Accession Number1993/1.99
TitleFive conjoined pots
Artist(s)ChineseArtist NationalityChinese (culture or style)Object Creation Date206 BCE-25 CEMedium & Supportstoneware with ash glazeDimensions 8 15/16 in x 7 13/16 in x 7 5/16 in (22.7 cm x 19.9 cm x 18.6 cm);8 15/16 in x 7 13/16 in x 7 5/16 in (22.7 cm x 19.9 cm x 18.6 cm)
Credit LineGift of Domino's Pizza, Inc.Label copy4. Five-bodied pot
Southeast China, Eastern Han, 25–220 or Eastern Wu dynasty, 222–80
Stoneware with ash glaze on shoulder
Gift of Domino’s Pizza, Inc., 1993/1.99
This vessel is shrouded in mystery. The smaller jars are attached to the main container, but do not open into it. Since pouring from this vessel would be awkward and it is unlikely that it was used in everyday life, scholars have proposed that this multi-bodied pot was for the storage of grain in a funerary context. Pots with five false spouts possibly held the Five Grains (wheat, rice, barley, maize, and sorghum) of China or a wine known as wu liang ye that was brewed from the five grains and formed part of ancient Chinese burial rites.
Subject matterClustered pots of the same form can be seen as early as the Neolithic period in China, and can be seen in bronze as well. In the Han Dynasty, remains of foodstuffs can be found in these types of jars to provide for the deceased in the afterlife. Conjoined pots such as this have been excavated from Western Han tombs in Guandong (Canton), Hunan, and Guangxi. By the Western Han dynasty, basic household bowls, plates, basins, jars, etc. were produced in great quantity, not only for use in daily life, but also specifically for tombs as
mingqi (明器, bright objects), or grave goods, as a way to provide for the deceased. These
mingqi included everything one would need during the afterlife, naturally, these objects reflected daily life during the Han.
Mingqi could include houses, towers, gates, granaries, livestock pens, chicken coops, wells, cooking stoves, storage vessels, dishes, incense burners, lamps and figures such as horses, dogs, anthropomorphic animals, and people such as officials, guardians, servants and entertainers, and more. The number of ceramic
mingqi items in a tomb could reach numbers of a few to several hundred objects.
Physical DescriptionThis is a stoneware ceramic pot on a tall foot ring with one large central globular body topped with one large central hu-shaped pot and four smaller hu-shaped pots that encircle it. The upper and lower body of the main pot is decorated with bands of incised bowstring decoration. It is covered by a thin layer of accidental ash glaze.
Primary Object Classification Ceramic Primary Object TypejarAdditional Object Classification(s)CeramicCollection AreaAsianRightsIf you are interested in using an image for a publication, please visit
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Keywords
ash glaze
ceramics (object genre)
jars
pots (containers)
stoneware (pottery)
vessels (containers)