Pictorial Charm
Item number Edz4161 from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
Item number Edz4161 from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
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Round charm with a four-sided hole at the centre, and a rim around the outer edge and centre hole. Two Chinese characters in seal-script on face, and a design on reverse that depicts a mythical animal (bull?) below, with another design element above.
Design similar to a coin, but too large to circulate; not from the period it purports to be from. (Larson, David) Archaic coins were often attributed to have magical power, embodying essence from the remote past. Its modelling after the Han coin and the addition of devine iconography, almost certainly point to a Daoist association. This charm may have been used in rituals or as an amulet. (Li, Min)
Image of a deity on the reverse, holding a flag and a sword. It probably represents Taishang Liaojun (Lao-tzu) or the Thunder God, powerful figures in the Daoist pantheon. At the bottom was an image of a tiger. (Li, Min)
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Image of a deity on the reverse, holding a flag and a sword. It probably represents Taishang Liaojun (Lao-tzu) or the Thunder God, powerful figures in the Daoist pantheon. At the bottom was an image of a tiger. (Li, Min)
Round charm with a four-sided hole at the centre, and a rim around the outer edge and centre hole. Two Chinese characters in seal-script on face, and a design on reverse that depicts a mythical animal (bull?) below, with another design element above.
Design similar to a coin, but too large to circulate; not from the period it purports to be from. (Larson, David) Archaic coins were often attributed to have magical power, embodying essence from the remote past. Its modelling after the Han coin and the addition of devine iconography, almost certainly point to a Daoist association. This charm may have been used in rituals or as an amulet. (Li, Min)
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