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to Mount Kunlun, a peak that reached upward

to the heavens, or even to a cosmic pillar joining

the earth to the heavens. 6 JR

1 Excavated in 1968 (M 1:5182); reported: Zhongguo i98ob,

1:63-66.

2 For the formulation of the notion of qi during the period,

see Graham 1989,101-104 and references in the index.

3 Erickson 1992.

4 See Rudenko 1970, 284.

5 Watson, 1993, 49.

6 Erickson 1992; Munakata 1991, 27-34. The identification

of Mount Kunlun's location changed during the Eastern

Zhou and Han periods; it was first thought to be situated

in the north, and later, in the west. See also Major 1993,

158-159.

FIG. i. Cat. 134 from above.

Adapted from Zhongguo

I98ob, 65, fig. 45.

possible that the use of incense may have been

stimulated in part by exchanges and contacts with

the inhabitants of these areas; peoples on the

southern borders of Siberia are known to have

inhaled narcotics from basins in which hot stones

were placed. This practice may have stimulated the

development of incense burners in China. 4

Over a relatively short time, the decorated,

covered censer was fully integrated into a system of

associations and meanings through the boshan lu

form. The representation of a miraculous island

supported by dragons may refer to the islands of

Penglai, thought to be situated in the eastern sea.

The First Emperor of Qin sent envoys with young

boys and girls to seek out these islands in the hope

of finding the drug of immortality; the islands disappeared

into the sea when the voyagers glimpsed

them and sought to land. 5 The Han image of mountains,

however, had a broader symbolic import

as well: Mount Taishan in Shandong province, in

particular, was viewed as one of the main routes

of access to the worlds of the immortals and to the

dwelling of the Celestial Deity in the stars. Thus,

the imagery of the mountain-shaped censer may

embody as well the identification of tall mountains

as routes to the spirit world. Indeed, it has often

been suggested that such imagery refers specifically

403 I ROYAL TOMBS AT LINCSHAN

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