Page 237 - The Golden Age of Chinese Archaeology: Celebrated Discoveries from the People’s Republic of China
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BRONZES    FROM       Zhuangbai, a hamlet  situated  approximately 100 kilometers west of the  city of Xi'an,  between
                            the  Wei River (25 kilometers to the  south)  and the  Qi Shan mountains  (25 kilometers to  the
      HOARD   1  AT         north), was recognized  as an important  archaeological  site  in December  1976, when farmers
                            clearing a field turned  up an ancient  bronze  vessel; subsequent  excavation revealed  a pit  con-
      ZHUANGBAI,            taining 103 bronze vessels dating to the  Western  Zhou period  (c. 1100-771 BCE) — the  so-called
                            Hoard i. Zhuangbai lies in the  Zhou Yuan — the  Plain of Zhou — the  ancestral  homeland  of the
      FUFENG,   SHAANXI     Zhou people  prior to the  establishment  of their dynasty in the  middle of the  eleventh  century
                            BCE. Even after  the  political capital  had  been moved to the  vicinity of present-day  Xi'an, many
      PROVINCE              important  Zhou families continued  to maintain households  in the  Zhou Yuan.
                                 Although the  plain covers a small area  (approximately 10 square  kilometers), it has  yielded
                            more Western  Zhou bronze vessels than  any single locality in China. In the  iSoos, when  archae-
                            ological finds in China  began  to become  systematically reported,  several important  Western
                            Zhou bronze  vessels were discovered within the  plain's perimeter  in the  two counties — Qishan
                            and  Fufeng — whose border  bisects  the  Zhou Yuan: the  Mao Gong  ding, found in the  18408 in
                            Jingdang  (Qishan)  and  now in the  collection of the  National  Palace  Museum in Taipei, Taiwan;
                            the  Da Yu ding, discovered  at around  the  same time in Licun (Qishan)  and  now in The  National
                            Museum of Chinese  History, Beijing;  and  the  Da Ke ding, discovered  in  1890  in  Renjia  (Fufeng)
                            and  now in the  Shanghai Museum. In the  19705, the  Zhou Yuan was the  focus of a concerted

                            archaeological  investigation, with important  discoveries of other hoards  made  at Dongjia
                            (thirty-seven vessels, found in  1975,  belonging  to the  Lti lineage); Hejia  (two vessels of the  San
                            lineage, discovered  in  1973, complementing  another  hoard  of eleven  San vessels that had been
                            unearthed  about  2 kilometers to the  east  in Shaochen  in 1960); Qiangjia (seven vessels, belong-
                            ing to the  Guoji lineage, discovered  in  1974); as well as the  tomb  of Bo Dong at  Zhuangbai
                            (fourteen  important  vessels found in  1975) — about one hundred  meters  from  where Hoard i
                            was discovered  a year later.
                                 Tombs usually contain  ritual implements that either  belonged  to the  deceased  during his
                            lifetime  or were made expressly for his burial. By contrast,  hoards  are groups  of objects  secreted
                            in  haste  to preserve them  from  marauders and  often contain  the  accumulated  heirlooms  of a
                            family. The Zhou Yuan hoards  indicate that the  old families  of the  Zhou Yuan owned  bronze
                            ritual vessels and other treasures  produced  over the  course  of several generations.  By the  early
                            eighth  century  BCE, however, the  Zhou dynasty was coming to an end; it is likely that  most
                            of the  hoards  of the  Zhou  Yuan date  from  about  the  year 771 BCE, when the  region  of the  Zhou
                            capital — including the  Zhou Yuan — was finally overrun by the  invading Quan  Rong and  the
                            families  were forced  to flee.
                                 The 103 bronzes  of Hoard i derive from  at least five generations  of the  Wei, a family  re-
                            lated  to the  ruling house  of the  previous Shang dynasty. The lengthy  inscription  on the  most

                            famous  of the  hoard's  bronzes, the  Shi Qiang pan (cat.  81), recounts  how the  High Ancestor
                            of the  Wei family presented  himself to  King Wu of Zhou after  the  Zhou defeat  of the  Shang



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