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78

Lu Fu Yi bronze gu vessel

Height 25.2 (io) T diam. at mouth 13.2 (5'A)

Early Western Zhou Period, late eleventh - early

tenth century BCE

From Zhuangbai, Fufeng, Shaanxi Province

Zhou Yuan Administrative Office of Cultural Relics,

Fufeng, Shaanxi Province

Notable for its long, narrow neck and the elegant

smoothness of its upper body, this gu } is decorated

only at its base, with a wide ribbonlike band sandwiched

between two narrower bands ofyunwen

(cloud pattern). Its shape dates it to the end of

the Early Western Zhou period — the first half of

the tenth century BCE — but the calligraphy of

its simple inscription (which reads "Father Yi of the

Lti [lineage]") suggests an earlier date. Whatever

its absolute date, this gu and four others that the

excavators have grouped with it are doubtless the

latest examples of this vessel type from Hoard i. 2

The gu, traditionally classified as a wine vessel,

was one of the standard vessel types of the Shang

period. Although it continued to be used through

the Early Western Zhou period, it became rare after

the beginning of the Middle Western Zhou period

(roughly the reign of King Mu [r. c. 956-918 BCE]).

The disappearance of this specific vessel type may

well prefigure the apparent abandonment of almost

all wine vessels in the "ritual reform" of the Middle

Western Zhou period. This reform saw a dramatic

change in the composition of sets of vessels used

in rituals: food vessels, especially ding and gui, often

in multiples, came to dominate ritual assemblages.

The Xing vessels of Hoard i are representative of

the composition of such a set after the reform: two

xu, four \\u, eight gui, three jue, five //, and at least

four different sets of zhong.

The family name in the inscription, Lti, is identified

with a hoard of thirty-seven vessels discovered

in 1975 in Dongjia, Qishan, Shaanxi province —

about 3 kilometers northwest of Zhuangbai. Although

the character is written differently on the

Dongjia vessels, the appearance of this vessel in

the Wei family hoard may reflect marriages between

238

BRONZE AGE CHINA

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