[Blue glazed jade wall shaped bottom bowl]
Blue glazed jade wall shaped bottom bowl, Tang Dynasty, 3.5 cm high, 14.4 cm caliber, 6.6 cm foot diameter
The bowl is skimmed, the shallow belly is slanted, and the bottom is jade. The inside and outside are covered with blue glaze. From all aspects of characteristics, this bowl should be the product of Yue kiln in the Tang Dynasty
According to the data unearthed from the tomb of the tenth year of Zhenyuan of the Tang Dynasty (794) and the tomb of the seventeenth year of Zhenyuan of the Tang Dynasty (801) in Lianjiang Mountain, Shangyu, Zhuji brand tea soup in Zhejiang Province, there was a skimming bowl at that time. The bowl had an oblique belly and a jade wall shaped bottom, which was a new variety in the Middle Tang Dynasty. The jade wall shaped bottom bowl was first seen in the Tang Dynasty, and was named after its feet like jade wall. It was widely fired in northern and southern porcelain kilns, such as the Xing and Ding kilns in Hebei, the Gongyi kilns in Henan, the Hunyuan kilns in Shanxi, the Yaozhou kilns in Shaanxi, the Yue kilns in Zhejiang, and the Changsha kilns in Hunan. Many ancient cities and ancient sites in foreign countries have also unearthed Chinese porcelain bowls with jade walls. This kind of bowl is mainly white porcelain and celadon. There are two kinds of mouth edges: lip and without lip. Some straight walls of the bowl are inclined, and some are slightly curved. The feet are generally wide and shallow, and some of the central recesses are glazed and some are unglazed. This kind of bowl has the same modeling style as the open inclined wall jade wall chassis and the skimming flat-bottomed plate, and is a novel food appliance.
青釉玉璧形底碗底部