10.05.2022 Views

CHINA ARQUEOLOGIA golden-age-chinese-archayeolog

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

a thin cord drawn through a perforation at the end

and another drilled in the finial. Such an attachment

would make for a swinging motion as the

wearer stepped or turned, producing a sound as

the pendent struck the other pieces of jade.

The Taosi hair ornament, which was unearthed

from a female burial, stands as an amazingly early

precursor in the long history of very imaginative

and artful jewelry that has continued in China

almost to the present time. As a personal ornament

it is not unique among the finds at Taosi sites.

During excavations conducted in 1997 and 1998

at a Taosi cemetery at Xiajin, near Linfen, slightly

north of Xiangfen, nearly 500 graves were uncovered,

among them a number of elite burials. 2

From the burials of two female elders have come

elaborately inlaid bracelets. The largest and most

astonishing of these is the one from M 76, which

measures 9 centimeters in height. Its surface, like

the spherical element on the hair ornament, is

covered by a mosaic of turquoise chips, and it is

further embellished by three contrasting inset

ovals of white stone. 3 LF-H

1 Excavated in 1980 (M 2023:1 - 3); unpublished. Gao Wei,

head of the Taosi excavation team, Institute of Archaeology,

CASS, has indicated that, in addition to the hair

ornament, Tomb 2023 contained a bracelet inlaid with

turquoise and a painted pottery ping. Gao has suggested

that the hair ornament is a percursor to later hair ornaments

called buyao (literally, "swinging when walking").

2 Zheng 1998, 4 -13; frontispiece and color pis. 1-2.

3 According to the excavation report, the bracelets are

made of a black rubbery substance (Zheng 1998,10).

Whether this substance is related to lacquer has not been

determined. The report makes no reference to the possibility

that the substance might originally have been the

coating of some underlying material, such as wood or

woven fibers.

The elite burials at Xiajin, so richly provided with

personal ornaments and jade ritual implements, lack the

usual collection of pottery vessels and other accouterments.

In each grave only a single vessel was found. All of

these vessels are of one kind: a tall, slender gray-ware ping,

of exceptionally distinguished appearance, painted partly

red (Zheng 1998, color pi. 12).

Il6 I LATE PREHISTORIC CHINA

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!