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Ritual food vessel (fangding)
Ritual food vessel (fangding)

Ritual food vessel (fangding)

Dateapprox. 1042-1021 BCE
PeriodWestern Zhou period (approx. 1050–771 BCE)
MaterialsBronze
DimensionsH. 10 in x W. 9 in x D. 6 1/2 in, H. 25.4 cm x W. 22.9 cm x D. 16.5 cm
Credit LineThe Avery Brundage Collection
Object numberB60B2+
DepartmentChinese Art
ClassificationsMetal Arts
On View
On view
LocationGallery 14
InscribedA five-line, thirty-five character inscription is cast along the inner side of one of the walls and extends over part of the bottom. The exact significance of some of the characters still evades us, but the general meaning is quite clear and can be translated as follows: Then the Duke of Zhou undertook a punitive campaign against Dong I, Feng Bo and Fu Gu and wiped them out. He returned to perform the X sacrifice in the Zhou temple. On the wuzhen day, they drank Qin wine and the Duke gave X a hundred strings of cowries to be used for the making of this sacrificial vessel.
More Information

This square ding from the early Western Zhou period was used for the ceremonial presentation of food. It differs very little in function and shape from Shang-dynasty versions. However, instead of the usual taotie masks of Shang examples, this piece is decorated with birds, one of the favored motifs of the early Western Zhou. Even the legs of the vessel consist of three-dimensional birds. Only the handles escape this decoration.


This vessel is said to have been discovered in 1926 in Baoji, Shaanxi, in the heart of Zhou territory. A five-line, thirty-five-character inscription is cast along the inner side of one of the walls and extends over part of the bottom. It can be translated: Then the Duke of Zhou undertook a punitive campaign against Dong I, Feng Bo and Fu Gu, and wiped them out. He returned to perform the X sacrifice in the Zhou temple. On the wuzhen day, they drank Qin wine and the Duke gave Ran a hundred strings of cowry-money to be used for the making of this sacrificial vessel.