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CHINA ARQUEOLOGIA golden-age-chinese-archayeolog

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placed one in each corner of the innermost chamber,

where they must have been used in an esoteric

Buddhist ritual of purification before any of the

other votive objects were deposited there. 4

The inscription on the staff reads as follows:

"The Wensiyuan has received the command of

the twenty-third day of the third moon of the fourteenth

year of Xiantong [873 CE] to make a silver

staff to welcome the true body [relic] with gilded

decoration and twelve rings, weighing a total of 60

liang, 5 of which 2 liang of gold and 58 Hang of silver.

Craftsman An Shuyun; Administrative Assistant with

the rank of Purple Gold Fish Pouch Wang Quanhu;

Vice-Commissioner for Court Service Qian Zhi;

Commissioner of the Palace Gate Guard of the

Left, General [Wu] Hongque." 6 This inscription is

couched in the terms required by the regulations,

probably promulgated at the beginning of the

reign, under which the Wensiyuan, or Crafts Institute,

operated; all of those involved had strictly

defined official functions. Together with other

inscriptions found on vessels and objects in the

Famen Monastery deposit, the inscription is proof

that during the Tang dynasty the Wensiyuan was

not merely an imperial storehouse: it housed the

imperial workshops, located within the palace and

operated under the strictest controls. 7 RW

1 Excavated in 1987 (FD 5: 041); reported: Shaanxi 19883,

20-22.

2 Liebert 1976,135.

3 Yen 1998.

4 Whitfield 19903, 252.

5 One liang during the Tang dynasty was equivalent to

approximately 40 grams. Francois Louis (1999, 93 n. 417),

provides a convenient breakdown of the weight measures

and their equivalents: 4 zi = i qian; 10 qian = i liang;

16 liang = ijin. The approximate metric equivalents are

i zi = i g; i qian = 4 g; i liang = 40 g; ijin = 640 g.

6 Han Wei 1995, 72. A few years before, Wu Hongque had

the lower position of Administrative Assistant of High

Rank (see cat. 163).

7 Han 1995, 75.

466 EARLY IMPERIAL CHINA

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