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CHINA ARQUEOLOGIA golden-age-chinese-archayeolog

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Cat. 35, incised and carved

decoration. After Zhejiang

1988B, b, 46, fig. 46. 35:3. fig. 35.3.

rings, drilled along the short edge so that they

could be joined at the perforations. 2

Although varied in shape and decoration, jade

bracelets are ubiquitous among prehistoric cultures,

and their distribution spans the Liao River

valley in northeastern China to the Zhujiang River

valley in the far south. 3 It is still too early to assign

a common origin to jade bracelets; pottery and

bone antecedents dating back much earlier than

the jade forms have been found among many of

these cultures, and these exhibit a wide variety of

idiosyncratic formal features; bracelets of the Late

Yangshao culture, for example, have a triangular

cross section. The fact that in later periods bracelets

were made of other materials (including gold,

silver, agate, ivory, and lacquer) apparently did not

diminish the value attached to jade: for thousands

of years after the Liangzhu culture — even to the

present day — jade bracelets have been the most

prevalent and favored items of personal adornment

in Chinese society, zs

1 Excavated in 1987 (M 1:30); reported: Zheijiang 19883, 48.

2 Shanghai 1984, 2, pi. 1:7; for a detailed photographic

reproduction, see Shanghai 1992, pi. 83.

3 Liaoning 1986,11-13, figs. 14,16,18, 20; Zhongguo 1963,

194; Xi'an 1988, 315-316; Zhongguo Shandong 1979,12-

13; Sichuan 1961,18, fig. 35; Zhongguo 1965!}, 67; Anhui

19823, 313-315; Anhui 1989,1-9; Zhu 1984, 90-95; for a

full bibliography, see Sun Zhixin 1996,137-166.

133 LIANCZHU CULTURE

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