Inscriptions on Bronze Objects (Jinwen or Zhongdingwen)
Another
type of early Chinese script in its long history of
development is represented by the inscriptions cast or carved on
ancient bronze objects of the Shang and Zhou dynasties.
It is called Jinwen (literally, script on metal)
and, as ancient bronzes are generally referred to as
zhongding (bells and tripods), it
is also called zhongdingwen.
The ding, originally a big cooking pot with three
(rarely four) legs, became a ritual object and a sign of power, and
the owning of such tripods, as well as their sizes and numbers, was
a status symbol of the Shang slave-owning aristocrats.
At the beginning only the names of the owners were cast or engraved
on the tripods. Later the tripods (and other bronzes) began to carry
longer inscriptions stating the uses they were put to and the dates
they were cast. Towards the end of the Warring States Period
(475-221B.C.), the ducal states of Zheng and Jin had their statutes
promulgated and cast on tripods.
Thus the inscriptions on the bronzes grew longer, from a few characters
to a few hundred, from simple phrases to detailed accounts.
Many bronze objects bearing inscriptions have been unearthed in China
and can be seen in a large number of museums.
A priceless tripod is the Dayuding (Large Tripod Bestowed
upon Yu) dating from the early Zhou Dynasty (c. 11th
cen-tury to 256 B.C.), now kept at the Museum of Chinese History
in Beijing. About one metre high and weighing 153.5
kilograms, it has on its interior wall an inscription of 291 characters
in 19 lines, by which King Kang summed up the experience
in founding a new nation and drew lessons from the failure of the preceding
Shang Dynasty. The inscription also mentions that the King awarded his
aristocrat follower Yu 1.722 slaves of various grades and large numbers
of carriages and horses.
Another important bronze called Maogongding, now kept
in Taiwan Province, belongs to the late Western
Zhou. It bears an inscription of 497 characters, the longest
ever discovered on any bronze hitherto unearthed. It is an account of
how king Xuan admonished, commended and awarded Maogong Yin; it also
reveals the instability of the Western Zhou regime
at the time.
Both tripods furnish rare and valuable information to throw light
on the slave society under the Western Zhou.
The ancient bronzes reflect not only the high level that Chinese metallurgy
attained in their time. The inscriptions they bear may well be regarded
as books in bronze" which fill important gaps left by the scanty
written history of that remote age.
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