Object Number | 19122 |
Current Location | Collections Storage |
Provenience | China |
Date Made | 19th Century |
Section | Asian |
Technique | Photography |
Description | Photograph of the Nestorian Stele, near Xi'an, China. The stele, with text in Chinese and Syriac, was erected in 781 CE near the Tang dynasty capital, Chang'an, to commemorate the presence of Nestorian Christianity in China. The title at the top of the stele (reproduced on rubbing 19121C) reads "Stele Commemorating the Dissemination in the Middle Kingdom of the Illustrious Teaching [i.e. Nestorian Christianity] of the Great Qin (Da Qin Jingjiao Liuxing Zhongguo Bei )." "The Great Qin" referred to the Roman Empire, including its Eastern branch, and by extension to Christendom. The main text refers to doctrinal matters including monotheism, the Creation, the Trinity, and the Virgin Birth, before going on to describe the arrival of the religion in China and the protection it enjoyed under the Tang emperors. The remainder of the inscription consists of names of about seventy members of the clergy. The stele was rediscovered in the 17th century, and currently stands in the Beilin Museum, Xi'an. The photograph shows a rubbing being made of the stele, with the paper laid over the inscribed surface, and tools at the base of the stele. The photograph was given, together with four rubbings 19121A-D |
Credit Line | Gift of Benjamin Smith Lyman, 1896 |
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