Page 312 - The Golden Age of Chinese Archaeology: Celebrated Discoveries from the People’s Republic of China
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complement on the  left  is portrayed — we can  guess
                                                                         the  form of the  second figure from  the first. The
                                                                         musician's long mallet is bent (rather than  straight
                                                                         as it would have been  in reality) to illustrate  the
                                                                         musician striking the  bell. Bells and chime  stones
                                                                         are here suspended  together on the  same stand, a
                                                                         representation  belied  by archeological  evidence:
                                                                         the  Leigudun chimes, as well as chimes from  other
                                                                         known sites, indicate that  bells and  stones were
                                                                         invariably hung on separate  stands.
                                                                            Only one other  piece  comparable to the  bird-
                                                                         shaped  box has been  found — a stemmed  dou
                                                                         with a lid found at Yutaishan, Jiangling (Hubei
                                                                                2
                                                                         province).  The decoration  of the  cup  itself is more
                                                                         naturalistic in style than that  of the  Leigudun box,
                                                                         and the  motif that decorates  the  stem — diagonal
                                                                         lines ending in spirals — is typical of the  latter  part
                                                                         of the  fourth century  BCE. AT

                                                                         1  Excavated  in  1978; published: Hubei 1989,1:363-365, figs.
                                                                                  an
                                                                           222-224, d 2: color pi. 14 and  pi. 130; Tokyo 1992, no. 13;
                                                                           Goepper 1995, no.  72; Rawson 1996, no.  65; Tokyo 19983,
                                                                           no.  11.
                                                                         2  Hubei 19843,102, fig. 77.1; color pi. i and  pi. 61.










































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