Japanese
Shinjūkyō (神獣鏡, "deity and beast mirror") is an ancient type of round
bronze mirror decorated with images of gods and animals from
Chinese mythology. The obverse side has a polished mirror and the reverse has relief representations of legendary Chinese
shen (神 "spirit; god"),
Xian (仙 "transcendent; immortal"), and legendary creatures.
The
shinjūkyō style of bronze mirror originated in China and was frequently produced during the
Han Dynasty,
Three Kingdoms, and
Six Dynasties (1st-6th centuries CE). With the spread of Chinese bronze casting technology,
shinjūkyō were also produced in Japan and the
Lelang Commandery and
Daifang Commandery in Korea. The ca. 297 CE
Wei zhi (魏志 "Records of Wei"), which is part of the
Sanguo zhi (三國志 "Records of the Three Kingdoms"), has the first historical reference to bronze mirrors in Japan. It chronicles tributary relations between Queen
Himiko of
Wa (Japan) and the Wei court, and records that in 239 CE, Emperor
Cao Rui sent presents to Himiko, including "one hundred bronze mirrors" (tr. Tsunoda 1951:15).
Archeological excavations of Japanese tombs from the
Kofun period (3rd-7th centuries CE) have revealed numerous
shinjūkyō, and Japanese archeologists divide them into subtypes including:
- sankakuen-shinjūkyō (三角縁神獣鏡, "triangular-rimmed deity and beast mirror")
- gamontai-shinjūkyō (画文帯神獣鏡, "wide image-band deity and beast mirror")
- hirabuchi-shinjūkyō (平縁神獣鏡, "flat-rimmed deity and beast mirror")
Kurotsuka
kofun tomb excavated in
Nara Prefecture contained 33
sankakuen-shinjūkyō bronze mirrors. Some scholars (Edwards 1998, 1999, Nishikawa 1999) believe they are the original mirrors that Emperor Cao Rui presented to Queen Himiko, but others disagree.
from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shinju-kyo
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