Record

Mirror

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probably from high status grave in China

Postcard of Mirror.
000-100-104-659-C
© National Museums Scotland

Mirror

This mirror almost certainly comes from a high status grave. During the Han period (206BC-AD 220) and later, burial of mirrors on the dead person's chest, as 'heart protectors', was popular. Mirrors were believed to have magical and protective properties

This mirror is made of cast bronze, its reflecting side originally silvered. It has an ornate central perforated knob, for suspension by a cord, and is decorated with bosses and scrolls, the latter resembling lotus leaves.

In China, during the first millennia BC and AD, mirrors were believed to protect living and dead people against evil spirits by revealing their true forms, and warding them off. They could also predict the future and show how people would be reborn.


Record details

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Online ID: 000-100-104-659-C
Image Rights Holder: National Museums Scotland
Project: 0098: National Museums Scotland
Project description | View all records in project
Ref: National Museums Scotland  A.1927.659
Date: 618 - 906 AD
Between 618 and 906 AD
Material: Patinated bronze, silvered
Dimensions: 4.50" L
What:
Subject: Bronzes
Who:
Where: China
Event:
Description: Mirror of silvered patinated bronze, with a central perforated boss in the form of a many-peaked mountain on the reverse: China, attributed to T'ang dynasty, 618 - 906 A
References:
  • Swallow, R.W. Ancient Chinese Bronze Mirrors. 1937. Peiping. 
  • Watson, W. Ancient Chinese Bronzes. London. 
Translations:
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