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CHINA ARQUEOLOGIA golden-age-chinese-archayeolog

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119

Ten bamboo slips

Length 64-71 (25-2/ 5 /8), width 0.5-0.8 (V*- 1 /*)

Warring States Period (c. mid-fourth century BCE)

From Tianxingguan, Jiangling, Hubei Province

Jingzhou Prefecture Museum, Hubei Province .

Written with brush and ink, in the script current in

Chu during the fourth century BCE, the Tianxingguan

manuscripts take their place among a growing

collection of similar objects excavated from Chu

tombs of the Warring States period. Seventy-four

unbroken bamboo slips vary from 64-71 centimeters

in length and from 0.5-0.8 centimeters in

width; the slips are notched in two places on the

left side, upper and lower, to facilitate binding the

slips together with cords. The binding cords had

disintegrated long ago, leaving the unbroken slips

in a jumble when they were discovered between

January and March 1978 in a compartment on the

west side of the burial chamber. Their original

order in the manuscripts must be reconstructed

by Chinese archaeologists and paleographers.

This information is not yet formally published. 1

One set of slips is a funerary document, an

official record identifying the deceased and listing

the burial goods, many of which were presented by

relatives and members of the Chu elite. It is from

this tomb inventory that we know the deceased

was named Pan Cheng, a man who held aristocratic

rank as the Lord of Diyang. Such inventories have

been found in many tombs of the Warring States,

Qin, and Han periods. For the deceased, the document

must have served in part as a declaration of

status in the other world to which he had been

transferred; for archaeologists, it is an invaluable

key to names for many of the artifacts, which allows

the matching of words in classical literature with

their corresponding material objects and deepens

our knowledge of early Chinese civilization.

These bamboo slips are from the second

manuscript, a record of divination and sacrifice

performed on behalf of Pan Cheng over a period of

years. Based on the more than half-dozen divination-sacrifice

records discovered since the 19605

349 | TOMB 1 AT TIANXINGGUAN, JIANGLING

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