Page 91 - Deydier UNDERSTANDING CHINESE ARCHAIC BRONZES
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Zun 尊





























 Under the name zun 尊, a character which early appears in inscriptions
 on ancient bronzes, we find three types of vessels used to hold fermented
 beverages:

 1.  A wide-shouldered vessel with a large, wide body, a much narrower,
 neck that flares outwards as it rises and a high, downwardly sloping
 ring foot. This form of zun 尊 is known in bronze from as early as
 the Erligang 二里崗 period (circa 17 /16  – 14  centuries B.C.) of
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 the early Shang 商.
 During the Yinxu 殷墟  or Anyang 安陽 period (circa 14  – 12 /11
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 centuries B.C.) and until the disappearance of this particular shape
 of zun 尊 in the middle of the period, the zun 尊 is the most common
 of the large bronze vessels produced, more so than the lei 罍. The
 most beautiful and rarest wide-shouldered zun 尊 is the fangzun 方
 尊, the square version of the early zun 尊.

 The most famous is a fangzun方尊  decorated  on each of its
 four  corners  with  an almost  full-front-bodied  ram with  a large,
 magnificently  horned  head  jutting  out  over  each  side  of  the



 Zun, Shang dynasty, Yinxu period (circa 14  – 12 /11  centuries B.C.)
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 Height: 35 cm – Private Collection.
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