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Rare Edo Period Japanese Jokoban Incense Clock browse these categories for related items... All Items: Archives:Regional Art:Asian:Japanese: Pre 1837 VR: item # 677500 Please refer to our stock # 11-331 when inquiring.
B & C Antiques P. O. Box 291 Derby, CT 06418 203-929-7312 Guest Book SOLD |
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This rare wooden “jokoban” is a specific type of “kobandokei” (incense clock) used to measure time and/or to make offerings in Buddhist temples by burning incense. Made of cryptomeria or paulownia wood, it dates to the late 18th/early 19th century. The upper section consists of an incense tray in the form of a square wooden box with a latticework cover, and the lower section has a large drawer used for the storage of the tools used to arrange the incense and the powdered incense itself. A locking wooden pedestal with a simple base supports the incense tray, and the wooden grid template is original. The upper tray held finely sifted wood ash, tamped flat and smooth, over which the wooden grid template was placed. A furrow was cut into the ash in the shape of the grid lines and then filled with powdered incense which burned at a uniform rate. Once the incense was placed into the continuous track, the grid was removed and the incense ignited. The latticework cover was then put in place to prevent a breeze from accelerating the rate of combustion of the burning incense. The incense would burn continuously for hours as the lighted edge made its way around the grid design. Continual offerings of incense using a jokoban were often found in Japanese Buddhist temples during religious rites. Because long periods of time could be measured by the amount of incense burned, this type of Japanese incense clock was also used in community life as well as in the temples. (See Figure 115 in “The Trail of Time: Time Measurement with Incense in East Asia” by Silvio Bedini.) Examples of old kobandokei show burn scars, overall evidence of handling and the presence of ash or powdered incense. Relatively few examples of antique incense clocks have survived. CONDITION is good, albeit somewhat rough, with wear consistent with age and extensive usage. The worn feet have been reinforced at the corners to keep the jokoban is level. The furrowing tool is not original. This is a rare item for Buddhist temples or serious Buddhist practitioners. DIMENSIONS: 18 ˝” (47 cm) high assembled. Base is 12” (30.5 cm) square, incense tray is 11 ˝” (29.3 cm) square. |
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