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CHINA ARQUEOLOGIA golden-age-chinese-archayeolog

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Bronze triple ji halberd

Length (including spearhead and shaft) 325 (127 %)

Warring States Period (c. 433 BCE)

From Leigudun, Suixian, Hubei Province

Hubei Provincial Museum, Wuhan

This halberd consists of three bronze blades and

a spearhead attached to a long haft. 1 The blades

vary slightly in length (the longest, excluding its

tang, is 18.3 centimeters) and exhibit the slender,

curving profiles characteristic of the period. Each

blade extends down the haft approximately 15 centimeters.

This lower part (hu) provided a firm attachment

to the haft by means of thongs threaded

through perforations in the hu and bound to the

haft. The upper blade extends into a tang, which

anchors the unit through a slot cut into the haft.

The haft itself, ovular in cross section, is made of

wood veneered in strips of bamboo bound with silk

and coated in red and black lacquer. A horn ferrule

is attached to the base of the haft.

This is one of thirty halberds found in the

northern chamber, named in their inscriptions as

ji. The term ji has been traditionally applied to halberds

that include a spearhead, but as only three of

these weapons have spearheads the evidence of this

group suggests that ji may be more correctly defined

as two or more blades attached to long hafts. The ji

hafts average 3.3 meters in length — much longer

than the single-bladed ge halberds (which average

1.3 meters) in the tomb. The greater reach of the ji

suggests that it was a charioteer's weapon; the

shorter ge was the mainstay of footsoldiers.

Most of the ji from the tomb are inscribed with

names other than those of the tomb's occupant

(Yue is the most common, followed by Yu); these

are generally believed to be names of Marquis Yi's

predecessors. 2 CM

1 Excavated in 1978 (N 139); reported: Hubei 1989,1:264, fig-

154 and 2: pi. 90:1-2.

2 Hubei 1989, i: 460.

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