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Mandarin square

A mandarin square (Chinese: 補子), also known as a rank badge, was a large embroidered badge sewn onto the surcoat of officials in Imperial China (decorating hanfu and qizhuang), Korea (decorating the gwanbok of the Joseon dynasty), in Vietnam, and the Ryukyu Kingdom. It was embroidered with detailed, colourful animal or bird insignia indicating the rank of the official wearing it. Despite its name, the mandarin square (buzi) falls into two categories: round buzi and square buzi.[1]: 396  Clothing decorated with buzi is known as bufu (simplified Chinese: 补服; traditional Chinese: 補服) in China.[2] In the 21st century, the use of buzi on hanfu was revived following the Hanfu movement.

Mandarin square
Qing dynasty mandarin square, 6th civil rank, about 30 cm square.
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese補子
Simplified Chinese补子
Literal meaningMaster's patch
Vietnamese name
Vietnamese alphabetBổ tử
Chữ Hán補子
Korean name
Hangul흉배
Hanja胸背
Transcriptions
Revised Romanizationhyungbae
Manchu name
Manchu scriptᠰᠠᠪᡳᡵᡤᡳ
Möllendorffsabirgi
English name
EnglishMandarin square/ rank badge

China edit

The history of the square-shaped buzi is unclear. However, in the Yuan dynasty encyclopaedia Shilin Guangji (事林廣記), as well as contemporary Persian paintings of the Mongol court, there are pictures showing officials wearing clothing with squares on the back, decorated with flora, animals and birds.[3] By the Yuan dynasty, the square-shaped buzi was already worn as clothing ornaments.[4]: 235 

Ming dynasty edit

 
A 15th-century portrait of the Ming minister Liu Daxia. His mandarin square indicates that he was a civil official of the first rank.

Mandarin squares were first authorized for the wear of officials in the sumptuary laws of 1391 of the Ming dynasty.[4]: 235  The use of squares depicting birds for civil officials and animals for military officials was an outgrowth of the use of similar squares, apparently for decorative use, in the Yuan dynasty.[5] The original court dress regulations of the Ming dynasty were published in 1368, but did not refer to badges as rank insignia.[6] These badges continued to be used through the remainder of the Ming and the subsequent Qing dynasty until the imperial system fell in 1912.

Ming nobles and officials wore their rank badges on full-cut red robes with the design stretching from side to side, completely covering the chest and back. This caused the badges to be slightly trapezoidal with the tops narrower than the bottom.[7] The Ming statutes never refer to the number of birds or animals that should appear on the badges. In the beginning, two or three were used. In a typical example of paired birds, they were shown in flight on a background of bright cloud streamers on a gold background. Others showed one bird on the ground with the second in flight. The addition of flowers produced an idealized naturalism.[8][9]

Qing dynasty edit

 
A Qing dynasty photograph of a government official with mandarin square on the chest.

There was a sharp difference between the Ming and Qing styles of badges: the Qing badges were smaller with a decorative border.[10] And, while the specific birds and animals did not change much throughout their use, the design of the squares underwent an almost continual evolution.[11] According to rank, Qing-dynasty nobles had their respective official clothes. Princes, including Qin Wang and Jun Wang, usually wore black robes as opposed to the blue robes in court, and had four circular designs, one on each shoulder, front, and back, as opposed to the usual front-and-back design. Specifically, princes of the blood used four front-facing dragons, Qin Wang had two front-facing and two side-facing dragons, and Jun Wang had four side-facing ones; all had five claws on each foot. Beile and Beizi had a circular design on their official clothing, the former having two front-facing dragons, the latter two side-facing ones; these dragons had only four claws on each foot, and are referred to as "drakes" or "great serpents" (巨蟒 jù-mǎng). National duke, general, efu, "commoner" duke, marquis and count had two front-facing, four-clawed dragons on square designs, whereas viscount and baron had cranes and golden pheasants, as for mandarins of the first and second class.

Comparative table across dynasties edit

 
Jesuit missionary Adam Schall wearing a robe with civilian mandarin badge of the first rank

The specific birds and animals used to represent rank varied only slightly from the inception of mandarin squares until the end of the Qing dynasty. Officials who held a lower position or did odd jobs used the magpie during the Ming dynasty. Supervising officials used xiezhi. Musicians used the oriole. The following tables[12] show this evolution:

Military edit

Rank Ming (1391–1526) Ming and Qing (1527–1662) Late Qing (1662–1911) Image
1 Lion Lion Qilin (after 1662)  
2 Lion Lion Lion
3 Tiger or leopard Tiger Leopard (after 1664)
4 Tiger or leopard Leopard Tiger (after 1664)
5 Bear Bear Bear
6 Panther Panther Panther
7 Panther Panther Rhinoceros (after 1759)[13]
8 Rhinoceros Rhinoceros Rhinoceros
9 Rhinoceros Sea horse[14] Sea horse[15]

Civil edit

Rank Ming (1391–1526) Ming and Qing (1527–1662) Late Qing (1662–1911) Image
1 Crane or golden pheasant Crane Crane  
2 Crane or golden pheasant Golden pheasant Golden pheasant  
3 Peacock or wild goose Peacock Peacock  
4 Peacock or wild goose Wild goose Wild goose  
5 Silver pheasant Silver pheasant Silver pheasant  
6 Egret or mandarin duck Egret Egret  
7 Egret or mandarin duck Mandarin duck Mandarin duck[16]  
8 Oriole, quail or paradise flycatcher Oriole Quail  
9 Oriole, quail or paradise flycatcher Quail Paradise flycatcher[17]

21st century edit

The use of the round-shaped and square-shaped buzi has been revived in China following the Hanfu movement.

Korea edit

Korean rank badge (흉배 in Korean) is a small panel of embroidery that would have served to indicate the status of a government official in the Choson dynasty Korea (1392–1910). Made in the nineteenth century, it shows a pair of black and white leopards, one above the other in opposing stance, surrounded by stylised cloud patterns in pink, purple and pale green upon a blue background. It would have been worn by a military official from the first to third ranks. Leopards and tigers, respected for their strength and courage in Korea, were used for the dress of military officials while civil officials wore crane motifs. This badge shows the distinctively spotted animals among rocks, waves and clouds in a pattern which remained virtually unchanged for 300 years.

Vietnam edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ A history of Chinese science and technology. Volume 2. Yongxiang Lu, Chuijun Qian, Hui He. Heidelberg. 2014. ISBN 978-3-662-44166-4. OCLC 893557979.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link)
  2. ^ "Guide to Hanfu Types Summary & Dress Codes (Ming Dynasty)". www.newhanfu.com. 4 April 2021. Retrieved 27 August 2022.
  3. ^ Cammann, Schuyler (1944). "University College London". Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies. 8 (2): 71–130. doi:10.2307/2717953. JSTOR 2717953.
  4. ^ a b Sullivan, Michael (1999). The arts of China (4th expanded and rev ed.). Berkeley, California: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-21876-0. OCLC 40200406.
  5. ^ Cammann, Schuyler: "Birds and Animals as Ming and Ch'ing Badges of Rank", Arts of Asia (May to June 1991), page 89.
  6. ^ Schuyler Cammann (August 1944). "The Development of the Mandarin Square". Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies. 8 (2): 75–76. doi:10.2307/2717953. ISSN 0073-0548. JSTOR 2717953. Wikidata Q117360120.
  7. ^ Cammann, Schuyler: "Chinese Mandarin Squares, Brief Catalogue of the Letcher Collection", University Museum Bulletin Vol 17, No 3 (June 1953), pages 8–9.
  8. ^ Cammann, Schuyler: "Chinese Mandarin Squares, Brief Catalogue of the Letcher Collection", University Museum Bulletin Vol 17, No 3 (June 1953), page 9.
  9. ^ Schuyler Cammann (August 1944). "The Development of the Mandarin Square". Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies. 8 (2): 95. doi:10.2307/2717953. ISSN 0073-0548. JSTOR 2717953. Wikidata Q117360120.
  10. ^ Cammann, Schuyler, "Birds and Animals as Ming and Ch’ing Badges of Rank", Arts of Asia (May–June 1991), page 90.
  11. ^ Jackson, Beverley & Hugus, David, Ladder to the Clouds, Berkeley: Ten Speed Press, 1999, Chapter 15, pages 215–289.
  12. ^ Katarzyna Zapolska (2014). "Mandarin squares as a form of rank badge and decoration of Chinese robes". Art of the Orient. 3: 53–70. ISSN 2299-811X. Wikidata Q117360068.
  13. ^ Note that the rhinoceros is depicted as a buffalo, rather than as a rhinoceros.
  14. ^ Note that the sea horse is depicted as a horse living under water, rather than as a seahorse.
  15. ^ Jackson, Beverley & Hugus, David, Ladder to the Clouds, Berkeley: Ten Speed Press, 1999, Table 4, page 133;
  16. ^ Marcin Latka. "Portrait of a young official". artinpl. Retrieved 31 July 2019.
  17. ^ Jackson, Beverley & Hugus, David, Ladder to the clouds, Berkeley: Ten Speed Press, 1999, Table 3, page 133.
  18. ^ Crawfurd, John (1828). Journal of an embassy from the Governor-General of India to the courts of Siam and Cochin-China : exhibiting a view of the actual state of those kingdoms. London: H. Colburn. pp. 262–263.

Further reading edit

  • "Rank insignia for military officers of the imperial court", in: Welch, Patricia Bjaaland (2008), Chinese Art, Tuttle, pp. 110–111, ISBN 978-0-8048-3864-1
  • , Pacific Asia Museum, 2008, archived from the original on 7 October 2016, retrieved 19 June 2016

External links edit

  •   Media related to Mandarin square at Wikimedia Commons

mandarin, square, mandarin, square, chinese, 補子, also, known, rank, badge, large, embroidered, badge, sewn, onto, surcoat, officials, imperial, china, decorating, hanfu, qizhuang, korea, decorating, gwanbok, joseon, dynasty, vietnam, ryukyu, kingdom, embroider. A mandarin square Chinese 補子 also known as a rank badge was a large embroidered badge sewn onto the surcoat of officials in Imperial China decorating hanfu and qizhuang Korea decorating the gwanbok of the Joseon dynasty in Vietnam and the Ryukyu Kingdom It was embroidered with detailed colourful animal or bird insignia indicating the rank of the official wearing it Despite its name the mandarin square buzi falls into two categories round buzi and square buzi 1 396 Clothing decorated with buzi is known as bufu simplified Chinese 补服 traditional Chinese 補服 in China 2 In the 21st century the use of buzi on hanfu was revived following the Hanfu movement Mandarin squareQing dynasty mandarin square 6th civil rank about 30 cm square Chinese nameTraditional Chinese補子Simplified Chinese补子Literal meaningMaster s patchTranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinbŭziWade GilesputzŭVietnamese nameVietnamese alphabetBổ tửChữ Han補子Korean nameHangul흉배Hanja胸背TranscriptionsRevised RomanizationhyungbaeManchu nameManchu scriptᠰᠠᠪᡳᡵᡤᡳMollendorffsabirgiEnglish nameEnglishMandarin square rank badge Contents 1 China 1 1 Ming dynasty 1 2 Qing dynasty 1 3 Comparative table across dynasties 1 3 1 Military 1 3 2 Civil 1 4 21st century 2 Korea 3 Vietnam 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksChina editThe history of the square shaped buzi is unclear However in the Yuan dynasty encyclopaedia Shilin Guangji 事林廣記 as well as contemporary Persian paintings of the Mongol court there are pictures showing officials wearing clothing with squares on the back decorated with flora animals and birds 3 By the Yuan dynasty the square shaped buzi was already worn as clothing ornaments 4 235 Ming dynasty edit nbsp A 15th century portrait of the Ming minister Liu Daxia His mandarin square indicates that he was a civil official of the first rank Mandarin squares were first authorized for the wear of officials in the sumptuary laws of 1391 of the Ming dynasty 4 235 The use of squares depicting birds for civil officials and animals for military officials was an outgrowth of the use of similar squares apparently for decorative use in the Yuan dynasty 5 The original court dress regulations of the Ming dynasty were published in 1368 but did not refer to badges as rank insignia 6 These badges continued to be used through the remainder of the Ming and the subsequent Qing dynasty until the imperial system fell in 1912 Ming nobles and officials wore their rank badges on full cut red robes with the design stretching from side to side completely covering the chest and back This caused the badges to be slightly trapezoidal with the tops narrower than the bottom 7 The Ming statutes never refer to the number of birds or animals that should appear on the badges In the beginning two or three were used In a typical example of paired birds they were shown in flight on a background of bright cloud streamers on a gold background Others showed one bird on the ground with the second in flight The addition of flowers produced an idealized naturalism 8 9 Qing dynasty edit nbsp A Qing dynasty photograph of a government official with mandarin square on the chest There was a sharp difference between the Ming and Qing styles of badges the Qing badges were smaller with a decorative border 10 And while the specific birds and animals did not change much throughout their use the design of the squares underwent an almost continual evolution 11 According to rank Qing dynasty nobles had their respective official clothes Princes including Qin Wang and Jun Wang usually wore black robes as opposed to the blue robes in court and had four circular designs one on each shoulder front and back as opposed to the usual front and back design Specifically princes of the blood used four front facing dragons Qin Wang had two front facing and two side facing dragons and Jun Wang had four side facing ones all had five claws on each foot Beile and Beizi had a circular design on their official clothing the former having two front facing dragons the latter two side facing ones these dragons had only four claws on each foot and are referred to as drakes or great serpents 巨蟒 ju mǎng National duke general efu commoner duke marquis and count had two front facing four clawed dragons on square designs whereas viscount and baron had cranes and golden pheasants as for mandarins of the first and second class nbsp 3rd civil rank peacock Mid 19th century Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum nbsp 2nd military rank lion Late 18th cent Art Gallery of New South Wales nbsp 3rd military rank leopard 19th or early 20th century Chester Beatty Library nbsp Members of three generations of a lineage are shown in Qing mandarin attire complete with mandarin squares Comparative table across dynasties edit nbsp Jesuit missionary Adam Schall wearing a robe with civilian mandarin badge of the first rank The specific birds and animals used to represent rank varied only slightly from the inception of mandarin squares until the end of the Qing dynasty Officials who held a lower position or did odd jobs used the magpie during the Ming dynasty Supervising officials used xiezhi Musicians used the oriole The following tables 12 show this evolution Military edit Rank Ming 1391 1526 Ming and Qing 1527 1662 Late Qing 1662 1911 Image 1 Lion Lion Qilin after 1662 nbsp 2 Lion Lion Lion 3 Tiger or leopard Tiger Leopard after 1664 4 Tiger or leopard Leopard Tiger after 1664 5 Bear Bear Bear 6 Panther Panther Panther 7 Panther Panther Rhinoceros after 1759 13 8 Rhinoceros Rhinoceros Rhinoceros 9 Rhinoceros Sea horse 14 Sea horse 15 Civil edit Rank Ming 1391 1526 Ming and Qing 1527 1662 Late Qing 1662 1911 Image 1 Crane or golden pheasant Crane Crane nbsp 2 Crane or golden pheasant Golden pheasant Golden pheasant nbsp 3 Peacock or wild goose Peacock Peacock nbsp 4 Peacock or wild goose Wild goose Wild goose nbsp 5 Silver pheasant Silver pheasant Silver pheasant nbsp 6 Egret or mandarin duck Egret Egret nbsp 7 Egret or mandarin duck Mandarin duck Mandarin duck 16 nbsp 8 Oriole quail or paradise flycatcher Oriole Quail nbsp 9 Oriole quail or paradise flycatcher Quail Paradise flycatcher 17 21st century edit The use of the round shaped and square shaped buzi has been revived in China following the Hanfu movement Korea editKorean rank badge 흉배 in Korean is a small panel of embroidery that would have served to indicate the status of a government official in the Choson dynasty Korea 1392 1910 Made in the nineteenth century it shows a pair of black and white leopards one above the other in opposing stance surrounded by stylised cloud patterns in pink purple and pale green upon a blue background It would have been worn by a military official from the first to third ranks Leopards and tigers respected for their strength and courage in Korea were used for the dress of military officials while civil officials wore crane motifs This badge shows the distinctively spotted animals among rocks waves and clouds in a pattern which remained virtually unchanged for 300 years nbsp Korean rank badge 1850 1900 Victoria amp Albert Museum no FE 272 1995 Vietnam edit nbsp Annamite Vietnamese badge Nguyễn dynasty 19th century civilian 8th rank nbsp Mandarins of the Nguyen dynasty circa 1820 The Mandarin on the left is a man of letters with a stork on his chest and the one on the right is a military Mandarin signified by a boar 18 See also editTablion Chinese hat knob Hanfu Gwanbok Qizhuang Nine rank system for an earlier system for ranking officials in China Chinese auspicious ornaments in textile and clothingReferences edit A history of Chinese science and technology Volume 2 Yongxiang Lu Chuijun Qian Hui He Heidelberg 2014 ISBN 978 3 662 44166 4 OCLC 893557979 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Guide to Hanfu Types Summary amp Dress Codes Ming Dynasty www newhanfu com 4 April 2021 Retrieved 27 August 2022 Cammann Schuyler 1944 University College London Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 8 2 71 130 doi 10 2307 2717953 JSTOR 2717953 a b Sullivan Michael 1999 The arts of China 4th expanded and rev ed Berkeley California University of California Press ISBN 0 520 21876 0 OCLC 40200406 Cammann Schuyler Birds and Animals as Ming and Ch ing Badges of Rank Arts of Asia May to June 1991 page 89 Schuyler Cammann August 1944 The Development of the Mandarin Square Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 8 2 75 76 doi 10 2307 2717953 ISSN 0073 0548 JSTOR 2717953 Wikidata Q117360120 Cammann Schuyler Chinese Mandarin Squares Brief Catalogue of the Letcher Collection University Museum Bulletin Vol 17 No 3 June 1953 pages 8 9 Cammann Schuyler Chinese Mandarin Squares Brief Catalogue of the Letcher Collection University Museum Bulletin Vol 17 No 3 June 1953 page 9 Schuyler Cammann August 1944 The Development of the Mandarin Square Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 8 2 95 doi 10 2307 2717953 ISSN 0073 0548 JSTOR 2717953 Wikidata Q117360120 Cammann Schuyler Birds and Animals as Ming and Ch ing Badges of Rank Arts of Asia May June 1991 page 90 Jackson Beverley amp Hugus David Ladder to the Clouds Berkeley Ten Speed Press 1999 Chapter 15 pages 215 289 Katarzyna Zapolska 2014 Mandarin squares as a form of rank badge and decoration of Chinese robes Art of the Orient 3 53 70 ISSN 2299 811X Wikidata Q117360068 Note that the rhinoceros is depicted as a buffalo rather than as a rhinoceros Note that the sea horse is depicted as a horse living under water rather than as a seahorse Jackson Beverley amp Hugus David Ladder to the Clouds Berkeley Ten Speed Press 1999 Table 4 page 133 Marcin Latka Portrait of a young official artinpl Retrieved 31 July 2019 Jackson Beverley amp Hugus David Ladder to the clouds Berkeley Ten Speed Press 1999 Table 3 page 133 Crawfurd John 1828 Journal of an embassy from the Governor General of India to the courts of Siam and Cochin China exhibiting a view of the actual state of those kingdoms London H Colburn pp 262 263 Further reading edit Rank insignia for military officers of the imperial court in Welch Patricia Bjaaland 2008 Chinese Art Tuttle pp 110 111 ISBN 978 0 8048 3864 1 Rank and Style Power Dressing in Imperial China Pacific Asia Museum 2008 archived from the original on 7 October 2016 retrieved 19 June 2016External links edit nbsp Media related to Mandarin square at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mandarin square amp oldid 1212626542, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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