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CHINA ARQUEOLOGIA golden-age-chinese-archayeolog

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Terra-cotta figure of a charioteer

Height 193 (76)

Qin Dynasty, third century BCE (c. 210)

From Pit i at Xiyangcun, Lintong, Shaanxi Province

Qin Terra-cotta Museum, Lintong, Shaanxi Province

This figure of a charioteer 1 was found positioned

behind one of the chariots in Pit i, accompanied

by one soldier at his left and another at his right.

Other groupings suggest variations in how such

vehicles were manned — in some cases a driver, an

officer, and a soldier; in others only a driver and a

soldier. The charioteer is clad in full armor. The

figure's square-shaped bonnet, tied beneath the

chin, suggests a high rank within the army.

The verisimilitude of most Qin sculptures has

prompted a number of commentators to identify

their style as "realistic" or "naturalistic," 2 a claim

that ignores the marionette-like artificiality of the

figures. This characteristic inheres in the subject

matter itself: the warriors had to be represented in

specific postures and gestures defined by their

function. The conceptual aspect of their style occasionally

makes these figures appear rigid — sometimes

even frozen in exaggerated postures. In so

doing, however, it captures the stances that embody

and define — and thus differentiate — the specific

function of a specific warrior within the army as a

whole. The descriptive style of representation then

literally transcribes each warrior's attributes — his

headgear, armor, outfit, boots, weapons — and also

differentiates his function and rank within the

army. Both stylistic approaches, organically intertwined,

delineate aspects of the model of the figure,

and establish its status as a functional component

of the army.

The chariots found in the First Emperor's

necropolis are uniformly two-wheeled vehicles with

a rectangular carriage linked by a single shaft to

a team of four horses. Chinese archaeologists have

distinguished variations among the chariots; 3 those

in Pit 2 are primarily lightweight models that presumably

would have been used by an army on the

offensive. Chariots were the preeminent symbol of

383 | TERRA-COTTA ARMY, LINTONC

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