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This particular li is conceivably a yingqi 媵器 (dowry vessel), even though it is lacking the ying 媵
                       character in the inscription. Yingqi are significant in studies of China’s ancient history, as they provide
                       insight into the political alliances made through marriage during this period. In the Zhou dynasty, bronze
                       yingqi were wedding dowries reserved for females in aristocratic and royal families. These vessels would
                       accompany a bride to her new family to be used as ritual or functional vessels. Although the inscription
                       suggests that this Xuan Mu li could have been a gift from the Zhou king to one of his wives, its excavated
                       location reveals that this li was brought away from the new capital of the newly formed Eastern Zhou
                       dynasty, Luoyi (present-day Luoyang). Therefore, this vessel was possibly commissioned by the Zhou
                       king for his daughter who married the lord of Xu, a regional vassal state possibly located in the Qishan
                       area of Shaanxi province.

                       Compare three closely related li, all of which are yingqi from the early Spring and Autumn period. A pair
                       of Lu Bo Yu Fu Li 魯伯愈父鬲, excavated in the Teng county of Shandong province during the Daoguang
                       period, is in the Shanghai Museum, Shanghai, and illustrated in Chen Peifen, Xia Shang Zhou qingtongqi
                       yanjiu [Study of archaic bronzes from Shang and Zhou dynasties], Eastern Zhou, vol. 1, Shanghai, 2004,
                       pp 34-36, no. 446; the third, the Zhu You Fu Li 鼄友父鬲, formerly in the collection of Xia Zhisheng (mid-
                       Qing dynasty), now in the collection of the Palace Museum, Beijing, is illustrated in Yan Yiping, Jinwen
                       zongji [Corpus of bronze inscriptions], Taipei, 1983, no. 1498.
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