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Screen Wall(Ó°±Ú Yingbi)
Known as a ¡°screen wall¡± in English, it is called yinbi or zhaobi in Chinese. It can be made of any material ¨Cbrick, wood, and stone or glazed tile. The yingbi dates back at least to the Western Zhou Dynasty (11century B.C. to 771 B.C.). Archaeologists have discovered in recent years from tombs of that period in ShanxiProvince what remains of a screen wall. It measures 240 cm long and 20 cm high. This is the earliest known wall of its kind in China at the time of writing.
Apart from keeping passers-by from peeping into the courtyard, the screen wall could also be used by the visitor, who would get off from his carriage and ,standing behind the wall, tidy up his dress before going in . It was not until much latter that private houses (mainly the quadrangles of bungalows in the northern parts of the country) began to have screen walls.
It originally stood in front of the princely mansion of the thirteenth son of ZhuYuanzhang , first emperor of the Ming Dynasty. Sculpted on it in seven different colors are nine dragons flying in clouds. The most splendid of the three is the one which belonged to a palace of the Ming Dynasty and now stands north of the lake in Beijing's BeihaiPark. It is a mosaic of glazed color tiles showing on each side nine curly dragons in relief. An observant visitor could also count 635 dragons of smaller sizes on the ridges and roof tiles of the wall. The third of these walls stands opposite the gate Huangjimen in the Forbidden City and is well-known to sightseers. All the three mentioned above were built during the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) and all used to stand in front of the entrance to a courtyard , making a component part of the architectural complex and adding to the magnificence of the buildings . Besides these, there are also screen walls with one, three of five dragons to be seen in different parts of the country.
Certain screen walls found in the eastern provinces of China bear the image of a strange animal called tan, either carved in brick or painted in color. According to local belief, this animal was so greedy that it wanted to devour the rising sun on the sea, meeting its own death by drowning. The picture serves as a reminder that greed leads to self-destruction. In the vicinity of the Five Dragon Pavilions (Wulongting) in the Beihai Park of Beijing, there is a so-called ¡°iron screen wall¡±, a relic from the Yuan Dynasty of the thirteenth century. At first glance, it appears to have been cast of iron but actually it is a piece of volcanic rock. Carved on it in vivid style are ,on one side ,lions playing with a ball and ,on the other ,a legendary unicorn ; it is noted for its antiquity and simplicity of execution.
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