Xiqin
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The xiqin (Chinese: 奚琴; pinyin: xīqín) was a bowed string instrument adopted by the Chinese from the Xi, a Central Asian people, in ancient times. It is perhaps the original member of the huqin family of Chinese bowed string instruments; thus, the erhu and all similar Chinese instruments may be said to be derived from the xiqin. The xiqin had two silk strings and was held vertically.
[edit] Origin and development
The xiqin is believed to have been developed by the Northern Xi, a Mongol- or Khitan-related ethnic group living in the Xilamulun River valley in northeast China.
The xiqin first appeared in China during the Tang Dynasty, during which time it was used in the palace orchestra and bowed with a bamboo stick. It was further developed in the Song Dynasty, when it began to be bowed with a horsehair bow.
In 1105, during the Northern Song Dynasty, the instrument was described as a foreign, two-stringed lute in an encyclopedic work on music called Yuè Shū (樂書; literally "book of music") by the music theorist Chen Yang (陳暘).
[edit] Similar instruments
The erxian used in nanguan music is similar in construction to the xiqin. The Korean haegeum (hangul: 해금; hanja: 奚琴) is also very similar in shape to the xiqin from which it is derived; in fact, its name is simply the Korean pronunciation of the same Chinese characters.
[edit] See also
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