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Bronze Dings Through the Ages

The ritual cauldrons that embodied Chinese state power

2 artifacts2 museums
Bronze Dings Through the Ages

The Story

When a Zhou Dynasty king asked a messenger how heavy the Nine Tripods of the Zhou were, he was not asking about metallurgy. He was asking whether the kingdom was his to take. To possess the dings was to possess the Mandate of Heaven. From the monumental Simuwu Ding of the late Shang — the heaviest ancient bronze vessel ever discovered — to the inscription-rich Da Ke Ding of the Western Zhou, dings are among the most concentrated vessels of Chinese political, religious, and artistic evolution. Their inscriptions are primary sources for Bronze Age history; their forms trace the shift from ritual awe to refined aristocratic taste. This theme walks through the evolution of the ding across a millennium, from the supernatural heft of Shang ritual to the literary elegance of Zhou court life.

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In Popular Culture