- Imperial Seal of China
The Imperial Seal of China, or the Heirloom Seal of the Realm (
Traditional Chinese : 傳國璽;Simplified Chinese : 传国玺) is a Chinesejade seal carved out of theHe Shi Bi , a historically famous piece ofjade .Creation
In 221 BC, the Seal was created when
Qin Shihuang destroyed the remainingWarring States and unitedChina under theQin Dynasty . The "He Shi Bi " was a famous piece of jade stone which previously belonged to the Zhao state. Passing into the hands of the newEmperor of China , he ordered it made into his Imperial seal. The words, "Having received the Mandate from Heaven, may (the emperor) lead a long and prosperous life." (,) were written by Prime MinisterLi Si , and carved onto the seal by Sun Shou.Propagation
At the death of the second Emperor of Qin, his successor
Ziying profferred the seal to the new emperor of theHan Dynasty , whereafter it was known as the "Han Heirloom Seal of the Realm". At the end of the WesternHan Dynasty in AD 9,Wang Mang , the new ruler, forced the Han empress dowager to hand over the Seal. The empress dowager, in anger, threw the Seal on the ground, chipping one corner. LaterWang Mang ordered the corner to be restored with gold.This seal passed on even as dynasties rose and fell. It was seen as a legitimising device, signalling the Mandate of Heaven. During turbulent periods, such as the
Three Kingdoms period, the seal became the object of rivalry and armed conflict. Regimes which possessed the seal declared themselves, and are often regarded historically, as legitimate. At the end of the restoredHan Dynasty in the 3rd Century AD,Sun Jian found the Imperial Seal on the body of a court servant who had committed suicide by diving into a well. His sonSun Ce gave the Seal toYuan Shu in return for 3000 soldiers, which he used to found theKingdom of Wu . WhenYuan Shu was defeated, the Seal came into the hands ofCao Cao , whose sonCao Pi proclaimed the Wei Dynasty as the legitimate successor state to Han and the other rival dynastiesShu-Han and Wu to be illegitimate.Loss
The Seal was passed through the Wei Dynasty, Jin Dynasty,
Sixteen Kingdoms period,Sui Dynasty andTang Dynasty , but was lost to history in theFive Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period (907-960).Three theories exist as to how it was lost:
# At the end of the
Tang Dynasty , when the last Emperor died by self-immolation.
# In AD946 when theEmperor Taizu of Liao captured the last Emperor of the Jin state.
# The Seal came into the hands of the Yuan emperors. When the Ming armies captured the Yuan capital in1369 , it captured just one out of the eleven personal Seals of the Yuan emperors. The Heirloom Seal was not found. In1370 , Ming armies invadedMongolia and captured some treasures brought there by the retreating Yuan emperor. However, the Heirloom Seal was again not among these.In any case, the Seal was known to be lost by the beginning of the
Ming Dynasty . Both the Ming and the Qing dynasties did not have the Heirloom Seal. This partly explains the Qing Emperors' obsession with creating numerous imperial seals, in order to reduce the significance of the Heirloom Seal.Recent developments
Since the
Qing Dynasty , several seals have been claimed to be the lost Heirloom Seal (for an example, see [http://www.good-luck.cn/Article.asp?ArticleID=567 here] ). One of these was even stored in theForbidden City alongside other imperial seals prior to the Qianlong era. However, none of these claims have been confirmed by experts. The one held by the Qing imperial palace was found to be made of earth, not jade. In at least one modern case, the seal concerned was found to be a personal seal of an Emperor, rather than the Heirloom Imperial Seal.ee also
*
Seal (Chinese)
*Seal script
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