"Five stars rising in the East" armband
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The "Five stars rising in the East" armband (Chinese: ãäºæåºæ±æ¹å©ä¸åãè·è) is an Eastern Han (25â220 AD) to Western Jin (265â316 AD) era Sichuan brocade armband embroidered with the phrase "ð ¡æåºæ±æ¹å©ä¸å" (WÇ xÄ«ng chÅ« dÅngfÄng lì ZhÅngguó), meaning "simultaneous appearance of five stars in the eastern sky is a propitious sign for the 'Middle Kingdom'",[1] or "Five stars rising in the East, being a propitious sign for the Middle Kingdom".[2][3] Another cloth of the same pattern was found later and has the words "put down South Qiang" (è¨åç¾ TÇo Nán QiÄng).[2] In 2002, they were designated one of the cultural relics forbidden to be exhibited abroad.[4]

Discovery
Interpretation
The phrase "Five stars rising in the East, being a propitious sign for the Middle Kingdom" (äºæåºæ±æ¹å©ä¸å) resembles a similar phrase found in the Records of the Grand Historian's scroll 27 (äºæå天ä¹ä¸ï¼ç©æ¼æ±æ¹ï¼ä¸åå©). In the ancient times the "five stars" (the classical planets) were represented as Chenxing (è¾°æ), Taibai (太ç½), Yinghuo (çæ), Suixing (æ²æ) and Zhenxing (éæ). In modern times these are Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, respectively. These are also represented by "Five Elements" with water, metal, earth, fire, wood.[2]
The phrase "put down South Qiang" (è¨åç¾) refers to the area that was first mentioned in a sentence in the Western Han Essentials's (西漢æè¦) scroll 46 in relation to the four ancient commandery. The four are located in today's Dunhuang, Jiuquan, Zhangye and Wuwei, in the northwestern province of Gansu, respectively.[2]
When the two pieces are combined, it forms the phrase "Five stars rising in the East, being a propitious sign for the Middle Kingdom to put down South Qiang" (äºæåºæ±æ¹å©ä¸åè¨åç¾), though the meaning is up for debate.