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  2. Chinese ritual bronzes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_ritual_bronzes

    Taotie on a ding from late Shang dynasty. The taotie pattern was a popular bronze-ware decorative design in the Shang and Zhou dynasties, named by scholars of the Song dynasty (960–1279) after a monster on Zhou ding vessels with a head but no body mentioned in Master Lü's Spring and Autumn Annals (239 BC). [15]

  3. Ding (vessel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ding_(vessel)

    Shang dynasty, 1300–1046 BC. Like other ritual bronze shapes, the ding was originally an ordinary ceramic cooking, serving and storage vessel, dating back to the Chinese Neolithic, and ceramic dings continued to be used during and after the period when ceremonial bronze versions were made.

  4. Min fanglei - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Min_fanglei

    The inscription inside the lid reads: 皿而[or 天]全作父己尊彝 (Min Er [or Tian] Quan made [this] esteemed vessel for Father Ji). The Min fanglei is dated to the late Shang dynasty or early Western Zhou dynasty (12th – 11th century BC). [1] It is a fanglei, or square or rectangular lei, a type of ancient Chinese ritual bronze vessel.

  5. Fujita Ram Gong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fujita_Ram_Gong

    The Fujita Ram Gong (Chinese: 觥; pinyin: gōng; Wade–Giles: kung 1) is a Shang dynasty Chinese ritual bronze vessel, a guang, in the shape of a ram that dates to the later part of the dynasty in 13th-11th century B.C. [1] Considered significant for its realistic shape and style, it is among 13 known Chinese bronze vessels made in animal-form.

  6. Gu (vessel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gu_(vessel)

    One bronze gu has been discovered at the north corner of the upper level of the Tomb M2 in Erligang, Zhengzhou, an early Shang dynasty site. [10] Decors on this vessel are concentrated on a band at the lower part of its body, which, according to Max Loehr, is a characteristic of Early Shang bronze. [11]

  7. Zun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zun

    A zun with taotie dating to the Shang dynasty A rare Xi zun in the shape of an ox Western Zhou goose-shaped bronze zun. National Museum of China. The zun or yi, used until the Northern Song (960–1126) is a type of Chinese ritual bronze or ceramic wine vessel with a round or square vase-like form, sometimes in the shape of an animal, [1] first appearing in the Shang dynasty.

  8. Houmuwu ding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Houmuwu_ding

    The Houmuwu ding (Chinese: 后母戊鼎; pinyin: Hòumǔwù dǐng), also called Simuwu ding (司母戊鼎; Sīmǔwù dǐng), is a rectangular bronze ding (sacrificial vessel, one of the common types of Chinese ritual bronzes) of the ancient Chinese Shang dynasty. It is the heaviest piece of bronzeware to survive from anywhere in the ancient ...

  9. Da He ding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Da_He_ding

    The Da He ding or Da He fangding (Chinese: 大禾方鼎; pinyin: Dà Hé fāngdǐng) is an ancient Chinese bronze rectangular ding vessel from the late Shang dynasty (c. 1600–1046 BC). Unearthed in Tanheli, Ningxiang, Hunan in 1959, it is on display in the Hunan Museum.