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CHINA ARQUEOLOGIA golden-age-chinese-archayeolog

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86

Jade pel pectoral

Length c. 150 (59 Ys)

Late Western Zhou Period, eighth century BCE

From Tianma-Qucun (Beizhao, Quwo),

Shanxi Province

Shanxi Provincial Institute of Archaeology,

Taiyuan

This complex assembly of jade plaques and beads, 1

more than twice as long as the pectoral ornament

described in cat. 85, comes from Tomb M 63, as

does a bronze vessel also exhibited, cat. 90. Such

bronzes date to the very end of the Western Zhou

period, around the time of the collapse in 771 BCE

of the Zhou kingdom and the loss of its capital at

Xi'an. While these bead-and-jade coverings similarly

date to the eighth century BCE, the constituent

jade carvings themselves date from a number of

different periods and were obviously amassed over

a long stretch of time.

Here, threads holding short groups of faience

and agate beads join jade huang, which dominate

the composition. The brown color of the arcs is the

result of burial; the arcs were originally a translucent

gray or green. Many have a schematic animal

head at each end; others carry finely incised decoration,

which permits approximate dating of the

individual pieces. One such huang displays patterns

typical of tenth-century BCE bronzes and jadework,

suggesting a date of manufacture one hundred or

more years prior to the burial itself. This huang

features a pair of dragons, each with two heads and

sinuous bodies that intertwine at the center; birds

with long, sweeping plumes were characteristic of

this period, and such dragon designs may have

developed by analogy. Jade craftsmen seem to have

adapted their designs from contemporaneous

bronzework, interlacing the creatures' plumes,

crests, and bodies to fit the limitations of their

inherently smaller work surface. From such small

beginnings arose an entire genre of jade (and later,

bronze) design. 2

Many of the jades found in Tomb M 63, like

those from Tomb M 8 (cat. 85), were originally

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