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CHINA ARQUEOLOGIA golden-age-chinese-archayeolog

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texts are exceedingly rare events); the text's author

may in any event have intended simply to contrast

a dew basin's yin qualities with iheyang character

of a circular mirror.

The beaker form exists in a number of other

examples (albeit without the flange seen here):

one from the Epang palace site at Chezhangcun,

at Xi'an, 3 and another from Luopowan at Guixian

in Guangxi province. 4 Two very similar U-shaped

beakers were found in at Shizishan at Xuzhou in

Jiangsu province, the site of one of the tombs of

a Han dynasty Chu king. 5 It seems likely, therefore,

that this was a standard jade item made for the

highest members of the elite. Lacquer versions of

the U-shaped beakers have been found, and it is

possible that the form originated in this more easily

worked material. 6 JR

1 Excavated in 1983 (D 102); reported: Guangzhou 1991

1:202-203, fig. 132.

2 Major 1993, 65-66.

3 Wenwu jinghua 1993, no. 64.

4 Guangxi 1978, no. 89

5 Shizishan 1998, fig. 8.

6 For pottery examples, see Hubei 1993, figs. 7:2, 7:3, 8.

FIG. i. Components and

cross section of cat. 148.

Adapted from Guangzhou

1991, 203, fig. 132.

43 1 TOMB OF THE KING OF NANYUE

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