Page 271 - The Golden Age of Chinese Archaeology: Celebrated Discoveries from the People’s Republic of China
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CHU   TOMBS   AT       Now normally submerged under the  Danjiang  Reservoir, the  nine large tombs at Xiasi in
                             Xichuan county (Henan province), together with two tombs at the  adjacent locality of
      XIASI,  XICHUAN,       Heshangling, represent  six generations of a high-ranking aristocratic lineage in the  Chu king-
                             dom. They date  from  the  second quarter of the  sixth to the  third quarter of the fifth century
      HENAN   PROVINCE       BCE. Each lineage head was buried in a large tomb with an associated  horse-and-chariot pit; in
                             some cases, their principal consorts were buried in separate  large tombs nearby. Besides the
                             main occupant, each large tomb contained  one or several additional skeletons, possibly human
                             victims chosen  from  the  main occupant's own relatives. Tomb 2 at  Xiasi, much larger and  more
                             lavishly appointed  than  the  others, was surrounded by fifteen small tombs containing possibly
                             lower-ranking human victims.
                                 The large tombs, some of which had been looted  before excavation, contained  abundant
                             assemblages of ritual bronzes and  funerary jades. The constellation of bronze  vessels reflected
                             the  ritual rank of the  deceased  person. Tombs of females lack the  weapons and horse-and-
                             chariot  items seen  in those  of their husbands, and they contain  fewer  vessels. None of the
                             tombs yielded  any trace of "useful"  items such  as ceramics.
                                  Despite some looting, Tomb 2 at Xiasi contained thirty-six bronze vessels and  a set of

                             twenty-six bells, which is shown in this exhibition. Its exceptionally lavish furnishings,  to some
                             extent echoed by those in the three consorts' tombs clustering  around  it (Tombs i, 3, and 4),
                             testify  to privileges far exceeding those  enjoyed by either previous or succeeding generations of
                             the  same lineage. This cluster of tombs yielded a number of bronze vessel types not  encountered
                             in the  others,  such as flat-bottomed tripods  (sheng)  and other vessels of archaic  form, harking
                             back to the  mid-ninth century  BCE. Possibly, these  vessels testify  to their owners' participation  in
                             special kinds of rituals restricted  to the  royal family and  its immediate entourage.  In their execu-
                             tion, as well, many of the  bronzes from  Tomb 2 and  its cluster are far more luxurious than those
                             seen elsewhere at the  cemetery. Highlights include some of the  earliest vessels with metal inlay
                             found  anywhere in China and  a unique altar stand with intricate  decoration  executed in  the
                             lost-wax casting technique, which was very rarely used in Eastern Zhou bronzework.
                                 In their bronze inscriptions, the  lineage heads buried at Xiasi-Heshangling refer to them-
                             selves as Chu Shuzhisun ("Descendants in a Junior Line of Chu"), indicating that they were
                             descended  from  an earlier king of Chu but  only distantly related to the  king of their own time.
                             The inscriptions give the  name of the  occupant  of Tomb 2 at Xiasi as Peng. This individual has

                             been  identified with Yuan  (or Wei) Zi Feng, chief minister of Chu  from  552 until his death in
                                     1
                             548  BCE.  Feng was a descendant  of Sunshu Ao (/I. 598-597 BCE), who had  been chief minister
                             under  King Zhuang of Chu  (r. 613-591 BCE), and  whose descendants  hereditarily governed  the
                             territory surrounding present-day Xichuan. Some scholars assume the  earliest  capital of the
                                                                       2
                             Chu kingdom to have been  located  in this area,  but  in the  sixth and fifth centuries  BCE,  the
                             Chu capital had long been  moved southward to the  environs of present-day Jiangling (Hubei
                             province), and Xichuan had become  a border  domain. The inscriptions  on bronzes found in



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