Huang Ying, curator of a jade exhibition in Beijing's Palace Museum, talks about a Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) dark green jade vase duplicate of a Han Dynasty (206 BC-AD 220) bronze vase with a fish ...
The Qing Dynasty had one major political handicap ... whatever [the] difficult times . . . the jade always represents the great past. "Another side, the darker side . . . the beautiful things ...
In its early years, the Qing Dynasty had a tea kitchen (for tea with ... had its own dinnerware storehouse where all variety of gold, silver, jade, tin, Bronze, copper, and porcelain ware were ...
The jade cabbage is the most revered treasure ... the consort of the Guangxu Emperor who ruled during the Qing dynasty. Together, the locust, katydid, and cabbage represented purity and fertility ...
The Jade Spring is famous for its pure cool waters ... For this reason it is also known as the "Snowflake Spring." In the Qing Dynasty, the spring was praised as the "Finest Spring Under Heaven ...
Three of these house Asian art, much of which dates back to the Qing Dynasty of China (1644 to 1911 ... The museum is unofficially known as the "Jade Museum" due to its extensive collection ...
This jade bi, already over three thousand years ... The Emperor was a member of the Qing Dynasty, which had displaced the Ming about a hundred years before, and which would rule China until ...