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carved jade object.  The silver box is  decorated
                                                                           with low relief patterns,  very similar to those in use
                                                                           in Iran under the Achaemenids and  Parthians; a
                                                                           wreath pattern  of V-shaped bands  around  the lip
                                                                           of the  lid and  the  bowl indicates  borrowings  from
                                                                           a Hellenistic or Iranian source.  Such  a piece was
                                                                           clearly a rarity and  a valuable one at that. 3
                                                                              Like many jade vessels of the  Han period,  this
                                                                           box resembles lacquerware of the  late Warring
                                                                           States period  and the  early Han period  (in particu-
                                                                           lar, third-century  lacquers  from  Yutaishan, Jian-
                                                                                             4
                                                                           gling, Hubei province).  These lacquer  forms were
                                                                           borrowed  from  the  south  and imitated in jade to
                                                                           provide the  owner with sumptuous pieces  suitable
                                                                           for  an elegant  afterlife.  That jade vessels were mod-
                                                                           eled after  lacquer forms, rather than  after  bronze
                                                                           ritual vessels (such as the  hu and  ding that survived
                                                                           into the  Han period), suggests that  lacquerware
                                                                           itself was prized in  its users'  daily lives. JR


                                 Jade vessels are  exceptionally rare. A few have  1  Excavated in  1983  (D 46); reported: Guangzhou  1991,
                                                                             1:202-205, fig.  133.
                              been  found in the  tomb of Liu Sheng  (cats. 129-  2  Shizishan 1998.
                              137). Others  were discovered  in a small storage  3  See Pruch  1998, 262 -  265.
                              chamber in a tomb belonging to one of the  Chu  4  See in particular the  box illustrated in Hubei  1984,
                                                                             color pi. 2.
                              kings at Shizishan (present-day Xuzhou) in Jiangsu
                                     2
                              province.  (The tomb was ransacked at an early
                              date, and  it is likely that the  vessels recovered  con-
                              stitute only a portion  of the  tomb's original jades.)
                              The jades of the  King of Nanyue's tomb are excep-
                              tional, both in their abundance and in their quality.
                                 Several points testify to the  value of this  partic-
                              ular vessel to its owner: it seems to have been  stored
                              in the  head  section  of the  outer  coffin  (perhaps for
                              the  use of the  king himself),  and  it was found to-
                              gether  with a number of other  objects  of evidently
                              exceptional  value — the  beaker with the  bronze
                              basin  (cat.  148),  a jade rhyton, as well as the  king's
                              seal  (cat.  138)  and pectoral. The mending of a break
                              in the  lid — by means of bindings  or rivets passed
                              through  paired holes — is additional evidence of
                              the  object's value. (The holes may have been  drilled
                              originally to attach  ornaments, now lost; the drill-
                              ing may in fact have caused  the  crack.) Finally,  the
                              presence  of an unusual silver box in the main
                              chamber indicates the value associated  with the



                              429   TOM B  OF  THE  KIN G  OF  N A N Y U E
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