10.05.2022 Views

CHINA ARQUEOLOGIA golden-age-chinese-archayeolog

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

75

Incised gold sheath

Length 142 (55%), diam. 2.3 (7s)

Late Shang Period (?) (c. 1300-1100 BCE?)

From Pit 2 at Sanxingdui, Guanghan,

Sichuan Province

Sanxingdui Museum, Guanghan, Sichuan Province

Carbonized fragments of wood found within this

unalloyed gold tube 1 suggest that it served as the

sheath for a wooden staff; a dragon ornament

found near in the pit may have also been a part

of the original assemblage. The material itself suggests

that this staff was associated with an individual

of high status among the people of Sanxingdui

— a king, a chief, or a shaman.

The sheath carries incised decoration at one

end: a terminal ring of "happy faces" beneath which

fish (whose scales are carefully detailed) and birds

are skewered by two bands of arrows. Bird imagery

appears in the spirit trees from Pit 2; the arrows

and fish, however, are uncommon in decorative

repertoires known from the Sanxingdui site. The

faces may have an association with human figures

displayed on several stone scepters from Pit 2,

motifs that might themselves be shorthand representations

of the standing figure or its ilk.

Gold was an important resource of the southwest,

so it is not surprising that the community

at Sanxingdui utilized this precious metal. Shang

centers of the north, by contrast, have yielded

very few gold artifacts. RT

i Excavated in 1986; reported: Sichuan 1987!}, 4.

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!