The lady with the phoenix crown : Tang-period grave goods of the noblewoman Li Chui (711-736)

Bibliographic Information

The lady with the phoenix crown : Tang-period grave goods of the noblewoman Li Chui (711-736)

Sonja Filip, Alexandra Hilgner, (eds.) ; with contributions by Guje Kroh ... [et al.] ; [translated from the German, Mary Wong-Sommer, Clive Bridger, Jörn Schuster]

Schnell + Steiner , Verlag des Römisch-Germanischen Zentralmuseums, 2014

  • : Schnell und Steiner

Other Title

Die Dame mit der Phönixkrone : Tang-zeitliche Grabbeigaben der Adeligen Li Chui (711-736)

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Note

At head of title: Römisch-Germanisches Zentralmuseum, Forschungsinstitut für Archäologie

XISBN: 9783884672310 for RGZM

Includes bibliographical references

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This richly-illustrated book presents the restoration of the intricate grave furnishings in the tomb of Li Chui, a descendant of emperor Gaozu, who had died in AD 736 in Chang'an. The grave was excavated in Xi'an in 2001, and this is the first time that the results have been made available to an English-speaking public. The Tang Dynasty (AD 618-907), China's Golden Age, was a flourishing period teeming with fascinating cultural phenomena. At the centre of this cosmopolitan empire lay the capital city of Chang'an - one of the largest metropolises of its time and now hidden below present-day Xi'an. Aristocrats as protagonists of courtly life shaped the character of the city, their luxurious everyday life equally reflected in lavishly furnished tombs. Nowadays, most of these tombs are found to have been robbed. Evidence of the former splendour of these subterranean chambers only survives in the form of marvellous wall paintings and clay figurines ignored by the grave robbers. The undisturbed tomb of Li Chui who had died in AD 736, a descendant of emperor Gaozu, was excavated in Xi'an in 2001. It took a German-Chinese team six years to restore the intricate grave furnishings. For the first time, it was possible to reconstruct the opulent jewellery assemblage of a Tang period noblewoman. In conjunction with the results of scientific analyses by a team of specialists from various disciplines it was possible to obtain new insights into Tang period burial culture. This book presents these results to an English-speaking public for the first time. Illustrated appendices throughout the text provide further insights into Tang period everyday life.

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