Currently not on view
Portrait of Wenchang, the God of Literature, on His White Donkey,
A.D. 1177
Information
A.D. 1177
Asia, China
At bottom is the scene of Wenchang 文昌, the god of literature and culture, riding his white donkey while looking back over his shoulder at soldier approaching from right. Accompanying Wenchang on foot are two attendants carrying travel packs on their backs, and a dog trots along below. In the dream-cloud that rises from the deity’s head are two small figures, male and female, riding a snake, which recalls Wenchang’s early beginnings as a local viper cult figure in Zitong 梓潼, Sichuan. Later, the deity was anthropomorphized into the war hero Zhang Yazhi 張亞子, who lived during the fourth century. After his death, he was re-embodied 73 times as a benevolent official and in the twelfth century, this figure became identified with Wenchang, who was the patron of civil service examinations, and whose popularity grew nationwide. At the right of the scene is a short inscription that Chen Shizhong had this stone carved in1177.
Above the pictorial scene is a heading in large clerical script and an inscription written in standard-script calligraphy. The heading joins the “Yingxian wulie wang” 英顯武烈王 title that the Northern Song dynasty Emperor Zhenzong 真宗conferred to Wenchang in 1001 with the titles “Zhongyou” 忠佑and “Guangji” 廣濟 bestowed during the Southern Song Shaoxing reign (1131-1162). The inscription text outlines how Wenchang practiced self-cultivation and attained merit before deification. This inscription was included at the beginning of the Qinghe neizhuan 清河内傳 (Esoteric Biography of Qinghe), an anonymous text that gathers together a group of works (with some supplementary materials dating to the Yuan dynasty) about the Divine Lord of Zitong (Zitong dijun 梓潼帝君, i.e., Wenchang). The pictorial stone from which this rubbing was taken was recorded as being in the Zitong dijun Ci 梓潼帝君祠 (Wenchang Ci 文昌祠) shrine in Hangzhou by the Qing dynasty scholar-official Ruan Yuan 阮元 (1764-1849) in his Liang Zhe jinshi zhi 兩浙金石志.
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