
Minneapolis Institute of Art
Dragon
China
- Date
- 9th century
- Medium
- Gilt bronze
- Department
- Asian Art
- Institution
- Minneapolis Institute of Art
The Emperor Xuanzong of the Tang dynasty (r. 713–56) was a fervent enthusiast of the Daoist belief system, which holds specific mountains and rivers to be sacred. Every year, the emperor dispatched envoys of ranking officials and eminent Daoists to the sacred mountains and rivers to perform a rite called tou longjian (tossing dragons and tallies). In order to communicate with gods there, they tossed cast-metal dragons—accompanied by tablets inscribed with prayers for the dynasty’s welfare and the immortality of the emperor—into these holy sites. This gilt-bronze dragon was likely cast for such a purpose, a practice that continued until the 900s. China, Asia
The authoritative record is held by Minneapolis Institute of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Minneapolis Institute of Art and other institutions.

Numinous Treasure Emissaries
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Fan painting of a Daoist magician
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Kui Xing (God of Literature)
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Miracle of the Dragon
Cleveland Museum of Art

Miniature Mountain with Daoist Paradise
Cleveland Museum of Art

Dragon
Cleveland Museum of Art

Dish
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Daoist Robe
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Dragon; Tiger
Cleveland Museum of Art

Zhenwu, the Daoist Deity of the North
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Album of Daoist and Buddhist Themes: Procession of Daoist Deities: Leaf 12
Cleveland Museum of Art
![Dragon and Tiger in Tempest [right of a pair]](https://6.api.artsmia.org/800/118075.jpg)
Dragon and Tiger in Tempest [right of a pair]
Minneapolis Institute of Art