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  1. Ding ware bowl, 960–1126 C.E., Northern Song dynasty, China (Shanghai Museum of Art)

  2. 15 de oct. de 2021 · The National Museum of China is known for its many national treasures in this category, such as the Houmuwu Square Ding (cauldron) - the heaviest ancient piece of Chinese bronze ware, weighing over 832 kilograms。

  3. The Hou Mu Wu bronze square ding (formerly known as Si Mu Wu ding) is huge, majestic, and weighs 832.84 kg. It is currently known as the heaviest bronze ware in ancient China. The inscription on the inner surface of the belly of the device is “Hou Mu Wu”, which is the temple title of Shang king's mother.

  4. Bottle. China. 10th–11th century. On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 210. Named after a prefecture in Hebei Province in north China, Ding wares were made from the eighth to the thirteenth or fourteenth century, and were popular at the Northern Song (960–1127) court.

  5. 6 de jun. de 2018 · The Song Dynasty (960-1279) was a golden age of Chinese ceramics when art peaked and techniques matured. The best known chinawares of this period are the Guan (meaning official), Ru, Jun, Ge, and Ding ware. The Guan ware, as its name indicates, was made in official kilns.

  6. This dish was made at the Ding kilns in Hebei province in the north of China near modern Beijing. The kilns were fuelled with coal, which gives an oxygen-rich firing atmosphere resulting in warm tones in the glaze colours.

  7. This magnificent Ding ware dish is rare and important both for its size and for its carved decoration of a powerful writhing long dragon. Long dragons (as opposed to chi dragons) are rare on all Northern Song dynasty ceramics, even those destined for the court.