Chinese pottery and porcelain : an account of the potter's art in China from primitive times to the present day . ^ is so little known thatits identity has been lost in variant readings, such as Hsiin H in laterwriters, which is very near in appearance to tung 3|, a common formused for the Tung ware (see p. 82); and we can safely leave it untilsome clearer information is forthcoming. The- second, according 1 Wares of the Sung and Yuan Dynasties, Burlington Magazine, May, 1909Plate i., fig. 4. - See Burlington Magazine, May, 1909, Plate i., fig. 28 ; Plate ii., fig. 6. Speaking of the imitation


Chinese pottery and porcelain : an account of the potter's art in China from primitive times to the present day . ^ is so little known thatits identity has been lost in variant readings, such as Hsiin H in laterwriters, which is very near in appearance to tung 3|, a common formused for the Tung ware (see p. 82); and we can safely leave it untilsome clearer information is forthcoming. The- second, according 1 Wares of the Sung and Yuan Dynasties, Burlington Magazine, May, 1909Plate i., fig. 4. - See Burlington Magazine, May, 1909, Plate i., fig. 28 ; Plate ii., fig. 6. Speaking of the imitations of Kuan yao early in the nineteenth century, theTao lu (bk. ii., fol. 10) remarks : Originally there were special departments forimitating Kuan yao. Now, only the imitators of the crackled wares make it. Asfor the imitations made at the (Imperial) factory, they are more beautiful, sc. thanthose made in the private factories. * Bk. xxix., fol. 11. 5 The word HsU j^ has the meaning continuation, and if it be not a place-name at present unidentified, it might conceivably be the continuation or later Fig. 1


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhobsonrl, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1915