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Chapter 07 (pp. 330-385)_Layout 1  7/7/10  5:42 PM  Page 355







                 the  Yuan  dynasty),  the  wares  decorated  with  three-,
                 four-, and five-claw dragons were restricted to the use
                 of  nobles,  princes,  and  the  emperor,  respectively. 93  A
                 few  large,  covered  blue  and  white  jars  were  found  at
                 Gao’an with three-claw dragons (Fig. 7.33). A few four-
                 claw dragon jars were also found at this site. The use of
                 thin  lines  to  paint  the  dragons  and  ample  unpainted
                 space seen on the Gao’an jars are reminiscent of fea-
                 tures on blue and white weiqi jars excavated at Doufu-
                 long in Jingdezhen.
                    Also  unearthed  at  the  site  were  nine  extremely  fine
                 luan bai (eggshell white) wares, as well as stem cups bear-
                 ing  molded  five-claw  dragon  anhua  (secret  or  hidden)
                 decorations. Stem cups were a new Yuan ceramic form
                 used for wine on festive occasions, and naturally accom-
                                             94
                 panied meiping, or wine bottles. The presence of white
                 sacrificial ware stem cups, decorated with the emperor’s
                 exclusive five-claw dragon, makes it likely that this body
                 of ceramics belonged to a member of the Yuan imperial
                 family.  This  cache  of  valuables  was  probably  buried
                 sometime between 1341 and 1351, when there were nu-
                 merous battles between the Chinese Red Turban insur-
                 gents and the Yuan army around Gao’an.
                    The  Baoding  treasure  was  discovered  at  Baoding  in
                                                                      7.33. Blue and white covered jar with three-claw dragon and
                 Hebei province in 1964 while erecting a building. It con-  peony decorations, Yuan dynasty, second quarter of the
                 tained  eleven  pieces  of  exquisite  Yuan  porcelain  (Figs.  fourteenth century, 47 cm tall. Made at Jingdezhen, and
                                95
                 7.34, 7.35, 7.36). Because these ceramics are of excep-  recovered in 1980 in Gao’an county. Gao’an County Museum,
                                                                      Jiangxi Province.
                 tionally fine quality and have been very well preserved,
                 they are among the most published and exhibited discov-
                 eries since the revolution in 1949.
                    Four  of  the  eleven  porcelain  pieces  are  octagonal
                 faceted blue and white vessels: a pair of meiping (wine bot-
                 tles), a pear-shaped (yuhuchun) bottle, and a ewer. They are
                 thus  more  complicated  than  the  usual  Yuan  forms  of
                            96
                 these types. (For more on shapes of Yuan wares, see
                 Fig.  7.37a–f.)  Four  pieces  are  sapphire  blue:  a  meiping
                 similar to one held by Yangzhou Museum, a yi (spouted
                 bowl), a stem cup, and a shallow dish of the same form as
                 one in the Topkapi Palace Museum. The glaze on a wine
                 cup has a slight jade-green tinge. And a dish with a brack-
                 eted rim is comparable in quality to benchmark dishes
                 with the Taixi inscription, datable to 1328–1340.
                    The most unusual and experimental pieces from the
                 Baoding treasure, however, are a pair of jars with molded
                 beading. On these jars, ogival panels of floral open work
                                                                      7.34. Cup with sapphire blue glaze and gilt decoration of prunus
                 are brushed with underglaze red and blue. Above and be-
                                                                      (plum), Yuan dynasty, fourteenth century, 4 cm tall, 8.1 cm
                 low, contrasting zones are painted in cobalt blue (see Fig.  mouth diameter. From Jingdezhen, recovered in 1964 from
                 7.36). These imperial-quality jars decorated with under-  Baoding, Hebei province. Hebei Provincial Museum.
                 glaze  blue  and  red  have  counterparts  made  at
                 Jingdezhen’s private kilns as furnishings for the tomb of

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