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                                                                         Jade yue axe and  haft  fittings
                                                                                       5
                                                                         axe: length  16.7 (6 /s), height  8.2 (3 V 4)
                                                                         fittings: top, height  3.6 (iVs);
                                                                         bottom, height  3.1 (i 'A)
                                                                         Liangzhu Culture, c. 3200-2000 BCE
                                                                         From Fanshan, Yuhang, Zhejiang Province

                                                                         Zhejiang Provincial Institute of Archaeology,
                                                                         Hangzhou

                                                                         This large axe, carved from  a cream-colored neph-
                                                                         rite fretted with white veins and brown speckles, has
                                                                         a gracefully curved cutting edge and two straight
                                                                                                    1
                                                                         sides, all gently and thinly beveled.  Two drilled
                                                                         holes pierce the  axe's butt, the  larger of them bored
                                                                         from  both  sides, as evidenced by a small ridge in
                                                                         the  aperture. The surface of the  blade is polished
                                                                         to a glossy luster, while the  butt, which would have
                                                                         been  fitted  into a haft  and thus would not  have
                                                                         been  visible, is unfinished.
                                                                            Evidence suggests that finely  crafted jade axes
                                                                         evolved from  functional weapons and  hacking tools
                                                                         of ordinary stone. The earliest stone examples,
                                                                         dated to the fifth millennium  BCE, come from  the
                                                                         cultures of the  eastern  coast. Thick and lenticular
                                                                         in cross  section, these perforated  stone axes (many
                                                                         of which have cracks and  chips along their edges,
                                                                         suggesting that they were in fact used as imple-
                                                                         ments) closely resemble their unperforated coun-
                                                                         terparts. It is the  perforation, by which the  blade is
                                                                         mounted to the handle, that distinguishes the two
                                                                                   2
                                                                         types of axes.  Whereas the  blade of an ordinary
                                                                         axe would have been positioned  in the  split end of
                                                                         the handle and then tied with a cord, the butt of
                                                                         a perforated axe blade was inserted into a groove
                                                                         cut in the handle and then  tied through the  hole
                                                                         (fig. i). This simple hole ensured  a much stronger
                                                                         bond  between the blade and the handle, and it may
                                                                         be that this superior, reinforced hafting led to the
                                                                         exclusive use  of the  perforated axe as a weapon, for
                                                                         the  secure mounting of a blade would have made a
                                                                         fatal difference  in battle. Over the  fourth millen-
                                                                         nium  BCE, the  perforated axe became increasingly
                                                                         large and flat. Many are smoothly polished and have
                                                                         an exceedingly thin blade.



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