Page 58 - 2011 - The Frank Arts Collection, Chinese Bronzes
P. 58

Inscription:
                          -  A five-character inscription inside the vessels translates, ‘The Duke of Qin (had)
                           made (this) precious gui’.
                        Provenance:
                          -  Wang Jui Chin collection, Taipei and Hong Kong, 1993
                          -  Frank Arts Collection, Belgium.
                        Notes:
                          -  The Dukes of the State of Qin ruled the strongest feudal kingdom during the
                           Zhou dynasty.
                          -  During the last days of the Western Zhou dynasty, Duke Xiang of Qin (Qin Xiang
                           Gong)  saved  the  royal  house  of  Zhou  and  ensured  the  dynasty’s  survival  as
                           Eastern Zhou, with a new capital in Luoyang ( Henan province). In recognition,
                           he received the title of “Gong” Duke.
                          -  At the end of the Warring States, and after the unification of all of China, the last
                           Duke of Qin took the title of Qin Shi Huangdi and inaugurated the Qin dynasty,
                           thus becoming China’s first ‘Huangdi’ or emperor.
                          -  The present Qin Gong gui was owned by either Qin Zhuang Cong or Qin Xiang
                           Gong, the Duke Xiang of Qin.  (See an article by Professor Li Feng entitled ‘Lixian
                           Chutu Qinguo Zaoqi Tongqi Ji Jisi Yizhi Lungang” p. 55 – 67 of Issue 5 for 2011
                           of Wenwu Cultural Relics magazine.

                        Similar examples:
                          -  Two  bronze  vessels  gui  from  the  same  set  (with  the  same  design  and  same
                           inscription), now in the Shanghai Museum, are illustrated by Chen Peifen,   Xia
                           Shang Zhou Qingtongqi Yanjiu, Dong Zhou Bian, Volume Shang, Shanghai, p.
                           41 – 43, n° 449





































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