The Chu musical instrument "Tiger Seat Phoenix Frame Hanging Drum" from the Warring States period
Musical Instruments
3D model of musical instrument
Chinese cultural relics
Cultural relics from the Eastern Zhou Dynasty
Cultural relics from the Warring States period
Tiger Phoenix Frame Hanging Drum
Chu State Musical Instruments during the Warring States Period
Chu State Musical Instruments
Chu State Cultural Relics
Hanging drum
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Tiger Phoenix Frame Hanging Drum, also known as Tiger Phoenix Frame Hanging Drum or Tiger Bird Frame Drum. Excavated from Tomb No. 2 of the Warring States Chu Dynasty in Jiuliandun, Hubei, it is a typical representative artifact of Chu musical instruments. This is one of the largest tiger shaped phoenix frame drums excavated from a Chu tomb in China. Its height is about 1 meter, with symmetrically arranged double phoenixes and double tigers as the drum frame. The base consists of two crouching tigers with their backs facing each other, with a phoenix standing on each tiger's back. The Tiger Seat Phoenix Frame Hanging Drum was an important type of musical instrument in the Chu state during the Warring States period. It is a lacquerware from the Eastern Zhou Dynasty, unearthed from Tomb No. 2 of Jiuliandun in Zaoyang City, Hubei Province. It is an exquisite handicraft that combines lacquer, carving, and painting techniques organically.