Page 79 - JJ Lally Ancient Chinese Jades, 1988
P. 79

60.  A Large Archaic Jade Ceremonial Dagger Axe ( Ge )
 Shang Dynasty, circa 1200 B.C.
 the thinly carved blade of slender elegant unusual form, with sharp beveled cutting edges, both
 sides curving down in slightly different arcs and widening to very shallow angle-points where the
 beveled edges end and the blade immediately tapers more rapidly, ending in a narrow skewed
 point, with a very gently rising median crest extending from the bottom of the plain squared tang
 through the drilled hole at the top of the blade down to the tip, the pale green and buff mottled
 stone smoothly polished all over.
 Length 18¼ inches (46.3 cm)
 Provenance:  Ex Collection D. David-Weill (1871–1952), Paris
    Ex Collection Guy Gudchau, Paris
    Ex Collection Elie Borowski, Basel
    Ex Collection Kojiro Ishiguro, Tokyo
 A slightly smaller jade ge of very similar form found in the tomb of Lady Hao, a consort of the Shang King Wu Ding, is illustrated
 in the excavation report Yinxu Fu Hao mu (Tomb of Lady Hao at Yinxu in Anyang), Beijing, 1980, col. pl. XVII, no. 443.
 Two large jade dagger axes of this form unearthed in 1986 from the ceremonial pits at Sanxingdui, Guanghan, Sichuan
 province are illustrated in Zhongguo yuqi quanji (Compendium of Chinese Jades), Vol. 2, Shijiazhuang, 1993, pp. 111-112,
 nos. 154 and 155.
 Compare also the long jade  ge of similar slender form illustrated by Loehr,  Ancient Chinese Jades from the Grenville L.
 Winthrop Collection in the Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge, 1975, p. 70, no. 61.
 ਠc͗ˑcڗ 46.3᩶Ϸc

 Ը๕cˋኇɽሊ۾ဧ€1871-1952ᔚᔛ
 cccˋኇ Guy Gudchau ᔚᔛ
 cccˋ෦ဧ Elie Borowski ᔚᔛ
 ccc؇ԯͩලѽϣࠛᔚᔛ












































 Page 75  X2500
   74   75   76   77   78   79   80   81   82   83   84