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Gold dagger handle

-599/-400

British Museum

British Museum
London, United Kingdom

In ancient China, gold and silver were not the prestigious materials they were in the West. Jade and bronze were more highly prized. Gold was used for decorative purposes, as inlay or coating on bronze or lacquer, and only very rarely for vessels or other independent objects.

However, in the Eastern Zhou period (771-221 BC) gold began to be increasingly used on a larger scale, though goldworking still relied to a great extent on well-established bronze technology, with ornaments and other items cast using moulds instead of beaten into shape.

This gold dagger handle has a conspicuous line on its sides, showing that it was probably cast in a two-piece mould. It bulges at the tops as well as at the junction where the blade would have been. The hilt is hollowed out and both sides are decorated with a design known as 'dragon interlace'.

The gold hilt is very fragile, which probably made it impractical for use on a real dagger. It may have been made for display or for placing in a tomb for taking to the afterlife.

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  • Title: Gold dagger handle
  • Date Created: -599/-400
  • Physical Dimensions: Height: 9.80cm
  • External Link: British Museum collection online
  • Technique: cast
  • Registration number: 1937,0416.218
  • Place: Found/Acquired China
  • Period/culture: Eastern Zhou dynasty
  • Material: gold
  • Copyright: Photo: © Trustees of the British Museum
  • Acquisition: Purchased from Eumorfopoulos, George
British Museum

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