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The Swastika Dispersion of the Swastika
The author conferred with the Chinese minister, Yang Yu, with the request that he should furnish any appropriate information concerning the Swastika in China. In due course the author received the following letter and accompanying notes with drawings: * * * I have the pleasure to submit abstracts from historical and literary works on the origin of the Swastika in China and the circumstances connected with it in Chinese ancient history. I have had this paper translated into English and illustrated by India-ink drawings. The Chinese copy is made by Mr. Ho Yen-Shing, the first secretary of the legation, translation by Mr. Chung, and drawings by Mr. Li. With assurance of my high esteem, I am,
Buddhist philosophers consider simple characters as half incomplete characters and compound characters as complete characters, while the Swastika Empress Wu (684-704 A.D.), of the Tang Dynasty, invented a number of new forms for characters already in existence, amongst which The history of the Tang Dynasty (620-906 A.D.), by Lui Hsu and others of the Tsin Dynasty, records a decree issued by Emperor Tai Tsung (763-779 A.D.) forbidding the use of the Swastika on silk fabrics manufactured for any purpose. [Pl.3.] Fung Tse, of the Tang Dynasty, records a practice among the people of Loh-yang who endeavor, on the 7th of the 7th month of each year, to obtain spiders to weave the Swastika on their web. Kung Ping-Chung, of the Sung Dynasty, says that the people of Loh-yang believe it is to be good luck to find the Swastika woven by spiders over fruits or melons. [Pl.4.] Sung Pai, of the Sung Dynasty, records an offering made to the Emperor by Li Yuen-su, a high official of the Tang Dynasty, of a buffalo with a Swastika on the forehead in return for which offering he was given a horse by the Emperor. [Pl.5.] The Ts’ing-I-Luh, by Tao Kuh of the Sung Dynasty, records that an Empress in << Previous Page Next Page >>
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