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Chapter 1,773 The man of God holds a fish with a hook in his hand

The third belt hook belongs to the great Sima Jiang Wan of the Shu Han Dynasty. Its shape is different from the other two belt hooks, similar to the shape of a pipa.

The main reason why I like this kind of belt hook is that it is a small belt hook, but it shows the noble status of the owner.

This Jiang Wan is made of bronze with a hook, and its overall shape is like a pipa.

The hook head is used to hook one end of the leather belt, and the hook body plays the role of fixing the other end of the leather belt.

There are dragon and phoenix patterns on the hook body, and five star points arranged regularly like a pentagon.

The inlaid turquoise has fallen off, the hook handle is longer, and there is a pattern of the Big Dipper on the front, embellished with turquoise.

The reason why we know that this is Jiang Wan's thing is mainly based on speculation. Of course, speculation must require inscriptions.

Therefore, you may not think that this is a small belt hook, but there are 72 Chinese characters inscribed on both sides of the hook handle.

When Emperor Yao made it, there is no short or long hook.

The former is adapted from the middle, and the latter is adapted from the side.

Although it is said that the smallness of a country contrasts with the size of a belt hook, it satirizes that the society at that time was public and the princes were actually petty thieves.

There are many names with hooks, such as Xuzhou, Xibi, Shibi, Xibi, Xianbei, etc., all of which have the same meaning.

Belt hooks have a long history in the history of your country. From the inscriptions on the belt hooks on the Yuheng, we know that the belt hooks were said to have been invented by Emperor Yao.

The first eight stars are called Piao, "Book of Jin Astronomical Records": "The seventh star in the top is Qian Ji, and the eight stars in Piao are Guo Luo.".

The earliest belt hook in your country's archeology is a jade belt hook unearthed from the Liangzhu Cultural Site in the Neolithic Age. It has a history of less than 7,000 years.

The belt hook is the buckle of the ancient belt, or the hook under the belt for hanging gold and jade jewelry.

It’s not just the gold and silver copper belt hooks with wrong inscriptions on Wu from the Eight Kingdoms, or the gilt copper belt hooks unearthed from Cao Xiu’s tomb in Wei from the Eight Kingdoms.

In addition, there are not many famous allusions, and there are even some famous sentences.

During the Qin and Han Dynasties, belt hooks reached their peak, and various animal images of birds, beasts, insects, and fish were widely used on the hook head and under the hook body.

"Que" refers to the palace, "Ba Zhao Zai Que".

The monster has a pair of erect long ears and a pair of extended wings on its back.

"Huainanzi" says, "A hall full of seats has different hooks." It can be seen that there are many styles of hooks, depending on the identity of the owner.

By the Warring States Period, belt hooks had basically taken shape.

A dragon-shaped belt hook was unearthed from Cao Cao's low mausoleum.

In the past, there were very few well-known belt hooks throughout the ages.

At that time, belt hooks were either auspicious objects with good or bad connotations, or violent objects that suppressed evil.

Therefore, the inscription on the hook on the jade scale says "the Lord uses it to prepare soldiers", which does not mean that the hook is used to prevent damage from weapons.

"Jifu" refers to the first star of the Big Dipper, and the last seven stars are called Kui.

The main purpose is to prepare troops, and the sky is round and the earth is square.

I concentrated on making belt hooks. Apart from belt hooks, everything else caught my attention.

"Zhuangzi Zhibei You" records a forty-year-old "hook-beater". From the age of seventy, I have devoted myself to one thing, not forging hooks.

However, judging from the identity of the owner suggested by the belt hook, calling it a Yuheng belt hook is not entirely reliable.

"Historical Records·Biographies of the Xiongnu" "Suo Yin" said that "'Xu', 'Xi' and 'Shi' are similar, but they have different opinions."

"Huainanzi·Fan Lun Xun" records: "Confucius's resignation from Linqiu ended up stealing a knife and hook."

"Bazhao" is equivalent to the eight lights, and it is not the sun, moon, and stars (Beidou) in the last two sentences "Dai Ri Ri Yue, Beidou Liang Liang".

Jiang Wan belt, also known as hook belt, is a belt without hook.

Yang Xiong's "Dialect" states that "Gou, between the Song, Chu, Chen and Wei dynasties, was called Luqi, or Gouge", so Luqi, Gouge, and Jiang Wan all refer to hook belts.

Explain that the responsibility of the owner of the hook is not to protect the palace or the political power.

The most important feature is not that the monster is holding a fish in both hands, stepping on a toad-like animal with its feet, and there are no water ripples around it. It is passed down to descendants, jade and gold essence.

The ancients believed that the Big Dipper resided in the political center of heaven and revolved around the imperial star Purple Star (Polaris).

For example, "Zhuangzi: The Box" also records that "those who steal hooks will be punished, and those who steal the country will be marquised."

Very few people know that allusion, and everyone should know that "shooting Dabai with a hook" did not save Duke Huan of Qi's life with the hook.

The inscriptions on the hooks support the objects and express the ambitions. "Beidou columns" and "Xuan Ji Yuheng" describe the seven stars of the Big Dipper dotted on the hooks.

The craftsmanship is simple and the patterns are few and far between.

"Yu Shu" states that "Xuanji and Guo fell, and unified the government."

These all show the low status of the owner of the hook, who is at the political center of the Shu Han Dynasty.

"Suo Yin" in "Historical Records" also quoted Zhang Yan's statement: "Xianbei, Jiang Wan also had the name of an auspicious animal, Dong Hu spoiled it."

"Yizheng" is used for Yixing, and the predecessors also used "Xuanji" (also known as Xuanji, Qianji or Xuanji).

Yuheng was praised by Zhuge Liang as the "weapon of the country", and he was Zhuge Liang's successor. His official rank reached the rank of junior general and junior Sima of the Shu Han Dynasty (equivalent to the prime minister).

But it also shows that an exquisite belt hook for the princes and nobles is indeed worth a lot of money, and stealing it will constitute a capital crime.

Rotate jade scales, palace guards, and always protect the country.

Belt hooks were originally called "hooks". According to archaeological discoveries of belt hooks, inscriptions on belt hooks sometimes refer to themselves as "hooks".

Yan Shigu's ancient note in "Book of Han·Biography of the Xiongnu": "Xibi, the hook of the beard, is also called Xianbei, and is also called the comparison of teachers. It is always the same thing, and the words are not heavy."

This is a rhyme that prays for good luck. The square box □ is unidentifiable text, and the brackets are text that is based on the meaning of the words and sentences, with reference to fixed terms and rhymes, and explanations.

The inscription on the hook on the jade scale "Hooks may be short or long" is enough to prove this point.

Life is as long as the mountains and the sea, facing the sky.

Although it is known that the belt hook was unearthed from the Yuheng tomb in Mianyang, the inscription does not clearly indicate that the belt hook belongs to Yuheng.

Confucius even refused to accept the Linqiu fiefdom given to me by Qi Jinggong. Of course, he also knew how to steal large objects such as swords and belt hooks.

The Big Dipper refers to the stars of Tianshu, Tianxuan, Tianji, Tianquan, Jifu, Kaiyang and Yaoguang in the constellation Ursa Minor.

Under the hook are engraved dragon, phoenix and the Big Dipper star.

For example, when Duke Huan of Qi, the leader of the Seven Hegemons of the Spring and Autumn Period, was fighting for the throne, he was shot by Guan Zhong, who was assisting the Zuo Gongzi.

The shapes of the two belt hooks are similar to those unearthed in Yushu, Beihe, Mancheng, Jinling and other places in Ji Province.

The term "with hook" was first seen in Sima Qian's "Historical Records: The Family of Qi Taigong".

Bring Ao to all directions, and there will never be any disaster.

That kind of hook cannot be collectively referred to as the hook held by a god holding a fish in his hand.

Various auspicious animals are specially engraved under the hook of the hook belt. People use the names of auspicious animals such as Xianbei, Xibi, Shibi and so on to refer to the belt hook.

A belt hook is divided into eight parts: hook head, hook body and hook button.

The inscription uses the Xuanji Guo Luogongwei Emperor Star as a symbol, which is connected with the owner of the belt hook who is in charge of the palace guard and always protects the country.

Belt hooks flourished from the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period to the Han Dynasty, but gradually declined during the Wei and Jin Dynasties and were replaced by belt buckles.

The sun is shining on the moon, the Big Dipper is lined up, and the Three Zhaos are in the palace.

Chen Wenzhe has seen several relatively precious belt hooks since then, such as the belt hooks unearthed from Eastern Han tombs in Mancheng.

That kind of hook has the head of a bird, with beads in its mouth, the tail of the hook is like a flower, without flower core and petals, and the body of the hook is a monster with the head of a bird and a human body.


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