国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

CULTURE

CULTURE

5,000 years riding high on the hog

By ZHAO XU????|????China Daily????|???? Updated: 2019-02-09 07:51

Share - WeChat
Clockwise from top: A carved brick from a Han Dynasty (206 BC-AD 220) tomb shows a pig being carried to the slaughterhouse; a pig with three sorcerers on its back, created around the third century BC; a boar-shaped bronze liquor container from around the 10th century BC; and a Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) gold hair piece features the multi-armed Indian goddess, Marici, sitting on chariot pulled by sows. [Photos provided to China Daily]

Two thousand years ago, privileged Chinese, such as aristocrats or superrich businesspeople, could expect a lot upon their deaths.

Their remains would most likely be encased in jade armor sewn with golden thread. Their heads would be set to rest on gilt bronze pillows inlaid with jade disks. The deceased, who were likely surrounded with luxury in life, would possess two objects-flat jade cicadas in their mouths and columnar jade pigs near their hands.

"The cicadas and the pigs were de rigueur for a man honored with a proper burial, since they represented the two crucial elements anyone would have wished for," says Liu Yunhua, a researcher with the Hebei Provincial Museum in Shijiazhuang.

Items unearthed from the burial ground of a vassal king in Mancheng county in Hebei province today constitute one of the country's best-known archeological discoveries from the Han Dynasty (206 BC-AD 220).

"Cicadas, which ancient Chinese believed fed on unspoiled dewdrops, symbolized virtue, while pigs represented wealth," Liu says.

"This funerary tradition started to form at the beginning of the Han Dynasty and had a firm hold on people's imaginations for more than three centuries. It only began to wane at the end of the Han era, when China was torn by war."

In recent decades, archeological excavations have turned up enough jade pigs-also known as zhu wo, which translates as "pig handles"-from Han tombs that almost every Chinese museum with a serious ancient jade collection displays at least one.

But the styles differ over time, says Ding Zhe, an antique-jade connoisseur.

"In the first half of the Han, the jade pigs were rendered more cursively. The entire animal was tubular, with a curled tail, pricked ears and a wrinkled snout indicated by only a few deep marks made by a hand-operated jade-grinding wheel. Today, the style is called han ba diao, or the "eight scratches of the Han knife".

"Eight" in this case refers to the artful precision with which a jade carver from the time handled the precious material."

But the style became more realistic over the next 200 years, as the jade pigs' identity as a status symbol matured.

It wasn't uncommon for aristocratic families to own pig farms, according to historical records. The life of a person whose wealth afforded ease without court politics' entanglements would have included more than a few pigs.

By that time, the pig had lost its supernatural connotations and was viewed as property.

"Long before that, pigs and their ancestors, wild boars, were given a more elevated status," Ding says.

1 2 3 Next   >>|

Registration Number: 130349

Mobile

English

中文
Desktop
Copyright 1994-. All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co(CDIC).Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form.
民乐县| 皮山县| 易门县| 新龙县| 富阳市| 武山县| 江西省| 英吉沙县| 长沙县| 龙口市| 贡嘎县| 肇州县| 东莞市| 甘德县| 岳西县| 阳春市| 五家渠市| 睢宁县| 龙门县| 镇巴县| 土默特右旗| 图片| 厦门市| 习水县| 阿克苏市| 双辽市| 东乡县| 英德市| 红河县| 同心县| 民和| 潞城市| 乌兰察布市| 筠连县| 五家渠市| 宁安市| 林甸县| 龙岩市| 宁津县| 井冈山市| 宜阳县|