| Hunan
Provincial Museum is situated in the northeast of Changsha
City. Built in 1951 and opened to visitors in 1956, this
museum occupies an area of 50,000 square meters with a
construction area of 20,000 square meters.
This
museum contains a collection of more than 110,000 objects,
including 763 pieces of first class cultural relics. It's
variety of pieces consists of stone implements of the
Neolithic Age, potteries, Bronzeware of the Shang and
Zhou periods, relics from the Chu State and relics from
a big tome excavated in 1972 - Mawangdui Han Tomb. Besides,
Yuezhou celadon produced from the Eastern Han to the Tang
period, Changsha colorful porcelain produced in the Tang,
the facsimiles of Wang Xizhi's Prologue to the Orchid
pavilion Collection and the handwriting of Wang Fuzhi,
the great thinker of the early Qing period, are also housed
there.
Among
all these collections, the relics from Mawangdui Han Tomb
are most excellent and miraculous.
In
1972, grave sites from the Western Han Dynasty (206BC-8AD)
were excavated in Mawangdui, northeast of Changsha. It
was proved to be the graveyard of Licang family that lived
during the Western Han period about 2000 years ago.
Three
tombs were unearthed successively, in which the one of
Marquise Dai, Licang's wife, was most famous. Countless
elegant and elaborate objects such as trappings and decorations
which made her stay in the afterlife a more pleasant one
were found in her tomb, of these a T-shaped silk picture,
supposedly a banner for the soul, is the most fascinating.
It is in extremely good condition and describes the voyage
of the dead to the next world. The painting techniques
and the color are of the highest quality. But more astonishing
still was the body of the Marquise herself. It was swaddled
in 20 layers of silk and was found surprisingly well preserved
and in remarkable condition, from skin to inner organs.
Her skin is still of elasticity and her fingerprint can
be seen clearly. |