Abstract

Abstract This article is not concerned with the history of aesthetics but, rather, is an exercise in intellectual history. “Illustrations of Tributary States” [Zhigong tu 職貢圖] as a type of art reveals a Chinese tradition of artistic representations of foreign emissaries paying tribute at the imperial court. This tradition is usually seen as going back to the “Illustrations of Tributary States,” painted by Emperor Yuan in the Liang dynasty 梁元帝 [r. 552-554] in the first half of the sixth century. This series of paintings not only had a lasting influence on aesthetic history but also gave rise to a highly distinctive intellectual tradition in the development of Chinese thought: images of foreign emissaries were used to convey the Celestial Empire’s sense of pride and self-confidence, with representations of strange customs from foreign countries serving as a foil for the image of China as a radiant universal empire at the center of the world. The tradition of “Illustrations of Tributary States” was still very much alive during the time of the Song dynasty [960-1279], when China had to compete with equally powerful neighboring states, the empire’s territory had been significantly diminished, and the Chinese population had become ethnically more homogeneous. In this article, the “Illustrations of the Tributary States of the Myriad Regions” [Wanfang zhigong tu 萬方職貢圖] attributed to Li Gonglin 李公麟 [ca. 1049-1106] and created during the period between the Xining 熙寧 [1068-1077] and Yuanfeng 元豐 [1078-1085] reigns of the Shenzong emperor 神宗 [r. 1067-1085] of the Song dynasty, is used as a case study for investigating the actual tributary relations between the Northern Song [960-1127] state and its neighboring countries. In doing so, I demonstrate that while certain parts of the “Illustrations of the Tributary States of the Myriad Regions” are historically accurate, a considerable portion of the content is the combined product of historical remembrance and the imagination of empire. In the international environment of the Song empire, China was captivated by the dream of being a universal empire envied by its “barbarian” neighbors. Particularly worth emphasizing is the fact that the artistic tradition of painting “Illustrations of Tributary States” as well as the accompanying idea of China as a universal empire continued well into the Qing [1644-1911] period, reflecting the historical longevity and lasting influence of the traditional conception of the relationship between China and the world.

Highlights

  • D via free access by its “barbarian” neighbors

  • Worth emphasizing is the fact that the artistic tradition of painting “Illustrations of Tributary States” as well as the accompanying idea of China as a universal empire continued well into the Qing [1644-1911] period, reflecting the historical longevity and lasting influence of the traditional conception of the relationship between China and the world

  • In the foregoing, we provided a general outline of the international relations during the era of Shenzong of the Northern Song and some of the information concerning foreign countries Li Gonglin might have been familiar with when he painted the Illustrations of the Tributary States of the Myriad Regions

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Summary

Back to Emperor Yuan in the Liang Dynasty

According to the famous saying “the greatest affairs of the state consist in offering sacrifices and conducting warfare,”[4] meaning that in ancient China, sacrifices and war were seen as the most important responsibilities of the state. The Chinese historical records have many traces of the tradition of neighboring countries going to the imperial court to pay tribute to the emperor In this respect, three classical texts are of crucial importance, namely the chapter “Tribute of Yu [Yugong 禹貢]” in the Book of Documents [Shangshu 尚書], the chapter on the “King’s Meetings [Wanghui pian 王會篇]” in the Remaining Documents of Zhou [Yi Zhoushu 逸周書], and the first part of the chapter “Discourses of Zhou [Zhouyu 周語]” in the Discourses of the States [Guoyu 國語]. 10 See Li Deyu 李德裕, “Jin xiajiasi chaogong tuzhuang 進黠嘎斯朝貢圖狀 [Illustrated Account of the Xiajiasi Tributary People],” in Quan Tangwen 全唐文 [Complete Prose of These works are the reason that portraits of foreign emissaries gradually became a major topic in the aesthetic history extending from the Tang period to the Song, Yuan [1271-1368], Ming [1368-1644], and Qing [16441911] dynasties, when numerous pictorial representations of this type can be found in contexts as diverse as paintings and tomb murals.[11]. We turn to the main topic of this paper, namely the Illustrations of the Tributary States of the Myriad Regions [Wanfang zhigong tu 萬方職貢圖], attributed to Li Gonglin 李公麟 [ca. 1049-1106]

Illustrations of the Tributary States of the Myriad Regions
Translated by Ady Van den Stock
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