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Chinese Zhou ritual vessel

Contributed by British Museum

A bronze Chinese vessel used to make ritual offerings to ancestors. © Trustees of the British Museum

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This ritual vessel was used for offering food to ancestors. This example is decorated with large tusked animal heads swallowing birds. Sacrifices to ancestors ensured the survival and success of those who performed them. Respect for ancestors has been a central part of Chinese life for thousands of years. This vessel was made through sophisticated bronze working techniques that were not employed in the Middle East or Europe until much later.

What is the legacy of the Zhou dynasty in China?

An inscription inside the vessel describes an attack by the Zhou king on the dynasty they overthrew - the Shang. Many of China's significant institutions were established during the Zhou period. Most important is the mandate of heaven - the notion that heaven blesses the authority of a just ruler. An incompetent ruler could be displaced by the people with the favour of the gods. This would become a central aspect of Chinese politics.

The Chinese Zhou dynasty often referred to its predecessor, the Shang, as alcoholics

Chinese bronze vessels

These bronzes that we call ritual vessels were used for a long time - from around 1300 BC down to at least 300 BC. All ritual vessels were made to give food and wine to the dead.

The first dynasties of China, the Shang and the Zhou, made large numbers of fine bronze containers for food, for alcohol, for water, and used these in a big ceremony, sometimes once a week, maybe once every 10 days. The belief is that if food, wine or alcohol is properly prepared, it will be received by the dead and nourish them and those dead, the ancestors, will look after their descendants in return for this nourishment.

The bronze vessels which we see today were almost all buried in tombs or in hoards. They were prized possessions for use in life. They were not made primarily for burial, but when a major figure of the elite died, it was believed that he would carry on offering ceremonies of food and wine to his ancestors in the afterlife, indeed, entertain them at banquets. They were also buried in large hoards when the state faced great danger. A member of the royal family might own up to 200.

The most famous bronze vessels are those dating from the early Shang dynasty down to the early Zhou dynasty – 300 or 400 years. These are made in very exquisite shapes, often rather spiky, with very fine decoration that we today can hardly replicate. They are all cast, that is, they are made by using mould sections and pouring hot metal into them and then removing the clay moulds. And it is astonishing how detailed the decoration is.

Sometime around 850 BC, the Zhou dynasty which was then in power, came into some considerable difficulty, political, perhaps dynastic. And all of a sudden, we see in the bronzes that they make, that some big religious change has taken place. Gone are the very fine spiky shapes with the detailed decoration, instead the bronzes are much larger. They have very smooth outlines and wave patterns, or rather, abstract patterns on them which are not at all as delicate as the earlier ones.

We have more repetitive food vessels, and many fewer vessels for alcohol. That means the choreography has changed. So when change of this sort in ritual has taken place, we have to infer that some rule, some decision was made at the court of the Zhou dynasty to make this change, and then they ordered a completely new set of vessels to be used all over the very large state that they ruled.

Professor Dame Jessica Rawson, Warden of Merton College, Oxford

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Comments

  • 1 comment
  • 1. At 17:13 on 21 January 2011, singh86 wrote:

    it looks soooo old

    Jack

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Location

Possibly Henan Province, China

Culture
Period

About 1100-1000 BC

Theme
Size
H:
23cm
W:
42cm
D:
26.8cm
Colour
Material

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