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This
city on green hills in northeastern Jiangxi Province is
world-famous for its elegant China. Known as Xinping in
ancient times, the city began to make porcelain as early
as the Han Dynasty around 200 B.C. During the reign of
the Emperor Jing De (1004-1007) of the Song Dynasty, all
the products made here bore the reign mark of “Jingde,”
and the name of the city was therefore changed to Jingdezhen
(Zhen in Chinese mean town). It became a national porcelain-producing
center in the Ming Dynasty; its products, estimated at
hundreds of thousands of pieces every year, were exported
to many other parts of thousands of pieces every year,
were exported to many other parts of the world. The number
of kilns at that time ran to several hundred. Four kilometers
southeast of the city are the ruins of the Hutian Kiln,
built during the Yuan Dynasty. Pieces of the blue and
white porcelain ware first made in that period were discovered
in the ruins of this kiln, which covered some forty square
meters.
The
China Produced in Jingdezhen in one incidence is described
to be “as white as jade, as thin as paper, as bright
as a mirror.” It makes a bell-like sound when struck.
TH products are beautifully designed and richly decorated
with mostly traditional designs. Varieties include the
well-known blue and white porcelain and another type produced
by putting openwork decorations under a thin layer of
bright glaze to intensify the effect of transparency and
delicacy.
Jingdezhen’s products are exported widely to more
than a hundred countries and regions. |