1, He Zun
He Zun, the first batch of cultural relics forbidden to go abroad in China and the national first-class cultural relics, was a ritual vessel made by a nobleman named He in the early Western Zhou Dynasty in China. 1963 was unearthed in Jia Cun Town, Baoji County, Baoji City, Shaanxi Province (now chencang district City, Baoji City) and collected in China Baoji Bronze Museum.
Inscriptions of 12 lines 122 are cast on the insoles of Zun, among which "Zhai Zi China" is the earliest written record of the word "China", which records the fact of inheriting the legacy and establishing Zhou (now Luoyang, Henan).
Height is 38.8 cm, caliber is 28.8 cm, and weight is 14.6 kg. Rectangular body, round mouth, long neck, slightly bulging abdomen and high circle feet. The ventral foot has delicate facial lines of high relief animals, and the corner ends protrude from the surface. There are four sides on the side of the body. The shape is rich and exquisite.
2. foldable
Wan Zhe, a national treasure cultural relic, 1976 was unearthed in Baicun, Fufeng Village, Baoji, Shaanxi. Collection of Baoji Bronze Museum.
The body is rectangular, with a flow in front and a needle in the back, which is divided into two parts: the cover and the body. The head of the cover is in the shape of an animal, with a high nose and protruding eyes, two teeth exposed and two huge curved corners. An animal face is sandwiched between two corners. Starting from the top of the head, a leaf edge extends from the middle of the cover ridge to the tail. The leaf edge of the neck is dragon-shaped, and the two sides are decorated with curly-tailed dragons.
Below the cover neck, that is, the part that is no longer convex and close to the horizontal, is decorated with a gluttonous face, and two three-dimensional animal ears are cast at the gluttonous head end.
3. Western Zhou wallboard
The bronze ware "Qiang basin" in the Western Zhou Dynasty is the first batch of cultural relics forbidden to go abroad for exhibition in China. Because the wall is a historian of the Zhou Dynasty, it is also called "historical wallboard". 1976 unearthed in Fufeng, Shaanxi (now Fufeng County, Baoji City), now in Baoji Bronze Museum.
The wallboard is huge, with 284 inscriptions cast on the bottom. The abdomen and the circle foot are decorated with Feng Huangwen and the curled lines of the animal body respectively. The ground is filled with thunder lines, and the circle foot is folded. The first part of the inscription eulogizes the achievements of the seven generations of Zhou kings in the Western Zhou Dynasty, namely, Wen, Wu, Cheng, Kang, Zhao, Mu and Gong. The second part describes the deeds of Wei's great-grandfather, Meng, Yi, Ya, Wen Kao and the author himself for six generations.
The achievements of the king of Zhou recorded on the wall are very consistent with the contents in Sima Qian's Historical Records of Zhou Benji, but there is no content about the development history of the Wei family in the known literature, which fills a gap in the Wei family in the Western Zhou Dynasty and belongs to important historical materials.
4. Qin Gong
Qin Gong (Qin Gongbo), a percussion instrument in the Spring and Autumn Period, is a national first-class cultural relic. 1978 The Taigong Temple in Baoji County (now chencang district), Baoji City, Shaanxi Province was unearthed and collected in Baoji Bronze Museum.
Qin Tong is 75. 1 cm high, 53 cm high, 30.4 X 26 cm wide and weighs 62.5 kg, which is very important for studying the history of Qin ancestors and is also helpful for understanding the bronze casting and smelting technology and music culture of Qin Dynasty in the early Spring and Autumn Period.
5、? graphical user interface
Gui, also known as Gui, is forbidden to go abroad to exhibit cultural relics in China. 1978 in may, bronze wares of the western period were unearthed in qicun village, fufeng county, Baoji city, Shaanxi province.
Reed is 59 cm high, 43 cm in diameter, 23 cm in belly depth and 60 kg in weight. Contains the inscription 12 lines, 124 words. It is the largest piece of bronze reed in Shang and Zhou Dynasties, and it can be called "King of Reed". Collection of Baoji Bronze Museum.
Baidu Encyclopedia-Baoji Bronze Museum