The earliest depiction of houses, going
back to
the Neolithic period, were modelled in
ceramic.
Before the Han period, such models more
often
consisted of a single cylindrical
chamber with a
roof, but during the Han dynasty designs
of
much more complex architectural
complexes
appeared throughout the country.
Especially from the 1st century AD, tomb
mingqi
production expanded to include new types
of
artefacts, ranging from everyday tools
to
figures of domestic animals and
architectural
models. Tombs in Henan, Shanxi, Shaanxi
and
Gansu provinces have yielded a large
quantity
of architectural models featuring multi-
storey
buildings with overhanging roofs,
brackets,
pillars, ornamental balustrades,
latticework
windows and hinged doors. The majority
was
lead-glazed in sparkling colours
including
green, yellow, brownish and black, but
unglazed
painted examples are also known,
especially in
Sichuan.
Such models and other miniature or non-
functional objects are collectively
known as
‘mingqi’ (spirit articles) and have been
traditionally interpreted as surrogates
for
objects of value placed in the tomb. Yet
recent
archaeological evidence have highlighted
that
these objects might have instead
constituted an
integral part of the strategy to
recreate the
earthly dwelling of the deceased. The
replication of the living world and its
constituents within the tomb might have
been
induced by various ideological factors,
including
a new religious trend emphasising the
separation of the dead from the living
and other
material manifestations of different
philosophical ideas, but also possibly
by the
effort to reproduce a self-sustaining
version of
the world- a fictive and efficacious
comprehensive replica, made up of both
real
sacrificed humans and animals (the
'presented')
and elements such as the multi-storey
house
(the 're-presented').
Daily life has thus been vividly
‘reproduced’ by
capturing in a still image the various
figurines
peaking out from the house balconies and
doors: look at the matron hieratically
standing
at the entrance door, holding a fan and
looking
towards his labourers to her right,
either
washing, holding a winnowing fan or a
sickle, or
again, at the archer perilously leaning
outward
on the balustrade of the third floor,
shooting to
the sky. Traces of the original red
paint are also
visible under the roof and on the
brackets,
suggesting that the entire house must
have
once been colourfully decorated with
draperies,
providing a vivid picture of what a
wealthy
abode must have looked like during the
Han
period. Furthermore, this house is
composed of
three storeys, a combination rarely
encountered
on domestic architecture of the period
(usually
made of one of two storeys) and more
often
employed in the depiction of military
outposts
such as watchtowers. Its architectural
details,
including lattice windows and bracketed
pillars
are extremely well preserved, as well as
the
upturned tiles on the overhanging roof,
thus
providing an indelible picture of this
long-gone
archaeological past.
TL tested.
- (LA.516)
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