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                            Bronze jue vessel                            flanges that  mark the waist band  and the  underside
                                                                         of the  spout. The animal head  on the  strap  handle
                                                     5
                                        5
                            Height  37.3  (i4 /s), weight 4.4  (9 / 8)   and  the  masks at the  waist are in fairly  high relief;
                            Late Shang Yinxu Period  II (c. 1200  BCE)   most of the  other decoration  is less readable. RT
                            From Xiaotun Locus North, at  Yinxu, Anyang,
                            Henan Province                               i  Excavated in  1976 (M 5:1579);  reported:  Zhongguo  1980,  85.

                            The  Institute  of Archaeology, CASS,  Beijing


                            From the  heyday of the  Erlitou type site until some
                            time in the  Western Zhou period, the jue pouring
                            vessel was one  of the  most common types of bronze
                            ritual vessels. About a dozen small, thinly cast,  and
                            plain jue have been recovered to date  at Erlitou;
                            at  Early Shang sites, jue are commonly found paired
                            with gu wine goblets.  This pairing is typical of all
                            stages  in the Anyang occupation, when hundreds
                            of examples from  period  burials are  documented.
                            The paired jue and gu constitute  the  "lowest com-
                            mon denominator" among Shang bronze vessels
                            and ritual sets.
                               Tomb 5 held  forty jue altogether,  but  this exam-
                               1
                            ple  and  its mate stand  apart  by virtue of their size
                            and  thick casting. This is an exceptionally large jue
                            — at almost 38 centimeters, nearly twice as tall as
                            other  examples from  the  tomb, which range  from  20
                            to 26 centimeters. The complement of jue in Tomb 5
                            corresponds  to four  sets of vessels, each  component
                            inscribed with a different  clan-sign that  indicates
                            its origin. The Fu Hao jue comprise the  large pair
                            represented  by the  exhibited example, and  ten
                            others  of smaller size and  different  shape. Three
                            other  lineages  (Si Tu Mu, Ya Qi, and  Shu Quan)
                            are represented  by three sets of nine jue each,
                            paired  of course  with gu goblets  (eleven, ten,  and
                            ten, respectively). The sets of goblets  and  pouring
                            vessels were probably gifts  or offerings  made to
                            Fu Hao at the  funeral; they may even have been
                            used  for drinking or libations at the  grave during
                            the  rites, a custom known as early as the  prehistoric
                            Dawenkou and Longshan cultures (fourth-third
                            millennium  BCE) of  Shandong.
                               Its three flared legs and trough  spout  and tail
                            extending well beyond  the  vessel body, this jue is
                            nonetheless  a stable  and  solid vessel. The evident
                            thickness of the  vessel walls is matched by thick



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