Fuc^ contain of the Han figures Zixu F?cb of the splendor of im and grandeur descriptions scenes. aristocratic It is and clear hunting perial from these accounts that the Han dynasty nobles were not naturally enclosed hunting roamed hunting in the wilds but parks where in the artificial that were the beasts confines stocked of with 49 Fig. 11. Incense excavated burner, Hebei Mancheng, from in 1968. province, Figs. tomb 11, no. i at 12, 17, 18 reprinted with permission from Wen Fong (ed.), The Great Bronze Age ofChina (New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1980); pi. 95. For example, the famous im the Garden, preserve, Shanglince animals.71 captive perial hunting contained fenced-in gamekeepers. garden had treasured roses from birds from areas under the care of official to the Liangdu Fu, the state of Jiuzhen,cf According qilin from the state of Dawan, state of Huangyou,c8 steed from the the state of Tiaozhi.cn These the the rhinoce and rare animals were all sent to the Shanglin Garden from all sorts some of different as far li, away as 30,000 places, from beyond the Kunlun Mountains and from the other exotic side of the ocean.72 animals grounds.73 vironment Hunting must the need of surely have fulfilled to and nobles themselves with identify emperors the divine world 50 were the hunts, these During released into the hunting en in such a magnificent of the xiangrui. Fig. 12. Bronze Museum. The Great dou in 1923, province, vessel from in Liyu, Hunyuan, Shanxi of the Shanghai found the collection Reprinted with permission from Wen Fong (ed.), Bronze of China, Age fig. 97. an court with also provided the Han for the conspicuous opportunity display of wealth In Zixu to and luxury. Fu Sima Xiangru goes in the grandeur of the great describing lengths Hunting the extravagance of its ceremonies, royal hunt, the superb horsemanship, the various exotic beasts encountered countless after participants and mood sphere the and the finally waited the noble upon the hunt was over.74 The atmo during courtesans hunt, who reflected accord by the writer on the spirit of the scene portrayed ornament. with perfectly our chariot Another and the Han difference between the Warring States is that in the xian periods expressed is the relation between men and beasts. grui design As noted earlier, States period men in the art works and beasts were of the Warring often portrayed Fig. 13. Detail of the Si Mu Wu ting vessel, from the 14. Silk painting, Fig. from Hunan province, collection of theMuseum of Chinese History. Reprinted with permission from Ch?koku no bijutsu (Tokyo: K?dansha, 1963), as locked ings, were vol. vol. sculptures, struggle. and bronzes In some o? the paint of the period, men as the heroic conquerors portrayed once noted, K. C. Chang the beasts. gating or at least the became masters challengers animals during the Eastern Zhou period."75 subju "Men of the In the it is evident from the art works however, that the sense of conflict between men and beasts Han, had diminished. Images of men beasts were forcibly subduing by a new scene of 2, pi. Humans The most of this change illuminating example lies in the relationship between and drag people were considered the most ons, which powerful In bronzes and divine of animals. of the Shang01 devouring (Fig. as portrayed In such 13). not but only battled dragons a them. The man subjugated holding dragon's in a Chu found tomb in reins in a silk painting period. at ease; the and completely control (Fig. 14). By Han the position of animals was again elevated of ideas about xiangrui and the influence is poised ChangshacJ his is under dragon times supposed en.76 Two fate. sometimes Changsha, the Hunan Museum. a threatening power dragons represented This that put men on the defensive. relationship States the Warring changed during completely human men of cases, gradually replaced were no as a Animals longer presented force requiring vigorous subjugation. threatening in harmony animals were shown with Instead, concord. dragons were or capturing in Zidanku, 53 under and Zhou, the collection Reprinted with permission from Ch?goku no hakubutsukan, 1, pi. 9. in head-on excavated did not give rise to For the famous silk example, people. in the Mawangdui exhumed tombs was immortality. conflict with painting Yet this elevation to facilitate the dead's ascent to Heav one on either side of an image dragons, an All the deceased, convey upward motion. such as the heavenly the other xiangrui animals, sense reinforce this of horse, rising motion (Fig. of 15). Such concord is fully expressed in the Dingxian 51 Fig. .15. Detail of Fig 1 at Mawangdui, the silk painting from tomb no. excavated from the collection of the Hunan Museum. Reprinted with permission from Ch?goku no hakubutsukan, vol. 80. 2, pi. It is clear between elephant, the harmonious and animals people to the popularity related and that through immortality. of that did not relationship in the Han is closely the ideas of xiangrui the animals' themselves arrival control Chengdu, as their THE XIANGRUI AND DESIGN THE HAN WORLD VIEW hu vessel in excavated in 1965, province, from the collection of the Sichuan Museum. Reprinted with from Wen Fong (ed.), The Great Bronze Age of fig. 107. difference. The latter a static display that seem unmov structure. Images composition are in sequence (Fig. 16). By con ing presented in characterizes the Han trast, fluidity designs all objects?mountains, which clouds, animals? are incorporated lating system Han view of into a constantly shifting, (see Fig. ig). The formation circu of the is closely the objects related to the and the five phases theories, which lay yin-yangck at the base of Han thought. The fate. bronze Sichuan permission marked animals were schema, news to human good the immortalization of In this envoys heavenly bearing kind of beings facilitating people. People welcomed messengers the juxtaposi and the cam of decor, Drawing Baihuatan, China, chariot ornament county tion of the man, the white el. 16. yin-yang and the five phases isted primarily as philosophical concepts ex ideas during the the Han dynasty, period. During framework became the they accepted for religious, and intellectual thought.77 political, Warring States however, In comparing Shan chariot period 52 pictorial xiangrui ornament bronze on the Sanpan designs and the Warring States see another vessels we Yin and yang express the polar relationships of The fire, among wood, opposites. relationships to be alternatively transformation. This understood and mutual The phases?were resistance mutual relationship for all movement to be the basic mode taken universe. overcomes that wood theory if they were constantly treading on thin ice. Like else living in Han times and influenced everyone five and metal?the earth, water, was in the earth, earth overcomes and water, water fire, fire metal, was a a metal wood, of circular process. theory Each one of the five elements had a correspond a The ear ing color, which symbolized dynasty. liest ruler, the Yellow the Emperor, possessed virtue of earth; Heaven the form of yellow earth was virtue then revealed dragons. the Xiacl When in xiangrui the virtue of the dynasty, with Yellow the replaced Emperor. were revealed to justify the rule exhausted, of wood, Different xiangrui came the Xia. the Xia Following overcame which the virtue dynasty, of the Shang of wood in only to be overcome turn by the Zhou which the dynasty, possessed virtue of fire. These successions thus demonstrated with the virtue of metal, the cyclical The Han system of history. people that the thought they occupied succeeding posi Heav tion, that of earth, in an everturning cycle. en again sent down as yellow dragons xiangrui.78 Constant the Han of the cosmos. view is at the center. The Han bined the with is also transformation the The of the five of of earth element of the cosmos view transformations the essence com elements four east, directions?north, south, had a corresponding color, animal spirit, season, musical scale, style of dress, In short, and so forth. taste, virtue, food, color, west. Each direction the system under Heav incorporated everything and transformation. en, all in constant movement universe. The considered status. For around a fixed center dom. He ing, Han the cardinal points had been previously to be fixed as was in place,79 social example, as recorded in the Shi fi, King Zhou of Shang squandered wealth advisors of warned him cosmos blue as a constantly turning. The new outlook was art forms. For different the black, also of the yellow, and colors in many reflected instance the and the four directions disc, of with by dynasty to think seemed red, white, giant revolving a acrobats, very a show known the Han, popular during performed as zhixicm offish (transmutation yulong manyan to historical and dragon). According the records, one actor dressed as performance began with a lynx, dancing in a courtyard. When the lynx reached the front hall of the palace it jumped into a and pool Clouds transformed a flounder. into itself burst from the mouth of the fish, obscur sun. By the time the clouds the the ing dispersed, fish had changed into a dancing yellow dragon and flashed scales gleamed eighty feet long, whose more than the sunlight.81 Almost all brightly scenes can stone in the pictorial these be viewed Yinan011 from tomb carving (Fig. 17 a-c). The most popular literary in describing the fu,co which the . the . . the west "in . "in formula: .", . "below. .", authors was east. . "in the . depicted as if the authors but rather natural "in .", settings the scenes structure, It and animals.82 had no glided .", "above .", a such used . . south . . north ." Within fantastic of the Han was form set point around-their of observa unfolding subjects. of thinking this way became the domi nant trend of the Han dynasty, thought during reasons no absolute the existence longer explained of objects whose re in the universe positions immovable theory of continuous believed that the virtue they be replaced of wood. They virtue trans elements formation, Han would tion, When mained the five by and his that he would lose his king their concerns, say rebuffed confidently "Did not Heaven the mandate?"80 give me as in contrast, worried emperors, ceaselessly stylized Highly with inscriptions state of YuecP southern period. bird-script on bronze By Han during the tomb originated from the weapons theWarring wide they had become on bronze vessels as well as on is the huccl vessel example of Liu state (Fig. Zhongshan fine sel is covered with Prince Qing of Sheng,cr ves The of the surface 18). gold and silver scroll-like flowing, two highly resemblance these States times spread, appearing stone tablets. A famous from characters forming configurations ornamental characters. Without to characters the strokes create in inlays forty any in standard the visual script, of impression 53 fluent movement rather than prompting codes. to decipher familiar In the design on our chariot four each register. connect with registers ward tains' undulat ornament, the main define ing mountains ment within the mind movement. ele compositional The mountains one another in the in an up the moun Following are in constant elements spiraling swirl, all the other and animals plants, cloud breath, are all depicted with curved lines, lines flowing in that seem to reinforce the sense of movement motion. Trees, mountains could say (Fig. ig). We as artistic expression, this particular the Han fu and the acrobats, lies the well as behind sense constant of transformation embodied deep in the Han world view. the spiraling that behind CONCLUSION In the above the Han I have sections and the Warring in their differences onstrating style. On the other hand, these during periods of the elements Many by dem matter and subject the development of art showed great in Han popular in the Warring States originated earlier. That animals are amedium cation notion, times. bird the art of compared States periods between Heaven and man continuity. art xiangrui even or period of communi is a very ancient Shang already clearly formulated during For example, in the oracle-bone scripts, the for which also means (the character feng was to as "the messenger referred of "wind") is little doubt that the forma There Heaven."83 tion of the systematic times had their origins States the Warring concepts xiangrui in this conception. in later During find many already period, omens and calamities, indicat we to good this kind of thinking was already on that ing it had not permeated rise, although political, to become and intellectual ligious, thought references mainstay thermore, as in the Han. of social psychology had not yet been these concepts the re the Fur illus art forms; trated by the various the xiangrui pat was not tern of decorative in arts, yet particular, Fig. 17. (a-c) Rubbings of the stone carvings of the Yinan Reprinted with permission from Yinangu huaxiang shimufajui haogao (Shanghai: Administration of Cultural Tomb. Relics, 54 1956), pis. 92-94 popular. The Han dynasty was an empire with vast ter Han thought was a synthesis ritorial holdings. of in various ideas that had developed before regions to good in docu For example, references dynasty. can be found or calamities mainly from the state of Lu in the north. the Qin omens ments of the Han forms of the Chu culture But the resemble those xiangrui designs to the south. The ideas of im and the Immortal Mountains of Penglai mortality came from the Qi and Yan states in the north. But a work from the south, the Shan Hai Jing, de scribes Magic Mountains. Qi to the necromancers the states of Qi and Yan meant "the immortal " For Zhoucs of the Chu qi. Zhuang (Chuang-tzu) cosmic life in a philosophical state, qi symbolized sense. For Mengzict from the Central (Mencius) of Plain, qi was tion. These to ethical related regional thesis of Han state The Zhongshan riod and the state of Chu on Han coveries have civiliza its bearing into the syn each concepts, stamp, were combined thought and art. own influence and moral different in the Warring States pe had a particularly strong art. Recent dis archaeological that animals were the most revealed of art around the Zhong characteristic prominent shan area during theWarring States period.84 Be sides fluidity of style, animals also figured promi in the Han xiangrui motif. to nently According historical the nomadic Baidi documents, tribes, came into China from the north, established which Fig. 18. Bronze hu vessel, excavated from tomb no. i at Mancheng. Reprinted with permission from Wen Fong (ed.), The Great Bronze Age ofChina, pi. 96. the state.85 Migrations of ethnic Zhongshan was one art of the the nomadic animal groups way north influenced Han designs. the Surprisingly, Chu state, which which had been exerted was great its own art. The herited the Han cloud on Han distinctive and visual by design barbaric in battles with defeated influence ture had considered art. The music, the Han, Chu cul philosophy, in features most prominent from Chu art were and, more and the fluid the mood importantly, of Itmust did not be stressed appear first that these curvilinear on bronze vessels, on The different lacquerware.86 of bronze and lacquerware were related to their functions: but designs rather decorative straints. The use. styles probably directly bronze vessels were in sacrificial used ceremonies traditionally was affected by more formal their decoration mundane spirit of the times. Once more they were lacquer popular, for some bronzes of daily use. By Han adopted functions of the ceremonial and times, religious the bronze lacquerware pieces Their decoration were and con for more adapted more vessels had decreased; of bronze vessels with fashioned for daily use. Following restricted formerly decorations became transience. to the changing designs became quickly common luxurious on bronzes bricks in the halls tombs. The designs on of tastes, changing to lacquerware as well. decorative derous, geometric on bronze vessels was inherited pon used worship exuded in and by the ex the feeling bronzes. Following serious atmosphere these bricks resembled and the beginning in tombs rations The style originally by the decorative ancestral by the ceremonial pressed this course, we see that around large quantities were decorations the end of the Han ^ deco of the Wei Jin period, the geo dropped ponderous, 55 fluid designs style in favor of the more more in life. The geo daily popular ponderous a new to metric then became transferred and style metric art in cave art?the Buddhist developing a temples. To be sure, this is drastic oversimplifi cation of the real development taking place in the rapidly art forms. In reality, the one form from another by designs never absolute. and the differences various In conclusion, First, as shown Iwould inheritance like to stress is never of total by trying particular to some of the significance understanding art form of a particular that is part of Art is often categorized that whole. by the mate as it ismade. Art history is viewed rial from which of specialized fields such as bronzes, cave decorative and so bricks, paintings, temples, on. Research on often concentrates development a as shown within However, category. given consisting not is the development of different only art of but also, under interconnected, categories a certain circumstances, particular style character one category can be transferred to another izing above, two points. the xiangrui of by the analysis a of the formation style of art is given design, to various connected aspects of thought closely and certain kinds of already existing art, forming a whole corne and value to reconstruct the only by reconstructing of art, and among various categories relationships re of the various human aspects conception they can we come to under flect at different periods, period stand with Chinese interrelated parts. Therefore, only the life and thought of a can one in a comprehensive way Therefore, category. the development of a particular art form. Characters ac adJkit *7J? ae ??i. aq *4 as af&i ag ?_ av ?L%Zi ai% alm. s am anJ?L m 7i% aa flhi?K n %%% 56 ab ~fc?p ap ax J?UH ay az ba befa) & CU <aVk cv tos$ to'Wt^f tou-^ JL 4?.f? bg/^fih CMf bh#* to^E^iv^ bi pi CX ck to^.fj^-i'i. bx-ft^ 4J? bk?4 yfyf? cy * cl cz toy??L W da bJ%\ db bm^flx ca bn/l CO .?l eo% J5?. Fa ^^ bo *? cc^/i-g de fit cp-?m cl: top *k ceJl -& Jfyk es Ct Notes Iwould Katherine the extensive like to acknowledge assistance given to me by Lazarus and by Carmelita Hinton, I am deeply for which not have been possible. I it, this study would grateful. Without K. C. Chang and John Hay for would also like to thank Professors their valuable advice and suggestions. i. The of China from exhibition was Finds of the People's Republic Archaeological in the National DC, Gallery of Art, Washington, 13, 1974 to March 30, 1975, and in the Nelson 20 to June 8, Kansas City, from April Museum, held December Gallery-Atkins 1975. 2. LiXueqin, 3. Shi Shuqing, The Wonder Woguo ofChinese 1980), p. 62. (Beijing, gongyi, Wen Wu 6 (1973): Bronze gudai dejincuo 66-72. and other artifacts, the 4. As demonstrated by the Luan Shufucw bronzes with gold and silver first appeared technique of embellishing in the middle of the Spring and Autumn The period; Li Xueqin, Wonder of Chinese Bronze, pp. 39, 66. For the development of the see Jenny F. So, The Inlaid Bronzes of theWarring inlay technique, inWen States Period, (ed.), The Great Bronze Age of China Fong 1980), pp. 305-311. (New York, tures of theHan Period (Lon 5. Cf. B. Laufer, Chinese Grave-Sculp Kandai don, New Paris, York, 1911), pp. 9-22; Hayasi Minao, kishin no sekai, Toho Gakuho 46 (1974): 223-306. 6. The not been contained detailed excavation The published. in the following report of the Sanpan Shan tombs has is information the excavation concerning and Cultural Relics articles: The Museum of Hebei chutu wenwu xuanji Province, Heheisheng of Hebei 1980), p. 50; The Cultural Relics Administration inWenwu kaogu 30 nianlai de kaogu gongzuo, Province, Hebeisheng gongzuo 30 nian (Beijing, 1979), p. 46. and Cultural of Hebei Relics Administration Prov 7. Museum Administration (Beijing, chutu wenwu xuanji, ince, Heheisheng 8. Cultural Relics Administration p. 50. of Hebei Province, Hebeisheng and Cultural Relics 30 nianlai de kaogu gongzuo, p. 46; Museum of Hebei Administration chutu wenwu xuanji, Province, Hebeisheng p. 50. and Cultural of Hebei Relics Administration 9. The Museum chutu de jinl? yuyi, Wen Wu 7 40 hao Hanmu Dingxian (1976): 59 10. Ban Gu, Dili zhi, Han Shu (Beijing, 1962), p. 1632; cf. The Institute of Archaeology, and the Hebei CPAM, Mancheng CASS, Province, 1980), vol. 1, p. 3. hanmufajue baogao (Beijing, 11. The four tombs inDingxian identified by Li Daoyuan belong to princes Ai,cx Kang, Qing, and Xian,cy See Yang respectively. Shoujing, Dingxian Shuijing zhushu (Beijing, Zhi (Dingxian, 1934), vol. 1955), vol. 2, p. 28. 11, pp. 311-312; 57 12. The reports of these three tombs: (Prince Xiaocz) Relics of Hebei Hebei Dingxian 40 Province, hao Hanmu fajue jianbao, Wen Wu 8 (1981): 1-10; (Prince Jian) The Team of the Hebei Cultural Administration, Hebei Archaeological Hanmu Dingxian Beizhuang fajue baogao, Kaogu xuehao 2 (1964): 35- BanGu, Liyue zhi, p. 1060. 36. Ibid., p. 1067. 37. See Wu Renchen, Shanhaijingguangzhu p. 16. 38. BanGu, Wudiji, p. 211. Hebei 127-194; Museum, (Prince Mu) The Dingxian hao Hanmu fajue jianbao, Wen Wu 11 (1973): 8-20. 39. Ibid., p. Zhuo. Institute excavation of Cultural Dingxian 43 As noted by 13. Yang Shoujing, Shuijing zhushu, pp. 311-312. a mistake Li Daoyuan made in identification in this passage. Yang, toHan According not Prince Qing. Shu the father of Prince Kang should be Prince Ai, 14. Dingxian Zhi, vol. 1, p. 2. 15. Ibid., vol. 2, p. 28. 16. Ban Gu, Zhuhouwang biao, Han Shu, p. 414: "In the first year era [110 b.c.] Prince Kang succeeded to the throne of the yuanfeng and died in the twenty-first year [90 B.c.]." between the Sanpan Shan tombs and the fa 17. A comparison mous tombs might the former Mawangdui help clarify to whom have belonged. The Mawangdui in the constructed tombs, may same dynasty to the family of a high-level and belonging provincial of three graves consisted that have been officer, tombs of Dai Hou, his wife, and a son (?). Among has been suggested tombs, on the one hand, M122 himself Jiaojun member as the identified the Sanpan Shan to Prince Kang two seals bearing the names Liu in this article; M120 yielded and Liu Zhanshi, that the deceased was amale demonstrating a son of Prince of the Zhongshan royal family, perhaps came a Zhongshan the third tomb, from which to Prince seal, then might belong Kang's wife. to the three tombs mentioned 18. In addition in note Kang; family 1972), vol. of Ying Shao 3, and Jin dazi 1966), p. 24; cf. Zhongwen Guanyin Zi (Taibei, 1963), vol. 9, p. 3602. of ganludf third year (51 b.c.), 41. The edict in the second month in Yu Hai. quoted 42. Shi Shuqing, Woquo p. 70. gudai dejincuo gongyi, 43. Sima Qian, Xiao Wu benji, Shiji 1959), vol. 12. (Beijing, 40. Jiuyao, dian (Taibei, Sima Qian, Taishigong vol. zizhuan, Shiji, Sima Qian zhuan, Han Shu, vol. 62, p. 2715. Handai xueshu shilue, p. 21. 45. Ku Chieh-kang, 44. 30, p. 3295; Ban Gu, 46. Cf. ibid., p. 31. 47. Ban Gu, Wudiji, pp. 160-161. zhi, Han Shu, vol. 27, pp. 1405-1439. 48. Cf. Ban Gu, Wuxing Handai xueshu shilue, pp. 43-44. 49. Cf. Ku Chieh-kang, recorded that Emperor Wu once used the skin of a 50. Sima Qian to invoke inXiao Wu benji, p. 457. the auspicious omen, Shu it is said that the same emperor made the lin zhijin,dg coins in the shape of a unicorn's foot, to invoke good omens. white deer Also inHan golden Ban Gu, Wudiji, 51. Sima Qian, 52. Cf. clay 12 and to the 193; also see the commentaries (Taibei, Yingtong, 53. Du p. 206. Xiao Wu benji, Sima Qian, Fengchan Liishi Chunqiu (Taibei, p. 458. vol. shu, Shiji, 1968), vol. 28; Lu Buwei, 13, pp. 4-5. 1955), v?l(Beijing, Yu, the graves of Prince Qing (d. 113 b.c.) and his Sanpan Shan tombs, in 1968. See the Institute wife Dou Wandc were found inMancheng of Archaeology, CASS, Hebei CPAM, Mancheng Hanmu fajue bao 24 (the jijie Chunqiu jingzhuan tian year of Zhao Gong), p. 2; cf. Guo Moruo, Xianqin shidai (Beijing, 1966), pp. 1-53. zhijinzhan, Qingtong daoguan 54. Cf. Ban Gu, Jiaosi zhi, p. 1205. gao, vol. 1, pp. 336-337. 19. Fan Yie, Yufu zhi, Hou Han Yinke, 1965), vol. 29, p. (Beijing, Hebei CASS, CPAM, 3647; Institute of Archaeology, Mancheng Relics of Hanmu fajue baogao, vol. 1, p. 204; Institute of Cultural Hebei Province, Hebei Dingxian 40 hao Hanmu p. 2. jianbao, fajue Shu 20. Geitjutsu Daigaku Z?hin Zuroku 1976), vol. 5, pi. 7. (Tokyo, 21. Shi Shuqing, Woguo de p. 70. gudai jincuo gongyi, 22. Cf. Dong in Chunqiu shunni, Wuxing Zhongshu, Wangdao, 1893), vol. 4, pp. 1-3, vol. 13, pp. 9-10; Ban Gu, (Zhejiang, of zhi, Han Shu, vol. 24, p. 1189. For the political implication see Astron W. of The Political Function omens, Eberhard, unlucky inHan China, omy and Astronomers (ed.), Chinese inj. K. Fairbank Fanlu Jiaosi 1957), pp. 33-70. Thought and Institutions (Chicago, 23. Cf. Ban Gu, Zhang Yu zhuan, Han Shu, vol. 24. Dong Zhongshu, Shunming, Chunqiu Fanlu, 25. Dong p. 4. 26. Dong Zhongshu, 81, p. 3351. pp. 6-8. Chunqiu Fanlu, vol. Tongleixiangdong, Furui, Chunqiu Zhongshu, 27. Ban Gu, Jiaosi zhi, p. 1212. 28. Ibid., pp. 1215-1248. Fanlu, vol. 13, 6, p. 3. xueshu Handai xueshu shilue, pp. 12-17; Chen 55. Cf. Ku Chieh-kang, Tianshidao yu binhai diqu de guanxi, Chen Yinke xiansheng lunji (Taibei, 1971), p. 271. work scholars 56. Most identify Shan Hai fing as a shamanistic in south China (Shi Jingcheng, yanjiu lunji Shanhaijing originating shilue (Shanghai, 1935), p. gave in tribute a tame elephant." 33. Ban Gu, Liyue zhi, Han Shu, vol. 22, p. 1069. in the third horses were discovered 34. The winged (heavenly) era (120 B.c.) and in the fourth year of the year of the yuanshou taichude era (101 b.c.). Ban Gu, Wudiji, pp. 176, 202; Liyue zhi, pp. 1060-1061. South Vietnam 58 7. Yun in the zhuan, Han Shu, vol. 96, p. 3929. 57. Ban Gu, Xiyu can be found in the fol huowan 58. The information concerning 1959), Sanguo Zhi (Beijing, lowing texts: Chen Shou, Shan shaodiji, vol. 4, p. 118; Gan Bao, Soushenji 1979), vol. 10, p. 124, (Beijing, vol. vols. 38, 399, 820; Fayuan Zhulin, vol. 13, p. 165; Taipingyulan, vol. 26; and Yiwen leiju, vol. 7. 37; Chuxueji, 59. Cf. Ci yuan (Shanghai, 1939), p. 927. in Chen 60. Dongfang Shuo, Shenyi fing, quoted p. 118. shaodiji, Sima Qian, Tianguan shu, p. 1382. Fengchan 62. Sima Qian, Fengchan 63. Cf. ibid., p. 1336. 64. 123. to Ban Gu, all tribal people in southwestern Yi, 31. According hairdos. Ban and in the north of Dian wore Miguan, snail-shaped zhuan, Han Shu, vol. 95, p. 3837. Gu, Xinan Yi, Hang Yu, Chaoxian 32. Ban Gu, Wudi ji, Han Shu, vol. 6, p. 176: "In the second year era [121 b.c.], during the reign of Emperor Wu, of the yuanshoudd wenshi 1974), PP- i~77; Meng Wentong, Zhonghua 1962), vol. 1;Yuan Ke, loc. cit. (1978), vol. luncong (Beijing, that this book had its origin however, suggests Xingpei, area of western loc. cit. (1979), vol. 11. He-Lo China, (Hongkong, 61. 29. Ibid., pp. 1248-1253. Handai 30. Cf. Ku Chieh-kang, eighteenth 65. Ibid., p. 1393. Sima Qian, Xiao 1382-1383. 66. BanGu, 67. Cf. Guo Liyue Baojun, shu, Shiji, shu, p. Wu benji, zhi, p. 1069. Zhongguo vol. 27, Shou, pp. Shan 1336-1339; 1339. Fengchan shu, pp. shidai (Beijing, 1963), p. pp. 464-465; qingtongqi 61. 68. Zuo Zhuan, zuozhuan 69. Zuo 404-405. 70. Zuo Zhuan, 149. the Fifth Year of Yin Gong, Liu Wenqi, 1959), pp. 29-33. shuzheng (Beijing, Year of Xi Gong, the Twenty-seventh Zhuan, Chunqiu jiuzhu the Eighth Year of Zhuang Gong, ibid., ibid., pp. pp. 148 "The 71. Ban Gu, Zhang Shizhi zhuan, Han Shu, pp. 2307-2308: the tigers and asks the deputy of goes into the fence holding Emperor the Shanglin Garden the categories of beasts and of birds." Yan "The fence is the place for raising animals." Shigu's commentary: 72. Ban Gu, Liangdu fu, in Yan Kejun, Quan Han wen (Wuchang, 1894), vol. 24, p. 4. 73. Wei Hong, Han jiuyi, in Han liqi zhidu ji qita 5 zhong, Cung 1939), pp. 16-17: "When the Emperor shujicheng chubian (Changsha, in fall and winter, officials fill the goes to hunt in the Shanglin Garden garden with animals and birds." 74. Sima Xiangru, 21, p. 6. Zixu Fu, in Yan Kejun, Quan Han Wen, vol. of Men and Animals in 75. K. C. Chang, Changing Relationships and Chou and The Bulletin the Institute of Eth Art, Shang Myths of nology Academia Sinica, no. 10 (Autumn 1963): 115-146. shuo (Taibei, and Anthro 1967); Yao Shan-yu, The Cosmological of Tung Chung-shu, pological Philosophy Journal of theN.C Royal Asiatic Society 73 (1948): 40-68. Yao dian states that Yao commanded his offcers 79. For example, to reside at the points of the four cardinal directions in order to the zodiacal the movements of the sun, spaces; to calculate the moon, and the stars; and so to deliver respectfully the seasons to the people; cf. James Legge, The Chinese Classics (Hongkong, i960), observe vol. 3, pp. 1-23. 80. Sima Qian, Yin benji, Shiji, 81. Cf. Yan Shigu's annotation vol. 3, p. 107. in Ban Gu's Xiyu zhuan, pp. fu, in Yan Kejun, Zonghua wenchi 3929-3930; Zhang heng, Xijing luncong, vol. 52, p. 11. 82. Cf. The Department of Chinese Beijing University, Zhongguo wenxueshi Language (Beijing, and Literature of 1959), p. 139. 1 hao 76. Shang Zhitan, Mawangdui shishi, Wen Wu Hanmu/eiyi of Western 9 (1972): 43-47; J. M. James, A Provisional Iconology Han Funerary Art, Oriental Art XXV (3) (1979): 347~357 angshi, Handai xueshu shilue, p. 1. 77. Ku Chieh-kang, Wude xia 78. Ibid., pp. 141-151; Ku Chieh-kang, shongshishuo de zhengzhi he lishi, The Qinghua University Journal 6 (1) (1930); zhi laili, Dongfang zazhi 20 (10) Liang Qichao, Yinyang wuxing and Liling, Zhongshan 85. Cf. Li Xueqin 3 qi yu Zhongshanguo shi de ruogan wenti, Kaogu xuebao 2 (1979): 163-165. 86. Cf. Thomas Chinese Art of the Warring States Period Lawton, DC, 1982), pp. 178-182. (Washington, (1923): 70-79; Li Hansan, Xianqin Lianghan zhi yinyang wuxing 83. JinZutong, 84. Wu Hung, Wen Wu Yinqiyizhu (Shanghai, Tan jijian Zhongshanguo 5 (1979): 46-50. 1939), no. 935. qiwu zaoxing yu zhu xue 59