Subscribe to free Email Newsletter

 
  Classics>Collection
 
 
 
Hongshan Jade Artifacts Make Guilin Visit

 

Hongshan Jade Article

Featured items embody the views on aesthetics, philosophy and religion of the people living around Hongshan Mountain.

Hongshan Culture & Jade

Hongshan culture was discovered in 1935, becoming an important part of the Neolithic Age in Northern China. Hongshan jades were found in large quantities with more than 52 different types in various shapes and forms. Typical Hongshan jade items are pig dragons, embryo dragons and cirrus-shaped jade articles. Hongshan jade carvings are crafted at higher levels than those of the Xinglongwa and Zhaobaogou cultures. Most Hongshan jade artifacts are well preserved due to the utilization of slab burial tombs and the dry arid climate of Inner Mongolia.

Jade Coiled Dragon

More than 20 cirrus-shaped jade articles have been unearthed at the site of Hongshan culture, each of them representing two fundamental themes—cirrus-shaped angles and minor convexities. The combination of cirrus-shaped angles and minor convexities in different ways constitute the various patterns and designs of the cirrus-shaped jade articles of the Hongshan culture, which is best demonstrated by the enormous blackish green jade dragon unearthed at Sanxingtala Township of Wengniute Banner in 1971.

 

1 2 3
 

 


 
Print
Save