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The Baekje Golden Copper Incense Burner, a 100-year cultural relic of the 100th century, is a classic of Baekje and Korean traditional culture. May 30, 1996 was designated as the National Treasure No. 287 of the Republic of Korea. It is now in the Korea National Fuyu Museum.
The Baekje Golden Copper censer was unearthed in 1993 at an archaeological excavation in a temple in Buyeo-gun, South Chungcheong Province, South Korea. The incense burner was 64 cm in height, 19 cm in diameter and weighed 11.8 kg. It was the largest of the 450 artifacts excavated at the time. Belong to Boshan furnace. The decoration of the Baekje gold and copper censer is engraved with the Western musical instruments from the Silk Road.
Korean scholars believe that Western musical instruments of this type only became popular in China during the Tang Dynasty of China. However, such musical instruments existed in Baekje as early as the Tang Dynasty. However, in the Tang Dynasty, during the first year of the Tang Dynasty, a copper gong was unearthed from the Tomb of Xianzi County and was named “Xiang Xian”, indicating that the time when the Chinese musical instrument appeared to be salty was not the Tang Dynasty.
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