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CHINA ARQUEOLOGIA golden-age-chinese-archayeolog

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11

Yangshao, and the Taosi Longshan (see cat. 25). 9

Dragon images from later periods are evidence of

the enduring impact of these cultures, as well as

regional influences: the plastic form of dragons

from the Shang period (c. 1600-1100 BCE) such as

one from the Fu Hao Tomb at Anyang (fig. 2), resembles

both the Hongshan and Taosi dragons. 10

With a form resembling that of a horse's hoof,

the hollow cylinder, cat. n represents the most

common type of jade object excavated from the

Niuheliang tombs, although they are not invariably

a component of the central tombs' burial objects.

Though identified by some scholars as arm or wrist

ornament or a tool of some sort, 11 the position of

these objects in the tombs — placed horizontally

underneath or above the skull of the dead 12 — has

led to a consensus that they were used as hair ornaments.

13 Objects from the later period, such as a

jade excavated from Dayangzhou (Xin'gan, Jiangxi

province), 14 depict figures with towering, braided

hair held in place with cylindrical objects, a hair

style that may have been associated with individuals

of particular status, or participants in rituals or

ceremonies. The identification of the Hongshan

cylinders with such ornaments is uncertain.

Furthermore, the function of the symmetrically

drilled holes, as well as the significance of the objects'

horizontal placement remains unknown. The

jade bears a resemblance to Hongshan pottery

vessels with sloping edges, but whether the two

forms are related has not been established. 15 Whatever

their function, jade cylinders had a long use;

one was found in the same region in a grave dating

some fifteen hundred years later, hung at the back

of the deceased. 16 XY

84 I LATE PREHISTORIC CHINA

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