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A Brief History

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Ceramics began in China 6,000 years ago during the New Stone Age, whose advent was marked, among other things, by the invention of pottery. The earliest earthenware was molded by hand; the potter¡¯s wheel came much later. At the beginning the clay was fired at a temperature of some 500-600¡æ. Painted pottery began to be known during the period of Yangshao and Long shan cultures.

The large legion of terra-cotta soldiers and horses of the Qin Dynasty(221-207B.C.), discovered in Shaanxi Province in 1974, are eloquent proof of the high skills in kiln-firing and sculpture attained at that early age. The art of pottery reached another peak of development in the Tang Dynasty(618-907A.D.), as evidenced by the renowned ¡°tri-coloured glaze.¡±

On the basis of pottery developed porcelain, which emerged in China, homeland of the art, 3,000 year ago during the Shang Dynasty. From the remains of that period at Sanligang of Zhengzhou and
Xiaotun of Anyang (both in Henan Province) and at Wucheng Vicllage of Qingjiang County, Jiangxi Province vessels of blue-glazed ware have been unearthed. Upon examination, they proved to have been made of kaolin and fired and vitrified at the high temperature of 1,200¡æ. Their surface is coated with a glaze, whose chemical composition is already very close to that of their bodies. Certain porcelains of the Song (960-1279) and Ming (1368) dynasties were already celadon, through at its early stages.
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Chinese ceramics became known to the world at   Chinese porcelain, together with Chinese tea and  and sea routes to foreign countries.

Jingdezhen in southern China became a principal  Dynasty. Dubbed the ¡°Porcelain Metropolis¡±. It  workshops and kilns.
A significant archaeological find was made when a Dynasty (25¡ª220 A.D) was brought to light a few Zhejiang Province. This is the earliest porcelain-producing site ever discovered in China, and in the world as a whole.

word ¡°china¡± became the name of porcelain.
silk flowed through the Silk Road and other land


center of the porcelain industry during the Song
still boasts important remains of ancient

porcelain kiln dating back to the Eastern Han years ago at Xiaoxiantan in Shangyu County,


Rapid progress has been made in the industry since the founding of New China by inheriting from, and improving upon, the past. Ceramics are now produced with renovated techniques and in ever-growing varieties in many localities, to the welcome of customers at home and abroad.

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