10.05.2022 Views

CHINA ARQUEOLOGIA golden-age-chinese-archayeolog

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

tions. Empress Wu Zetian entertained a Japanese

embassy there in 703; the largest occasion was a

banquet for 3,500 guests, given by Emperor

Daizong in 768.

Examples of this type of striding dragon, with

a single horn, long snout, and curling tongue, have

been dated as early as the Northern Wei dynasty

(386-534 CE). One such example is a bronze

dragon at the Fogg Art Museum, Cambridge, Massachusetts,

2 but its confident pose and the technique

of its casting, which it shares with the dragon seen

here, suggest a more likely dating to the Tang Dynasty.

One of a pair of gilt bronze dragons excavated

from the Yongle ward of the capital, some 5 kilometers

to the south of Darning Palace, illustrates these

features to perfection: standing on its forelegs, its

body smoothly extends skyward into its hind legs,

counterbalanced by the sinuous tail, as if it were

performing a handstand. 3

No particular justification seems to be needed

for the portrayal of this most auspicious of mythical

beasts at the Tang court, but in the context of

Daoist belief it has been noted that Emperor Xuanzong

(r. 712-756 CE), whose devotion to Daoism was

such that his own portrait can be found alongside

those of the Jade Emperor and other Daoist images, 4

introduced a cult of Five Dragons in 714. Splendid

examples have been found decorating the backs of

bronze mirrors; six striding dragons in pure gold,

each a mere 4 centimeters long from snout to tail,

were found in the Hejiacun hoard. RW

1 Recovered in 1979 -1980; published: Wang 19893, 83;

Xianggang 1993, cat. 46.

2 Sullivan 1984, no.

3 Kuhn 1993,137-138, cat. 53; Lee 1998, cat. 59.

4 See Liu Yang, "Manifestation of the Dao: A Study in Daoist

Art from the Northern Dynasties to the Tang (Fifth to

Ninth Centuries)," Ph.D. dissertation, School of Oriental

and African Studies, University of London, 1997 (The text

is currently in preparation for publication by the University

of Hawaii Press.) Chapter 13, at pages 284-285,

provides a table of extant and recorded images of Emperor

Xuanzong and other in Daoist halls.

461 | HEJIACUN AND OTHER DISCOVERIES

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!