In The Great Bronze Age of China: A Symposium, 100–23, George Kuwayama, ed Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art 1991 Ancient Chinese Bronze Art:
Archaeology of the Chinese bronze age : from Erlitou to Anyang / Roderick B Campbell pages cm -- (Cotsen institute of archaeology monographs ; 79) ISBN 978-
This process now extended to bronze, in particular bronzes cast as ritual vessels Page 13 Asian Art Museum Education Department The next period is referred
dence showing the existence of a number of Neolithic and Bronze Age Chang, K C (1963), The Archaeology of Ancient China (New Haven)
Introduction A staggering number of copper–alloy objects have been unearthed in China since the first scientific excavation of the Bronze Age sites in Yinxu (
Archaeology of the Chinese bronze age : from Erlitou to Anyang / Roderick B Campbell pages cm -- (Cotsen of The Archaeology of Ancient China in 1986
Early China CHAPTER OUTLINE Origins: Old and New Stone Ages Early Bronze Age: Shang Later Bronze Age: Western Zhou Iron Age: Eastern Zhou
6 Important archaeological discoveries 7 Ancient Cultures of the Erlitou, Erligang and Shang 10 Weapons 11 Musical instruments 12 Jade 14 Bronze Age
Given China's natural resources, clay, jade and bronze were the dominant materials used by the ancient Chinese Bronze Age cultures [6, 9-10, 18-37] Clay and
The as-cast surface of an ancient Chinese bronze must have looked exactly like that of a modern inlaid bronzes continues into the early Han period (ca