Main content
Art of Asia
Course: Art of Asia > Unit 4
Lesson 3: Yayoi period (300 B.C.E.–300 C.E.)Dōtaku, ancient bells
Dōtaku (bell-shaped bronze, national treasure), 1st–2nd century B.C.E., bronze, found in Kagawa Prefecture, 42.7 cm high (Tokyo National Museum). Speakers: Dr. Steven Zucker and Dr. Beth Harris. Created by Smarthistory.
Video transcript
(jazzy music) - [Steven] We're in the
National Museum of Tokyo and we're looking at a bronze bell, which was made by one of
the oldest known cultures in a pre-history of Japan. - [Beth] This is a
period called the Yayoi. It's certainly a bell shape and some of these had a clapper inside, but we think that they
primarily had a ritual purpose, since most of them did not. - [Steven] Bronze casting
technology, casting molten bronze in a clay mold likely came
from either China or Korea, and perhaps the shape, also. These began as small objects and they grew into a variety of sizes. They've been unearthed at a
number of different sites, but what's interesting is
that we find them alone. They're not part of a larger
cache of ritual objects. - [Beth] Sometimes up to 10
in a single burial place, and there are regional differences. Sometimes they have
fin-like shapes on the sides and the example that
we're looking at doesn't. - [Steven] But this example is exceptional because it has 12
pictorial scenes within it. These are some of the
oldest pictorial scenes that we have from Japan. - [Beth] This is the
beginning of the Bronze Age. Although settled communities had existed in the Jomon Period,
during the Yayoi Period, there are settlements
where human beings start engineering the landscape for agriculture, so they start creating rice patties. There's an ability to have the
population thereby increase to have a more hierarchical
or stratified society. - [Steven] The name Yayoi
refers to an area near Tokyo where the first Yayoi objects were found, but these are not the
earliest Yayoi objects and it is just circumstance that this culture gets this name. Let's take a look at the 12 scenes. They are simplified, but
the casting technique made the images quite clear. - [Beth] And it's interesting
to see figures and animals when so many other objects
from this period and earlier are purely decorative. - [Steven] One of the images
that I find most interesting is an image of a house. It's a high house on stilts, and it's got a ladder that goes up. You can see that the floor is quite high and then you can see the wood
slats that construct the roof. - [Beth] And it's hard to
find a theme that unifies these different images
because right next to that we see a scene that seems
to depict two figures, each with a pestle with
a mortar between them grinding something. - [Steven] We also see hunting scenes. - [Beth] We see a figure
who seems to be seated because his legs are
bent forward at the hip, or maybe jumping or dancing. His torso almost facing
us, although his legs are in profile and his arms stretch out and one arm seems to
have an implement in it. - [Steven] It's not
immediately recognizable. The shape of the bell itself, it's profile is similar to the shape of the huge tombs that a slightly later
culture will produce. - [Beth] The decorative forms that we see around the semicircle
at the top are lovely. We see triangles, zigzag shapes. We see circular spiral
shapes, and then in the bands in between the pictorial scenes, we see a checkerboard pattern. - [Steven] Now, none of this is incised. This was all the result of the clay molds from which it was cast. - [Beth] It's important to
remember that bronze casting is a very complicated process. You'd have to marshal a lot of resources in order to create an object of design. This was an important object. It was buried, probably ritualistically. It probably had a ritual function, perhaps related to the idea of prosperity in agriculture and in hunting. - [Steven] We're so
lucky to have this bell. Its images, its shape, its form, its technology gives us access back to the earliest history
of Japanese culture. (jazzy music)