The origin and formation of Han glaze, what is the origin of glaze?

Updated on culture 2024-06-14
8 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    I remembered Shen Yingying's glass change.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    Because of the discoverer of the glaze, that is, Fan Li, in the eyes of the ancestors, people believe that the glaze and the crystal, with the same memory and inheritance function, more importantly, the glaze can bless the owner of "the home is to the daughter, the official is to the prime minister".

    About in the Yuan Dynasty, with the emergence of the artificial fault line of Han culture, many skills of the Han royal family were also lost, and the glaze was among them, so in the Ming and Qing dynasties, the glaze was only in myths and legends, you must have seen "Journey to the West", Sha Seng was originally the general of the heavenly palace, wasn't it because he broke a glass cup and was demoted. In Stephen Chow's words, breaking a wine glass will be degraded, and it is enough to be a fairy and make it like this. But from here we can also see the preciousness of glass.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    <> glaze was invented in the Western Zhou Dynasty, and the glazed products produced at that time were mostly glazed beads, glazed necklaces and other decorative items, and some products were used for inlaid utensils and utensils, and glaze was also very popular with people.

    With the passage of time, the production technology of glass has become more and more mature. In the Han Dynasty, the glaze production technology was further developed, and the scope of application was expanded. Many Ming vessels of the Han Dynasty, that is, burial utensils, were made of colored glass.

    Some daily utensils are also made of glass, and some doors, windows and wall decorations have also begun to be made of glass.

    The glaze color on the surface of the glazed products of the Han Dynasty is mostly green, and the archaeological community generally calls it green glazed pottery, referred to as glazed pottery. Its utensils have pots, bottles, tripods, jars, warehouses, cabinets, stoves, basins, pavilions and so on. Most of these products were unearthed in the Han tombs in Taiyuan, Datong, Changye, Ruicheng, Yuncheng, Pinglu, Wenxi, Hejin and other places.

    Glass can also be used in architecture. The Han Dynasty green glaze dance and music pottery building preserved by the Yuncheng Museum is not only tall, but also has the terracotta figurines singing and dancing on the upper floor, and the image of the terracotta figurines is very vivid. There are a considerable number of pottery towers in the Ming ware of the Han Dynasty, which are generally designated as watchtowers.

    In 1969, the green glazed pottery building unearthed in Hou Village, Yuncheng, Shanxi Province stood on the water, with Kabuki figurines on it, and a master ornamental figurine. This kind of pottery building has a variety of uses and can be used as a place for temporary performances of music and dance.

    In 1975, two pieces of green glazed pottery were unearthed in the No. 1 brick and stone tomb of Jiaoyao in the Dawang Hall of Wuyang, Anhui Province. The mirror-framed stage on the second floor is divided into a front and back stage, with figurines and handstands in the foreground, and stage railings and columns decorated with them. The shape of these unearthed cultural relics is very beautiful, reflecting the level of glazed craftsmanship in the Han Dynasty.

    The above content is about the period of the invention of glaze, as well as some uses of glaze in the Han Dynasty. I hope it helps.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    Invented during the Warring States period. It can be used for decoration, it can be used for decoration, it can be used to replace glass, it can also be used for funerals, and it can also be used to make some jewelry.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    Glaze was first invented in the Zhou Dynasty, when bronze smelting technology and porcelain firing technology had already appeared. The glaze of the Han Dynasty was mainly used as ornaments and offered to the imperial court.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    The origin of glaze in the Shang Dynasty also comes from a legend about nature: when a caravan passed through the desert, it took a break halfway, so it took dry desert plants to make a fire to cook and keep out the cold at night, and buried it in sand afterwards.

    The next day, before leaving, people accidentally found in the sand that the sand was buried in the sand the night before was all crystal clear and shiny treasures, so everyone cheered. Because the people of the caravan were away for a long time, this treasure was called "displaced", and later it evolved into glass.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    4 "Huainanzi copy

    There is a comparison between the pearl of Suihou and the Bi of the He's family, uploaded: "For example, the pearl of Suihou, the Bi of the He's family, those who gain are expensive, and those who lose are poor." Although the Pearl of Suihou is famous all over the world, people have not been clear about what exactly it refers to.

    It was not until 1976 that the Suihou tomb was unearthed, and people understood that the so-called Suihou beads were exquisite and gorgeous Han Dynasty glass beads.

    Glazed beads are the most common type of ancient glazed artifacts in China, which has existed since the Western Zhou Dynasty and became very popular in the Warring States Period. At present, in the tombs of the Warring States Period, almost all of the buried glazed vessels have glazed beads. Its development is inseparable from the continuous improvement of technology and equipment, and the texture of the glass is more clean.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    It's the first time I've seen it, and it feels beautiful.

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