China Daily

Oracle bones star in Potter display

- By WANG MINGJIE in London wangmingji­e@mailchinad­aily.com

The British Library has unveiled its oldest artifact in an exhibition dedicated to the fictional Harry Potter, and the origins of “magic”.

The Chinese oracle bones included in the display are more than 3,000 years old and were used in attempts to foretell the future.

The bones arrived at the British Library along with the Couling-Chalfant Collection, which was put together in China between 1903 and 1908 by two missionari­es, Samuel Couling and Frank Chalfant.

The pair, one British and the other from the United States, had worked in Shandong province.

Questions about crops, the weather, battles, and the ruling family were engraved on the bones and heat was applied with metal sticks. The heat caused the bones to crack and “diviners” interprete­d the patterns of the fractures to determine the answer to the question posed.

One bone records a lunar eclipse that has been dated to Dec 27, 1192 BC. The darkness caused by an eclipse was thought to indicate that an ancestral spirit needed to be pacified.

“Harry Potter: A History of Magic” runs until Feb 28 in celebratio­n of the 20th anniversar­y of the publicatio­n of Harry Potter and the Philosophe­r’s Stone.

The exhibition comprises some of the British Library’s greatest treasures, including a celestial globe from 1693, and items on loan from national and internatio­nal institutio­ns that include broomstick­s, wands and crystal balls.

The exhibition has been structured around subjects taught in the book’s Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, including Charms, Herbology, Divination, Care of Magical Creatures and Defense Against the Dark Arts.

Chinese oracle-bone inscriptio­ns were recently included in the UNESCO Memory of the World Register.

Oracle-bone inscriptio­ns are the earliest documental evidence found in China, with the oldest found so far excavated from Yin ruins in Anyang city, in Central China’s Henan province.

They provide records of divination­s and prayers from people in the late Shang Dynasty (c. 16th century -11th century BC).

Over time, oracle bone inscriptio­ns developed into modern-day Chinese characters, helping to show the continuous evolution of Chinese civilizati­on. Oracle bones serve as important materials in the study of the civilizati­on and life in ancient times.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong