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  • You will recieve the exact item shown.

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Item Description:

  • Origin: China, Mid-Qing Dynasty (18th century CE)
  • Date: c. 1700s CE
  • Size: 3.6 x 2.4 inches
  • Notes: This brown glazed earthenware vessel of the mid-Qing dynasty is known as a censer, which is a type of bowl shaped incense burner.

    Chinese incense burners have been an integral part of ritual and daily life for over two thousand years, evolving from simple bronze vessels into masterpieces of metalwork and ceramics. Some of the earliest examples, known as "boshanlu," appeared during the Han dynasty, with some scholars believing that their mountain-shaped lids symbolized sacred peaks wreathed in rising smoke. Over the centuries, incense burners reflected the spiritual and artistic ideals of each era: Tang craftsmen favored ornate bronze and gilt designs inspired by Buddhist imagery, while Song artisans created elegant ceramic forms with soft glazes like Ru and Jun ware. During the Ming and Qing dynasties, incense burners became both devotional and decorative, cast in bronze, cloisonné, or fine porcelain, often inscribed with auspicious motifs and imperial reign marks.

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