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Guanghan,
called Luoxian and Hanzhou in ancient times, is situated in the
north part of the Chengdu plain, 22km from Chengdu, capital of
Sichuan Province. Being an important and famous city of Sichuan, it
enjoys a long istory, fertile soil and abundant produce, and has
given birth to many wellknown personal. The world-known Sanxingdui
ruins are located by the Yazihe River 6km west of the Guanghan city.
The Sanxingdui
ruins cover an total area of 12 square kilometers, whose central
used to be an ancient city surrounded by city walls in the east,
west and south. The city was broader in the south and narrower in
the north with an area of about 3 square kilometers, larger than the
Shang (Dynastey) city of Zhengzhou of the same time and ranking
among the tops in the country at that time. Investigation and
excavation of the city walls prove that the eastcity was 1700m long
(the remaining length being1100m) with the top being over 20m in
width and the base about 40m in broadth and the existing height
being 4m, its structure composed of the main wall, the interior wall
and the exterior wall. The top of the main wall was built with
adobes and bricks, being the earliest adobe wall in China.
The south city
wall was also manual-made, being 200m long, 40m wide and 6m high
(remaining height), with a 2.8m deep ditch outside the wall. The
west city wall was based on a natural mound and built with manual
ramming, its existing length being about 600m, broadth about 40m and
height 6-10m. On the axis of the ancient city were dispersed four
terraces, namely, Sanxingdui (Three-star Mound), Yueliangwan (Moon
Beach), Zhenwugong and Xiquankam. A number of important relics and
sacrificial pits were located on this axis showing that the place
was the site of the ancient city with the city walls as its support
and protective screen.
In 1920s, a
farmer named Yan Daocheng discoverd many jade wares while digging a
ditch by the side of the house, which unveiled, from then on, the
mystery of the ancient Sanxingdui. In 1930s-40s, both Chinese and
foreign archaeologists began to carry out excavations and studies in
Sanxingdui. In 1950s-60s archaeologists from Sichuan persevered in
their work there. Especially after 1980s large-scaled excavations
were started and finally two sacrificial pits were found
successively in July-August 1986 on the south side of Sanxingdui.
The two pits were orderly built, filled up and made even by ramming.
In the pits were stuffed in layers various kinds of jade wares,
bronze human statues and ivories etc. All these relics used to be
the holy images, sacrificial instruments and sacrificial offerings
in the ancestral temples. The hundreds of cultural relics unearthed
from the sacrificial pits are a concentrated embodiment of the
Sanxingdui cultural at its zenith and prove to be world known
Culture creams. The culture relics and artifacts of Sanxingdui,
unqiue in forms and making, are not only the first discoveries in
Sichuan but also very rare in the country. they are reputed as
"the most attractive archaeological discoveries in the
world".
The
identification of the ancient city of Sanxingdui has unveiled the
mystery of history and clearly revealed to the people the glory of
the ancient capital of the Shu kings, and it once again proves that
the place was once a glorious centre of civilization in the ancient
east. Numerous archaeological materials prove that Sanxingdui
civilization as an outstanding representative of the Chinese ancient
civilization on the upper reaches of the Changjiang river warrants
eloqently once more the source of the Chinese civilization to be an
organic whole of pluralism. It has made up an important cultural gap
in the evolutionary development of the Chinese culture and as an
ancient pearl displayed by colonization it also occupies its place
in the history of world civilization and human development.
However, with
dramatical social changes the Sanxingdui civilization seemed to be
checked in the course of its local development and the ancient
Sanxingdui State also seemed to have died away all of a sudden. What
kind of obstacles did it meet with? And how did it become extinct?
These questions remain to be answered by us.
Sanxingdui
owns a large group of exquisite and uniquely-shaped bronze artifacts
which were all excavated from two sacrificial pits. Yet, in
stratigraphic excavation brone wares are rarely found. This
undoubtedly renders a mystic colouring to the originally very uniue
Sanxingdui bronze civilization. In perspective of their functions,
the Sanxingdui bronze artifacts were chiefly used in religious and
sacrificial rites but rarely used in daily life and production. With
regard to their shapes, Sanxingdui bronze wares are primarily
classified into three catepories:The first category consists of
various bronze sculptures imbued with profound religious colouring
like human images, divine images and demon images etc. Bronze
artifacts of this category are the most typical of the Sanxingdui
bronze sculpture and they include standing human statues, kneeling
or sitting statues, head sculptures and masks. All of unique styles.
Their forms are seemingly meant to meet the needs of sacrifical
activities to be cast into images of comperes representing different
capacities, or figyres participating in the sacrificial offerings.
The completely bronze-cast huge erest human statue, standing high on
the square throne with a weight of over150kg, is so far the tallest
and largest of all the ancient bronze sculptures ever fond in the
world. The bronze head sculptures and bronze mask are orderly
arranged in size. The facial features of the masks are similar to
those of the head sculptures, some inset with the design of the
one-legged dragon on the forehead, which looks the same as the
animal facial design often seen on the bronze ritual artifacts of
the Shang Dynasty when viewed sidelong. Of the masks, a large
one,138cm in broadth and 65cm in height, is very uniquely shaped
with a human face and animal ears and two colun-formed eyeballs
bulging 16cm out. The second category includes the bronze sculptures
of animals and plants related to legend and mythology such as the
sculptures of dragon, tiger, snake, chicken, bird, animal, fruit and
bronze tree etc. For example, the No.1 bronze tree, with a round
seat at the bottom, has three arch forms cast on the upper part
symbolizing three mountains with winding branches in which are cast
flowers petals, fruit and birds; on the lower part of the trunk and
downward along the trunk is cast a "flying dragon" having
a horse face, a snake body and a phoenix tail. The whole brounze
tree, mysterious and interesting, is vividly shaped, making people
associate it with the legendary holy trees described in the book
Shan Hai Jing (Scriptures of Mountains and Rivers). Wine and
sacrificial vessels belong to the third category, very small in
number (only a dozen pieces or so), including cups and dishes etc.
It is not
difficult to see that Sanxingdui bronze wares with vivid human
images and animal-plant sculptures as the main and with divine,
demon and human images co-existing represent a cultural quality
whose religious custom is entirely different from that of the bronze
culture of Central China.
The casting of
the Sanxingdui bronze artifacts includes blockcast, sub-model
moulding and concave-convex moulding and concave-convex moulding.
For example, the human head sculptures, wine vessels, battle-axes,
daggaxes excavated from No.1 pit and some human head images, human
face images, and prismati-holde wares and sunformed wares excavated
from No.2 sacrificial pit are made with block-cast. Sub-model
moulding refers to the separate modelling and moulding of the
artifacts. The bronze bell inearthed from the sacrificial pit of
Sanxingdui is made with this method. The concave-conves moulding is
widely used in the making of Sanxingdui bronze wares. The
dragon-tiger wine vessel, the human head statues and human face
sculptures are made in this way. The linedesigns of the dragon and
tiger on the wine vessel are all made with high relief moulding but
the surfaceand the wall of the vessel are evenly formed and interior
of the vessel is coincid-ental with that of the exterior of the
vessel.
As we knock
open the first gate of Sanxingdui, the artistic treasury of the
ancient Shu State, a dozen of bronze human head images that have
slept under ground for 3000 years are shown before us. Following the
successive excavation of scores of bronze head sculptures from No.2
sacrificial pit, we are time and time again surprised by these
numerous bronze head sculptures excavated.
In the
highly-developed culture of the Shang-Zhou Dynasties in China,
bronze human sculptures of real human size have never been found in
the past and are very rare also in foreign ancient cultural ruins of
the same period. The excavation of these bronze head sculptures has
filled in gaps in the lack of separate human sculptures in the
bronze culture of China. The different shapes of the Sanxingdui
bronze head sculpture are probably the vivid representation of the
religious colourings of different people of different clans of
races. The grand erect human sculpture, as the "head of all
sorcers", is leading the various chiefs composed of various
head sculptures in the sarifice. Together with the various medium
and small-sized bronze human sculptures different in attires, facial
shapes and costumes and varied in postures-either kneeling or
sitting or with something held overhead or with gold-gilded masks,
they constitute from different layers a grand scene of
sacrifice-offering to heaven, to earth, to the god of land, to the
holy mountain and to the various deities or the ancetors. This is a
reflection of the social life of Shou people at that time.
"The love
of beauty exists from ancient times". These bronze head
sculptures are exemplary for this earliest love of beauty. They
tried every means to orettify themselves. The round hole on the
lower part of the big ear should be made for wearing
ear-ornament--this is the earliest archaeological proof for the
unearthed human sculptures wearing ear-ornaments. We can also see
some head sculptures painted dark green on the big and erect
eye-socket, vermilion on the broad and long lips and scarlet in the
nose-hole for wearing jade earrings. All this looks very handsome
and energetic and full of taste of life.
From the
coloured paint leftover on the bronze head sculptures unearthed from
the sacrificial pits of Sanxingdui ruins we can presume that all
facial features of the Sanxingdui bronze head sculptures were colour-painted,
but mostly decoloured due to longtime burying in the ground. The
coloured panit remaining on some bronze head sculptures explains, to
some extent, the make-up custom and aesthetic sense of the ancient
Shu people. Surly, the coloured paint maks these bronze head
sculptures more vivid and vigorous. But what is its religious
significance? Maybe, it is aimed to strengthen the vitality of the
divinities and to make the divinities represented by these head
sculptures more divine.
In No.2
sacrificial pit of Sanxingddui is excavated a uniquely-shaped bronze
mask of a vertical-eyed animal. This mask is square with broad
forehead, slightly-withdrawn cheeks, wide and deep mouth,
up-slanting mouth corners and slightly out-extended tongue; its
brows long and knife-like and broad, its eyes vertical like dento
liva and the eyeballs being prism-formed with arched sides and
staring straight forward; and each eyeball being bound with a
wide-strap hoop, seeming to open the eyes with efforts and to pull
out the eyeballs together with the eye-muscles as if to see through
the whole world by the two telescope-like eyes. The animal ears are
somewhat rectangular with the ear-tip shaped like the kernel of
walnut; the nose is short like a cow's with two sides in wardly
up-coiling; in the center of the forehead there is a square hole in
which is set an ornamental one-legged dragon to link with the upper
part of the nose. The ornamental dragon has its two horns outwardly
coiling with knife-shaped feathers and the upturned tail coiling
inward. There are also square holes on the upper and lower part in
front of the ear, which are probably used for fixing. The one-legged
ornamental dragon on the largest mask is no longer existing.
This kind of
bronze animal mask testifies the high standard of the sculptures of
the ancient Shu State in their artistic conception. With bold
exaggeration they skilfully and harmoniously combined man and animal
to have created abstractly this unrealistic man-animal intergrated
divine idol. At first glance, it looks stately, dignified and
awe-inspiring like beasts. But looking at it carefully, its profile
rendered by smooth and exquisite lines, its sharp knife-formed broad
eyebrows, its slightly round vertical almond-like eyes,
slightly-exposed tongue-tip and swollen-up nose, all give people a
sence of warmth and kindness. And the slightly retrenched facial
muscles give the facial look an expressions of quiet and bitterness
to reveal certain solemnity and grimness in the calmness. These
special and complicated expressions seem to render the people a
sence of the divinities so that they respect them, worship them and
are subjected to their power, while at the same time they take them
as protective deities who drive away the evil and protect the good.
These masks which have so harmoniously intergrated man with animal,
grimness with kindness have reflected the unique social
consciousness and religious concept of the ancient Shu people which
are different from the Culture of Central China. At the same time
they also have shown that the ancient Shu States possessed very high
bronze carving workmanship by no means inferior to that of the
Central Chinese Culture.
Facial masks
of divinities are an important component of sorcery culture. These
masks are worn on the head or body in religious sacrificial
activities to carry out simulated performances for the purpose of
expelling evils or disease, which was called "exorcising
ceremony" in ancient China.
The Chinese
sorcery culture has a long history. In the period as early as the
Neolithic Yangshao Culture, there appeared manual-made pottery human
masks for sorcery purposes. In the Shang and Zhou Dynasties
exorcising ceremonies became an important rite to offer sacrifices
to dogs or devils and to expel pestilence. In the time of Han-Tang
Dynasties this ancient religious rite was mixed with contents of
entertainment to become a kind of dance with entertaining
characters. And starting from the Song Dynasty the exorcising dance,
influenced by folk talking and singing art and drama, became a form
of dramatic performance. Up to date this ancient culture is still
very popular in some regions inhabited by national minorities or
some remote mountainous areas.
In two
sacrificial pits of the Sanxingdui ruins have been unearthed about
20 human facial masks. The excavation of so many human masks is the
first discovery in the archaeology of the Shang-Zhou Dynasties in
China. The combination of all the bronze erect figures, head images
and kneeling human figures plus the head masks constitutes a world
of masked images of divinities of the ancient Shu State.
The numerous
bronze masks are very different in size, yet, none is fit for human
wearing. Their usage is still a mystery.
Three kinds of
artifacts excavated from the sacrificial pits are of special value.
They are the bronze prismy eyes, the bronze upper eyelid and the
bronze sun.
The prism-eye
is slantingly flat in the percline and the eye ball in the center is
round and bulging out with a concave periphery. The two ends of the
prism-eye havetriangular convex edges which look like share beaks
and on each tip of the two obtuse angles and the two acute angles
there is a round hole used for fixing. Besides, there are two
combined types of diamond eye. One is shaped like an obtuse triangle
equalling a half of a complete diamond-eye cut in twins through the
diagonal line. This kind artifact is used by combining two together.
Another type is a quarter of a complete diamond-eye, shaped somewhat
like a right triangle and four such right triangles put together
constitute a whole diamond-eye.
The upper
eyelid is of varied kinds. It may be hemispheric or arc-square or
fillet-square or cylindrical. In terms of its basic form, it is same
as the eyes of the excavated vertical-eyed animal mask or their
variant. Some eyslids are basically parallelograms and these
parallelogram-shaped bronze artifacts are named bronze prism-eyes or
bronze diamond-eyes.
There is
another bronze artifact which resembles a cartwheel very much,
originally called bronze cartwheel. It is shaped round, the centre
being a convex hemispheric eyeball surrounded by five radiant spokes
and its outer edge being a ring linking with the spokes. This kind
of cartwheel also has fixing holes on the convex centre and the
periphery and some are colour-painted. Actually these artifacts are
not cartwheels but the sun as described in the inscriptions on the
bones and tortoise shells of the Shang Dynasty and in the bas
reliefs on precipices.
Comparative
studies of the primitive religious of many nationalities in the
world prove: the divinities worshipped by almost all the
nationalities experienced a transitional process from the
animal-shaped deity to half-animal-half-human deity. This
evolutionary process has reflected the changes of human statues in
nature and is the refraction of these changes in ideology. In this
regard, the sphinx of ancient Egypt and the human-head and bird-body
statue, the human-head and bird-feet statue and many other relics
excavated from Sanxingdui ruins are all good example.
The gold
artifacts of Sanxingdui culture include gold rod, face-screen,
tiger, fish-shaped ornament, leaf-formed ornament, gold block and so
on. The gold rod excavated frome No.1 sacrificial pit is 1.42m in
length and about 500g in weight, with flat-carved designs of human
head, bird, fish and crop ears on the upper part. The gold
face-screen was still worn on the bronze head sculpture when first
excavated from the earth. The gold wares of Sanxingdui are not only
great in number but also large in size, which proves the first
discovery in the Shang Dynasty Culture.
The gold rod
is made of a wooden core coated with thick gold wrappings, 142cm in
length and 2.3cm in diametre and with 46cm-long ornamental line
designs on the upper end of the rod. Over 500g in weight, the rod is
so far the largest gold artifact of the Shang Dynasty ever found in
Chind. Its convex line design by double intaglios is extremely
exquisite. The cutiing is made along the two sides of the line to
make the central line convex and thin structure of the design, the
eqillibrium of the fish and the bird has strengthened the ornamental
beauty of the design.
The gold
face-screen and gold tiger are made by mould-pressing if thin gold
plate and their detail features are consoicuous. Seen from the
workmanship of mould-pressing, hollowing-out and carving of these
exquisite gold artifacts, the Shu people then had already metal so
that they could create with ease such exquisite artistic wares of
it. These advanced technologies were already in lead of gold
manufacture at that time.
The jade wares
of Sanxingdui culture are not only large in number but also complex
in kinds. They include ritual artifacts and daily utensils made of
high quality jade like jade earring, jade bracelet, jade pipe, jade
beads, jade pendant as well as jade arms or tools like jade spear,
jade daggar-axe, jade chisel and so on. The latter kind of jade
wares looked new and sharp when first exccavated and are mostly
unearthed from the sacrificial pits. They should be ritual articals
but not jade wares for practical use. Some tables are even as long
as 90cm and made of very thin jade plate, showing that their
manufactural skills like plate-cutting, sculptural carving and
grinding already reached very high standard.
The excavation
and studies of the ancient Sanxingdui ruins have solved many doubts
for us but at the same time have left us many unsolved mysteries.
Examples are as following:
- What is the
source of the Sanxingdui culture?
- What
nationality once lived in the Sanxingdui ruins?
- What is the
nature of the regime and religion of the ancient Sanxingdui
state?
- What are
the reasons for the production of the Sanxingdui bronze
artifacts?
- How did the
ancient Sanxingdui State come into being? How long did it last?
And why did it die out suddenly?
- What is the
date of the two sacrificial pits?
- What is the
nature of the two pits?
- How to
solve the mystery of the "Ba-Shu graphic language?"
- How were
the jade stones processed?
- The origin
of the ivory and its use?
- How were
the bronze erect human sculpture and the holy tree made in
ancient times?
- What are
the functions and usages of the various bronze masks of
Sanxingdui?
- The
function of the bronze divine alter?
- What is the
thing held in the hand of the bronze erect man and what is its
use?
- What is the
use of the holy tree?
- What does
the bronze erect man stand for?
- What social
statues does the gold-screened head statue represent?
- What does
the design on the gold rod indicated?
- The source
and function of the gold rod?
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