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Wine container, zun, in rhinoceros
shape
Found in Maoling,
Xingping county, Shaanxi Province, in 1963
Western Han dynasty, 206 BCE — 23 CE
Bronze inlaid with gold and silver
height 34.1 cm, length 58 cm
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Archaeological evidence shows that rhinoceros have been found in China
since earliest times. A text on oracle bones from the late Shang
dynasty (ca.1300 - ca. 1050 BCE) records the king hunting rhinoceros,
whose tough, thick hide
was used as body armor by high-ranking soldiers.
In the war-torn centuries preceding the Han period, the rhinoceros was
hunted nearly to distinction, becoming so rare that it attained almost
mythical status.
A chance discovery by a farmer plowing his field, this large
rhinoceros-shaped wine vessel, found in a large pottery jar, was
probably hidden by its owner during a period of unrest, but never
retrieved. It is a masterful creation by an artist who doubtless
observed the animal, with its solidity, belligerent stance, and
malevolent eye inlaid in black glass.
The body was inlaid with a swirling pattern in gold and silver wire,
of which some remains.
National
Museum of Chinese
History, Beijing
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