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Fu (tally) : ウィキペディア英語版
Fu (tally)

In ancient China a ''fu'' ((中国語:符)) was a tally, made of bamboo, wood, metal (gold, silver, bronze) or jade and used as a proof of authorization.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Tally(符 Fu) )〕 Most commonly, ''fu'' were made of wood or bamboo in sizes of wooden slips or bamboo chopsticks.〔 Although ''fu'' have been made in various shapes (such as tiger, dragon, turtle, snake, fish or human), most of them come in the shape of a tiger.〔
Classical description of tallies is found in the Zhou li, which refers to the tallies of jade and horn, and mentions the shapes of tiger, human, dragon, seal, and banner.〔Lothar von Falkenhausen, "The E Jun Qi Metal Tallies" in ''Text and Ritual in Early China'', 2005:83〕
==Hu-fu==

The two-piece tiger tallies (''hu-fu'', 虎符 in Chinese) were used by a king or emperor to command and dispatch the army. The right piece was retained in the central government while the left piece was issued to the local officials or commanders. If someone wanted to dispatch the troops from a certain area, he had to show the right piece of the tiger tally in order to obtain authorization; both pieces of the tally had to match each other.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Tiger Tally )〕 The word ''hu-fu'' first appears in the biography of Hsin-ling in the ''Records of the Grand Historian'', which tells the story of the stealing of a tiger tally to relieve the state of Zhao. During the Warring States period this kind of ''fu'' was changed from jade to bronze.〔
The tiger tally from the tomb of King Zhao Mo 趙眜 (Nanyue, Western Han), was cast as a single piece. It demonstrates that ''hu-fu'' were not uniform and might function not as tallies, but rather as tokens.〔Lothar von Falkenhausen, "The E Jun Qi Metal Tallies" in Text and Ritual in Early China, 2005:87〕
The image penetrated popular culture: in the The Legend of Qin (animated TV series) animated series tiger tallies are figuratively called "the spirit of Chu troops" (Season 4, episode 16).

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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