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- Li_gui abstract "The Li gui (Chinese: 利簋) is an ancient Chinese bronze sacrificial gui vessel cast by an early Zhou dynasty official named Li. It has the distinction of being the earliest Zhou bronze vessel to be discovered, the earliest record of metal being given as a gift by the king, one of only two vessels dateable to the reign of King Wu of Zhou to record personal names, and the only epigraphic evidence of the day of the Zhou conquest of Shang. This makes the Li gui highly important to the periodisation of the Shang and Zhou dynasties, and it has been described as bearing "the single most important inscription regarding the Zhou conquest of Shang."A round vessel on a square pedestal, the Li gui measures 28 centimeters high; the mouth of the vessel has a diameter of 22 centimeters. It has two bird-shaped handles and is covered with a high-relief taotie motif similar to earlier Shang ritual objects. It was excavated in 1976 in Lintong district, Shaanxi, and was kept for a time at the Lintong County Museum, before being transferred to the National Museum of China in Beijing, where it now resides. In 2002, it was listed among the cultural artefacts prohibited from leaving Chinese soil.".
- Li_gui thumbnail 利簋.jpg?width=300.
- Li_gui wikiPageID "42078616".
- Li_gui wikiPageLength "7527".
- Li_gui wikiPageOutDegree "25".
- Li_gui wikiPageRevisionID "665863426".
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Muye.
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLink Beijing.
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLink Book_of_Documents.
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLink Category:Archaeological_artifacts_of_China.
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLink Category:Chinese_bronzeware.
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLink Category:Zhou_dynasty.
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_bronzes.
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_ritual_bronzes.
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLink Gui_(vessel).
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLink Institute_of_Archaeology,_Chinese_Academy_of_Social_Sciences.
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLink Jupiter.
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLink King_Wu_of_Zhou.
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLink Lintong_District.
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLink Lintong_district.
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLink List_of_Chinese_cultural_relics_forbidden_to_be_exhibited_abroad.
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLink National_Museum_of_China.
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLink Sexagenary_cycle.
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLink Shaanxi.
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLink Shang_dynasty.
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLink Taotie.
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLink Yi_Zhou_Shu.
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLink Yizhoushu.
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLink Zhou_dynasty.
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLink File:利簋.jpg.
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLink File:利簋铭文.jpg.
- Li_gui wikiPageWikiLinkText "Li gui".
- Li_gui hasPhotoCollection Li_gui.
- Li_gui wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Chinese_bronzeware.
- Li_gui wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Li_gui wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_journal.
- Li_gui wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:For.
- Li_gui wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Li_gui wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Zh.
- Li_gui subject Category:Archaeological_artifacts_of_China.
- Li_gui subject Category:Chinese_bronzeware.
- Li_gui subject Category:Zhou_dynasty.
- Li_gui hypernym Cast.
- Li_gui type Agent.
- Li_gui comment "The Li gui (Chinese: 利簋) is an ancient Chinese bronze sacrificial gui vessel cast by an early Zhou dynasty official named Li. It has the distinction of being the earliest Zhou bronze vessel to be discovered, the earliest record of metal being given as a gift by the king, one of only two vessels dateable to the reign of King Wu of Zhou to record personal names, and the only epigraphic evidence of the day of the Zhou conquest of Shang.".
- Li_gui label "Li gui".
- Li_gui sameAs m.0_v5gn8.
- Li_gui sameAs Q7256118.
- Li_gui sameAs Q7256118.
- Li_gui sameAs 利簋.
- Li_gui wasDerivedFrom Li_gui?oldid=665863426.
- Li_gui depiction 利簋.jpg.
- Li_gui isPrimaryTopicOf Li_gui.